Maine aquafarms can feed global demand: 鈥楤angor Daily News鈥 publishes op-ed by Barry Costa-Pierce

Barry Costa-Pierce Op-ed published in the Bangor Daily News
Barry Costa-Pierce Op-ed published in the Bangor Daily News

Land-based salmon farms proposed for Belfast and Bucksport would create an extraordinary opportunity for Maine communities.

In an op-ed published by the , Barry Costa-Pierce, Ph.D., Henry L. & Grace Doherty Professor of Marine Sciences and executive director of 新香港六合彩资料 NORTH: Institute for North Atlantic Studies, says the time is right to seize the opportunity.

Costa-Pierce writes that after more than 30 years of research and development, the science of recirculating aquaculture systems on land is finally here, making it possible to farm fish without the use of net pens in the ocean.

鈥淩ecirculating aquaculture systems are more costly, but they enable fish farms to be part of a true recycling aquaculture economy where the wastes may become more valuable than the fish fillets themselves, as they are used in new products from animal feed to pharmaceuticals,鈥 writes Costa-Pierce.

 He says we must find ways to increase our food sources without continuing to rely mainly on traditional farming.

Costa-Pierce explains, that is an issue for all of humanity to face. 鈥淔ish account only for 15.7 percent of global animal protein consumption. By 2050, we鈥檒l need to increase food production by about 50 percent to 75 percent to feed a planet of 10 billion. If we expect to get this protein from the land, most of the world鈥檚 last great natural areas will be destroyed by agriculture鈥檚 expansion. We must find ways to sustainably farm aquatic species to save Mother Earth.鈥

According to Costa-Pierce, the salmon farms can provide those additional food supplies, while also creating jobs for the future.

鈥淟and-based aquaculture can create hundreds of knowledge-based jobs鈥, stated Costa-Pierce. 鈥淥ur universities could be global centers of excellence in education, research and business outreach.鈥