BROPHY'S SANTA BARBARA
Every two weeks we endeavor to answer any and all questions that our guests send in. If you have visited Brophy Bros. in Santa Barbara and have a question, please send it along to brophybros.com.
Here is a question from a man from Missouri:
I always love stopping at Brophy Bros. for a great seafood meal when I’m in Santa Barbara. Looking out at all the fishing boats in the harbor got me wondering about the seafood supply here in the US. Why is it that, as a nation, we seem to be going backwards regarding the growth of aquaculture while the rest of the world surges forward?
Your impression is correct. The US aquaculture industry is on life support. Globally, aquaculture production represents about 50 percent of all seafood produced for human consumption - but not in the United States. Not even close. Since 1996, production has been decreasing or flat and, compared to other seafood superpower nations, one might say that the US has virtually no aquaculture industry at all.
According to Mike Rust, (NOAA) National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration fisheries scientist, there is a patchwork of policies at the federal, state, and local levels that actually conflict with each other, making it difficult to grow the U.S. aquaculture sector.
Rust gives the example of a Washington state shellfish farmer who waited 15 years for a site permit due to a delay by the Army Corps of Engineers’, delays in Endangered Species Act (ESA), the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act certifications, and delays in updates to the State of Washington’s Shoreline Master Program. Finally, out of patience, this grower leased a site in Canada.
The problem is further exacerbated by the fact that most Americans have come to perceive only the potential negative effects of marine aquaculture without the offsetting positive effects. Because fish and marine waters are traditionally seen as public resources, NGOs (Non-Government Organisations) have been able to systematically and effectively oppose marine aquaculture and successfully influence public opinion against it.
While the decline of US fisheries and conservation efforts have also played a major role in shaping aquaculture here in the states, the bulk of U.S. aquaculture now actually comes from freshwater farms that involve relatively low-value species like catfish and carp. These indoor fish factories filter all of their water and recycle nearly all of their waste which, from an environmentalist’s point of view, is the perfect kind of fish farming, with no pollution spewing into open water.
BROPHY BROS.
Photo Credit Kcruts Photography
119 HARBOR WAY. SANTA BARBARA, CA 93109
805-966-4418
BROPHY BROS.