Showing posts with label China. Show all posts
Showing posts with label China. Show all posts

Sunday, June 1, 2014

THE BLUE REVOLUTION HAS BEGUN

Joe Quirk of the Seasteading Institute referred me to his posting on "National Geographic:  Can the Blue Revolution Solve the Worlds Food Puzzle?"  You can read the NG article by clicking here, which starts with:

It should be a surprise to most that in tonnage, there is now more farmed fish (70 million tons/year) than beef!!!  A few more bullets:
  • Fish farming began in China 2500 years ago with carp.
  • China now produces 42 million tons/year, mostly carp and tilapia (Above, did you know that this fish is a mouth breeder?  Yes, hard to see, but the eggs are kept in the mouth.), in ponds, rivers, lakes and the ocean.  
  • Here are two graphs from Taiwan:


  • Aquaculture has expanded 14-fold since 1980.
  • Seafood demand will expand by 35% over the next two decades.
  • As wild fish production has stagnated, all this increase will come from farms (click on the graphic to actually read it).

  • 90% of farmed fish are in Asia.
  • With respect to farming, fish production is very efficient:

  • China dominates global aquaculture.
  • However, many of these developments have destroyed desirable habitats, caused severe water pollution and induced a myriad of food-safety scares.
  • The USA now imports 90% of its seafood, only 2% of which is inspected by the Food and Drug Administration.
  • Disease is the bane of fish farms, as infectious anemia has killed off $2 billion worth of salmon in Chile, and the shrimp industry of Mozambique was wiped out in  2011.
Here are most frequently asked questions answered by Fishwatch of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (click on any question to view the answer):

All the above continues to talk about cages, fish feeding and the conventional.  While entertaining with fabulous National Geographic photos, the theme is sadly uninspired.  For a quarter century now, I have been cheerleading the concept of a real Blue Revolution, particularly with respect to next generation fisheries, or an Ultimate Ocean Ranch (click on it to read my Huffington Post article on that subject):
  • Sited in the open ocean, away from coastal environments.
  • Linked to the cold water effluent (high in nutrients and pathogen free) of OTEC plantships.
  • Eliminate the need for cages with nutrient or temperature barriers.
  • Eliminate the need for feed, as the system will close the growth cycle for maintaining a sustainable seafood population.
  • Acoutiscally harvest.
  • Use of robotics to protect byproduct.

Of course, the ultimate ocean ranch has not yet begun because there is today no commercial OTEC facility anywhere.  Thus, much of what is happening today is that necessary bridge to the future.  The Seasteading Institute and Blue Revolution Hawaii have taken on the challenge, with a few competitors from Japan and Europe.
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Friday, June 10, 2011

ZHEJIANG OCEAN UNIVERSITY AND BLUE REVOLUTION HAWAII SIGN MOU


Blue Revolution Hawaii today hosted five professors from Zhejiang Ocean University:

Professor Dajun Zhou (group leader, second from the right)
Vice President of Zhejiang Ocean University

Professor Zhibo Tang (tour leader, in the mddle)
Director of Scientific Research Department

Professor Shilai Wang
Director of Teaching Affairs

Dean Guofang Ding
School of Food Science, Pharmacy and Medicine

Dean Yin Wang, Dean
School of Social Sciences



We signed a Memorandum of Agreement (a following posting will provide details):




Several interesting bits of information:

1.  A bridge (just part of it is to the right) finally connected Zhoushan Island (where Zhejiang Ocean University is located) to the mainland only last year at a cost of about two billion dollars.  These islands (and there are a thousand of them) were then made a Special Economic Zone.  Several more bridges will be built.  There are construction canes all over the island.

2.  The city of Shenzen, located close to Hong Kong was named a Special Economic Zone in 1988.  Depending on who you ask, the population is today 9 million, 14 million, 20 million or 30 million.  This means that the population grew by a factor of 30 to 100 over the past 23 years.

3.  Zhoushan now has a population of about a million.  Projections are that this will "only" increase to 3 million to 5 million by the Year 2020.

4.  Zhejiang Ocean University was formed in 1988, but already has 15,000 students.  A new campus at the coastline is being constructed.  I would not be surprised if this someday becomes the pre-eminent ocean institution for the country.

A sister city relationship is being discussed between Zhoushan and Honolulu.  Hawaii's primary link to China could well in time become these islands, located across the bay and south of Shanghai, for we have very similar interests and are the only island states of our respective countries.  [I was reminded that there, too, are Hainan and Taiwan, and, yes, we should form partnerships with all three locations.]

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