Tools
Change country:

Fish farming was supposed to be sustainable. But there’s a giant catch.

Red and orange fish swarm below the surface of water with their mouths open.
A large group of red hybrid tilapia wait to be fed in a floating pen fish farm in Thailand. Overcrowding is a common problem in aquaculture, which can affect the health of the fish being raised. | Mako Kurokawa/Sinergia Animal/We Animals

Earlier this summer, the United Nations reported that humanity now consumes more fish raised in farms than taken from the ocean. 

The milestone was the culmination of a decades-long growth spurt in aquaculture, or fish farming, an industry that produces more than four times as much fish today than it did 30 years ago. Fish farming’s growth was spurred primarily by government subsidies around the world, as the world’s wild fish catch peaked in the 1990s and countries sought another source of seafood.   

Aquaculture has also been boosted by academic institutions, philanthropic foundations, nonprofit organizations, and the United Nations on the belief that fish farming can give overexploited oceans a break and more sustainably improve food security.

But fish farming comes with — forgive the pun — some major catches. Some of the most valuable farmed species, like salmon and trout, are carnivorous and must be fed wild-caught fish when farmed. Farmed shrimp, along with a number of omnivorous fish species, are also fed wild-caught fish. All told, some 17 million of the 91 million metric tons of wild-caught fish are diverted to the aquaculture industry annually. 

In other words, what was supposed to relieve pressure from overexploited oceans has become a new source of its exploitation. According to a new study published in Science Advances by a team of researchers from the University of Miami, New York University, and conservation group Oceana, fish farming might kill far more wild-caught fish than previously thought — a finding that throws the aquaculture industry’s sustainable branding into question. 

The researchers found that the amount of wild-caught fish — usually from small species like anchovies and sardines — to feed the top 11 farmed fish and crustacean species could be 27 to 307 percent higher than current estimates, or even higher, depending on how it’s calculated. (The high degree of variability and uncertainty is due to a lack of validated industry data on what farmed fish are fed.) 

“The extraction of wild fish to manufacture aquaculture feed is likely far higher than we’ve been told,” Spencer Roberts, a PhD researcher at the University of Miami and lead author of the study, told me. “The story about fish farming feeding the world is very optimistic, but it’s based on incomplete data. So what we’re trying to do is portray a more realistic and comprehensive picture.”

The aquaculture industry now uses almost one-fifth of the global wild fish catch just to feed farmed fish, adding pressure to already taxed oceans and threatening the food sources of some coastal communities in the Global South. It has also created a new realm of animal suffering: Fish farms, sometimes called “underwater factory farms” by animal advocates, often keep fish in conditions similar to the crowded industrial farms that confine pigs, chickens, and cows raised on land.

“There is a lot of hype in not just media but in governance conversations about aquaculture or blue foods more broadly as a sustainable source of food and a way to combat hunger or reduce food insecurity, but there are so many things ignored,” Roberts said. “I hope that [the new research] prompts other academics, but especially policymakers, to question some of the narratives.”

Fish farming might waste more fish meat than it produces

The aquaculture industry measures the amount of wild-caught fish required to produce one unit of farmed fish with what it calls the Fish In:Fish Out (FIFO) ratio. In 1997, the early days of the fish farming boom, the industry had a FIFO ratio of 1.9, meaning that for every kilogram of fish it produced, it had to catch and kill almost two kilograms of fish used for feed. 

By 2017, according to a team of aquaculture experts, that figure dropped to .28, an all-time low, largely because the industry switched much of its feed from wild-caught fish to crops like soy and corn, along with vegetable oils, minerals, and vitamins. 

Those findings were published in Nature, and it’s since been widely cited in food systems research. The fish farming industry puts its FIFO ratio at a similarly low rate, claiming a major sustainability win. (It’s worth noting that some of the Nature paper’s authors hold close ties to the aquaculture and livestock feed industries.)

But the model used in that paper was incomplete, according to Roberts. For instance, it didn’t include trimmings, the parts of a fish considered byproducts that do end up in fish feed, nor fish that were unintentionally killed and turned into fish feed. The model also used industry data reporting that, on average, only 7 percent of its farmed fish feed consisted of wild-caught fish; the rest consisted of crops. Other data sources, from the Monterey Bay Aquarium, the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), and another team of researchers, reported much higher rates of wild-caught fish in farmed fish diets. 

