Farming Fish in the Sky 
By Megan Tatum SG Source: hakaimagazine 2/8/2021

Sometime soon, Apollo Aquaculture Group will have one of the world’s largest vertical fish farms up and running in Singapore. Though construction has been delayed by COVID-19, the farm, once complete, will scale eight stories. Crucially, says the company, it won’t only be the farm’s height that sets it apart from the competition.

The high-tech facility will produce up to 3,000 tonnes of hybridized grouper, coral trout, and shrimp each year—with an efficiency, measured in fish per tonne of water, that is six times higher than established aquaculture operations in the Southeast Asian city-state, says spokesperson Crono Lee.
 

In doing so, the company hopes to become a major contributor to an ambitious plan to boost the food security of the small island city-state, which currently imports 90 percent of its food.

According to Ethan Chong Yih Tng, an associate professor at the Singapore Institute of Technology who is not involved with the company, this stacking of fish farms is one of the key initiatives that geographically small Singapore is looking at to achieve its ambitious “30 by 30” target for food security—to produce 30 percent of its nutritional needs locally by 2030.

Founded in 1969, Apollo isn’t a new arrival to aquaculture in Singapore. Since the 1970s, it has been breeding ornamental fish across its 300-odd farms in the region. But when Eric Ng took over the family business in 2009, he was quick to diversify into producing marine fish as food, borrowing methods from operations in Germany, Japan, and Israel, says Lee. The outcome was a three-story farm in Lim Chu Kang, a rare green spot on the outskirts of Singapore. That aquaculture facility has been in operation for nearly a decade.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
476Striped bass: no longer eclipsed by its hybrids?thefishsite2024-05-27US
477Fresh insights into Aeromonas hydrophila in aquaculturethefishsite2024-05-27US
478Oklahoma angler reels in 95-pound catfishFox News2024-05-28US
479Tired angler thought hed regret dropping another line inidahostatesman2024-05-16US
480In the mystery of Floridas bizarre spinning fish, a leading suspect has emergedmsn2024-05-12US
481Illinois Tried to Bait Restaurants With Carp But Customers Wont Bitechicago.eater2024-05-17US
482Recreational Fishing on the Klamath and Trinity Shut Down For the Second Consecutive Yearlostcoastoutpost2024-05-17US
483Paddlefish, East Grand Forks archery hunt and sturgeon nuggets that didnt make the cutechopress2024-05-25US
484Walleye fishing challenge offers prizes to anglers for fishing dataPort Huron Times Herald2024-05-24US
485Meet the farmer: Jasvir Singh Aujlathefishsite2024-05-26IN
486Community mourns thousands of fish lost as B.C. drought risk looms againbowenislandundercurrent2024-05-08CA
487Chinese scientists breed endangered fish speciesXinhua2024-05-09CN
488Anglers break records with whopping 40lb fishyahoo2024-05-11UK
489Meet the woman turning Yellowknife's fish waste into gardening goldCBC News2024-05-11CA
490This voracious U.S. catfish species is now in OntarioCBC News2024-05-06CA
491Georgia angler hooks unique-looking fishFox News2024-05-23US
492East Grand Forks woman reels in 56-inch sturgeonechopress2024-05-22US
493Nice weather equals a nice openerechopress2024-05-15US
494River creature — with intensely red eyes – found as new species in Brazilmiamiherald2024-05-22BR
495Canada and U.S. suspend all fishing for Canadian-origin Yukon River chinook salmonbrandonsun2024-05-22CA
496Судак и «море»ohotniki2024-05-15RU
497Researchers optimise feeds for red snapper aquaculturethefishsite2024-05-22SG
498Wanda Fish unveils its first cell-cultivated bluefin tuna productthefishsite2024-05-21IL
499Colorado angler helps authorities crack down on gigantic invasive fishFox News2024-05-15US
500Two Georgia anglers recognized as newest state saltwater record holdersFox News2024-05-15US

217 218 219 19 of [220 - pages.]