Fish Focus

CARGILL PARTNERS WITH FISH FARMERS

Cargill partners with fish farmers to chart new course in seafood sustainability. Cargill has set a course to protect oceans, a vital ecosystem where the company helps to grow and move food around the world. Cargill’s latest initiative, SeaFurther™ Sustainability, will help aqua farmers raise more sustainable seafood with less environmental impact. It is part of the company’s overall carbon commitment, with a science-based scope 3 target to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 30 percent per tonne of food by 2030. SeaFurther alone will help save two billion kilograms of CO2 by 2030, which is the equivalent of removing more than 400,000 cars from the road.

“With SeaFurther Sustainability we are charting a new bold course, one that makes aquaculture better for our planet,” said Pilar Cruz, president and group leader for Cargill Aqua Nutrition. “Seafood consumption is rising globally. We want to meet that demand; increasing production while decreasing environmental impact. By working closely with farmers to source sustainable ingredients, improve farm productivity and ensure fish welfare, Cargill is redefining aquaculture’s role in helping the world thrive.”

Cargill’s SeaFurther programme will start with salmon farmers, who are focused on the role they play in ocean stewardship and addressing the sustainability of food systems, especially with relation to climate change.

“We are excited to see a clear commitment from Cargill that is focused on the needs to reduce the environmental footprint of salmon,”said Stian Amble, Biology and Quality Advisor, Nova Sea.  “Delivering more sustainable aquaculture will require the value chain to align on key goals and work together to deliver on them. By agreeing on the value of the changes that are required, we can deliver true transformation to become more sustainable more quickly and at greater scale.”

Through SeaFurther Sustainability, Cargill is setting the goal to reduce the footprint of farmed salmon 30% by 2030.  Today, feed represents up to 90% of a salmon’s environmental footprint. To reduce this climate impact and enable salmon farmers to provide consumers with sustainably raised seafood options, SeaFurther is focused on:

While the company is starting with salmon, SeaFurther will expand, with an intent to add other species, like shrimp in the near future. This initiative builds on Cargill’s extensive supply chain efforts which centre around the belief that agriculture is how we’ll feed a growing population while protecting our earth’s resources.

SeaFurther joins a fleet of Cargill’s strategic partnerships, investments, research and technologies aimed at protecting oceans. Cargill is leading the way in reducing the environmental impact of global bulk shipping in line with the International Maritime Organisation’s target to reduce decarbonise shipping by at least 50 percent by 2050.

“The health of the world’s salmon is ultimately linked to the health of our oceans,” said Jan Dieleman, president of Cargill’s Ocean Transportation business. “Large-scale carbon reduction requires commitment across the global supply chain and we’re working with partners to develop solutions to reduce our impact on the environment. As one of the world’s largest vessel charterers, Cargill continues its push to reduce emissions and raise industry standards.”

Since the end of 2019, Cargill has installed around $3 million USD worth of energy saving equipment onboard some of our long-term time charter vessels. Cargill is also a strategic partner of ZeroNorth, a tech start-up that provides digital tools that improve vessel performance and reduce fuel consumption. In 2020, Cargill partnered with BAR Technologies to bring their WindWings – large, solid wing sails that measure up to 45 meters in height – to the deck of bulk cargo ships to harness the power of the wind and reduce CO2 emissions by as much as 30 percent.

“Cargill has an opportunity to drive real, positive climate impact for people and the planet,” said Cruz. “With our global footprint and view across supply chains, sustainable oceans and sustainable seafood can become a reality if we are all in, partnering with farmers, working across the industry and pulling in the same direction.”