When correcting for these factors from the original model, Roberts and his co-authors found that for the top 11 farmed species, the global aquaculture industry’s Fish In:Fish Out ratio is much higher than the original model’s estimate of 0.28, ranging from 0.36 to 1.15, or 27 to 307 percent higher.

Then the researchers ran the numbers again, adding in other fish and other marine animals killed unintentionally by commercial fishing vessels, and removed fish farms that don’t feed their animals at all. That adjustment brought up the industry’s FIFO ratio to between 0.57 and 1.78, or 103 to 535 percent higher than the original model. That means that at the upper estimate of 1.78, the industry still generates a net loss of fish, just as it did in the 1990s.

Chart showing which species of farmed fish and wild-caught fish are produced.

For carnivorous farmed species like salmon and trout, the aquaculture sector’s demand for wild-caught fish is especially high. By Roberts and his co-authors’ upper-bound estimate, it could take up to 6.24 kilograms of wild-caught fish to produce just one kilogram of salmon — 230 percent more than previously estimated.

“It appears this current paper replaced [earlier studies’] simplifying assumptions with better sources of data or better estimates,” said David C. Love, an aquaculture and fisheries research professor at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, who was not involved in the study. “What they found was that more fish are being used in the diet than what was previously thought.”

But looking at the FIFO ratio for the entire industry obscures major differences in feeding requirements across species. 

“It’s hard to say, ‘Well, aquaculture is just one thing.’ It’s not. It’s lots and lots of different species with different needs,” Love said. The biggest difference is between herbivorous species, like carp and tilapia with a FIFO ratio up to .83 at the upper bound of the adjusted model, and carnivorous species like salmon and trout, with a FIFO ratio up to 5.57 — a near sevenfold gap. Shrimp, freshwater crustaceans, and catfish also require more wild-caught fish than they produce at the upper bounds.

Paul Zajicek, executive director of the National Aquaculture Association, dismissed the study’s findings in an email to Vox. 

“As noted by the authors, these types of analyses are very challenging and we suspect a rival analysis will show differences as well,” Zajicek wrote.

But the massive amounts of wild-caught fish fed to farmed fish is only one piece of the bigger picture on fish farming’s unsustainability. 

Fish farming’s environmental, social, and animal welfare costs

Although the fish farming industry over time has lowered its reliance on wild-caught fish on a per-kilogram basis, it has replaced it with corn and soy. 

“Every bit of fishmeal that you [remove from fish diets] has to still be substituted with something from land,” said Jennifer Jacquet, a co-author of the study and professor of atmospheric and earth science at the University of Miami. “We’re already concerned with deforestation for [feeding] land animals, and now farmed salmon are also contributing to the deforestation of our world.”

Chart showing how fish farming has increased the demand for corn and soy.

This explosion in crop use — about a fivefold increase in recent decades — doesn’t just mean more potential deforestation. Those crops are grown using a lot of synthetic fertilizer, which in turn pollutes waterways and harms wild fish. It’s also a significant source of greenhouse gas emissions and displaces land that could be used to otherwise grow food directly for humans.

“What we’re talking about is not so much increasing efficiency as much as a shift in pressure from ecosystems like the Humboldt Current [in Peru], where the anchovies come from, to ecosystems like the Amazon rainforest where the soy comes from,” said Roberts.

What we need, Love of Johns Hopkins University told me, are holistic life-cycle assessments that cover not just a species’ FIFO ratio but other metrics, too, such as carbon footprint, water use, land use, and pollution, to give us a more accurate picture of aquaculture’s environmental impact.

One such assessment, published Nature in 2021, found that seaweed and bivalves, like mussels and oysters, have the lowest environmental footprint of all aquaculture foods. But it also illustrates the complex range of trade-offs between different species and whether they’re wild-caught or farmed. For example, farmed salmon use little land and water but use a lot of wild-caught fish and generate a lot of pollution. By comparison, farmed carp eat almost no wild-caught fish but require much more land and water.

When we farm or catch fish at scale, much like animals raised on land, we tend to overexploit one ecosystem or another, making it an inefficient way of producing protein relative to plant-based agriculture.

The rapid growth of fish farming has also come with grave ethical implications. 

Animal rights advocates have lambasted fish farm conditions, where fish often suffer from many of the same issues as animals raised on land, like overcrowding and disease. Slave labor on commercial fishing vessels and inside fish processing plants has long plagued the industry.

