logo
Farmed production of some fish like Tilapia - and seaweed

Farmed production of some fish like Tilapia - and seaweed

The Star13-06-2025
Since 2022, the farming of aquatic animals has been steadily overtaking fishing around the world -- but with large disparities from species to species. — AFP
The amount of farmed seafood we consume – as opposed to that taken wild from our waters – is soaring every year, making aquaculture an ever-more important source for many diets, and a response to overfishing.
According to the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization, nearly 99 million tonnes of aquatic animals (fish, molluscs like oysters and mussels and crustaceans like prawns) were farmed around the world in 2023, five times more than three decades ago.
Since 2022, the farming of aquatic animals has been steadily overtaking fishing around the world – but with large disparities from species to species.
Fast-growing species
The two biggest sellers on the market in 2023, carp and tilapia, mainly came from freshwater farming, while other widely-consumed fish, like herring, came just from deep sea fishing.
Thierry Laugier, a researcher at Ifremer, France's national institute for ocean science and technology, told AFP that fish farmers choose species that grow quickly and with simple requirements, to be able to control the life cycle.
Sales of the most widely farmed fish in Europe, Atlantic salmon, came to 1.9 million tonnes in 2023, 99 percent of which were farmed.
"We know how to control the ageing or how to launch a reproduction cycle, through injecting hormones," Laugier said.
Asia main producer
Asia is by far the biggest producer of farmed fish, accounting for 92 percent of the 136 million tonnes – of both animal and plant species – produced under manmade conditions in 2023.
"For carp, it comes down to tradition, it has been farmed for thousands of years on the Asian continent," the Ifremer researcher said.
At the other end of the spectrum, sardines and herring are just fished in the oceans, mainly for profitability reasons as some fish grow very slowly.
"It takes around two years to get an adult-sized sardine," Laugier said.
He said farming of some fish has not yet been started as, "for a long time, we thought the ocean was an inexhaustible resource".
Seaweed
Little known in the West, seaweed nevertheless accounts for almost a third of world aquaculture production.
Almost exclusively from Asia, seaweed production increased by nearly 200 percent in two decades, to 38 million tonnes. It is mainly used in industry, in jellies, pharmaceuticals and cosmetics, the expert said.
He said seaweed also has the major advantage of absorbing not just CO2 in the oceans, but also nitrogen and certain pollutants.
"And from an ecological point of view it is better to farm macroalgae than salmon," Laugier said. – AFP
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Contaminated Fukushima soil delivered to PM office
Contaminated Fukushima soil delivered to PM office

The Star

time7 hours ago

  • The Star

Contaminated Fukushima soil delivered to PM office

Harmless stuff: Bags of contaminated soil being delivered to the Japanese prime minister's office to be reused in the garden, in Tokyo. — AP Dozens of bags of mildly radioactive soil collected from near the stricken Fukushima nuclear plant were delivered to the Japanese prime minister's office in an effort to show it is safe for reuse. Soon after the March 2011 tsunami and nuclear disaster, authorities scraped a layer of contaminated soil from swathes of land in Fukushima to reduce radiation levels. A vast quantity of soil – 14 million cubic metres – has since been stored at facilities near the Fukushima Daiichi plant, with the government setting a 2045 deadline for its transfer elsewhere in the country. Most of the stored soil contains low levels of radiation equivalent to or less than one X-ray per year for people who directly stand on or work with it, the environment ministry said. But with few willing to take the contaminated earth, the government took it upon itself to reuse some of the soil to show it is not dangerous. Yesterday, workers unloaded bags of the dirt from a truck in the front yard of the prime minister's office in central Tokyo. According to earlier reports, the slightly radioactive soil will be used in flower beds. A layer of ordinary soil around 20cm deep will sit on top of the Fukushima soil, according to the environment ministry. — AFP

