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ASA Supports President Obama’s Budget Request for
Aquaculture Research
May 14, 2009…Saint Louis, Missouri… The American Soybean
Association (ASA) today expressed support for the Obama Administration’s
budget request for aquaculture research that could increase demand for
soybean meal in aquafeed. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA) requested an increase of $2 million for
aquaculture research, some of which would be spent on studies on
life-cycle cost analysis of aquaculture, marine fish hatcheries for
stock enhancement, the environmental impacts of escapes from
aquaculture, as well as sustainable feeds.
"Soybeans play a key role in building a U.S. aquaculture industry to
meet growing consumer demand for safe, healthy seafood," said ASA
President Johnny Dodson, a soybean producer from Halls, Tenn. "Soybean
meal is a nutritional, high-protein source for aquafeed, free of organic
and inorganic contaminants that may be found in fish meal-based feeds."
ASA expressed its support for aquaculture research in a letter to
Gary Locke, Secretary, U.S. Department of Commerce, the Department that
has oversight of NOAA. More than 80% of the seafood Americans consume is
imported, and at least half of those imports are farmed seafood. Major
aquaculture-exporting nations include China, India and Vietnam.
"This funding is critical to NOAA’s research efforts that will help
study the potential for offshore aquaculture," Dodson said. "Soybean
farmers are working with NOAA and the U.S. Department of Agriculture
(USDA) under the auspices of the NOAA-USDA Alternative Feeds Initiative
to support a broad spectrum of approaches to better understand marine
fish nutrition."
ASA is a world leader in the development of soy-based aquaculture
feeds. Since 1992, soybean farmers have supported market development
activities, primarily in China, through the American Soybean
Association’s International Marketing activities with funding from
USDA’s Foreign Agricultural Service and the soybean checkoff. This
program has increased demand for soybean meal for farm-raised fish from
almost zero to approximately 5.5 million metric tons annually.
Aquaculture is the fastest growing form of food production in the
world, and most of this growth is offshore and overseas. Seafood imports
are the second biggest contributor to the U.S. trade deficit at over $9
billion per year.
"With increasing seafood demand and declining capture fisheries,
global aquaculture production will have to increase by 500 percent by
the year 2025 to meet the projected needs of a world population of 8.5
billion people," Dodson said. "We’d like to see the United States
capture its share of this growing market."
ASA is the policy advocate and collective voice of its 22,000
producer-members on domestic and international issues of importance to
all U.S. soybean farmers.
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For more information contact:
Johnny Dodson, ASA President, (731) 286-2268, johnnydodson@bellsouth.net
Bob Callanan, ASA Communications Director, 314-576-1770, bcallanan@soy.org
Access this release at www.SoyGrowers.com/newsroom/news.htm
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