Government Keeps Offshore Aquaculture Afloat
While the federal government has spent millions of dollars funding offshore aquaculture research and demonstration projects on both U.S. coasts and in Hawaii and Puerto Rico, the commercial viability of the fledgling industry has yet to be proven.
The U.S. Department of Commerce strongly supports the National Offshore Aquaculture Act of 2007 and its purported promise for the nation’s economy. The department manages marine resources through the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and promotes new technology through the National Institute of Standards and Technology.
“Seafood contributes over $8 billion to the United States’ trade deficit. America imports 80 percent of its seafood and almost half of that is from aquaculture. A robust offshore aquaculture industry will help reverse this and will help drive economic growth,” 1 said Secretary of Commerce Carlos Gutierrez in April 2007. However, while the federal government has spent millions of dollars funding offshore aquaculture research and demonstration projects on both U.S. coasts and in Hawaii and Puerto Rico, the commercial viability of the fledgling industry has yet to be proven.
The National Offshore Aquaculture Act, H.R. 2010 and S. 1609, would allow companies to place fish farming cages in federal waters, three to 200 miles from shore. However, this type of aquaculture, called “offshore” or “open ocean” aquaculture, barely has been achieved on a small scale and, in most cases, with significant government support.
Randy Cates, president of the Hawaiian aquaculture company Cates International, admits that a significant investment of government funds would be needed to subsidize the development of an offshore aquaculture industry in the United States. “It will not make sense to pass [the National Offshore Aquaculture Act] unless we are willing to invest in this new industry,” Cates said. “I strongly believe that we will need a level of around $50 million per year to adequately satisfy needs on a national level.” 2
Although current demonstration projects are sited in state waters, up to three miles from shore, the government has presented them as models of eventual operations in the federal waters farther from shore.
Hawaii Projects
Hawaii hosts two operations in its waters. Cates International, born out of the Department of Commerce-funded Hawaii Offshore Aquaculture Research Program, raises Pacific threadfin, also called moi, in four cages two miles off the coast of Oahu. Cates produces 750 tons of fish annually, but hopes to acquire another ocean lease and build a hatchery to scale up to 7,000 tons per year.3
The second aquaculture venture, Kona Blue Water Farms, produces amberjack, sold as Kona Kampachi®. The operation, which registered $2 million in sales in 2006, distributes to Whole Foods supermarkets and seafood restaurants on the U.S. West coast.4, 5 Kona Blue plans to add 14 cages to the existing six that are moored a half mile off the coast of Kona Island.6
Both the Department of Commerce’s NOAA and NIST agencies granted money to support offshore aquaculture in the state of Hawaii:
NOAA National Marine Aquaculture Initiative Grants
| Related Institution(s) | Year | Description | Grant amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| Oceanic Institute | FY 2006 | Hawaii Offshore Aquaculture Research Project: Project goals include environmental and health studies of Cates International and Kona Blue Water Farms, and sharing of information and technology with programs in NH, FL, and MS. | $400,000 |
| University of Hawaii, Cates International | FY 2004 |
Hawaii Offshore Aquaculture Research Project | $88,400 |
| University of Hawaii | FY 2004 | Acquire data on rate of sedimentation around offshore aquaculture cages | $20,000 |
| University of Hawaii, Oceanic Institute | FY 2002 | Hawaii Offshore Aquaculture Research Project: Research and development towards commercialization of OOA | $205,650 |
| University of Hawaii, Oceanic Institute, Cates International | FY 2001 | Hawaii Offshore Aquaculture Research Project | $450,000 |
| University of Hawaii | FY 2000 |
Evaluate sites for open ocean aquaculture | $118,682 |
| University of Hawaii, Oceanic Institute | FY 1999 | Hawaii Offshore Aquaculture Research Project | $150,000 |
Sources: “Recipients of the 2006 NOAA National Marine Aquaculture Initiative Grants.” National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, September 2006; McVey, Eileen M. Personal email correspondence. Aquaculture Librarian, NOAA Central Library, June 1, 2007.
