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 couple from New Mexico:
My wife and I love the California coast, so eating at Brophy Bros. overlooking the harbor was quite a treat. Although we live inland, we are big fans of seafood and try to eat it several times a week. Are there any innovative solutions being considered in the US to increase our aquaculture industry and hopefully improve its rather negative public perception?
The future of fish farming may very well be indoors, according to news in the Scientific American. New advancements in water filtration and circulation are making it possible for indoor fish farms to dramatically grow in size and production.
On a projection screen in front of a packed room in a coastal Maine town, computer-animated salmon swim energetically through a massive oval tank. A narrator’s voice soothingly points out water currents that promote fish exercise and ideal meat texture, along with vertical mesh screens that “optimize fish densities and tank volume.” The screens also make dead fish easy to remove, the narrator adds cheerily.
The video is part of a pitch made by a Norway-based firm, Nordic Aquafarms, for an ambitious $500-million salmon farm they have plans to build in Belfast, Maine, complete with what Nordic says will be among the world’s largest aquaculture tanks. It is one of a handful of projects in the works by companies around the world hoping these highly mechanized systems will change the face of fish farming—by moving it indoors.
If it catches on, indoor aquaculture could play a critical role in meeting the needs of a swelling human population, says Erik Heim, Nordic CEO. He believes it could do so without the pollution and other potential threats to wild fish that can accompany traditional aquaculture.
Michael Timmons, an environmental engineer at Cornell University, who has studied aquaculture for more than 20 years, admits that “there’s always some risk, but the risk of the land-based system is a small percentage of the risk of an outdoor system.”
Although land-based farms may be years away from being profitable, there are new land-based project being announced every week. The list is long, with over a half a million tons of salmon projected to be on the market in a decade.
BROPHY BROS.
Photo Credit Kcruts Photography
119 HARBOR WAY. SANTA BARBARA, CA 93109
805-966-4418
BROPHY BROS.