Catching wild fish for fish feed also undermines food security in some regions. For example, many of the fish caught for the aquaculture industry come from West Africa and “could be part of the West African diet, but are instead being sold to fish meal plants” as food to be used on fish farms, said Love. Many of those fish end up in wealthier markets, like Europe and North America.

“While the aquaculture industry regularly uses the narrative of food security, their top products, salmon and shrimp, are prized not for their nutritional value but for their export value,” wrote Patricia Majluf of Oceana, a biologist and co-author of the study, in a separate analysis of the aquaculture feed industry. 

Much of the conversation among governments, philanthropies, nonprofits, and academics around the future of seafood — which is anticipated to grow some 30 percent by 2050 — aims to balance conservation and economic development. But famed ecologist and author Carl Safina, in a recent commentary, called for something grander: a clear-eyed look at aquaculture’s environmental and social harms — one that would require us to fundamentally rethink aquaculture. “Problems in animal aquaculture stem from failures of care and conscience,” Safina wrote. “Solutions require not ‘balanced’ goals but moral reckonings overhauling economic valuations and policies.”


Read full article on: vox.com
Dine like your favorite Dodger. 15 L.A. restaurants that the 2024 World Series players love
Dine at the Dodgers' favorite restaurants in Los Angeles, including a legendary sushi spot, an iconic burger chain, Nashville-style hot chicken and more.
latimes.com
Jaime Jarrín on Fernando Valenzuela: 'He was so smart. ... He was a marvel, really.'
Hall of Fame broadcaster Jaime Jarrín shares behind-the-scenes memories of Fernando Valenzuela, revealing the quiet star knew more than he let on.
latimes.com
Will a HELOC or home equity loan be better this November?
Not sure if a HELOC or home equity loan will be better for you this November? Here's what to consider now.
cbsnews.com
Most popular baby names of 2025 will be kinda bonkers — here’s what Gen Beta kids will be called
Get ready for the Beta babies —- and their bizarre names.
nypost.com
For a second straight day, Jayden Daniels misses Commanders practice
Marcus Mariota served as the Commanders’ primary QB as Jayden Daniels sat out with a rib injury suffered Sunday against the Panthers.
washingtonpost.com
Biden set to apologize to Native Americans for Indian boarding schools
Joe Biden’s remarks would mark the first time a U.S. president formally apologized for the government’s role in separating Native children from their families.
washingtonpost.com
A real Catholic cardinal let Ralph Fiennes try on his robes for ‘Conclave’: ‘Invited him to his chambers’
The “English Patient” actor was preparing for his next role, as Cardinal Thomas Lawrence in the pope drama, and wanted to spend time with the real deal.
nypost.com
D.C. Council member Vincent C. Gray says he has dementia, won’t cast votes
A judge this week also moved to appoint a guardian over Gray, who has had numerous health problems in recent years.
washingtonpost.com
Battleground state's high court rejects GOP challenge to provisional ballot rules
The Republican Party has faced setbacks in recent weeks in their nearly 100 election-related court cases.
foxnews.com
Ohio grand juries indict six non-citizens for allegedly illegally voting in past elections
Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost said six non-citizens were indicted for allegedly voting in past elections, and a local prosecutor said one had died.
foxnews.com
4 lifesaving tips for if you spot a mountain lion on the trail
It is exceedingly rare to spot a mountain lion while out hiking in Southern California. But should you see one, these expert tips will help you know what to do next.
latimes.com
Underdog Fantasy Promo Code NYPNEWS: Secure a $1K Bonus for Vikings-Rams on ‘Thursday Night Football’
Get the Underdog Fantasy promo code NYPNEWS for up to $1,000 in bonus cash from a 50% deposit match offer ahead of Thursday Night Football.
nypost.com
How much does a $30,000 home equity loan cost per month now that rates were cut?
A $30,000 home equity loan comes with inexpensive monthly payments now that interest rates have been reduced.
cbsnews.com
Taco Bell, Pizza Hut, KFC yanking onions after McDonald’s E.coli outbreak
Yum Brands said Thursday it would be removing fresh onions from its meals at select Taco Bell, Pizza Hut and KFC restaurants out of “abundance of caution” following an E.coli outbreak tied to McDonald’s Quarter Pounder hamburgers. The E.coli outbreak has killed at least one person and sickened nearly 50 others across the West and Midwest. McDonald’s removed...
