Big Agriculture Becomes Big Aquaculture

 | Sep 16, 2015 07:45AM ET

On August 17, the privately owned agriculture giant Cargills PLC (CM:CARG) made the second-biggest acquisition in its 150-year history.

But it didn’t purchase in the grain, meat, poultry, or any of the other traditionally lucrative sectors.

Nope. Cargill is betting that the next hot growth area in farming will come from the sea.

The company plunked down about $1.5 billion for the Norwegian salmon feed producer, EWOS AS. In July, Cargill announced another smaller, $30-million deal with Naturisa to build a shrimp feed facility in Ecuador.

It seems the world’s largest grain trader has suddenly transformed itself into one of the three top aqua-feed producers in the world.

Hot Fish!

The reason behind Cargill’s moves is obvious. Fish farming has quietly become a big business. In fact, farmed fish production exceeded global beef output in volume back in 2010.

Leading the way is salmon. Over the past five years, production of farmed salmon worldwide has soared by a third to 2.5 million metric tons. Much of this growth occurred in China. The country is believed to produce about 62% of the world’s farmed salmon.

More salmon raised means more feed is needed. Demand for salmon feed is expected to climb by 4% to 5% this year and next. That’s a faster clip than any other animal protein, according to Rabobank.

And Cargill is hardly alone in its move into aquaculture and salmon.

In 2014, Japan’s Mitsubishi Corp. (TOKYO:8058) bought Norwegian fishery Cermaq ASA for about $1.4 billion. That made it the world’s number two salmon farmer.

The timing of both purchases looks to be right on the money.

Last year was a key milestone for the aquaculture industry. It was the first time that the consumption of farmed fish globally exceeded that of wild-caught fish. Just three decades ago, farmed fish accounted for a mere 11% of the amount of fish consumed.