Indonesia aims for sustainable fish farming with ‘aquaculture villages’ 
By Luh De Suriyani, M Ambari ID Source: mongabay 1/7/2022
Luh De Suriyani, M Ambari
ndonesia plans to have a network of 136 villages dedicated to aquaculture by the end of this year.
The initiative is part of the government’s efforts to boost exports of its world-renowned aquaculture commodities, namely shrimp, lobster, crab and seaweed.
Experts have welcomed the plan, but say it must be supported by sound environmental planning, particularly avoiding the clearing of mangrove forests and ensuring proper waste management.
Indonesia is one of the top exporters of farmed seafood, but fish farming in the country has long come at the expense of carbon-rich mangrove forests and other important coastal ecosystems.
 

The Indonesian government plans to have a network of dozens of villages with aquaculture farms by the end of the year, in a bid to spur the post-pandemic economic recovery by catering to global demand for farmed seafood.

Indonesia’s fisheries ministry said in December that it has established six of these so-called aquaculture villages and would add 130 more by the end of 2022. The villages will cultivate high-value aquaculture commodities, including shrimp, lobster, crab and seaweed.

“Boosting production of commodities for exports comes first,” TB Haeru Rahayu, the ministry’s director-general of aquaculture fisheries, said at an online event. He added the program would strengthen the country’s food security and create new jobs.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
3326State backs limited fishing of goliath grouperfox132021-10-06US
3327How to Keep a Small Aquarium Without Being Cruel to the Fishlifehacker2021-09-27US
3328Britain angers France over fishing boat licencesrte2021-09-28IE
3329Fish fertilize corals and seagrasses but not the way you thinkflu2021-09-28PA
3330How illegal fishing off Cameroon’s coast worsens maritime securitytheconversation2021-09-29CM
3331Female cleaner fish can judge when to cheat without getting caughtnewscientist2021-09-30ID
3332How to save an endangered fish? Eat their enemies, say N.S. conservation groupsCBC News2021-10-01CA
3333Grantham couple upset after pet fish of 30 years killed following otter attackgranthamjournal2021-10-04UK
3334San Marcos fish recommended to be declared extinct by U.S. governmentkxan2021-10-04US
3335British Teenager Catches Behemoth 96-Pound Wels Catfishfieldandstream2021-09-24UK
3336Fishing on the L.A. River without a poletheeastsiderla2021-09-26US
3337The redfish fishery is returning. So is angst about quotasCBC News2021-10-16CA
3338Less Than 50 Sockeye Salmon Return to Idaho’s Red Fish Lakenewsradio13102021-10-11US
3339Alaska’s vanishing salmon push Yukon River tribes to brinkopb2021-10-02US
3340Jeremy Wade on the ‘weirdest’ creature he had crossed paths withentertainment2021-09-27US
3341DEEP officials recall declaration for massive catfish caught in Coventry FOX61 2021-09-29US
3342Hendersonville man catches another monster fish on Old Hickory Lake by accidentNashville Tennessean2021-09-19US
3343Anglers feared red tide would create a ‘dead zone’ in Tampa Bay.bradenton2021-09-24US
3344Cornwall fisherman questions 'absurd' tracking system for small boatsbbc2021-09-19UK
3345The White Lady, endemic fish of the Yucatan Peninsula threatened by water pollutiontheyucatantimes2021-09-24US
3346No violations at salmon farm where more than 100,000 fish died, state saysbangordailynews2021-09-27US
3347Tasmania’s salmon industry detonates underwater bombs to scare away seals – but at what cost?theconversation2021-09-16AU
3348Outrage as supertrawler fishing boats return to East and West Sussex coastsussexlive2021-09-20UK
3349Video shows sea ‘bubbling’ at St Leonards as mackerel force whitebait fish on to beachhastings observer2021-09-20UK
3350Ipswich ‘underwater highway’ recognised for protecting lungfish in new documentaryipswichfirst2021-09-17AU

215 216 217 133 of [218 - pages.]