nypost.com
World Series scouting report: This Dodgers strength could be ‘a recipe for disaster’ for Yankees
With the help of executives, scouts and a pitching coach, The Post's Joel Sherman takes you inside what may decide the Yankees-Dodgers World Series.
nypost.com
How far will credit card interest rates fall in November?
There may be another Fed rate cut on the horizon in November. Here's how it could impact credit card rates.
cbsnews.com
Bill Maher says Kamala Harris must convince voters she's not part of 'worst excesses of the left'
Comedian Bill Maher said during a recent interview that Kamala Harris needed to show undecided voters that she was not part of a "stealth version" of the left.
foxnews.com
This charmingly exclusive NYC ‘secret street’ hardly ever sees its homes list — now 3 seek new residents
In Washington Heights, a cobblestone lane with a handsome row of wooden townhouses and a small-town feel has a mini-boom of rarely available listings.
nypost.com
New Zealand man hauled off flight for allegedly assaulting crew 
On an international flight from Perth, Australia, to Auckland, New Zealand, a reportedly intoxicated passenger allegedly assaulted a crew member, causing slight injury. The disruption forced the Oct. 23 flight to be diverted to Melbourne, Australia, where authorities took the unruly flier, age 23, into custody. “At the very least, in this alleged incident, it...
nypost.com
Matthew Broderick Reveals He Was Asked To Play Carrie Bradshaw’s “Premature Ejaculator” Lover On ‘SATC’: “Kind Of Embarrassing”
Broderick revealed why he never made an appearance on the hit HBO show.
nypost.com
Key takeaways from our investigation into the science behind an alternative autism therapy
Here are the key takeways from The Times' yearlong investigation into the science behind magnetic resonance therapy, or MERT, as a therapy for autism.
latimes.com
NBA abre investigación por ausencia de Joel Embiid en primer partido de 76ers
La NBA abrió una investigación sobre el por qué el centro de Filadelfia Joel Embiid no jugó en el partido inaugural contra Milwaukee y que recibió emisión televisiva nacional.
latimes.com
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs seen dancing with young women, surrounded by bottles of vodka: photos
New photo evidence shows Sean “Diddy” Combs’ behavior at one of parties where he allegedly assaulted men, women and minors. A new lawsuit includes pictures of the rapper dancing at a party at his suite at the Planet Hollywood Hotel while being surrounded by young women and bottles of vodka. Watch the full video to...
nypost.com
Víctor Dávila se fractura la pierna derecha y será baja indefinida con América y Chile
El delantero chileno del América Víctor Dávila sufrió una fractura del peroné de la pierna derecha y estará fuera de actividad por tiempo indefinido, informó el equipo el jueves.
latimes.com
Trump to the West as Kelly's fascism warnings usher new Harris attack
Former President Donald Trump will stop in Arizona and Nevada to campaign with surrogates Tulsi Gabbard and Vivek Ramaswamy. CBS News campaign reporter Libby Cathey has more on the presidential race and Trump's reaction to John Kelly's fascism comments.
cbsnews.com
State senator dies following freak lawn mower accident
Kentucky state Sen. Johnnie Turner died more than a month after a lawn mower accident. U.S. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell issued a statement about Turner.
foxnews.com
Kamala Harris Has Relinquished One of the Strongest Arguments Against Trump
Forget Trump and the F-word. Harris needs to talk about the I-word.
slate.com
Philly firefighters’ union flips Senate endorsement to GOP’s Dave McCormick: ‘Tired of political promises’
PHILADELPHIA — Sirens are sounding for Sen. Bob Casey’s campaign in Pennsylvania, where the firefighters’ union in deep-blue Philly is ditching the incumbent Democrat and endorsing GOP Senate hopeful Dave McCormick instead. The union, International Association of Fire Fighters Local 22, is based in Philly’s industrial Northern Liberties neighborhood and represents more than 4,500 firefighters,...
nypost.com
Maria Sharapova, al Salón de la Fama del tenis en 2025
Maria Sharapova, la rusa que conquistó cinco títulos de Grand Slam que se hizo famosa por su garra en las canchas y el interés que generaba fuera de las mismas, fue seleccionada para ingresar al Salón de la Fama del tenis tras su primer año de elegibilidad.
latimes.com
‘Most satisfying’ year: How Dave Roberts changed narrative, got Dodgers to World Series
Two weeks ago, Dave Roberts appeared to be managing for his job but is now a four-time pennant-winning manager and four wins away from a World Series title.