Orphaned elephants return to the wild
Orphaned elephants return to the wild

The Star

time2 days ago

  • The Star

Orphaned elephants return to the wild

Back where they belong: The baby elephants being released into the Mau Ara forest area. — AFP Authorities returned six orphaned and injured elephants to the wild after nursing them back to health under a long-running conservation project, officials said. Two females and four males, aged between five and seven, were released into the Mau Ara forest within the Udawalawe Wildlife Sanctuary, environment minister Dammika Patabendi said. He said it was the 26th such release of rehabilitated elephants since the Udawalawe Elephant Transit Home began its programme in 1998. 'We hope, in the interest of conserving elephants, we will be able to improve facilities at this transit home in the near future,' Patabendi said. The calves were transported in trucks and then allowed to walk free because they were deemed strong enough to fend for themselves or join wild herds. Baby elephants have minimal contact with humans at the transit home to ease their integration into wild herds. All elephants at the facility were rescued after being found abandoned, injured or separated from their herds. Sri Lankan authorities believe the transit home's strategy of rewilding rescued elephants, rather than domesticating them, has paid off. The centre's director, Malaka Abeywardana, said 57 elephants remain at the facility, which has released 187 back into the wild since the first release in early 1998. Sri Lanka had previously sent rescued calves to the Pinnawala Elephant Orphanage, which has also become a popular tourist site. — AFP

UN says more than 737,000 newly displaced in Gaza since March
UN says more than 737,000 newly displaced in Gaza since March

Sinar Daily

time2 days ago

  • Sinar Daily

UN says more than 737,000 newly displaced in Gaza since March

Over the past 21 months, nearly everyone has been displaced, typically multiple times. 18 Jul 2025 09:46am Palestinians salvage items from the debris of a tent which was hit in Israeli strikes a day earlier, at the UNRWA-run Abou Helou school for girls at the Bureij refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip on July 17, 2025. (Photo by Eyad BABA / AFP) HAMILTON - The United Nations (UN) said Thursday that more than 737,000 people have been displaced in the Gaza Strip since an escalation of Israeli attacks in March, underscoring the scale of the humanitarian crisis facing the population, Anadolu Ajansi (AA) reported. Citing the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), spokesperson Stephanie Tremblay reported at a news conference that "between the 8th and the 15th of July, more than 11,500 people were newly displaced." Palestinians salvage items from the debris of a tent which was hit in Israeli strikes a day earlier, at the UNRWA-run Abou Helou school for girls at the Bureij refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip on July 17, 2025. (Photo by Eyad BABA / AFP) "That brings overall displacement since the latest escalation of hostilities on March 18th to over 737,000 people - that's about 35 per cent of Gaza's population. "And over the past 21 months, nearly everyone has been displaced, typically multiple times," she noted. Tremblay said Israeli strikes in the last 24 hours hit sites sheltering displaced Palestinians, with reports of injuries and fatalities. Despite mounting needs, she said that only a limited amount of humanitarian aid is reaching the enclave. Tremblay described the delivery of benzene for the first time in more than 135 days as a "small but important step forward," noting that benzene is essential for powering ambulances and critical services. "But it's not enough," she stressed. On the Israeli strike against a church in Gaza, Tremblay said UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres "strongly condemns today's reports of an Israeli strike on the Holy Family Church in Gaza, a place of worship and a sanctuary for civilians." "Attacks on places of worship are unacceptable. People seeking shelter must be respected and protected, not hit by strikes," she added, reiterating demands for an immediate ceasefire. She reiterated Guterres' call "on all parties to ensure that civilians are respected and protected at all times and allow humanitarian aid to flow into the Strip at scale." In response to a question by Anadolu on Israel's reported reassignment of administrative control of the Ibrahimi Mosque in Hebron to a settler council, Tremblay said the UN had not seen the report, but emphasised: "We always call for the protection of all religious sites." On Tuesday, Israeli media reported that Tel Aviv removed the Hebron municipality's administrative authority over the Ibrahimi Mosque and reassigned it to a settler council. The Ibrahimi Mosque, also known as the Tomb of the Patriarchs, is a site sacred to Muslims and Jews. Tensions over control and access have long made the mosque a flashpoint in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The Israeli move marks the first major shift in the status of the mosque since the 1994 recommendations of the Shamgar Commission, which divided access, allocating 63 per cent of the site to Jewish worshippers and 37 per cent to Muslims. The division followed the 1994 massacre by extremist settler Baruch Goldstein, who killed 29 Palestinian worshippers during dawn prayers. The mosque is located in the Old City in an area under full Israeli control where roughly 400 illegal settlers live under the protection of 1,500 Israeli soldiers. - BERNAMA-ANADOLU More Like This

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store