Frederico Füllgraf, Santiago de Chile
Pichilemu and Bucalemu – «Little Forest» and «Big Forest» in the Mapuche language Mapugundún – are coveted beach-resorts in the region O’Higgins, 200 to 240 kilometers south-west of Santiago de Chile. Because of its break points in Punta de Lobos Pichilemu is a particularly hot surfer-tip.
But the time-honored fishing villages are also strongholds of Chilean seaweed fisheries, a nondescript, extractive industry, which counts as part of Chile’s aquaculture. At least 35,000 fishermen and gatherers are employed in the production of approximately 700,000 tons of algae per year composed of some 18 different species – including Chascón (giant kelp) (Macrocystis pyrifera), Luga Negra (Sarcothalia crispata), Luga Roja (Gigartina skottsbergii) Chicorea del Mar (Chondracanthus chamissoi) and Luche (Porphyra columbiana). The seaweeds are collected from shallow waters or the beach or actively bred in the sea. Up to 500,000 tonnes are regularly exported to Japan, the US, China and Spain. With annual sales of around 300 million US dollars (Subpesca, 2013), it’s a thriving business for the traders and exporters, but not as lucrative for algueras, the seaweed collectors.
This is a chronicle of a collection economy, which should mutate into a biotech business.
Los mariscos que comemos
- World Food Day 2024, Joint Webinar with Fish Party
- Keynote at the ‘Feed the Future – Innovation Lab for Fish’
- Disfrute de deliciosos y sostenibles pescados y mariscos con los talleres de Mundus maris
- Chiloé, o: Los desastres de Salmonopoly
- From plates to fuel – the controversial seaweed boom in Chile
- Seafood Symposium – From Fisheries to Foodies, 27 April 2015
- Baltic students concerned about sustainable foods, Rogow, Poland, 15-19 April 2015
- “Inseparable” – Fish sustainability campaign celebrates event in Athens
- Environmentally conscious consumer behaviour in food – what can I do?
- Respetar la talla mínima de los peces ¿Qué dicen los comerciantes de pescado en el Senegal?
- Let’s save the Oceans! – Cercle Europa invites
- The Mundus maris campaign in the urban markets in Dakar
- International Study Group Brussels: Save the Seas!
- Save baby fish or Point ‘n’ kill?
- Mercado San Miguel in Central Madrid
- Khazan – Traditional coastal zone management in Goa, India
- Relator Especial de la ONU sobre el derecho a la alimentación