Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
US Markets for Tilapia Products Kevin Fitzsimmons, Ph.D. Professor, University of Arizona Visiting Professor/Fulbright Scholar, Asian Institute of Technology / Kasetsart University Bangkok, Thailand Sec/Tres, American Tilapia Association President, World Aquaculture Society Tegucigalpa, HONDURAS August 2004
2
Introduction F Quick review of tilapia F Explosion in tilapia trade F US markets F Opportunities to expand markets
3
Tilapia production F Currently second in volume to carps F Prediction: Tilapia will become most important aquaculture crop in this century F Widest demand, no religious/cultural concerns, few environmental concerns F More genetic potential F Greatest variety of production systems
5
Farmed around the world. F Tilapia production in 100+ countries. F China is world’s largest producer. F Philippines, Thailand, Indonesia, Latin America, Egypt significant producers F Germany, Belgium, Spain, Canada, Korea, Japan, most states in US F Total production >1,500,000 mt in 2003
6
Global Tilapia Sales (farmgate) F For year 2000 F US $ 1,706,538,200 (FAO Fisheries Circular No. 886) F 2003 sales >$ 2,500,000,000 F 2010 sales >$ 5,000,000,000
7
Tilapia - the aquatic chicken F Grows in all kinds of farms F Eats all kinds of food F Large eggs and easy to rear young F Lots of ways to prepare the fish
8
Ponds and cages
9
Intensive tank culture Tanks in Arizona Tanks in Eritrea
10
Raceway Systems Intensive raceways Extensive raceways
11
Intensive farms in buildings in cool climates
12
Intensive farms with recirculation in greenhouses
13
How did tilapia get so popular, so fast?
14
Tilapia - the Perfect “Aquaculture” Storm
15
Tilapia widely popular around the world and beyond. F Common names: Tilapia, chambo, boulti, lou fei, pla nil, St. Peters fish, mojara, freshwater and/or red snapper F Used in many cuisine, hundreds of recipes, often replaces over-fished local species F Eggs hatched and fry reared on International Space Station
16
Environmentally correct F Primarily vegetarian F Most farm systems cause little pollution F Tilapia were long ago established as exotic species, common food fish F Grown mostly in developing countries F Few diseases, essentially no chemicals used
17
Research & Development ISTA 6 (Manila, Philippines, Sept 12 -16, 2004) F International Symposia on Tilapia in Aquaculture
18
Genetic Improvements in Tilapia (From: Mair, G., 2002)
19
US Tilapia consumption - 2003 ( 187,000 mt of live weight = 412,260,000 lbs)
20
F Imports in 2003 were $241,205,610 F US production of $30,000,000 at farm F 2003 sales were over $271,000,000 F 1994 - 2003 US tilapia sales (imports and domestic) exceeded one billion $$$ US Sales of tilapia
21
Top Ten Seafoods (U.S.) per capita (lbs)
22
Major fresh fillet buyers (US) F Major restaurant chains (Darden: Red Lobster, Bahama Breeze, Olive Garden, Landry’s: Joe’s CrabShack, Wille G’s, Rainforest Cafe), Ruby Tuesday, Applebees). F Major grocery chains (Safeway, Kroger, Winn-Dixie, Wegmans, Publix, Basha’s) F Food service (supply small restaurant & grocery chains) - SYSCO, Fleming Co., Shamrock
23
US. Tilapia imports 1993-2002
24
$ 174,215,165 (2002) $241,205,610 (2003)
25
17,952 mt fresh fillets, 23,249 mt frozen fillets, 49,045 mt whole frozen (2003)
26
Major Tilapia Producers (for year 2002) F China - 706,000 metric tons / year F Philippines - 122,277 mt / year F Mexico - 110,000 mt / year F Thailand - 100,000 mt / year F Taiwan Province - 90,000 mt / year F Brasil - 75,000 mt / year F Indonesia - 50,000 mt / year
27
Consumer evolution in US F Ethnic buyers (Asian - Latino) F Up-scale restaurants F Casual dining F Club stores F Local groceries
28
US Tilapia Supply and Demand F Supply of fresh fillets primarily from Central America and Ecuador F Frozen fillets from China and Southeast Asia. F Demand for live fish in immigrant Asian communities
29
Fresh tilapia fillet products F Size (under 3 oz, 195 g F Skin on, shallow skin or deep skin F Individual wrap, 2 or 5 kg package, master pack
30
Fresh tilapia fillet product prices FOB Miami F Size (under 3 oz, 195 g $3.35 - 3.55/lb F Variation in prices due to skinning, packaging, volumes and history with buyer F Additional variations with terms of payment
31
Quality control and assurance F National standards F ISO and HACCP (Hazard Analysis at Critical Control Points) F Industry standards F Buyer standards F Other (NGO’s)
32
Advertising
33
Current US Market Trends F Increase in demand for all forms of tilapia F Demand increase will be greatest for fresh fillets F Prices have been constant for several years and will remain stable, will not increase with inflation
34
IQF Fillets
35
Smoked products
36
Impacts of “Industrial” Production of Tilapia F Spin-off some products into local markets F Availability of prepared feeds F Availability of domesticated stocks F Possibility of more production cooperatives
37
Historic consequences F Foreign investment, new jobs, and improved standard of living F Foreign trade and reliable income F Imports of technology and know-how (especially processing, handling and packaging) F Spin-off to other aquaculture F Improvements in personal hygiene F Many jobs for women
38
Historic consequences F Desire of small farmers to adopt methods of large growers F Increase in effluent generation F Eutrophication from lake cage farms F Increase in conflicts with fish eating birds F Imports of sex reverse hormones F Improved basic farming practices
39
Historic consequences (Industry by-products) F Leather goods from skin will become a significant contributor to profitability F Pharmaceuticals from skins F Formed fish products F Fertilizer F Fish meal
40
Predictions F Tendency for small farmers to “overshoot” level of technology F More “organic” tilapia products F Cut back on high level of protein in tilapia diets F Bird netting to discourage birds F Reduction in MT for sex reversal F Integrated farming to reuse effluents for crop irrigation
41
Predictions F World tilapia production (1,265,780 mt in 2000, FAO) reached 1,500,000 mt in 2003 and 2,000,000 mt by 2010
42
Aquaculture Collaborative Research Support Program Thank you! Questions? The Aquaculture CRSP is funded in part by United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Grant No. LAG-G-00-96-90015-00 and by participating institutions.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.