Walleye Farming

  • slough
    Posts: 595
    #2306686

    Will be interesting to see if this gets off the ground:

    Indoor walleye startup searches for a home in Minnesota as the state revamps its aquaculture plan

    A Minnesota-based startup looking to build the country’s first commercial indoor walleye farm is still far from breaking ground on a production site.

    “We’ve made some major progress, but all of this has turned out to be far more challenging than one would have expected,” said Clarence Bischoff, founder and CEO of Blue Water Farms and president of the Minnesota Aquaculture Association. “But we’re getting it, and it’s been a very rich experience in doing so.”

    In a letter from October 2020, Thom Petersen, Minnesota’s agriculture commissioner, shared his support for Blue Water Farms.

    “Walleye is a coveted food fish here. The market possibilities are large if we can dial in the production needs of this emerging industry,” Petersen wrote. “Blue Water Farms has proved to be a leader in the aquaculture field. The farm is involved in initiatives that are working to bring the aquaculture industry to the next level.”

    Last spring, Blue Water Farms was planning to operate its walleye hatchery, processing facilities and an aquaponic operation to produce lettuce, strawberries, cherry tomatoes and other products at a city-owned property in Red Wing. That plan has since changed.

    “We decided that’s not the right spot for us,” Bischoff said.

    A well that is now closed off located at the potential location in Red Wing was considered a “major asset” for Blue Water Farms, Bischoff said. He also said the group encountered problems “politically” as stipulations were added to a purchase offer that caused investor concern.

    “Our investors just said forget it,” Bischoff said of the Red Wing location.

    New search, partners
    The startup is now in the hunt for a new location that has “good water and some acreage,” Bischoff said, and not far from St. Paul where the group has agreed to a partnership with Shanghai Wholesale, a wholesale distributor located in the Twin Cities.

    “Shanghai Wholesale will sell all the walleye that we can produce, and at a price that works for us,” Bischoff said.

    Blue Water Farms has also recently entered a partnership with a group in Norway responsible for a new Recirculating Aquaculture System that Bischoff said the group will use in Minnesota.

    Aquaculture technology has become more advanced and sustainable in the last decade, but Bischoff said it’s still behind in the U.S., which is why Blue Water Farms has looked abroad for direction.

    “We needed to reach out to European companies with more experience to resolve the issues that we were encountering,” he said. “We’ve connected with those using advanced technology in Norway and from The Netherlands and Denmark, to get us going here in Minnesota.”

    Minnesota’s plan for aquaculture
    Bischoff said he hopes the state’s new aquaculture plan will include enough infrastructure investment needed to build the type of aquaculture systems that Blue Water Farms will need to produce walleye and other plant products.

    “In aquaculture in Minnesota, (the food fish market) is the biggest prize and that has the greatest potential,” he said.

    The Minnesota Department of Agriculture fielded public input on its new draft state aquaculture plan this winter, with officials expected to present the final plan to the state Legislature in February. It’s been 34 years since Minnesota wrote its last aquaculture plan and that plan did not include the raising of fish for food.

    Interest in food-fish aquaculture is growing in Minnesota, according to Minnesota Sea Grant, which finished its three-year project to determine the potential for a sustainable food-fish aquaculture industry in Minnesota.

    Bischoff said the Minnesota Aquaculture Association was “very concerned” with the state’s aquaculture draft plan because of the projections for the food-fish market, which do not align with the potential seen by the association and Blue Water Farms for the sector in the state.

    The Minnesota Aquaculture Association met with the consulting group that wrote the draft plan and was able to voice specific concerns, Bischoff said, which he hopes will be ironed out in the final plan.

    “The key thing is being far too low on their projections, because of the uncertainty around getting the infrastructure in place,” he said. “After we talked, I believe they are ready to move those projections in a much more positive direction.”

    Dutchboy
    Central Mn.
    Posts: 16818
    #2306688

    Rules & regulations will bog this thing down forever I would guess. The amount of blue tape just to justify all the government jobs is amazing.

