A3 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, JUNE 22, 2021 Aquaculture: Will require support from the state to expand Continued from Page A2 state. “You can design these systems to be really sustain- able, actually,” said Naylor. “The question is how do you get them there and still get the profi tability.” have been tied to pollution, disease, invasive species and lax animal safety. And so boxing out aqua- culture in Oregon, directly or indirectly, has been seen as protective of the environ- ment, wild fi sh stocks and commercial fi shing. But as aquaculture becomes more important to food systems of the future, Moehl and other advocates see potential to grow the industry in Oregon — and to learn from other places that already have. “We don’t have a lot of things to undo in order to develop a modern, state- of-the-art program,” Moehl said. “We’re at the bottom, but we can actually build now the best pathway to the top.” ‘As wild as it gets’ Getting here A 2018 report from the World Resources Insti- tute, backed by the United Nations and World Bank, says aquaculture produc- tion needs to more than dou- ble by 2050 to meet the sea- food demands of 10 billion people and help restore wild fi sh stocks, a growing num- ber of which are overfi shed at unsustainable levels. Yet seafood produc- tion on U.S. aqua farms has remained pretty stagnant since the 1980s, when peo- ple had a much more criti- cal view of the industry. The late comedian Garry Shan- dling even joked about vis- iting a fi sh farm in his 1984 stand-up special “Alone In Vegas,” pretending to stamp on a sickly bass crawling on land in search of food. “There was a lot of con- troversy over whether this was good or bad for the envi- ronment,” said Roz Naylor, an economist and the found- ing director of the Center on Food Security and the Environment at Stanford University. Naylor was the lead author on a paper in 2000 that warned aquaculture wasn’t sustainable in the long term, despite being a net contrib- utor to world fi sh supplies. The paper won support of environmentalists and com- mercial fi sheries, which saw aquaculture as a threat. Since then, as other food production sectors like beef have come into focus for their outsize contributions to climate change, aquacul- ture’s appeal has grown. Fish generally have fewer calo- ries and saturated fat than red meat, and they have a lower carbon footprint than Photos by Bradley W. Parks/Oregon Public Broadcasting Bass fi ngerlings swim in a tank in one of the ‘fi sh houses’ at Santiam Valley Ranch. beef, poultry and pork. Naylor and a team of researchers published a new paper in the journal Nature this spring that looked at improvements in aquacul- ture since their inaugural study sparked controversy decades ago. They found that the aqua- culture industry has become signifi cantly more effi cient and sustainable. However sustainable it may be these days — especially when compared to other meat pro- duction chains — fi sh farm- ing is still not ecologically benign, Naylor said. Many of the problems that plagued the industry when Shandling was delivering zingers on Showtime are the same prob- lems it faces today: escape- ment, pollution, disease and pathogens. The risks associated with aquaculture grow as the industry grows, Naylor said. “We have to look at the experience that we’ve had with the industrial livestock sector,” she said. “As that has scaled, these kinds of issues have come up, and we would be foolish to be blind to those kinds of issues com- ing up (in aquaculture).” Less is more Washington state is giv- ing up on farming Atlantic salmon in net pens after one collapsed in Puget Sound in 2017. Disease and market consolidation are shrinking the trout farming industry in Idaho. Industrial fi sh farms prob- A fi sh pond at Santiam Valley Ranch. ably won’t be dotting the Oregon Coast any time soon, but proponents still see room for aquaculture in the state. According to the World Resources Institute report from 2018, feeding future generations will require humans to produce more food without mowing down forests, devoting more land to agriculture or squeezing water sources dry. Sustainable farming is a game of inputs (land, labor, water, fertilizers, etc.) and outputs (commodities). The goal is to reduce inputs and increase outputs. In other words, to get more with less. “I’m trying to get more out of an existing box of resources,” said Moehl. “Basically, we now know that our resources have fi nite limits, so we have to be able to multiply the benefi ts that we get from those fi nite supplies.” Moehl says aquaculture is one way to do that. Fish can be integrated into existing terrestrial farm systems or greenhouses to reduce inputs and increase outputs. For example, water impounded for irrigation on terres- trial farms could be used to grow fi sh. Same input, more output. Earlier this year, NOAA Sea Grant awarded $700,000 to an Oregon State Universi- ty-led project building soft- ware tools to help small- and mid-sized investors identify such opportunities. “This could be a new business in Oregon with the right ideas,” said Gil Syl- via, a marine resource econ- omist and professor emeritus at Oregon State. The university has part- nered with other agencies to build a custom version of its “Oregon Explorer” mapping tool specifi cally for aquacul- ture. The new tool will show things like available land and water resources, aquatic spe- cies options, start-up cost estimates and more for any particular location in Ore- gon. Work began on the proj- ect in 2018. Sylvia, who is the grant’s principal investigator, said that expanding the fi sh farm- ing industry in Oregon will require support from the Fitzpatrick and his par- ents, who own the neigh- boring ranch in Turner, have tried to raise fi sh for food since the ’80s, but the reg- ulatory and fi nancial bars have always been too high. Sitting in the duck blind, Fitzpatrick recalled a time about a decade ago when he wanted to rear stur- geon for meat and caviar. He expressed interest to the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, which regu- lates private aquaculture in Oregon. To keep sturgeon in his private ponds, Fitzpat- rick would have had to pay $3,573 a year for the proper permits under Oregon law. “As a young fi sh farmer at that point I said, ‘No way! Why would I do that?’” he said. Fitzpatrick later learned, to his dismay, about poach- ers reeling in hundreds of thousands of dollars for wild sturgeon. Had starting a stur- geon program not been so cost-prohibitive when he was starting out, “I would have had something going,” he said. “It just didn’t go any- where, but it has potential. It really does,” he said. Pond stocking is good business for Fitzpatrick and — combined with land leases for honeybees and beef cattle, and deals with waterfowl hunting clubs — provides enough money to pursue his primary interest, which is restoring these wet- lands for migratory birds on the Pacifi c Flyway. “We can farm fi sh in a way that promotes so much habitat for things,” he said. “It doesn’t need to be like a confi ned animal feedlot farm. This is as wild as it gets.” COME INTO MY PARLOUR SAID THE SPIDER... NEW GO KART TRACK NOW OPEN! GO KARTS MINI GOLF GYROXTREME ROCK WALL KIDDIE RIDES AND MORE! SEASIDE, OREGON HWY 101 (1/4 mi South of Seaside) • 2735 S. 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