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Overview of Global Tilapia Trade and US Markets

Overview of Global Tilapia Trade and US Markets. Kevin Fitzsimmons, Ph.D. President, World Aquaculture Society Professor, University of Arizona Sec./Tres., American Tilapia Association Jan. 20, 2005. Tilapia aquaculture. Second most important farmed fish after the carps

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Overview of Global Tilapia Trade and US Markets

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  1. Overview of Global Tilapia Trade and US Markets Kevin Fitzsimmons, Ph.D. President, World Aquaculture Society Professor, University of Arizona Sec./Tres., American Tilapia Association Jan. 20, 2005

  2. Tilapia aquaculture • Second most important farmed fish after the carps • Most widely grown of any farmed fish • In 2003 became the eighth most popular seafood in the US • In 2004 moved up to sixth most popular seafood in the US

  3. Global Tilapia Sales (farmgate) • For year 2000 • US $ 1,706,538,200(FAO Fisheries Circular No. 886) • 2003 sales >$ 2,500,000,000 • 2010 sales >$ 5,000,000,000

  4. How did tilapia get so popular, so fast?

  5. Large cage farms

  6. Tilapia-shrimp polyculture farms

  7. Intensive Raceway Systems

  8. Improvedprocessingplants

  9. Additional processing and quality assurance steps • Depuration stage • Bleeding step • Deep skinning • Additional trimming • Ozone dips • Improved packaging • Faster delivery

  10. Individual bags for frozen fillets

  11. Highquality importedproducts

  12. IQF Fillets

  13. US market development • The LAND opens at EPCOT in 1983 – features tilapia culture and on menu in the Good Turn Restaurant • Farms in US supplying live markets • Farms in Colombia, Costa Rica, Jamaica Taiwan, and Indonesia begin imports

  14. Consumer evolution in US • Ethnic buyers (Asian and Latino) • Live markets • Up-scale restaurants • Casual dining • Club stores • Local groceries

  15. US Consumption of tilapia from domestic and imported sources

  16. US Tilapia consumption(187,000 mt of live weight - 2003)(229,000 mt of live weight – 2004 est)

  17. 23,000 mt fresh fillets, 33,000 mt frozen fillets, 55,000 mt whole frozen (est. 2004)

  18. $174,215,165 (2002)$241,205,610 (2003) $287,000,000 (2004)

  19. US Sales of tilapia • Imports in 2004 were $267,233,031 through November • US production of $30,000,000 at farm • Total 2004 Imports at least $287,000,000 • 2004 Total US tilapia sales at least $317,000,000

  20. Top Ten Seafoods (U.S.)per capita (lbs)

  21. Consumption patterns in producing countries • Consumption by growers • Local markets • Live tanks in restaurants • Sell to large urban markets • High quality product into up-scale domestic markets • Restaurants and groceries • Exports

  22. New product forms Smoked tilapia Sashimi grade tilapia

  23. Advertising

  24. Current Global Market Trends Prices have been constant for several years and will remain stable, will not increase with inflation

  25. Current Global Market Trends • Increase in demand for all forms of tilapia • Demand increase will be greatest for fresh fillets

  26. Industry by-products • Leather goods from skin will become a significant contributor to profitability • Pharmaceuticals from skins • Formed fish products • Fertilizer • Fish meal

  27. Flowers made from Tilapia scales

  28. Global aquaculture production of tilapia

  29. Future global tilapia production

  30. Tilapia – Worth going to jail? • PLACETAS, Cuba, September 1 • Police arrested a young man who was selling tilapia fillets out of his bicycle in Placetas Sunday morning and local residents loudly protested the lost possibility of buying the fish. • The policeman making the arrest saw the man at an intersection and ordered him to walk to the police station while he followed in his car. • Residents watching the parade protested loudly. One woman brought her hands to her head and said: "Now, what am I going to feed my children and my mother? We are the ones that get stuck, because they (meaning the government) don't sell fish through the rationing system." • A young woman said: "Now they'll confiscate the tilapia and keep it for themselves."

  31. Funding for this research was provided by theAquaculture Collaborative Research Support Program The Aquaculture CRSP is funded in part by United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Grant No. LAG-G-00-96-90015-00 and by participating institutions.

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