Recirkuleret Tilapiafarm i USA
Bill Martin is the founder and CEO of Blue Ridge Aquaculture in Martinsville. The company is the largest indoor producer of the farm-raised fish. In the mid 80's Martin dabbled in the catfish businesses. With no success, he switched to Tilapia by the early 90's. Today his company produces four million pounds a year.
"They go to Washington DC, New York, Boston and then to Toronto. We have one truck that runs up the East Coast and one goes straight to Toronto," says Martin.
Each day, 10,000 to 20,000 fish leave the local facility....alive. It seems the demand for live fish is growing particularly in areas that have a booming Asian and Hispanic population. As for plans to start selling Tilapia to local stores, the company is hoping that'll happen in the next three years.
"We're now bringing investors in to develop this next building which
will allow us to have a presence in the filet market in the United
States and we'll see how that develops," says Martin.
From the
time they're mere eggs to full fledged fish (weighing over a pound),
Martin says mercury, antibiotics or hormones never enter the equation.
"Well,
it's very healthy for you, if you want to feed your child, this isn't
what you want to feed them this mercury," says Martin.
To say
business is rapidly swimming the company estimates it garners about 20
percent of the domestic fish market and it's finding it's quite nice to
be a big fish in a small pond.
Workers are also extremely pound of the company's ability to be self-sustaining. Blue Ridge recycles about 85 to 90 percent of it's water (used by the fish) It also captures its own waste and does not rely on the ocean to feed its Tilapia.