Blue foods have a bright future
The webinar opened on blue foods, highlighting the potential from oceans and building on the conclusions of recent research papers such as the Blue Food Assessment papers and the Blue Papers commissioned by the High-Level Panel for a Sustainable Ocean Economy: better management and technological innovation can enable a sixfold increase in the supply of food from the ocean compared to current levels. 'Where do marine Ingredients stand? Our message is clear: blue foods should be considered as a key part of the global food system. And with marine ingredients supporting the production of blue foods, it is obvious that marine ingredients should follow the same path. It is just impressive to think that with 1kg of marine raw materials, 5 kg of farmed fish are produced' Petter Johannessen, IFFO's Director general, stated.
Industry resilience and interesting developments in specific markets
Image credit: Thomas Baranowski on Flickr (CC BY 2.0) |
Marine ingredients' footprint: a positive story
By-products already make up one third of fishmeal and fish oil. But much more will come with the growth of the aquaculture sector, itself producing by-products, thus relieving pressure on the terrestrial environment, according to Anne Mette Baek, IFFO's President. The marine ingredients industry relies on a low carbon value chain, from fishing methods to production and processing equipment. With climate change disrupting institutions, management systems, fishing operations, offloading/ processing, markets and consumption patterns, adaptation can be more than a zero-sum game, if properly implemented. This was discussed during the webinar's climate change panel discussion, which looked at implications of ocean warming: a 4.1 percent decline in the maximum sustainable yield has been observed over the past 80 years, according to FAO's Director of the Fisheries and Aquaculture Division, Manuel Barange.
Collaboration at all levels
Distributional changes in the biomass, although not geographically uniform, will make negotiations between states and regional frameworks even more instrumental. Adaptation should also be addressed through a value chain approach: adaptation becomes possible only if it is followed throughout the value chain. A library of actions taken by IFFO members towards meeting the Sustainable development goals highlights the interconnection of challenges and opportunities.
Challenges such as IUU, potential of new raw materials or life cycle assessments, must be addressed through a collective lens. This is the aim of the newly launched Global Roundtable on Marine Ingredients, which IFFO and Sustainable Fisheries Partnership announced at the start of the webinar through a keynote speech by its independent chair, Arni Mathiesen.
For more information visit the IFFO website, HERE.
The Aquaculturists
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