This is welcome news. Even more welcome is that the process
conserves water. It appears to barely
waste any at all. Thus a growing
operation can be placed directly near or even in a large urban centre. This makes it easy to supply fresh shrimp
directly to the market which has rarely been possible before. You really had to go fishing and pop them
fresh.
Since shrimp food consists of
phytoplankton and artificial substitutes, there is no particular pressure on
external food chains.
In the first plant most of a
million pounds will be produced each year on 70,000 square feet. I suspect that building up is even an option
here.
I expect that we will all see
local facilities been built inside the next decade to supply our local market
and I expect we will soon see cheap fresh shrimp become almost a staple in our
diets. This will also eliminate the frozen
shrimp export market simply because of quality differences.
Another aside is that this
particular protocol is effectively unlimited in its ability to supply human
populations with high quality protein. I
cannot say that about any form of animal husbandry and many other forms of
agriculture. It is even suitable for
space habitats and colonies on Mars.
New shrimp technology could speed up race to feed the world
Innovative stacked system could revitalize U.S. shrimp industry
September 28, 2011By: Rod Santa Ana
Dr. Addison Lawrence, left, points to the lower section of his
super-intensive stacked raceway shrimp production system to Dr. Maurice Kemp,
president of Royal Caridea. (AgriLife Research photo by Patty Waits Beasley)
PORT ARANSAS — They may look like bunk beds on steroids, but a
new shrimp production technology developed by a Texas
AgriLife Research scientist near Corpus
Christi promises to revolutionize how shrimp make it
to our tables.
The patent-pending technology, known as super-intensive stacked
raceways, was created by Dr. Addison Lawrence at the Texas AgriLife Research Mariculture
Laboratory at Port Aransas, who says the system is able to produce
record-setting amounts of shrimp.
“We’re able to produce jumbo size shrimp, each weighing 1.1 ounces,
known as U15 shrimp, which gives us world record production of up to 25
kilograms of shrimp per cubic meter of water using either zero water exchange
and/or recirculating water,” he said.
At this rate of production, Lawrence
said commercial shrimp producers will have the potential to vastly increase
their profit margins.
A world-wide license for the new technology has been awarded to Royal
Caridea, headed by Dr. Maurice Kemp, president. Sub-licenses are being
considered for other countries, including Ecuador ,
Chile , Colombia , Mexico ,
Canada , People’s Republic of
China , Germany , Czech
Republic and Russia .
“Order a plate of shrimp at any U.S. restaurant, even along the coast,
and chances are you’ll be served shrimp farmed in Southeast Asia and frozen two
to four times before it got to your table,” Lawrence said. “That’s because the U.S.
imports about 90 percent of the shrimp it consumes, with a value of about $4
billion annually.”
In addition to contributing to a foreign trade deficit, imported shrimp
also bring with them environmental and quality control issues, he said.
“They are grown in open ponds and treated sometimes with antibiotics
banned in this country, creating a negative impact on wetlands and human
consumption,” Lawrence
said. “About 90 percent of sea life in the world spends some portion of their
life in the wetlands, thus making wetlands essential for the sustainability of
food from the oceans. Uncontrolled use of antibiotics creates its own problems
for the wetlands and consumers.
But because Thailand, India, Vietnam and other countries in the
tropics can grow two or three crops of shrimp per year compared to just one
crop in the U.S., it’s hard to compete.”
Until now, Lawrence
added.
A prototype of the new system has been constructed in a darkened room
just feet from its creator’s office. The shrimp grow in four columns of
raceways stacked four high. These raceways are long tubs with circulating water
of only 5- to 7-inches average depth. As the shrimp develop, they are
transferred to a raceway below. Baby shrimp are added to the top raceway, while
the more mature shrimp in the lower raceways are harvested.
“Simplicity is the key here,” said Lawrence . “Some of history’s most creative,
innovative inventions are based on very simple logic. Keep it simple.”
But the results of these simple tanks — the amount of shrimp that can
be harvested — are astounding, Lawrence
said.
“These tanks require stringent control and supervision, 24/7 monitoring
with computers tracking the shrimp,” he said. “But properly run, these
systems can produce up to 1 million pounds of shrimp per acre of water, or two
acres of land per year,” he said “That’s far superior to traditional shrimp
farms in the U.S. that can produce only up to 20,000 pounds of shrimp per acre
of water per year. In tropical countries that have year-round growing seasons,
they can produce up to 60,000 pounds of shrimp per year.”
Developing the stacked raceway system is the culmination of Lawrence ’s 50-year career
in aquaculture, he said. Along the way he’s developed various components of the
new system, including the patent-pending feed (co-inventor) for growing the
shrimp, the closed water system using zero exchange and recirculating, a unique
raceway bottom design and aeration system and other technologies.
The vision for his creation includes stacked raceway facilities near
major metropolitan areas throughout the country, producing live, fresh,
never-frozen or fresh-frozen shrimp to be available every day of the year.
“Most Americans have never tasted fresh shrimp,” he said. “There is a
huge demand for high-quality shrimp. At a nearby IGA supermarket, we
test-marketed shrimp produced in these raceways and they sold out in a matter
of hours. They would surely bring premium prices at supermarkets and
restaurants in New York , Chicago ,
Las Vegas and
other large cities. But more importantly, these systems could provide the
protein that a booming world population desperately needs.”
“Where will the necessary protein come from?” he asked. “The only way
to feed the world, I think, is with aquaculture. We can’t catch more fish or
shrimp; we’re at a maximum sustained yield, so these systems would not compete
with fishermen.”
China, currently a shrimp exporter, will soon become a net importer of
shrimp, which will push shrimp prices upward, said Kemp, president of Royal
Caridea.
The world’s first commercial application of Lawrence ’s stacked raceways will break ground
just miles from his office in Port Aransas, according to Kemp. His company will
own and operate the project.
“We’ll construct a facility of about 70,000 square feet, hire 15 to
20 people, some of them with advanced degrees, and produce shrimp year-round.
We expect to produce some 835,000 pounds of shrimp per year,” he said.
“Also of significance is that this technology will allow shrimp farms
to be built inland in proximity to major metropolitan areas and provide live,
fresh-dead and fresh-frozen shrimp on a daily basis,” Kemp added.
Lawrence said based on high growth rates and high survival and
production levels, economic data shows an estimated rate of return of 25
percent to 60 percent.
“There are no disease problems; it’s biosecure. So, with predictable
high internal rates of return, the system is economically viable. But the best
part is, it’s totally organic with high-quality protein available every day of
the year.”
For more information, contact Lawrence
at 361-749-4625, extension 223, or 361-443-6921, or smpall@yahoo.com. Also, Patty Beasley at
361-749-4625, extension 221, orsmppwb@yahoo.com.
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