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 Shrimp-Farming Report Strong on Attack, Weak on Facts

 

 EJF Ignores Industry Progress
 
 A June report published by the Environmental Justice Foundation painted a  negative view of shrimp farming while failing to recognize the industry's ongoing  improvements in farming practices and management.
 
 While the Global Aquaculture Alliance recognizes past abuses and works  collaboratively with groups like EJF to further improve global shrimp-farming  practices, it disputes several points in EJF's "Smash & Grab" report.
 
 "Up to 38% of global mangrove loss has been attributed to shrimp farming,"  the report states.  This figure was pulled out of context from a study published  in Bioscience in 2001 by Boston University's Ivan Valiela and co-workers. 
 
 A number in the 4-10% range is more accurate, according to a 1999 Auburn  University report by Laurence Massaut on "Mangrove Management and Shrimp  Aquaculture" and a 1998 report in Scientific American by Jason Clay and Claude Boyd  titled "Shrimp Aquaculture and the Environment."
 
 The EJF statement that the use of fishmeal as a feed ingredient places  "additional pressure" on marine reserves is misleading.  A 1994 paper by Garcia and  Newton of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations  categorized fishmeal stocks as neither overfished nor depleted. 
 
 Except for El Niņo years, fishmeal production has been stable for the last  two decades.  At the 2002 Conference on Seafood Byproducts in Alaska, USA,  Ronald Hardy estimated that fishmeal consumption by shrimp farming merely diverts   7.6% of fishmeal from its traditional use as an ingredient in pig and poultry  feeds. 
 
 "Smash & Grab" also implies that the fish used to manufacture fishmeal  would  be more efficiently fed directly to people.  It fails to mention that these  small, boney, oily fish are generally considered unsuitable for human  consumption.
 
 To bolster its claim that many shrimp farms are unsustainable, the report  states: "In Thailand, a production crash is estimated to have led to 45,000 ha of  shrimp farms being abandoned in 1990. Consequently, around 90% of shrimp  farmers lost their businesses." 
 
 FAO statistics, however, indicate that Thailand's production of farmed shrimp  increased steadily from 93,496 tons in 1989 to 119,510 in 1990, and 162,051  in 1991. This region is now producing 300,000 tons per year and continues to  grow. 
 
 The EJF report contains emotional photographs and stories about alleged  human  rights abuses.  Many of the anecdotes were gathered in Bangladesh, a  developing country with high population density, low income levels and limited law  enforcement.
 
 Shrimp farming is one of few income sources in Bangladesh's poverty-stricken  coastal communities. Jamuna Basu, a widow in Phaltita village in Bagerhat,  said, "I could not survive with any honor if I did not do shrimp farming and earn  enough for my own livelihood."
 
 In Bangladesh, aquaculture directly employs over 600,000 individuals and  benefits 3.5 million, if their families are included. A critical goal of the  country's new Seal of Quality Program for shrimp farming is regulation of child  labor. 
 
 "Smash & Grab" overlooks many improvements in shrimp-farming practices.  The  practice of collecting postlarvae from the wild, for example, has been  eliminated in most regions.  The switch to hatchery-reared postlarvae eliminates  losses of other organisms captured with wild shrimp postlarvae and also increases  returns for farmers through disease control, cost reduction and selective  breeding. 
 
 The practice of relying on high rates of water exchange in ponds was  radically reduced in the last decade from 10-30% per day to 0-5% per day in most  locations.  This reduction has direct environmental benefits in terms of lower  organic enrichment of receiving water bodies. 
 
 Shrimp losses from viral epidemics that are harmless to humans are now  avoidable through the use of sensitive diagnostic testing and improved farm  management. Newly developed lines of shrimp are disease-free and disease-resistant.
 
 Another promising industry development is the formation of Aquaculture  Certification Council, Inc., which performs certifications of shrimp farms and  processing plants for compliance with environmental, social and food safety  standards. The program includes traceability and envisions the
incorporation of feed  mills and hatcheries in the future. 
 
 For additional information on how aquaculture is improving its practices and  providing jobs while raising quality seafood for the world's growing  population, visit http://www.gaalliance.org or contact the Global Aquaculture Alliance
 office: telephone +1-314-293-5500,
e-mail gaa1@attglobal.net.

GAA is an  international, nonprofit trade association dedicated to advancing environmentally

 and socially responsible aquaculture.