SEVENSEAS Marine Conservation & Travel Issue 24, May 2017 | Page 119

AgriProtein has developed a black soldier fly-based feed called MagMeal™. They are taking something that most consider waste and turning it into a product that can help solve our global challenge of feeding nine billion people. They started farming black solider flies in 2008, opened a pilot plant in 2010, quickly built an international network of partners and opened their first commercial scale factory in 2014. Just recently, they announced plans aimed at building 20 fly farms in the U.S. and Canada in pursuit of their global targets of 100 fly farms by 2024 and 200 by 2027.

For them, participating in the F3 Challenge is a necessity in promoting international collaboration and having a larger public platform for the issue—to stop destroying the oceans to feed animals. Five years ago, AgriProtein formed a F3 Challenge partnership with Abagold, a cultivator of abalone and trout. Together these two companies have been exploring the potential of using MagMeal in the complete abalone growth diet. The hope of this partnership is to create a world first ZFIFO (Zero Fish in to Fish Out) fish farm in South Africa’s Western Cape region.

AgriProtein’s participation is also helping bring the issue of nutrient recycling to a larger audience by demonstrating that recycled nutrients are a valuable commodity.

“In the coming decades the black soldier fly will become as important as the honeybee in our agricultural system in helping us meet the growing food demand,” says AgriProtein cofounder and CEO Jason Drew. “By putting insects back into the role they have played for millions of years, we will help preserve marine environments while improving the health of the chickens and fish that we consume.”

Insects are part of the evolutionary diet of fish, and a number of fish species have been successfully raised on insect protein. Finding the right combination of fish-free nutrients that provide the same nutritional value to the fish and us humans for all types of seafood, and that don’t fluctuate in cost, is the innovation focus for the F3 team.

What could be more sustainable then harnessing flies and food waste to feed fish?

The F3 Challenge showcases the science and sustainability of alternative aquafeeds. By accelerating the progress being made we have the chance to help our ocean fish stocks recover so we can continue to feed our growing population.

This is Part II of a seven-part series about the contestants competing for the $200,000 F3 prize. Learn more (https://herox.com/F3) about the F3 challenge and its participants. To see the prize leader and cast your vote on the winner, visit:  https://goo.gl/Tp2qlg.

May 2017 - Technology

SEVENSEAS - 119