NOAA Small Business Innovation Research Program Grants
| Related Institution | Year | Description | Grant amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cates International | FY 2004 | Test and evaluate automated fish feeding system and, add telemetry and monitoring equipment | $97,762 |
| Cates International | FY 2003 | Develop automated fish feeding system | $49,970 |
Sources: “Awards for Fiscal Year 2004.” Office of Research and Technology Applications, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration; “Awards for Fiscal Year 2003.” Office of Research and Technology Applications, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
National Institute of Standards and Technology Advanced Technology Program Grant
| Related Institution |
Year | Description | Grant amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kona Blue Water Farms | 2001 | Zooplankton harvesting for open ocean aquaculture feed | $1,499,090 |
Sources: “Overcoming an Impediment to Marine Fish Hatchery Culture: Zooplankton Harvesting and Mesocosm Culture.” Advanced Technology Program, National Institute of Standards and Technology
NOAA Saltonstall-Kennedy Grants
| Related Institution(s) | Year | Description | Grant amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| Black Pearls, Inc. (parent company of Kona Blue Farms until 2001) | FY 2002 | Rearing of deepwater snapper fry to be grown-out in nets pens and an offshore cage | $159,040 |
| Black Pearls, Inc. | FY 1998 | Obtain an ocean aquaculture lease and promote state level legislation to facilitate process | $99,540 |
Sources: Grable, Michael. “The Saltonstall-Kennedy Grant Program: Fisheries Research and Development. Report 2002.” Financial Services Division, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Aug. 1, 2002; “The Saltonstall-Kennedy Grant Program: Fisheries Research and Development. Report 1998.” Financial Services Division, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Aug. 1, 1998.
From 1998 to 2007, Kona Blue or its parent company, Black Pearls, Inc., received nearly $1.8 million and Cates received about $150,000 in grants from the Department of Commerce. The department also granted nearly $1.3 million for collaborative research in support of offshore aquaculture in Hawaii.
Florida/Puerto Rico Project
Two miles off Culebra, Puerto Rico, Snapperfarm, Inc. raises cobia in collaboration with researchers from the University of Miami and the University of Puerto Rico. The operation produces only 50 tons of fish per year in three cages, but hopes to increase production and acquire permits to add five more cages.8,9
However, University of Miami scientist Daniel Benetti admits that “low survival rates due to disease outbreaks both at the hatchery and at the growout stages are currently causing severe economic impact and compromising the commercial viability of the operations.” 10
The following Department of Commerce grants were used to support offshore aquaculture in the Caribbean:
NOAA National Marine Aquaculture Initiative Grants
| Related Institution(s) | Year | Description of Grant | Grant amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| University of Miami, Snapperfarm | FY 2006 | Environmental impacts of open ocean aquaculture |
$150,000 |
| University of Miami, Snapperfarm | FY 2006 | Cobia open ocean aquaculture demonstration project: Hatchery to Market | $400,000 |
| SC Dept. of Natural Resources, Snapperfarm |
FY 2006 | Aquaculture development; land-based demonstration project | $356,337 |
| University of Miami, Snapperfarm, AquaSense | FY 2004 | Hatchery & open ocean aquaculture for cobia and Florida pompano (a type of fish) in Puerto Rico and the Bahamas | $69,800 |
| University of Puerto Rico, University of Miami, NOAA Fisheries Puerto Rico, Snapperfarm | FY 2004 | Measure environmental impact of open ocean aquaculture in Florida and Puerto Rico waters | $69,800 |
| University of Puerto Rico |
FY 2004 | Environmental monitoring of open ocean aquaculture | $15,000 |
| University of Miami | FY 2003 | Hatchery production of snapper | $60,000 |
| University of Miami | FY 2002 | Geographic Information System siting for open ocean aquaculture | $27,420 |
| University of Miami | FY 2002 | Hatchery production of snapper | $159,950 |
| University of Miami, FL Dept. of Agriculture, Puerto Rico Department of Natural and Environmental Resources, Puerto Rico Coastal Zone Program | FY 2001 | Use Geographic Information System to identify sites for open ocean aquaculture cages in Caribbean and Florida | $60,000 |
| University of Miami, Florida International University, North Carolina State University, Southland Fisheries Corporation, and Florida Keys Community College | FY 2001 | Hatchery production of mutton snapper and cobia | $350,000 |
| Puerto Rican Commercial Aquaculture Research and Development Center, University of Miami | FY 2001 | Evaluate environmental, economic, and social impacts of open ocean aquaculture in Puerto Rico | $200,003 |
Sources: “Recipients of the 2006 NOAA National Marine Aquaculture Initiative Grants.” National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, September 2006; McVey, Eileen M. Personal email correspondence. Aquaculture Librarian, NOAA Central Library, June 1, 2007; McVey, Eileen M. Personal email correspondence. Aquaculture Librarian, NOAA Central Library, July 25, 2007; McVey, Eileen M. Personal email correspondence. Aquaculture Librarian, NOAA Central Library, June 1, 2007.
