China Daily

Intrusive offshore fish farms face cull

Aquatic facilities that disrupt shipping, cause harm to marine life to be axed

- By LI LEI lilei@chinadaily.com.cn

China is racing to phase out offshore aquatic farms that clog up shipping lanes and damage the ecohealth of mangroves, while building more deep-sea alternativ­es as the country looks to its expansive territoria­l waters for food supplies, a circular said.

Local government­s must limit the scale of new sea farms in the neighborho­od of important gulfs, estuaries and coastal cities, and avoid planning such facilities close to military zones, ports, shipping lanes, anchorage grounds and areas with submarine cables, said the circular by the ministries of natural resources and agricultur­e and rural affairs.

Dated Dec 13 but released to the public only this month, the circular said the scale and layout of sea farms must be “scientific­ally planned” so that farming areas remain stable and ocean ecosystems are preserved.

The mainland has about 18,000 kilometers of coastline and 4.73 million square kilometers of maritime area, offering large swaths that can be tapped to create such farms.

However, inadequate planning plus the country’s surging demand for seafood have led to the explosive growth of sea farms in recent years, the circular said. Some have threatened to disrupt shipping lanes and led to the degenerati­on of some marine animals and plants.

To address the woes, the circular vowed to restrict new areas earmarked for enclosed farms dotting the coastline — where the use of fish feed and antibiotic­s have long been blamed for pollution — and highlighte­d the conservati­on of mangroves and other ecosystems in coastal areas.

The document also called for the fast expansion of cage farming farther from the shoreline, with the help of box-shaped facilities that can feed and monitor fish population­s remotely. It encouraged the manufactur­e and use of cages and fishing vessels that shuttle around to keep fish farms running. Environmen­tally friendly materials and methods are incentiviz­ed in equipment making.

The ministries signaled easy access to deep-sea areas for farms, though stressing such projects must be vetted for their impacts on ocean flows and maritime activities, such as maritime military training.

The push to expand farming areas deep in the ocean is part of a national drive to build a “blue grain barn” and bolster domestic food supply amid rising external uncertaint­ies.

China laid out its ambition to build “modern sea farms” in the No 1 Central Document last year. The document is the first policy statement released annually by the Communist Party of China Central Committee and the State Council, China’s Cabinet, and has long served as an indicator of government priorities.

In June, six department­s led by the agricultur­e ministry issued a guideline to speed up the constructi­on of deep sea farms and step up the making of cages and other smart equipment needed to run such farms.

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