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Demand for seafood is soaring, but oceans are giving up all they can. Can we farm fish in new ways?

By VICTORIA MILKO - Nov 16, 2023, 10:51 AM ET
Last Updated - Aug 28, 2024, 03:00 AM EDT
Protein_Fish
Fish farming and shellfish production usually spew far less greenhouse gas emissions than production of beef and other animal protein, but aquaculture can still cause serious environmental problems

Aquaculture has been the fastest growing food sector in the world for decades, and people now eat more farmed fish than wild fish

If it still seems strange to think of fish growing on farms, it shouldn’t. 

Aquaculture has been the fastest growing food sector in the world for decades, and people now eat more farmed fish than wild fish.  

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The industry has had to grow. Demand for seafood is soaring and will continue to rise. But the oceans are giving up all they can: Production of wild fish has been flat since about 1990.  

Fish farming and shellfish production usually spew far less greenhouse gas emissions than production of beef and other animal protein, but aquaculture can still cause serious environmental problems.  

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