NOAA Small Business Innovation Research Program Grants
| Related Institution | Year | Description | Grant Amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| Snapperfarm | FY 2005 | Predator exclusion from open ocean aquaculture cages | $58,480 |
Sources: “Awards for Fiscal Year 2005.” Office of Research and Technology Applications, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
NOAA Saltonstall-Kennedy Grants
| Related Institution | Year | Description | Grant Amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| University of Puerto Rico | FY 2002 | Environmental Effects and Social Perceptions of Open Ocean Aquaculture | $363,357 |
Source: Grable, Michael. “The Saltonstall-Kennedy Grant Program: Fisheries Research and Development. Report 2002.” Financial Services Division, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Aug. 1, 2002.
The following Department of Agriculture appropriations did not specify whether the grants were offered to support offshore aquaculture research in Florida:
U.S. Department of Agriculture Appropriations
| State | Year | Description | Amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| Florida (unspecified) | FY 2006 | Aquaculture research (unspecified) | $300,000 |
| Florida (unspecified) | FY 2005 | Tropical aquaculture research (unspecified) | $213,000 |
| Florida (unspecified) | FY 2002 | Tropical aquaculture research (unspecified) | $194,000 |
| Florida (unspecified) | FY 2002 | Aquaculture research (unspecified) | $490,000 |
| Florida (unspecified) | FY 2001 | Tropical aquaculture research (unspecified) | $198,000 |
| Florida (unspecified) | FY 2001 | Aquaculture research (unspecified) | $446,000 |
Sources: H.R. 255, 109th Cong. (2006); H.R. 792, 108th Cong. (2005); H.R. 275, 107th Cong. (2002); H.R. 948, 106th Cong. (2001).
From 1999-2007, Snapperfarm, Inc. directly received close to $60,000 from the Department of Commerce for offshore aquaculture. Researchers also received close to $2.3 million in support of open ocean aquaculture in the Caribbean. Additionally, Congress appropriated more than $1.8 million of USDA funds for general aquaculture research in Florida.
New Hampshire/ New England Project
Richard Langan, director of the University of New Hampshire’s Atlantic Marine Aquaculture Center, has high hopes for offshore aquaculture. “Certainly the potential is in the many millions of dollars…,” 11 Langan said.
However, for the years 1997-2006, UNH sold only about 6,500 pounds of fish raised in offshore cages, totaling $23,711, despite receiving hundreds of thousands of dollars in government subsidies. In 2005 and 2006, the center made 11 sales of cod and 1 sale of cod guts to five Northeastern companies. Despite UNH’s statement to NOAA that “halibut, haddock and cod –– all of which have been raised from offshore cages –– have excellent potential for commercial development,” 12 the center had not sold any halibut or haddock as of 2006, according to UNH invoices obtained by Food & Water Watch through a public records request. Although UNH’s program is not a commercial operation, these figures indicate that in the 10 years since it was founded, the program has not demonstrated that open ocean aquaculture is commercially viable.
