As the fastest growing animal protein, aquaculture is the
centre of conversations beyond the circle of animal agriculture. And the most
common circle these days discussing aquaculture is soybean
the following news was recently published on animal.agwired.com
The US Soybean Export Council (USSEC) and Soy Aquaculture Alliance (SAA) joined
forces to host the 2017 Aquaculture Educational Opportunity in Panama City,
Panama. US soybean growers, researchers and aquaculture experts gathered to
take in the latest and visit the Panama Canal to witness the centre of global
trade and the import role US soy plays in the international economy.
SAA Executive Director, Bridget Owen, has spent her career devoted to the soybean community working at various levels of the supply chain.
Now on the receiving end of the protein, Bridget shares the role of SAA and what this growth in aquaculture means to US soybean growers.
SAA manages aquaculture research and looks at ways to increase the use of US soy in aqua feeds globally. The Alliance also works to grow the US aquaculture industry.
“We would like to see more fish production, more shrimp production here at home. There are opportunities for that,” Ms Owen said.
She added that the demand for seafood as a whole is growing at an incredible rate, is the fastest growing food production sector and the fastest growing use of soy.
Simply put, “we need more product and to feed the growth, more soy is needed.”
“We have incredible resources that allow us to be competitive. Number one is our US soybean growers who produce a very high quality, consistent and cost effective product. US is a fantastic resource for the aquaculture industry in the US and overseas. We also have incredible transportation resources and access through the Panama Canal to overseas markets lets us compete. The ability to move our soy products overseas quickly and in a cost efficient, secure way is important to our customers. There are some many ways US soy delivers to our customers domestically and internationally and our infrastructure is a part of that,” she added.
the following news was recently published on animal.agwired.com
Image: United Soybean Board |
SAA Executive Director, Bridget Owen, has spent her career devoted to the soybean community working at various levels of the supply chain.
Now on the receiving end of the protein, Bridget shares the role of SAA and what this growth in aquaculture means to US soybean growers.
SAA manages aquaculture research and looks at ways to increase the use of US soy in aqua feeds globally. The Alliance also works to grow the US aquaculture industry.
“We would like to see more fish production, more shrimp production here at home. There are opportunities for that,” Ms Owen said.
She added that the demand for seafood as a whole is growing at an incredible rate, is the fastest growing food production sector and the fastest growing use of soy.
Simply put, “we need more product and to feed the growth, more soy is needed.”
“We have incredible resources that allow us to be competitive. Number one is our US soybean growers who produce a very high quality, consistent and cost effective product. US is a fantastic resource for the aquaculture industry in the US and overseas. We also have incredible transportation resources and access through the Panama Canal to overseas markets lets us compete. The ability to move our soy products overseas quickly and in a cost efficient, secure way is important to our customers. There are some many ways US soy delivers to our customers domestically and internationally and our infrastructure is a part of that,” she added.
Read more HERE.
The Aquaculturists
This blog is maintained by The Aquaculturists staff and is supported by the
magazine International Aquafeed which is published by Perendale Publishers Ltd
For additional daily news from aquaculture around the world: aquaculture-news
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