Thursday, February 26, 2015


Much has changed since Sea Port’s original blog back in March of 2013 about the devastating disease impact of EMS to the global shrimp farming industry:

1. The causative agent has been identified

2. New technological and scientific management improvements have been implemented worldwide to
    manage EMS.  Subsequently, global farmed shrimp production has resumed its upward trend.
     
Revisiting our original blog post shows that Sea Port believed that EMS would only be a bump along the road for the global shrimp farming industry as it continued its developmental journey toward improved practices and output.

Looking forward:

1. While the worse of EMS seems to be over for now, diseases in general will continue to be an
    ongoing concern for the industry as new disease agents emerge and old diseases reappear in areas
    where EMS inspired best aquaculture practices have not yet taken hold.

2. In addition to ongoing disease concerns, the rising cost of aquaculture feed will also be an
    ever-present issue. 

In Conclusion:

Global shrimp farming and aquaculture in general are in their infancy compared to the more modern state of animal husbandry exhibited by land based livestock production systems.  Sea Port believes that each bump encountered along aquaculture’s road to expanded production will actually serve as catalysts that help advance its modernization.  This gives great promise that aquaculture will be the major leading sustainable food source to feed the 9-10 billion of us that will inhabit our wondrous blue planet by the year 2050.

Go Blue!.....For Our Environment…..For Our Health…..For Sustainability
Sincerely yours,

David Glaubke, Director of Sustainability Initiatives 

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Sea Port Helps Sponsor the SeaWeb Seafood Summit and Proposes a Panel for Next Year Concerning Human Population Dynamics

Sea Port was pleased to help sponsor the SeaWeb Seafood Summit on sustainability held in New Orleans during the week of February 9th.    It brought together environmental and social justice NGOs with seafood industry players, academics, and federal/state/foreign governments to brainstorm about how to advance the sustainability of our global fisheries and aquaculture production systems.  There was a great spirit of collaboration among all these groups as they united around this shared goal.

The summit brainstorming focused on advancing seafood sustainability by primarily confronting these three aspects:  environmental, social justice, and economic.

                1.  Environmental Aspects: Ocean acidification becoming a stress on marine ecosystems;
                     impact of IUU fishing & ideas to mitigate via improvements in traceability, international
                     enforcement/cooperation, and using incentives; reducing bycatch; restoration of
                     depleted fish stocks; expanded management of forage fish

                2.  Social Justice Aspects:  Ongoing need to combat slave labor and other unfair labor
                     practices in the Thailand seafood industry and around the globe

                3.  Economic Aspects: Working to increase consumer awareness, demand, and trust  in
                     sustainability ecolabels; driving down costs for small farmers and artisanal fishers to 
                     attain certifications and market access; simplifying and unifying sustainability schemes

Sea Port’s Proposal for Next Year’s Seafood Summit

Sea Port proposes that next year the Seafood Summit convenes a panel to confront how our changing world human population dynamics pose multiple and complex challenges to our efforts to maintain worldwide productive and healthy aquatic ecosystems to provide for our future survival.

Some Points for the Human Population Dynamics Panel to confront:

·         It has taken us only 8 generations to expand our world population from 1 Billion roughly 200 years ago to our present level of over 7 Billion and it will take less than two additional generations to reach 10 Billion by the year 2050.  By 2050, over 70% of us will be living in cities and these cities will be predominantly located along marine coastlines, freshwater rivers and lakes, and close to watersheds.  Will 10 Billion people collectively degrade our aquatic ecosystems?  Will there be enough freshwater for aquaculture, agriculture, and all our other needs?  With nearly 3/4th of the world’s population living in crowded cities in 35 years, will respect and appreciation for our natural environment wane?

·         An ever-growing population increases the likelihood of additional atmospheric CO2 and other greenhouse gases, freshwater and marine pollution, and coastal and riparian habitat losses.  Will new technologies prevent these negative impacts?

·         An ever-increasing economic middle class increases the likelihood that a greater number of people will demand more seafood.  Will there be enough seafood to meet this demand?


Sea Port firmly believes that human population dynamics is a critical variable worthy of its own panel at the next SeaWeb Seafood Summit where we will all once again convene to brainstorm on how we can assure that our wondrous blue planet continues to sustain us as our numbers increase to unprecedented levels.