The New Hampshire hatchery, Great Bay Aquaculture, provides UNH and Snapperfarm with juvenile fish for offshore aquaculture. The company also plans to raise cod in cages off the Maine coast. George Nardi, head of Great Bay, echoes Cates’ request for more funding: “We need $50 million, not $5 million.” 13
The following Department of Commerce grants were used to support offshore aquaculture in New England:
NOAA National Marine Aquaculture Initiative Grant
| Related Institution(s) | Year | Description | Grant Amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| Great Bay Aquaculture, University of New Hampshire, University of Maine14 | FY 2006 | Open Ocean Aquaculture of cod, fish feed | $248,952 |
| University of Massachusetts, University of Delaware, South Carolina Sea Grant, Delaware Aquaculture Resource Center, MS/AL Sea Grant Law Center, Policy Center for Marine Bioscience and Technology, Coastal States Organization, Texas Sea Grant, Moonstone Oysters, Sea Web15 | FY 2001 | Legal rights and framework for marine aquaculture | $44,634 |
| University of New Hampshire | FY 2000 | Reducing the risk of open ocean aquaculture to protected species | $50,619 |
| Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution | FY 2000 | Improving regulatory framework for offshore aquaculture | $91,000 |
Sources: “Recipients of the 2006 NOAA National Marine Aquaculture Initiative Grants.” National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, September 2006; “National Strategic Initiative Project Summaries 2001.” Aquaculture Information Center, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration; McVey, Eileen M. Personal email correspondence. Aquaculture Librarian, NOAA Central Library, July 25, 2007.
NOAA Small Business Innovation Research Program Grants
| Related Institution(s) | Year | Description | Grant Amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| JPS Industries, University of New Hampshire | FY 2005 | Construct open ocean aquaculture cage to be deployed at UNH | $299,854 |
| Ocean Farm Technologies, University of Maine | FY 2005 | Harvest and fish transfer methods for open ocean aquaculture | $74,737 |
| JPS Industries, GreatBay Aquaculture, University of New Hampshire | FY 2004 | Development of an open ocean aquaculture cage | $74,796 |
| Net Systems, Inc., University of New Hampshire | FY 2004 | Test automated fish feeding system | $200,000 |
| Net Systems, Inc. Environmental Technologies, University of New Hampshire | FY 2003 | Develop automated fish feeding system | $50,000 |
Sources: “Awards for Fiscal Year 2005.” Office of Research and Technology Applications, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration; “Awards for Fiscal Year 2004.” Office of Research and Technology Applications, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration; “Awards for Fiscal Year 2003.” Office of Research and Technology Applications, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
NOAA Saltonstall-Kennedy Grants
| Related Institution(s) | Year | Description | Grant Amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| University of New Hampshire, Heritage Salmon | FY 2005 | Evaluate salmon net-pen for potential use in offshore aquaculture | $472,662 |
| University of Rhode Island | FY 2004 | Reduce stress and improve health of flatfish in open ocean aquaculture | $72,793 |
| Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution | FY 2004 | Economic Measures for Mitigating Risk and Encouraging Development of Offshore Aquaculture | $107,257 |
| University of Rhode Island | FY 2000 | Study stress and health of flatfish in open ocean aquaculture | $69,979 |
| Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution | FY 1999 | Economic and Legal Models for Offshore Aquaculture Regulation | $92,935 |
Sources: Grable, Michael. “The Saltonstall-Kennedy Grant Program: Fisheries Research and Development. Report 2005.” Financial Services Division, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Aug. 1, 2005; Grable, Michael. “The Saltonstall-Kennedy Grant Program: Fisheries Research and Development. Report 2004.” Financial Services Division, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Aug. 1, 2004; “The Saltonstall-Kennedy Grant Program: Fisheries Research and Development. Report 2000.” Financial Services Division, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Aug. 1, 2000; “The Saltonstall-Kennedy Grant Program: Fisheries Research and Development. Report 1999.” Financial Services Division, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Aug. 1, 1999.
From 1999 to 2007, Great Bay Aquaculture received nearly $250,000 from the Department of Commerce for open ocean aquaculture research. The agency granted more than $1.7 million for collaborative research in support of offshore aquaculture in New England.
