Environmental sustainability of future aquaculture production: analysis of Singaporean and Norwegian policies

To address global food demand and sustainability challenges, aquaculture has appeared as an essential element in food systems, and an increasing number of national aquaculture policies have emerged over the past decades. However, several of these policies have failed because of an often-argued inabi...

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Main Authors: Bohnes, Florence Alexia, Hauschild, Michael Zwicky, Schlundt, Jørgen, Nielsen, Max, Laurent, Alexis
Other Authors: School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/162601
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1626012023-12-29T06:52:10Z Environmental sustainability of future aquaculture production: analysis of Singaporean and Norwegian policies Bohnes, Florence Alexia Hauschild, Michael Zwicky Schlundt, Jørgen Nielsen, Max Laurent, Alexis School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering Food Technology Centre (NAFTEC) Engineering::Bioengineering Prospective Scenarios Seafood To address global food demand and sustainability challenges, aquaculture has appeared as an essential element in food systems, and an increasing number of national aquaculture policies have emerged over the past decades. However, several of these policies have failed because of an often-argued inability to anticipate their far-reaching implications on environmental and socio-economic variables. To tackle this gap, we propose a step-wise framework to assess the national environmental impacts from aquaculture industries with a prospective and systemic approach. Starting from identifying policy-based national targets, the methodology relies on economic equilibrium modeling to develop realistic future-oriented scenarios of the aquaculture sector, and couples them with life cycle assessment principles. To evidence its operability, we apply the framework to two distinct case countries: Norway and Singapore. Beyond our key findings from the analyses of the policies in both countries, we observed that feed production and usage are important drivers of impacts, hence calling for new and more environmentally-friendly feed options. Our results additionally show that the development of aquaculture following existing governmental policies may not directly reduce greenhouse gases emissions and, hence, not support climate change mitigation objectives. These findings should however be cautioned as potential shifts of diets due to the increasing seafood availability might occur, leading to indirect environmental benefits. We therefore advocate the further expansion of our framework to cover the entire food system, so it can integrate such indirect effects. Meanwhile, we recommend its interim application to support policy-making and help move towards more environmentally sustainable aquaculture systems. Published version The research stays in Singapore that allowed the F.A. Bohnes et al. Bohnes and Laurent,2019Bjørn et al., 2016Bjørn et al., 2015Santos and Ramos, 2018WHO, 2018Wu,2019Neugebauer et al., 2016 Aquaculture 549 (2022) 737717 15authors to collect the relevant data for the case study were funded by Niels Bohr Fondet, Otto Mønsteds Fond and Oticon Fonden. 2022-11-01T01:35:14Z 2022-11-01T01:35:14Z 2022 Journal Article Bohnes, F. A., Hauschild, M. Z., Schlundt, J., Nielsen, M. & Laurent, A. (2022). Environmental sustainability of future aquaculture production: analysis of Singaporean and Norwegian policies. Aquaculture, 549, 737717-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2021.737717 0044-8486 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/162601 10.1016/j.aquaculture.2021.737717 2-s2.0-85120336244 549 737717 en Aquaculture © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Bioengineering
Prospective Scenarios
Seafood
spellingShingle Engineering::Bioengineering
Prospective Scenarios
Seafood
Bohnes, Florence Alexia
Hauschild, Michael Zwicky
Schlundt, Jørgen
Nielsen, Max
Laurent, Alexis
Environmental sustainability of future aquaculture production: analysis of Singaporean and Norwegian policies
description To address global food demand and sustainability challenges, aquaculture has appeared as an essential element in food systems, and an increasing number of national aquaculture policies have emerged over the past decades. However, several of these policies have failed because of an often-argued inability to anticipate their far-reaching implications on environmental and socio-economic variables. To tackle this gap, we propose a step-wise framework to assess the national environmental impacts from aquaculture industries with a prospective and systemic approach. Starting from identifying policy-based national targets, the methodology relies on economic equilibrium modeling to develop realistic future-oriented scenarios of the aquaculture sector, and couples them with life cycle assessment principles. To evidence its operability, we apply the framework to two distinct case countries: Norway and Singapore. Beyond our key findings from the analyses of the policies in both countries, we observed that feed production and usage are important drivers of impacts, hence calling for new and more environmentally-friendly feed options. Our results additionally show that the development of aquaculture following existing governmental policies may not directly reduce greenhouse gases emissions and, hence, not support climate change mitigation objectives. These findings should however be cautioned as potential shifts of diets due to the increasing seafood availability might occur, leading to indirect environmental benefits. We therefore advocate the further expansion of our framework to cover the entire food system, so it can integrate such indirect effects. Meanwhile, we recommend its interim application to support policy-making and help move towards more environmentally sustainable aquaculture systems.
author2 School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
author_facet School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
Bohnes, Florence Alexia
Hauschild, Michael Zwicky
Schlundt, Jørgen
Nielsen, Max
Laurent, Alexis
format Article
author Bohnes, Florence Alexia
Hauschild, Michael Zwicky
Schlundt, Jørgen
Nielsen, Max
Laurent, Alexis
author_sort Bohnes, Florence Alexia
title Environmental sustainability of future aquaculture production: analysis of Singaporean and Norwegian policies
title_short Environmental sustainability of future aquaculture production: analysis of Singaporean and Norwegian policies
title_full Environmental sustainability of future aquaculture production: analysis of Singaporean and Norwegian policies
title_fullStr Environmental sustainability of future aquaculture production: analysis of Singaporean and Norwegian policies
title_full_unstemmed Environmental sustainability of future aquaculture production: analysis of Singaporean and Norwegian policies
title_sort environmental sustainability of future aquaculture production: analysis of singaporean and norwegian policies
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/162601
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