Aquaculture exporter urged LGUS to adopt a Sustainable Aquaculture Program to generate jobs, beef up food supply

October 14, 2023

By Melody Mendoza Aguiba

An aquaculture exporter has urged local government units (LGUs) to pursue a Sustainable Aquaculture Program in their domestic water so as to generate jobs and help beef up food security and protein supply in the Filipino diet.

   In a press briefing of the Philippine Chamber of Agriculture and Food Inc (PCAFI), Norberto O. Chingcuanco, Feedmix Specialist Inc. (FSI) vice president, also asked LGUs to issue long term aquaculture permits. 

   This will ensure long term investments in the fishery sector.

  Adopting a Sustainable Aquaculture Program (SAP) can be a major livelihood program of LGUs aligned with national government’s call for sustainable food production.

   It should be an intentional policy program to attract private sector investments.

   “These policies should contain proper zoning and site exclusivity per company or group. 

 Long term permits encourage needed long term investments,” said Chingcuanco     

   Also integrated in the SAP should be priority employment for local or native communities within the LGU.  It should implement safety and labor standards.  Fees and rentals should be appropriate to cover costs of monitoring and regulations.

   Chingcuanco lamented that the Philippine government has made it easier to import raw fish.  That is rather than importing cooked raw materials in order to produce feeds and grow its own fish.

   PCAFI President Danilo V. Fausto government should also boost production of fish fries needed in fishery production.  It should put up more hatcheries where fish and shellfish are spawned and hatched until large enough to be transferred to an aquaculture farm.

   “BFAR (Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources) said tilapia fry and fingerling production was 208.35 million in 2020 while annual demand is 2.1 billion tilapia fingerlings,” said Fausto.

   Even local communities will be benefitted by an LGU-based SPA as they will have priority access over whatever food is produced.

   FSI with its affiliate firm Fisher Farms is an integrated aquaculture company with seafood processing facilities that enable export products to reach Europe and North America. 

   It boasts of full traceability enabling food safety, technological innovation even in feeds, sustainable farm management, and the largest of its kind in its processed fish production.

   All of Feedmix’s hatcheries and feeds manufacturing facilities are certified and regulated by BFAR.  Fisher Farms’ facilities are certified by Sanitation Standard Operating Procedure (SSOP), Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point (HACCP), Good Manufacturing Practice, and World Halal Council. 

   Calling aquaculture “fish farming” rather than fish hunting, Chingcuanco said aquaculture in the Philippines has exceeded fish hunting production with 2.349 million metric tons as of 2022.  Commercial fisheries only reached 868,408 MT and municipal fisheries, 1.122 million MT.

    In his “Sustainable Aquaculture as a Livelihood Option,” Chingcuanco said the fisheries sector is a major job employer in the Philippines. 

   “WE have over 2 million registered fisherfolks as of 2021,” he said.

   This consists of capture fisheries, 1.095 million fishers; gleaning, 253,825; aquaculture, 247,164; fish vending, 147,038, fish processing 4,524, and related jobs, 404,113.

   An aquaculture or marine culture site employs 10 people per hectare and produces 250 tons of fishery per year.

  The advantage of SAP is it can be done in remote coastal areas, can employ people in the farflung provinces, and is a source of local food supply and local revenue.  It is protective of the environment if only proper policies are in place.

   Fishes are a major source of protein for the Filipino diet.

   “Fish and fishery products constitute 11.68% of each person’s total food intake which is equivalent to 93.9 grams per day,” he said.  “Each Filipino consumes an average of 34.27 kilos of fish and fish products per year, 65% from aquaculture.”

   The Philippines should take advantage of its natural resource, having the second longest coastline among South East Asian countries and China.   It has a coastline of 36,289 kilometers, just second to Indonesia, 99,073 kilometers.

   Even if fishermen and fishing investors take huge risks in the sector with storms, volcanic eruptions, and climate change, he said the country remains lucky as fishery resources just stay in the waters and are not lost.  That makes it less risky compared to crops.

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