Skretting research centre in Lerang, Stavanger. (Photo: Skretting)
Skretting adds RAS facilities to speed up salmon feed development
(NORWAY, 10/2/2018)
Skretting announced that it has included a state-of-the-art recirculation hall in its Lerang Research Station in Stavanger, Norway, intended to enable researchers to conduct precise experiments on its latest closed system feed formulations in strict, closely monitored environmental conditions.
This new facility comprises 12 independent recirculating aquaculture systems (RAS), predominantly conducting trials for salmon product development, which enables research on feed and formulations, and also evaluates feed interactions and influences on system performance.
The firm’s representatives point out that with the recirculation hall now complete, it joins its existing infrastructure of recirculation research units, located in Chile and Australia, adding that their importance is growing quickly as more innovative production facilities emerge that require customised feeds.
Paulo Mira Fernandes and the new RAS facilities. (Photo: Linkedin)
“Attempts to mitigate the biological risks associated with traditional aquaculture is leading to a lot of momentum for closed fish production systems, and this is happening all over the world. While these are unique systems with their own particular challenges, Skretting has been operating within this space for a long time; we brought the first recirc-specific diet to the market in 2009,” stressed Dr Paulo Mira Fernandes, researcher and RAS expert at Skretting Aquaculture Research Centre (ARC) and International Director on the Aquaculture Engineering Society Board of Directors.
The researchers explains that the knowledge and expertise that they continue to amass along with the R&D facilities that they have in place will prove invaluable as more and more of these systems come on stream.
Producers using RAS are also benefiting from Skretting’s robust set of pioneering AquaSim management tools that predict farm performance and enable production to be further optimised. Based upon appraisals of the farming environment and each farm’s production targets, and using more than 20 years of growth and waste prediction model development, AquaSim provides recommendations on the most cost-effective stocking patterns, feed selection and feeding strategy to help producers to achieve their desired results.
“Skretting has multiple research facilities dedicated to closed containment systems. As well as developing feeds that can help optimise our customers’ production, we have built an unprecedented knowledge bank of the most effective ways to manage and apply this technology,” said Fernandes.
“We know that feeding the fish means feeding the system, and our knowledge in this area ensures that we can help our customers maximise their production capacity,” the scientist concluded.
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