Announcement of UNU/IAS Electronic Seminar
Date: 11 Oct-11 Nov 1996. Title: The Blue Revolution - an integrated approach to aquaculture By: Michael Weber, co-author of the book "The Wealth of Ocean". Discussion Paper: M.Weber, 1996. "So you say you want a blue revolution?" The Amicus Journal, Fall 1996. Pages 39-42. (Available by air-mail - send request to - [log in to unmask]) Electronic Mailing list: ET-W3 to join, e-mail [log in to unmask] and write the message: SUB ET-W3 yourfirstname yourlastname, organization e.g. SUB ET-W3 Michael Weber, freelance writer Sponsor: Institute of Advanced Studies (UNU/IAS), The United Nations University, Tokyo.
Summary: Declining harvests of wild fish and rising demand are fostering renewed calls for aquaculture to close a looming animal protein gap. If aquaculture follows the pattern of the green revolution in agriculture--by relying on high inputs, and intensive cultivation--environmental problems will mount. This contrasts with integrated approaches used for centuries in Asia that produce food and treat wastes. Militating against these integrated approaches is the desire to use aquaculture as a means of economic development by supplying markets in developed countries with high-end products such as shrimp.
About the Author: Michael Weber is a freelance writer based in Washington, D.C. In 1995, W.W. Norton published The Wealth of Oceans, a book he wrote with Judith Gradwohl of the Smithsonian Institution. Mr. Weber worked for four years as a special assistant to the Director of the National Marine Fisheries Service in the United States. Before that, he managed marine conservation programs at the non-profit Center for Marine Conservation.
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