IN BRIEF - Fusion Marine secures new fish farm development project in Zambia
ZAMBIA
Tuesday, March 06, 2012
Fusion Marine Ltd has won a GBP 0.5m contract to supply fish farm pens and associated aquaculture equipment for a new tilapia farming venture in Zambia.
The Zambian order is the latest in a series of contracts Fusion Marine has secured for new farming ventures in remote parts of the world, underlining the company’s expertise in new start-up developments.
This new project for Mpende Fisheries is for a tilapia farm located on Lake Tanganyika, the second largest freshwater lake by volume in the world. For the development, Fusion Marine will be supplying 18 Aquaflex fish farm pens as well as providing technical expertise for their installation.
The project will also incorporate a hatchery capable of producing 10 million tilapia fingerlings. Construction work on the hatchery is already underway and the broodstock of local indigenous tilapia (Tilapia Tanganyika) from the lake has been under cultivation for over a year. Production of fingerlings should commence towards the middle of this year and the first produce from the pens is expected early in 2013, with initial annual production anticipated to be in the region of 1,000 tonnes per year.
The federal government says a New York City company has been processing fish under unsanitary conditions.
The accusation was made in a lawsuit filed on Friday 17 May against N.Y. Fish Inc.
The suit alleges that the makers of smoked salmon and mackerel failed to take steps to minimize contamination by potentially life-threatening bacteria.
Seaweed producers, government officers and aquaculture stakeholders in Fiji, Kiribati, Papua New Guinea and Solomon Islands are part of the International Seaweed Symposium in Bali, Indonesia.
The Secretariat of the Pacific Community, through the European Union-funded increasing agricultural commodity trade (IACT) project, has been working with seaweed farming communities in the Pacific to identify new export markets for their products.
A new study published in PNAS argues that for fisheries policies to be effective they must take in to account not just fish stock conservation and environmental issues, but also research data on the patterns and dynamics of fish trade, markets and user consumption.
Securing the critical contribution of wild fish stocks to food and nutrition security in the developing world depends on better governance and management of the fisheries sector.
Provincial Fisheries Minister Derek Dalley says inland fish farming is not economically viable. Dalley was responding to the recent discovery of farmed Atlantic Salmon in rivers on the Burin Peninsula. While still under investigation, it appears as though the fish may have escaped from local fish farms, probably as the result of winter storms. Opposition Fisheries Jim Bennett called for government to look into the viability of farming fish in inland tanks, as opposed to nets in the open ocean, after recent outbreaks of infectious salmon anaemia. There is no indication that the fish found recently were sick in any way. Dalley says inland fish farms are simply not an option.
Cawthron Institute has boosted its science and aquaculture capability with the appointment of senior scientist Dr Jacquie Reed as its new head of aquaculture.
"We are excited to further strengthen our science leadership team with this new appointment," Cawthron Institute Chief Executive Professor Charles Eason says.
"Dr Reed is an accomplished scientist with extensive, proven scientific expertise and specialist knowledge of the commercial aquaculture sector. She will complement and enhance our existing research, while bringing a fresh approach, new energy and drive to this important role."
A Maltese tuna rancher can continue legal action against marine conservation group Sea Shepherd in the UK, a high court has ruled.
The company claimed it incurred EUR 1 million in damages
Fish and Fish won an appeal after a UK court last year threw out a lawsuit against Sea Shepherd in which the Maltese company sought damages for an incident that happened in 2010.
SEATTLE - Alaska Air Cargo delivered the season's first shipment of Copper River salmon on 19 May to Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. The arrival of the coveted Copper River salmon marks the start of the summer salmon season and is anticipated by seafood lovers throughout the Pacific Northwest and beyond.
The Alaska Airlines plane arrived early this morning with Copper River king and sockeye salmon from three seafood processors: Ocean Beauty Seafoods, Trident Seafoods and Copper River Seafoods. On 19 May, at least four more Alaska Airlines flights will transport salmon from Cordova, Alaska, to Anchorage, Alaska, Seattle and across the United States.
Cawthron Institute has boosted its science and aquaculture capability with the appointment of senior scientist Dr Jacquie Reed as its new head of aquaculture. We are excited to further strengthen our science leadership team with this new appointment, Cawthron …High quality, safe NZ seafood focus of new role.
Cawthron Institute has boosted its science and aquaculture capability with the appointment of senior scientist Dr Jacquie Reed as its new head of aquaculture.
Australia has formally submitted a proposed amendment to the London Protocol for discussion at its meeting in October.
Minister for Environment, Tony Burke said Australia was acting on the international stage to address ocean fertilisation, an emerging technology that presented a significant risk to the international marine environment.
Ocean fertilisation is a type of geoengineering in which nutrients are introduced to the upper ocean to increase marine food production and remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
The Federation of the Icelandic Fishing Vessel Owners condemns the Marine Conservation Society’s decision to rate the Icelandic mackerel fisheries as least sustainable. According to the United nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, the four coastal States, Iceland, the EU, the Faroe Islands and Norway, have the right to fish for mackerel. This, fishing of mackerel by Icelandic vessels in Icelandic waters is just as legitimate as is the fishing of mackerel by EU vessels in EU waters.
It is necessary to keep in mind that the migration pattern of the mackerel has changed with a substantial part of the stock feeding in Icelandic waters. Thus, a joint scientific survey conducted by Iceland, Norway and the Faroe Islands documented the presence of approx. 1.5 million tons of mackerel in Icelandic waters in 2012.
Synthethic Genomics, ExxonMobil to develop algae biofuels United States
Synthetic Genomics Inc announced a new co-funded research agreement with ExxonMobil to develop algae biofuels from strains with significantly improved production characteristics by employing synthetic genomic science and technology.
Cesium findings in eel coverup reported Japan
A scientist has admitted having detected radioactive cesium in eels caught in a boundary river between the Tokyo and Chiba prefectures but claims local governments took no action for nearly two months despite having informed authorities promptly.
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