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Last week’s most-read account came on Saturday that just passed and it may be news that everyone who sold in China feared: the Asian giant discovered a vivid hint of coronavirus in packages containing frozen fish in the port city of Qingdao.
This is the first time an infectious indication of coronavirus has been detected in frozen food packaging, at the China Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, known as CDC.
Reuters reported that frozen cod, founded on a translation of a CDC report, Hu Luyi, a journalist for Undercurrent News in China, said the same word used in China to refer to cod and pollock. staff at Qingdao Port have focused on abbotejo.
The CDC also does not specify which country the fish comes from, however, Russia is the leading supplier of headless and eviscerated pollocks (H
Only a small branch of the leading company 4 years ago, American Penaeid (API), the Florida-based branch of American mariculture, has the world’s largest provider of vannamei parents without an express pathogen (SPF), Dan Gibson wrote.
With a company built on strong demand in China, API has now noticed that its breeders work “incredibly” in Indonesia, after sending its first animals to Southeast Asian country 3 months ago.
According to API President Robin Pearl, as far as Indonesia is concerned, the sky is the limit.
“Now they are reaching the last component of our first crop and the effects are incredible,” he told Undercurrent. “So I hope that over the next two weeks we will start to get genuine knowledge of the crops and get genuine reports, currently they are getting more orders already and I guess we are going to take over from Indonesia, in the next 12 months we will be a main supplier .
For API, which exported 95% of its 330,000 bulls to China next year, there is a genuine incentive to diversify into other markets. The company expects sales to remain similar this year despite the pandemic, expanding from 20 to 25% in 2021. Pearl said.
On 16 October, news broke that Undercurrent had been following and waiting for some time despite everything: Eight Fifty Food Group, the parent company of the UK’s largest seafood processor, Young’s Seafood, announced that it had reached an agreement for the fish finger. manufacturer Greenland Seafood.
Corporations broke the news hours after Undercurrent announced that Nippon Suisan Kaisha was no longer in the race to buy the abbot processor, paving the way for an agreement with CapVest Partners, Young’s sponsor.
If the agreement establishes regulatory controls, CapVest will own a pan-European sea product processing company with a turnover of more than $1. 2 billion. The British company Young’s has a turnover of more than six hundred million pounds ($775 million), with Greenland generating sales of around 400 million euros ($468 million) of its high-volume, high-yielding pollock plants in Germany and France.
Young’s and Nissui were appointed leaders of Greenland through Undercurrent’s resources in July.
In the United States, Jason Huffman reported that one of the fastest developing seafood corporations in the United States is not the one he has heard of before and does not adhere to any of the traditional approaches.
The Wild Alaskan Company, a three-year monthly direct customer subscription service that specializes in sustainable seafood in the state of Alaska, nearly quadrupled its sales within seven months of the pandemic, founder and CEO Aaron Kallenberg told Undercurrent in a recent interview.
Although Kallenberg refuses to provide his annual income, he said his company now has up to 132,000 members, but the CEO does not believe it is the concern of customers going to restaurants or in-house establishments who are most guilty of the immediate expansion of his company. On the contrary, he thinks, it has much more to do with the fall in the value of online customer advertising that has allowed Wild Alaskan to get three times every marketing dollar.
News that the alleged austromerluza poacher sent Cobija, formerly known as Cape Flower, was seized through Interpol in Al Mukalla Port, Yemen, won readings last week.
The ship is listed by the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Fauna and Flora (CCAMLR) illegal, undeclared and unregulated (DCI), but is suspected of illegally fishing in the CCAMLR Antarctic Zone.
Blanket added to the InN blacklist of the South-East Atlantic Fisheries Organization in 2017; The North-East Atlantic Fisheries Commission in 2018; and the Southern Indian Ocean Fisheries Agreement, the foreign commission for the conservation of Atlantic tuna and the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission, all in 2019.
Low scallop stocks in the United States have led to a 48% increase in value in 4 months, Huffman reported. Brian Maccini, raw seafoods’ purchasing director, sees something he and others haven’t noticed at one time on the grounds of the seafood auction. in New Bedford, Massachusetts, nearly a dozen merchants bid on the same Atlantic scallops.
“Their frozen stocks are not far from where they deserve to go for the winter, so you’ll have noticed, if you look at the auction, especially in [size U-] 10/20, 10 or 11 distributors vying for scallops that are on the board that day,” he told Undercurrent.
Normally, he says, there may be 3 or 4 distributors making an offer opposite to another.
The rise of festivals is pushing north, as Evidenced by Undercurrent’s recent review of auction landings, better known as the exchange of buyers and sellers.
Mowi reported on two alleged detections of infectious salmon anaemia (AIS) on a property of its Canadian division, Northern Harvest Sea Farms (NHSF), off the southern coast of Newfoundland.
On October 9, the company reported that samples from the provincial government’s Department of Fisheries, Forestry and Agriculture’s Aquatic Animal Health Monitoring Program discovered “suspicious detections” of AIS on a fish from two other sites: McGrath Cove North and Ironskull Point.
On Friday, American Aquafarms, a US-based aquaculture company, is a U. S. -based aquaculture company. But it’s not the first time Founded through the founders of Norwegian cod farming company Norcod, it announced plans to create sites for a hatchery, fish farm and processing plant off the coast of Maine.
American Aquafarms has reached an agreement to purchase maine Fair Trade Lobster facilities in Gouldsboro, according to the company, whose founder and CEO, Mikael Rones, is CEO of Global AS, a Norwegian investment firm.
There, he plans to expand his hatchery and processing facilities. American Aquafarms will also expand a workforce strategy plan to help local, professional and non-professional workforce structure and complete production phases, he said.
“We firmly believe that fish deserve to be bred in their herbal habitat, in the ocean, with an emphasis on employing the most productive generation imaginable to reduce our environmental footprint,” Rones said. “We look forward to continuing our paintings with the City of Gouldsboro and local fishermen to a percentage of our complex generation of aquaculture that can provide year-round work for domain residents. “
And in Argentina, the new Acuisocial company is in the process of building its first Aquaculture Atlantic Salmon Recirculation System (SAR) in Tornquist, Buenos Aires, told María Feijoo the company’s co-director, Diego Ballarini.
The company is looking for two candidates, AquaMaof Aquaculture Technologies of Israel, through its Chilean subsidiary Inno-Sea, and the Dutch company Hesy Aquaculture to supply the facilities and turnkey production, he said.
“They have already provided us with data and budgets. We haven’t signed a contract yet, but [AquaMaof] is one of the potential generation partners in our project,” Ballarini told Undercurrent.
With an initial investment of around $ 75 million, Acuisocial aims to expand a SAR aquaculture agribusiness program and wine farms in Argentina, said co-director Omar Seijo.
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Neil Ramsden, deputy editor-in-chief of Undercurrent News, a summary of last week’s top stories. [. . . ]
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