Sunday, October 7, 2012

Aquaculture potential


Mercopress reports 

UN aquaculture initiative to help low-income countries fight hunger





A United Nations-backed initiative that will form partnerships among governments, development agencies and universities has been launched to better understand how aquaculture can help low-income countries fight hunger.


“The project will work closely with fish farming communities and will focus on field research in many major aquaculture countries in the developing world,” said Rohana Subasinghe, a senior expert of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) on aquaculture and coordinator of the project.
“It will develop tools and methodologies to help key partners to develop policies geared to improving aquaculture’s contribution to food and nutrition security.”

Aquaculture is a no brainer with regard to developing new sources of protein. From a New Zealand perspective aquaculture offers huge opportunities, something that seems to scare the crap out of our governments be they left ( Labour ) or right ( National ). Of course that is again down to the Greens who seem to view starvation in the third world as an environmentally friendly solution to, global warming, high exchange rates....
Aquaculture, which involves cultivating fresh water and saltwater populations of fish under controlled conditions as opposed to catching fish in the wild, is the world’s fastest growing source of animal protein, growing by more than 60% between 2000 and 2008, from 32.4 million tons to 52.5 million tons. Nearly 50% of the fish for consumption comes from this practice.

Think about NZ. A small country to be sure but with the fifth largest in the world oceanic territory. 
Although aquaculture is widely regarded to play a pivotal role in fighting hunger, little is known about its exact impact on food and nutrition security and poverty alleviation in developing countries. However, given population growth projections, aquaculture will need to expand to meet future demand for fish, FAO said in a news release.
The initiative –Aquaculture for Food Security, Poverty Alleviation and Nutrition (AFSPAN) – will examine low-income food-deficit countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America to develop sustainable fishing policies and support the livelihoods of millions of small-scale fish farmers.

There are some very innovative aquaculture initiatives happening in Zimbabwe independent I might add of the government of Zimbabwe.
AFSPAN will also develop new ways to quantify the contribution of aquaculture with systematic and quantitative assessments, and elaborate strategies for improving the impact of aquaculture on food and nutrition security and poverty alleviation.
The three-year project will be funded by the European Union (EU) with one million Euros, which will be managed by FAO in partnership with a global alliance of 20 development agencies, governments and universities.

I think an investment of just 1 million euros is a bit lame.

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