Aquaculture waste proves profitable for seafood producers
Aquaculture waste proves profitable for seafood producers
As nearly one million tonnes of aquaculture waste are discarded annually, some firms have begun to seek ways to reclaim the waste and prevent it from posing a risk to the environment.
Vinh Hoan Corporation extracts proteins from fish waste for use in cosmetics and pharmaceuticals.
"Our company isolates collagen and gelatin from fish skin, two proteins that are used in cosmetics and pharmaceuticals", said Vinh Hoan's General Director, Nguyen Ngo Vi Tam.
About 19 per cent of its revenues come from aquacultural byproducts and 7 per cent from the recovery of collagen/gelatin.
The general director said her company launched its first collagen/gelatin plant in 2015 with an annual capacity of 2,000 tonnes. The plant was the first of its kind in Viet Nam.
In 2021, Vinh Hoan's aquacultural byproducts and collagen/gelatin products raked in over VND2.2 trillion, of which the latter contributed VND642 billion.
Nam Viet JSC has recently followed suit with a plant of 780 tonnes. As a result, insiders estimate that the market of collagen products will grow by 6 per cent annually, reaching roughly US$8 billion by 2027.
Viet Nam Food JSC (VNF) is profiting from the re-utilisation of shrimp waste.
Phan Thanh Loc, Viet Nam Food CEO, revealed that the biopolymers derived from shrimp heads, such as chitosan, are highly profitable as they are integral to anti-obesity and anti-fibrinolytic medications.
"We process shrimp heads into various products, including chitosan and hydrolysed liquid. Our shrimp-derived hydrolysed liquid is unique", Loc said.
In his estimation, shrimps' value would rise about five times should they be reclaimed into animal feed, twenty times into functional foods and thirty times into pharmaceuticals.
Unfortunately, most shrimp producers opt for animal feed because of the costs of investing in high-tech equipment.
Sao Mai Group JSC is another big name that has successfully turned pangasius fat into high-valued products, including cooking oil, shortening and margarine.
The process is lucrative as fish fat sells at VND16,000 per kilo, whereas cooking oil sells at VND46,000 per litre and the two substances at VND30,000 per kilo.
"We use the proteins concentrated in hydrolysed liquid to make broth mix. We reclaim everything", said Truong Vinh Thanh, Sao Mai's Deputy General Manager.
Experts estimated annual aquaculture waste at approximately one million tonnes. Such an amount of waste, if left untapped, would cause severe damage to the environment.
"If we can employ technology to turn 320,000 tonnes of annual shrimp waste, it would yield tens of billions of dollars", said Tran Van Tung, Deputy Minister of Science and Technology.
However, there is still ample room for improvement. Reclaimed agricultural waste in Viet Nam stood at just $275 million in 2020, far lower than the above figure.
Insiders underscored the inaccessibility of bank loans as the main reason for the slow pace.
"Firms have proclaimed for years that they do not need government financial support. Instead, they need readily-accessible bank loans and land slots", said Bui Ba Bong, former Deputy Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development.
Firms need bank loans to fund their research and development of new reclamation methods and obtain high-tech equipment that can put the methods into use. Unfortunately, bank loans are generally difficult to obtain as most banks are cautious about financing such ventures.
The situation is no better for firms seeking government financial support, as access to the money involves a lengthy administrative process.
"It is not easy to get hands-on financial support because of cumbersome procedures", said Vo Quan Huy, Director of the Huy Long An Company LTD.
Le Hang, Communication Director of the Vietnam Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers, estimated annual seafood output at eight million tonnes, of which aquaculture byproducts and waste account for nearly half.
She called for favourable policies to develop aquaculture byproducts and waste reclamation into an independent industry to fully unlock their economic potential.
"Ministries should put aquaculture byproducts and waste high on its agenda and regard their reclamation as an independent industry", she said.
She also called for a mechanism to encourage firms to invest heavily in the industry for the good of the environment.
According to the Department of Science, Technology and Environment under the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, up to 90 per cent of aquaculture waste is reclaimed annually but predominantly into animal feed, a low-valued product.
The department believed that the waste would become a money-spinner for firms should they pour sufficient finance into high-tech equipment, which allows for the manufacturing of higher-valued products.