latimes.com
Vast majority of Americans support photo ID requirement to vote, new poll says
A Gallup Poll released on Thursday shows that most Americans support having photo identification as a requirement to vote in elections.
foxnews.com
Some Halloween candy includes cancer-linked Red Dye 3, watchdog says
Some Halloween treats such as Brach's candy corn include Red Dye 3, a carcinogen banned in Europe, Consumer Reports says.
cbsnews.com
In Wisconsin’s hottest House race, Democratic challenger claims she’s an immigration moderate — but her record says otherwise
WATERTOWN, Wis. — In Wisconsin’s most competitive House race, Democratic challenger Rebecca Cooke is positioning herself as a moderate on a top issue for Republican voters, immigration — despite having criticized her opponent for running a campaign on securing the border. The Trump-endorsed incumbent, Rep. Derrick Van Orden, has been an outspoken opponent of the...
nypost.com
Judge reveals whether jurors deciding Daniel Penny’s fate in NYC subway chokehold case will remain anonymous
Jurors weighing the fate of Daniel Penny in the fatal subway chokehold of Jordan Neely will remain anonymous, a Manhattan judge ruled Thursday — citing months of “threats” made to all parties in the high-profile case. Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Maxwell Wiley said he’d grant a request by prosecutors to conceal the identities of the...
nypost.com
WATCH: Halloween house display gives fun, creepy vibes set to ‘Somebody’s Watching Me’
This house in California was all decked out for Halloween and its light display played to the hit by Rockwell.
abcnews.go.com
JD Vance eviscerates Harris’ work in ‘most anti-Catholic administration in living memory’
The op-ed appeared less than a week after Harris, 60, opted not to attend the Archdiocese of New York's Al Smith Dinner.
nypost.com
Harris says Trump is a fascist after Kelly's comments go viral
Vice President Kamala Harris said she thinks Donald Trump is a fascist after his ex-chief of staff John Kelly linked the former president to fascism in recent interviews. CBS News' Nikole Killion has more on reactions to the comments as the presidential campaigns near the Nov. 5 election.
cbsnews.com
Hezbollah steps up missile strikes on Israel, as IDF delays attack on Iran over US intel leak
Hezbollah has ramped up its daily attacks on Israel, firing around 200 rockets a day over the border to drain the Jewish state's resources – all while the IDF is forced to delay its retaliatory attack on Iran over leaked US intelligence.
nypost.com
Liberty’s fanbase began as niche — but the Big Apple is theirs after championship triumph: ‘It’s not just basketball’
The New York Liberty isn't just a winning team -- it's a legacy.
nypost.com
High-speed pursuit ends in deadly crash into freeway pillar on live news
The driver died after crashing into a guard rail during a police pursuit.
latimes.com
Trump camp says Dem rhetoric 'directly to blame' for past assassination attempts
Former President Donald Trump's campaign insisted that rhetoric from Democrats recently was "dangerous" and "directly to blame" for the environment that led to two assassination attempts on Trump's life.
foxnews.com
If 'Venom: The Last Dance' is the end, Tom Hardy's one-man buddy duo goes out twirling
Now a trilogy, the "Venom" movies have a distinct tone for Marvel-derived products, neither somber nor self-referential. That's largely due to its star's input.
latimes.com
Cardi B hospitalized after 'medical emergency,' pulls out of weekend music festival
Cardi B remains hospitalized following an undisclosed 'medical emergency.' The rapper has canceled her Saturday performance at Atlanta's One Musicfest.
latimes.com
When did food become such a luxury?
What is a supermarket?
latimes.com
Is ‘Your Monster’ Streaming on Netflix or Amazon Prime Video?
Melissa Barrera falls in love with a monster in this new horror-comedy.
nypost.com
John Turturro turned down ‘The Penguin’ due to the ‘violence towards women’: ‘That’s not my thing’
“In the show, there was a lot of violence towards women, and that’s not my thing,” John Turturro said about why he didn't reprise his "The Batman" role in "The Penguin."  
nypost.com
Recommendation expected today in Menendez brothers' case
The Los Angeles District County Attorney's Office has been taking another look at the highly publicized Menendez brothers' murder case.
1 h
cbsnews.com
TKO to acquire Professional Bull Riders and other Endeavor assets in $3.25-billion deal
In an all-equity deal, publicly traded TKO will receive Professional Bull Riders, live events business On Location and global sports marketing agency IMG.
1 h
latimes.com