A mud crab and fish hatchery will be inaugurated by U.S. Ambassador Judith Fergin and the East Timor Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries Sr. Mariano Assanami Sabino in a ceremony, March 8, 2013.
This venture in aquaculture development comes at a crucial time for East Timor,
as the country seeks to diversify its economy and feed its growing
population while protecting its coastal and marine resources for tourism
and future generations. Mud crabs are a prized delicacy throughout Asia, commanding high prices in upper-end restaurants and hotels.
The facility is the country's first brackish water hatchery. It was built by ACDI/VOCA's
Mud Crab and Fish Cultivation program in coordination with the East
Timor Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries, and with funding from the
United States Department of Agriculture's (USDA) Food for Progress
program.
The
nation's stable weather patterns and over 700 km of coastline are
well-suited for sustainable coastal aquaculture production. Still,
fish-farming practices that have grown rapidly during the last 20 years
in other Asian nations such as Vietnam, the Philippines and Indonesia are almost nonexistent in East Timor.
New Hatchery Brings New Economic Opportunities
Mud crabs were selected because they can be environmentally sustainable to cultivate, have strong market potential in nearby countries such as Japan, Taiwan and Singapore, and can be fattened in coastal ponds alongside milkfish or tilapia.
Once
operational, the hatchery is expected to produce 240,000 mud crabs per
year. The facility can also be modified to produce brackish and
saltwater fish.
The new complex incorporates a number of technologies that are firsts for East Timor:
four ponds totaling two hectares; a powerful 4-cylinder generator; a
UV seawater filtration system; numerous tanks for spawning and
cultivating crabs; and a state-of-the-art laboratory designed for
ensuring quality control, growing phytoplankton and rearing the youngest
crab larvae.
Seed
stock produced at the hatchery will be transported to cooperatives
whose members have already been trained to fatten mud crabs in cages and
pens placed in coastal mangrove areas. The program began organizing
cooperative groups in 2011, and now estimates that 70 cooperatives will
benefit from the hatchery's production.
Hatchery is Environmentally Friendly and Sustainable
"Hatchery seed stock is easier and more environmentally friendly to raise than wild catch," said Jinki Comon , the program's technical manager. "Sourcing crabs from the hatchery rather than coastal areas lessens overfishing."
The
potential for the facility does not end with mud crabs—it could easily
be modified to produce other aquatic species such as snapper, milkfish
or grouper and sea bass.
This potential is not lost to Dani Fernandes ,
who will manage the hatchery as it is turned over to the ministry in
the coming months. "I hope that [the hatchery] will become a center for
aquaculture and for research that will attract and train the type of
people that can help develop Timor Leste's fisheries," said Fernandes.
ACDI/VOCA
implements the Mud Crab and Fish Cultivation program which began in
2010 and is funded by the United States Department of Agriculture.
ACDI/VOCA is an economic development organization that fosters
broad-based economic growth, raises living standards and creates vibrant
communities. Based in Washington, D.C., ACDI/VOCA has worked in 145 countries since 1963, empowering people to succeed in the global economy.
Contact: Elise Otto (Timor Leste)
Mud Crab and Fish Cultivation (MCFC) Program
Bidau Akadiru Hun
P.O. Box 86, Dili, Timor Leste
Phone +(670) 3310902
otto.elise@gmail.com
Mud Crab and Fish Cultivation (MCFC) Program
Bidau Akadiru Hun
P.O. Box 86, Dili, Timor Leste
Phone +(670) 3310902
otto.elise@gmail.com
SOURCE: ACDI/VOCA
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