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Fishy Concerns: Armenian Hatcheries Resist 'Costly' Technology

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  • Fishy Concerns: Armenian Hatcheries Resist 'Costly' Technology

    FISHY CONCERNS: ARMENIAN HATCHERIES RESIST 'COSTLY' TECHNOLOGY

    http://www.armenianow.com/economy/business/47168/armenia_fish_breeders_concerns
    BUSINESS | 25.06.13 | 10:05

    NAZIK ARMENAKYAN
    ArmeniaNow

    By Gohar Abrahamyan
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    While the government is trying to take steps to protect the country's
    water resources, demanding that a 'semi-closed' water cycle mode by
    used in fish farming, most fish-breeders claim it is an inefficient
    and costly process that harms their businesses.

    Still in late February the agriculture minister said that despite
    being one of the country's promising sectors fish farming had serious
    problems as far as water consumption was concerned. He then announced
    plans for hatcheries to switch to new technologies that would solve
    the problem of water management.

    According to the minister, 'closed' and 'semi-closed' cycles were
    planned for fish production at farms, which implies water saving
    through multiple use of same water. In this regime used water is used
    again with the application of special equipment and technologies.

    In order to work under such regimes fish farms need to be equipped
    with the newest technologies, such as special pumps, filters, oxygen
    generating devices, other special means for regulating water
    temperature and chemical composition, which entrepreneurs find quite
    costly.

    "In developed European countries they get up to 300-450 kilograms of
    fish with the use of one cubic meter of water. In our country today it
    is about 150 kilograms, which is a very low index," said the minister,
    giving large, medium-sized and small fish farm, one, three and five
    years, respectively, to introduce the new water-saving technologies.

    But Armenian Fish Farmers Association NGO Artur Atoyan says that most
    fish-breeders in Armenia are in poor financial condition and cannot
    afford to introduce this technology yet.

    "There are fish-farming enterprises that have accumulated a lot of
    debt and can barely maintain their existence. And the modern
    technology to be introduced is quite expensive, they are not for
    [poor] countries like ours. We've heard that it is a very good thing,
    but it won't be of use without adjustment to our local conditions,"
    says Atoyan, adding that banks consider hatcheries and fish farms to
    be a risky business and loan opportunities are limited in this area.

    Fish farming in Armenia is mostly common in the Ararat and Armavir
    regions of the country. Atoyan says still a few years ago Armenia had
    234 fish-breeding enterprises, but 57 of them were recently shut down
    and closures in this business continue.

    Atoyan says he has information that 97 fisheries will be exempted from
    the obligation to apply the 'semi-closed' cycle mode and will be
    allowed to use alternative means, but a large number of them will
    still face a dilemma.

    "This technology requires an investment of one million euros, while 97
    percent of fish farms in Armenia cannot afford it," says the head of
    the Armenian Fish Farmers Association.

    He also says that the use of closed cycle technologies will affect the
    taste and quality of fish.

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