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The Future of Fish Feed might be Fish-Free
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The Future of Fish Feed might be Fish-Free

Tim Minapoli

Tim Minapoli

Kontributor

26 Desember 2025
4 menit baca

An Omega Protein fisherman looks down at a school of\r\nmenhaden caught off the coast in Virginia. Atlantic menhaden are harvested as a\r\nnutritional supplement for human and animal consumption in oi...

An Omega Protein fisherman looks down at a school of\r\nmenhaden caught off the coast in Virginia. Atlantic menhaden are harvested as a\r\nnutritional supplement for human and animal consumption in oils, essential\r\nfatty acids and specialty protein. If you’re trying to be a conscious omnivore,\r\nchances are you’re putting some serious thought into the sustainability of the\r\nanimal proteins you’re eating: Were the animals humanely raised, on\r\nfarms/ranches that don’t harm the environment? The next level is to think about\r\nwhether the feed itself of what we eat is sustainable. But even people\r\nconcerned with GMO soy used for cattle might not be thinking about what their\r\nfarmed salmon are eating.

Future of Fish Feed (F3) is trying to change that — at\r\nleast in the aquaculture feed sector.

The X Prize of Aquaculture

F3 is a collaboration between nongovernmental organizations,\r\nscientists, and the private sector (backers include the University of Arizona,\r\nthe New England Aquarium and the organizers of the X-Prize) to uncover new\r\nalternative feed ingredients for aquaculture that reduce or eliminate reliance\r\non wild-caught fish. What’s wrong with fish eating fish? Well, in the case of\r\nfarmed fish (hogs and poultry, too, but that’s another story), a large amount\r\nof feed for these animals relies on fishmeal and oils from small, wild-caught fish\r\n(aka “forage fish”) such as anchovies, sardines, and menhaden. And as\r\naquaculture continues to boom — according to the Food and Agriculture\r\nOrganization of the United Nations, aquaculture represented\r\napproximately 47% of global fish production in 2016 — the\r\ndemand for fishmeal and fish oils to feed farmed fish is fast increasing.

That’s why just last week, F3 launched the third F3 Challenge,\r\na contest that incentivizes global companies to develop and sell fish-free feed\r\nand oils for cash prizes. This year’s contest focuses on feed for carnivorous species such as salmon, shrimp,\r\ntuna, and cod, many of which rank as the most popular seafoods in the U.S. The first contest’s winner was Guangdong Evergreen Feed Industry Company,\r\nwhich was awarded a $201,000 prize by F3 for selling more than 85,000 metric\r\ntons of fish-free feed. According to F3, the amount of fish-free aquafeed\r\n(using plants, insects, algae and bacteria as a base) sold during the contest\r\nwas roughly equivalent to 100 million forage fish from the ocean. The second\r\ncontest, which ends Sept. 15, will award more than $100,000 to the company that\r\ndevelops and sells the most “fish-free fish oil.”

Scaling Up Fish-Free\r\nFeed

There are industry groups that challenge F3’s vision of a\r\nfish-free feed future, including the Marine Ingredients Organization (IFFO),\r\nwhich published a scathing rebuttal to the contest. And there’s bound to be\r\nconcern down the road about whether these novel feed combinations might have\r\nunforeseen consequences. Still, the United States Department of Agriculture\r\n(USDA) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration have recognized the need for feed alternatives, as has the United\r\nNations’ Food and\r\nAgriculture Organization (FAO).

Increased demand not only puts pressure on wild stocks of\r\nforage fish, it also has the potential to affect wild carnivorous fish that rely on\r\nforage fish for food (though some scientists refute this claim). According to a recent\r\nstudy in Nature Sustainability, if wild forage fish continue to be\r\nharvested as they are now, stocks could reach “ecological limits” by 2037,\r\nwhich means forage fish and all dependent aspects of the ecosystem could be in\r\ndanger. There is a business case, too. While most forage fish fisheries are heavily\r\nregulated and aquaculture feed conversion ratios are improving, in recent years\r\nincreased demand and variable supply has driven up the price of fishmeal and oils, which has\r\naquaculture businesses on alert.

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Fish-free innovations using algae, yeast, soy, and insect protein are all being tested with some\r\nsuccess — and some challenges. The use of waste from fish processing in fishmeal is also becoming\r\never more efficient. While wild-harvested fishmeal and oil are unlikely to\r\ndisappear from aquaculture feeds entirely, there’s room in the market for\r\nnutritious alternatives that don’t rely on wild marine resources.

Source : Forbes

Tim Minapoli

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Tim Minapoli

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Pakar di bidang akuakultur dengan pengalaman lebih dari 15 tahun. Aktif berkontribusi dalam pengembangan industri perikanan Indonesia.

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