    Riverrat
    Posts: 1596
    #2306692

    So aren’t walleyes that are closely packed together susceptible to the fungus that gives them those pink tumors? I caught a few of those this past fall and no way would I eat one. I even made sure to sanitize my hands between fish. And recirculating or not it will eventually discharge virus laden water, and boom CWD walleye style. No really sure that any of these farms have been successful but they’ve been talking about it for years.

    Reef W
    Posts: 2846
    #2306693

    So aren’t walleyes that are closely packed together susceptible to the fungus that gives them those pink tumors? I caught a few of those this past fall and no way would I eat one. I even made sure to sanitize my hands between fish. And recirculating or not it will eventually discharge virus laden water, and boom CWD walleye style. No really sure that any of these farms have been successful but they’ve been talking about it for years.

    Well that takes all the fun out of it. I just wondered if they’d let people fish in it like a trout pond.

    Red Eye
    Posts: 957
    #2306697

    Wonder how the tribe’s input will factor in?

    Steve Root
    South St. Paul, MN
    Posts: 5651
    #2306699

    If this is anything like Salmon farming, count me out. Between the artificial food pellets and the amount of antibiotics dumped on those fish…who are swimming around in each other’s crap…Pen raised Salmon are considered to be the worst food in the world. No thanks.

    How many stories have we heard about fish or other critters escaping from some facility and spreading disease or other havoc amongst the native populations? Asian Carp come to mind immediately.

    Grow beef. Or bacon.

    SR

    AK Guy
    Posts: 1432
    #2306701

    Ocean pen raised vs recirculating aquaculture systems (RAS) are apples to oranges. RAS raised fish are the most pristine fish brought to market. The water is filtered and all waste is removed and repurposed (often to grow lettuce). It’s a more healthy environment than the oceans, lakes and rivers. No mercury, pcb’s, or forever chemicals. I believe they’re the only fish that can be marketed as organic because they know everything that went into producing it. They don’t know what wild fish have been eating so it can’t be labeled as organic. RAS salmon farms are currently in Florida, Maine, Wisconsin, South Carolina, Maryland, and Ohio. It’s definitely the future of fish production for the masses.

    That being said, I prefer the old fashioned method of catching fish. I will never buy my fish from a store or a restaurant.

    3rdtryguy
    Central Mn
    Posts: 1529
    #2306703

    Farmed shrimp are not as good either

    Deuces
    Posts: 5270
    #2306705

    Folks would be quite surprised the amount of fresh produce that’s given to us in stores that are grown hydroponically. We’ve been eating pellets for a very long time…

    My cousin majored in hydro, very interesting systems. Its a very cool cycle, and I appreciate them trying to make this world more sustainable, but my same concern as mentioned above, in the end isn’t the whole system still just being fueled by pellets?

    DaveB
    Inver Grove Heights MN
    Posts: 4505
    #2306706

    I think someone was farming tilapia in an old brewery on West 7th, not sure if they still are.

    buschman
    Pool 2
    Posts: 1772
    #2306710

    Wonder how the tribe’s input will factor in?

    Sounds like it already had an impact. They said there were “political issues” in the Red Wing plans. I am assuming this was related but only a guess.

    suzuki
    Woodbury, Mn
    Posts: 18723
    #2306713

    Not interested.

    Riverrat
    Posts: 1596
    #2306717

    I wouldn’t be surprised at all that tilapia are being grown in a recirculating system. They eat poop and algae. We were supposed to get a giant hydroponics farm near here that was going to do the whole raise tilapia off the algae byproduct feed plants tilapia poop, etc. They had a bunch of grants out and I haven’t seen anything since. That was about 10 years ago. Some fish would do fine with a closed loop, I don’t think walleye will ever be one of them.

    munchy
    NULL
    Posts: 4951
    #2306768

    Speaking of feed pellets I saw a video the other day where they were making pig feed from literal ground up garbage fresh off the truck, plastic and all. Wouldn’t surprise me most of these feeds from these big feedlots come from a similar process.

    Mike Schulz
    Osakis/Long Prairie
    Posts: 1470
    #2306773

    Speaking of feed pellets I saw a video the other day where they were making pig feed from literal ground up garbage fresh off the truck, plastic and all. Wouldn’t surprise me most of these feeds from these big feedlots come from a similar process.

    not good

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