Monday, April 27, 2009

Obama Administration Shifts Aquaculture Strategy

As first blogged by our friends at acuaculturetoday, Commerce secretary Gary Locke last week said the administration will develop federal aquaculture regulations, including a system that could permit offshore fish farming in the ocean waters for the first time.

As part of the secretary's briefing before a senate committee hearing in Washington D.C., Locke further detailed a decision to change a Bush administration proposal that would have expedited a permitting system for offshore aquaculture under the Minerals Management Service. He said the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration will oversee the preparation of the Obama administration's fish-farming guidelines, according to aquaculturetoday's blog post.

I was waiting to hear what the Obama administration would be doing with aquaculture policy. As the UN and other international organizations have seen the light in recent months and accepted the fact the industry is a more-or-less a good thing for consumers and, if done correctly and sustainably, for the oceans and those individuals, communities that rely on them.

Stay tuned for further info on aquaculture policy out of the Obama White House. 





Monday, April 20, 2009

MA-based Australis Aquaculture Making Waves

The Berkshires have a little bit of the outback going on. For several years a favorite south east Asian fish has been farmed and raised in a closed hatchery system at Australis Aquaculture, a subsidiary of WM Capital of Huston, TX

WM Capital bought the hatchery and farming operations in Massachusetts and Vietnam last month from Australis Aquaculture in Australia

Josh Goldman, managing director for Australis, told SeaFood Business in March that the transaction provides the necessary capital to increase the fish's presence in retail markets while also moving the investor base of the company, which will still operate with the Australis name. 

"We're really focused on growing the barramundi business, both by increasing supply in Vietnam and doing what we do in the United States," said Goldman. "We're building a national presence for the ‘Better Fish' brand." Australis barramundi fillets are now available frozen in stand-up retail bags.

I will be meeting with Goldman and others at the Turners Falls-based US headquarters to interview him and his colleagues for Hatchery International about their operations in the US and their efforts to sustainably farm the mid-sized white fish.

Though, the company has made a concerted effort to farm their fish in a completely closed system here in America, their Vietnam raised fish are reportedly being raised in open ocean cages.

At first, Australis executives played coy when I first approached them about doing a story on their hatchery in Turners Falls, claiming they wanted to protect their technology and trade secrets from competitors. I kept on them. 

I told them that I had learned over the years I worked at CNET Networks covering the technology sector that stories can be written effectively about businesses without giving away their golden egg. It worked and on Friday Goldman called me up and said my persistence had paid off.

With that, I plan to go out next week and try and cover their unique hatchery system without giving away too much. I’ll let you know how it goes.

 

Monday, April 06, 2009

Aquaculture as an education tool for success

Over the past several weeks I've come across a few high school programs in the area that incorporate aquaculture into their curriculum, combining biology, science and sustainable oceans policy studies.

In a recent op-ed in the Gloucester Times in Massachusetts, the editors praised Gloucester High School students and faculty working on a joint project with the Salem State College science department to grow clams and hatchery maintenance. The effort is “effectively bridging the gap between theory and the real-world economy,” the op-ed went on to say.

Here on Martha’s Vineyard, I’ve heard of talk of students earning how to grow tilapia, though I haven’t independently confirmed this yet.

I soon will be pitching a story to Hatchery International taking a look at the various high school and two year community colleges in New England offering studies in aquaculture.

If you have any high schools in your area that fits this angle, please feel free to leave a note and I will try and include them in the story.