IN BRIEF - Frozen pollock imports decreased by 10% in March
SOUTH KOREA
Thursday, April 11, 2024
Frozen pollock imported into Korea in March 2024 amounted to 18,606 tons, a 10% decrease compared to the 20,677 tons imported in the same period in 2023.
Total imports amounted to 45,766 tons, down 13% from 52,891 tons in the same period last year, accounting for 19.4% of the total seafood imports of 236,154 tons.
As of March, 44,925 tons, or 98%, of frozen pollock were imported from Russia, 817 tons, or 1.8%, from the United States, and the remaining 24 tons were imported from China.
The import price by country was highest for the Chinese origin at USD 1.71/kg, the US origin at USD 1.20/kg, and the Russian at USD 0.96/kg.
The import amount of frozen pollock in March was USD 17.24 million, down 17% from USD 20.79 million in the same period of 2023, and the total import amount was USD 43.92 million, down 20% from USD 54.68 million in the same period last year. The average import price was USD 0.96/kg, 7% lower than the previous year's USD 1.03/kg.
A new, low-cost Internet of Things (IoT) sensor system could help the aquaculture sector in developing countries fight against the effects of climate change by enabling fish farmers to detect, monitor, and manage water quality in real time.
Aqsen Innovations has partnered with CENSIS – Scotland’s innovation centre for sensing, imaging, and IoT technologies – to advance the development of its sensor system, Aquasense. This can be adapted to test for a range of variables in water, such as temperature, oxygenation, salinity, and the presence of chemicals such as chlorine.
Source: The Fish Site l Read the full article here
The European Commission has published two staff working documents to support EU Member States in facilitating the sustainable growth of aquaculture.
This comes in response to aquaculture producers’ calls to reduce the administrative burden on establishing and operating aquaculture sites in the EU.
The objective is to unlock the potential of aquaculture in the EU. Despite all of its benefits, aquaculture production in the EU has not grown at the same pace as in other parts of the world.
The European Commission's negotiations to sign a free trade agreement with Thailand have perhaps forged not strangers, but unprecedented bedfellows. The NGOs Oceana and EJF (Environment Justice Foundation), the fishing association Europêche, and the canning association Anfaco-Cecopesca met with the general director of Fisheries and Maritime Affairs (DG Mare), to convey to Charlina Vitcheva their concern that countries such as Indonesia, the Philippines and, above all, Thailand, can take advantage of the change in the political cycle in the EU to blur the red lines that the community industry and conservationists had marked, such as the consideration of tuna as a sensitive product, the demand for equal rules of gambling or the fight against illegal fishing.
Source: La Voz de Galicia l Read the full article here
Within the framework of World Tuna Day, the Mexican holding company Grupomar announces that it is strengthening its commitment and actions regarding sustainability to contribute to the preservation of the populations of this key species for global nutrition.
To help meet this goal linked to UN Sustainable Development Goal 14 for the preservation of Underwater Life, Grupomar will increase its efforts: carrying out sustainable fishing practices such as the Purse Seine Art (a method that protects the accidental capture of other species ); through the On-Board Observer program of the Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission in its tuna fleet
Source: Industrias Pesqueras l Read the full article here
Global volumes of tuna sold with the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC)’s blue ecolabel grew by almost 10% year on year from 196,363 metric tonnes in 2022-23 to 217,300 mt in 2023-24, according to data from the MSC.
Volumes sold are up almost 60% in the two years from 2020-21 when global sales were just 137,600 mt.
Most tuna carrying the MSC certified label is tinned but the data also includes sales of wet tuna from the fish counter, frozen, in ready meals or pet food.?
Author: Oliver McBride / The fishing Daily l Read the full article here
Bue Salmon conducted its first harvest earlier this week.
Norwegian land-based salmon producer Bue Salmon has announced the harvest of 90 metric tons of salmon for the first quarter of 2024.
The latest batch of salmon, initially stocked at 100 grams in June 2023, reached an average harvest weight of over 4 kilograms, with 95% rated as superior quality.
The largest individual fish weighed over 8 kg. The mortality rate for the batch was approximately 2%.
Source: SalmonBusiness l Read the full article here
Nutreco has opened a state-of-the-art fish and poultry feed production facility in Ibadan, Oyo State, Nigeria, through its operating company, which trades under the names Skretting and Trouw Nutrition. The new facility, valued at €25,000,000, was built on a 170,000 square meter site and has the capacity to manufacture 125,000 tonnes of extruded fish feed and animal feed per year. The plant was officially inaugurated on April 17, 2024 by the Executive Governor of Oyo State, Seyi Makinde.
Source: iPac.acuculture l Read the full article here
The government of France has announced new changes to its Label Rouge quality mark, which the Scottish salmon industry says will help expand its markets.
Label Rouge is a French mark of quality originally established in the 1960s that places stringent quality standards on food producers. For Scotland-based salmon producers, Label Rouge has long been an important part of their overall marketing strategy in Europe, and the product was the first non-French product to ever be awarded the quality label.
Author: Chris Chase / SeafodoSource l Read the full article here
In April 2018, the ambitious “Project for the Development of Monitoring Methods and Prediction System for Harmful Algal Blooms for Sustainable Aquaculture and Coastal Fisheries in Chile” began, also known as Algae Monitoring in Chile (MACH). , scientific and technological collaborative effort between Chile and Japan with a holistic-ecosystem view that recognizes that the phenomenon of Harmful Algal Blooms (HAB) depends on the environmental quality and the biotic diversity of the ecosystem, as a result of which collaborative relationships are established (mutualism) and antagonistic (parasitism) between microbial diversity and phytoplanktonic species.
Source: MundoAcuicola l Read the full article here
A bill which seeks to expedite the review and approval process for mariculture projects in California has received bipartisan support, passing onto the state Appropriations Committee.
Currently in the process of consideration by the California Assembly, a bill which seeks to improve the efficiency of review processes for aquaculture projects has received support across both political parties and has been passed on to the next phase of the legislative process.
Source: The Fish Site l Read the full article here
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