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Produción y mercados internaciónal de Tilapia

Produción y mercados internaciónal de Tilapia. Kevin Fitzsimmons University of Arizona American Tilapia Association Guadalajara, Jalisco, MEXICO Mar 20, 2003. Introduction. Review worldwide tilapia trade Suppliers and consumers in the Americas Mexico production

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Produción y mercados internaciónal de Tilapia

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  1. Produción y mercados internaciónal de Tilapia Kevin FitzsimmonsUniversity of Arizona American Tilapia Association Guadalajara, Jalisco, MEXICO Mar 20, 2003

  2. Introduction • Review worldwide tilapia trade • Suppliers and consumers in the Americas • Mexico production • Opportunities to expand markets

  3. Tilapia trade • Second in volume to the carps • Prediction: Tilapia will become most important aquaculture crop in this century • More genetic potential • Greatest variety of production systems

  4. Established market demand • Accepted in many national dishes • Popular in many forms (live, whole, fillets, fresh and frozen, smoked, sashimi, fried skins)

  5. International ResearchISTA(next in Manila, Philippines, Sept 2004) • International Symposia on Tilapia in Aquaculture

  6. Genetic improvements in tilapia (From: Mair, G., 2002)

  7. Major Tilapia Producers (for year 2002) • China - 629,182 metric tons / year • Mexico - 102,000 mt / year • Thailand - 100,000 mt / year • Philippines - 92,284 mt / year • Taiwan Province - 85,000 mt / year • Brazil - 65,000 mt / year • Indonesia - 50,000 mt / year

  8. Tilapia production in the Americas

  9. Production of Tilapia in the Americas 2002 (by volume)

  10. US Tilapia consumption - 2002 (Jan-Nov)(117,842 mt of live weight)

  11. US. Tilapia imports 1993-2002

  12. $ 174,215,165 (2002)

  13. Typical prices for Tilapia products sold in the U.S. (Feb. 2003.)

  14. Mexico - 102,000 mt Tilapia-shrimp farm in Sonora Pond Tilapia farm in Tamaulipas

  15. Tilapia production in Mexico • Production in most states of Mexico • Most production in southern states • Intensive in north, lake ranching in south • Repopulation of reservoirs • Problem with UN-FAO definition of aquaculture (no clear ownership) • Tilapia-shrimp polyculture in seawater(UJAT y CIAD)

  16. Markets in Mexico Raceway system, Tamaulipas • Strong domestic markets; on ice, fillets in grocery stores • All domestic consumption - Will eventually develop export markets.

  17. Brazil - 65,000 mt

  18. Tilapia production & Markets in Brasil • Production in Southeast and Northeast • Red tilapia in Southeast for fee-fishing and food • Cage farms allowed in NE reservoirs. • Tilapia leather industry • Jump in interest with ISTA 5 in Rio. • Developing export markets.

  19. Tilapia production in Ecuador • Replacing shrimp because of white spot and other shrimp diseases • Using shrimp infrastructure • Exporting to US and EU • Benefits to shrimp culture with polyculture

  20. Tilapia production in Ecuador and shrimp viral infections WhiteSpot Taura IHHN

  21. Red strains of tilapia most popular for brackish polyculture systems

  22. Tilapia production in outside ponds with shrimp in covered ponds

  23. Costa Rica - 15,000 mt Acuacorporacion ponds in Cañas, Costa Rica

  24. Jamaica - 5,200 mtTilapia production 1980-2001

  25. USA  9,000 mt • Production in many states • Mostly intensive systems, many recirculating • Sales to ethnic markets as live fish, high value

  26. USA - Intensive tanks Tanks in Arizona Tanks in California

  27. USA - Ponds and cages

  28. Raceway Systems Intensive raceways Extensive raceways

  29. Pond culture to cotton irrigation

  30. Intensive farms in New York and Iowa

  31. Intensive farms in Illinois & Louisiana

  32. Expanding markets • Quality control and assurance • Advertising • Product placement • Endorsements • New recipes and product forms

  33. Quality control and assurance • National standards • HACCP (Hazard Analysis at Critical Control Points) • Industry standards • Buyer standards • Other (NGO’s)

  34. Advertising

  35. Direct retail sales

  36. www.tilapia.org

  37. Product placement • “Saving Faith” • Murder mystery • Detective fixes elegant tilapia dinner to seduce the beautiful blonde.

  38. Dear Kevin, • I recently began using Tilapia fillets farm raised by Sea Best and distributed by Beaver Street Fisheries, Inc. I buy these in individual vacuum sealed packages in one pound bags at Wal-Mart in San Marcos, Texas. My husband has diabetes and we both are very weight conscious. This fish is the perfect food item for us, I love the way it is packaged, just use what I need for one meal, it is reasonably priced, always available in the market and consistently high quality. I trust you will forward these comments to the producer. • I LOVE THE PRODUCT!!!! • Marian Birnie Aug. 12, 2001

  39. New recipes

  40. New recipes

  41. Sashimi

  42. Fried tilapia skins

  43. International/US Supply and Demand TRENDS • Supply of fillets primarily from China, Southeast Asia, Ecuador and Central America. • Demand for live fish needs to expand beyond Asian markets • With rapid increases in supply, demand must increase at least as fast to support price.

  44. Major Tilapia Producers in International Trade • China - whole frozen, IQF fillets • Ecuador - fresh fillets • Taiwan Prov. - whole, IQF, sashimi • Central America - fresh fillets • Indonesia - IQF fillets • Thailand - IQF fillets

  45. Current International Market Trends • Increase in demand for all forms of tilapia • Demand increase will be greatest for fresh fillets • Prices have been constant for several years and will remain stable, will not increase with inflation.

  46. Changes and Predictions • Further intensification in virtually every country • Production will be 75% Oreochromis niloticus, 20% Red strains, O. aureus and O. mossambicus mostly for hybridization • Production will be 50% intensive ponds, 25% cages, 10% intensive recirculating systems

  47. Changes and Predictions • US production will increase slowly, intensifying current production methods

  48. Changes and Predictions • Further intensification in virtually every country • Production will be 75% Oreochromis niloticus, 20% Red strains, O. aureus and O. mossambicus mostly for hybridization • Production will be 50% intensive ponds, 25% cages, 10% intensive recirculating systems

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