California/Mexico Project
Hubbs–Sea World began trying to establish an open ocean aquaculture operation in 1998, when it received a NOAA grant to raise white sea bass offshore. However, at this time, Hubbs raises sea bass in near–shore net–pens.16 In 2006, Hubbs received a grant from NOAA to grow yellowtail amberjack in collaboration with a Mexican company in a popular tuna aquaculture site off the coast of Baja California, Mexico.
The following Department of Commerce grant supports Hubbs-Sea World’s offshore aquaculture research:
NOAA National Marine Aquaculture Initiative Grant
| Related Institution | Year | Description | Grant Amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hubbs–SeaWorld | 2006 | Open ocean aquaculture of yellow tail on a tuna farming lease site in Mexico | $505,553 |
Source: “Recipients of the 2006 NOAA National Marine Aquaculture Initiative Grants.” National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, September 2006.
NOAA Saltonstall-Kennedy Grants
| Related Institution | Year | Description | Grant Amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hubbs–SeaWorld | FY 199817 | Offshore aquaculture of white sea bass | $208,982 |
Source: “The Saltonstall-Kennedy Grant Program: Fisheries Research and Development. Report 1998.” Financial Services Division, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Aug. 1, 1998.
Hubbs-Sea World may or may not have used the following Department of Agriculture grant to support its offshore aquaculture research, as the precise project for this grant is not specified:
U.S. Department of Agriculture Appropriations
| Related Institution | Year | Description | Grant Amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hubbs–SeaWorld | FY 2006 | Aquaculture (unspecified) | $150,000 |
Source: H.R. 255, 109th Cong. (2006).
From 1998 to 2007, Hubbs-Sea World Research Institute received more than $700,000 from the Department of Commerce for open ocean aquaculture research.
Gulf of Mexico Projects
The Gulf Marine Institute of Technology owns an oil rig complex in Texas state waters and plans to attach offshore aquaculture cages to the rig, where they would raise cobia in cooperation with the University of Texas and Texas A&M University.18
The Gulf of Mexico Offshore Aquaculture Consortium proposed to raise fish adjacent to a Chevron natural gas platform, but it abandoned the project when funding expired in 2003.
The following Department of Commerce grants were used to support offshore aquaculture research in the Gulf of Mexico:
NOAA National Marine Aquaculture Initiative Grants
| Related Institution | Year | Description | Grant Amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| MS/AL Sea Grant | FY 2000 | Biological, engineering, environmental, and legal research to develop offshore aquaculture in the Gulf of Mexico | $148,059 |
Source: McVey, Eileen M. Personal email correspondence. Aquaculture Librarian, NOAA Central Library, June 1, 2007.
NOAA Saltonstall-Kennedy Grants
| Related Institution | Year | Description | Grant Amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| University of Texas at Austin | FY 2000 | Hatchery technologies for snapper to be used in offshore aquaculture | $169,987 |
Source: “The Saltonstall-Kennedy Grant Program: Fisheries Research and Development. Report 2000.” Financial Services Division, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Aug. 1, 2000.
Earmarks in Senate 2008 Commerce Appropriations Bill
| Related Institution | Year | Description | Grant Amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| University of Southern Mississippi | FY 2008 | Construction of the Center for Marine Aquaculture | $11,000,000 (proposed) |
Source: Ellis, Steve. “Alabama big winner in FY08 Senate Commerce, Justice, Science, & Related Agencies Spending Bill.” Taxpayers for Common Sense, July 9, 2007.
From 1999 to 2002, the Department of Commerce granted more than $300,000 for collaborative research in support of offshore aquaculture in the Gulf of Mexico.
Conclusion
The Department of Commerce has made the past decade of offshore aquaculture development possible through millions of dollars in subsidies. Since 1999, the department has granted close to $3 million to companies involved with offshore aquaculture and funded nearly $9.3 million in offshore aquaculture research. However, despite this investment of taxpayer funds, existing offshore aquaculture operations have not proven that their industry is commercially viable, or that it will balance the nation’s seafood trade deficit.
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