Aquaculture for all

US grain industry targets Southeast Asian and North African aquafeed sectors

Feed ingredients Catfish / Pangasius Tilapia / Cichlids +5 more

The US Grains Council (USGC) has invested significantly in both resources and relationships to target Southeast Asia’s aquaculture feed sector, in the hope of selling an additional 1.125 million tonnes of American grains in the region.

USGC has worked in the aquaculture sector for nearly a decade, predominantly in the Southeast Asia region. Work has been done to promote distiller’s dried grains with solubles (DDGS) use in pangasius and tilapia diets,” said Cary Sifferath, USGC senior director for global programmes.

“Now with the expansion of higher protein corn co-products and even new possibilities for sorghum and barley-related proteins, our staff is working to best position DDGS and other grain co-products with the different diet demands for fresh water, salt water and shrimp diets.”

The council has promoted the use of distiller’s dried grains with solubles (DDGS) in pangasius and tilapia diets, and are now also looking at higher protein corn co-products and even new possibilities for sorghum and barley-related proteins © Montana Microbial Products

In 2019, Ronnie Tan was hired as USGC’s regional aquaculture consultant for Southeast Asia to target technical education and trade servicing programmes at the region’s growing industry.

Most recently, USGC co-sponsored and event, Shrimp Talks, along with USGC member companies Cargill and POET-NexPro. This event was attended by nearly 300 stakeholders and focused on supporting Indonesia’s goal of increasing shrimp exports by 250 percent in the coming years.

During the event, Ronnie Tan discussed how DDGS could help the country reach this ambitious target. He also shared results from recent shrimp tank feeding trials and upcoming pond trials.

“DDGS could play a significant role in aquaculture diets as the industry shifts from animal-based ingredients to more sustainable plant-based material,” said Caleb Wurth, USGC’s assistant regional director of Southeast Asia and Oceania. “We are first proving that DDGS can perform on the farm, and then we will market this information to the industry. Engagements like Shrimp Talks are critical to our overall strategy.”

USGC is also looking beyond Southeast Asia to other parts of the globe where aquaculture provides much opportunity. For example, the Council was recently awarded a $200,000 grant from the United States Department of Agriculture’s Foreign Agricultural Service to work on aquaculture promotion programmes in Morocco, with the goals of promoting investment by the Moroccan feed industry into aquaculture projects and developing the technical knowledge to produce quality aquaculture feeds for the various species under production.

The Moroccan government has an aquaculture development plan that is in its early stages, and the Council plans to use the grant to accelerate commercial aquaculture project development by showcasing successful aquaculture models from other regions of the world that can be adapted easily in the country.

In a more recent engagement in the region, a successful USGC product quality trial led one of the largest feed producers in Egypt to begin selling aqua feed produced with US DDGS and corn gluten meal (CGM). Egypt is the largest aquafeed producer in the region with 34 small-to-medium aqua feed mills collectively producing 1.85 million tonnes annually. This demand for aquafeed continues to grow and the Egyptian government set an ambitious goal in 2020 to increase aquaculture production.

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