Authors
Christopher Costello, Ling Cao, Stefan Gelcich, Miguel Á Cisneros-Mata, Christopher M Free, Halley E Froehlich, Christopher D Golden, Gakushi Ishimura, Jason Maier, Ilan Macadam-Somer, Tracey Mangin, Michael C Melnychuk, Masanori Miyahara, Carryn L de Moor, Rosamond Naylor, Linda Nøstbakken, Elena Ojea, Erin O’Reilly, Ana M Parma, Andrew J Plantinga, Shakuntala H Thilsted, Jane Lubchenco
Publication date
2020/12
Journal
Nature
Volume
588
Issue
7836
Pages
95-100
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Description
Global food demand is rising, and serious questions remain about whether supply can increase sustainably 1. Land-based expansion is possible but may exacerbate climate change and biodiversity loss, and compromise the delivery of other ecosystem services 2, 3, 4, 5, 6. As food from the sea represents only 17% of the current production of edible meat, we ask how much food we can expect the ocean to sustainably produce by 2050. Here we examine the main food-producing sectors in the ocean—wild fisheries, finfish mariculture and bivalve mariculture—to estimate ‘sustainable supply curves’ that account for ecological, economic, regulatory and technological constraints. We overlay these supply curves with demand scenarios to estimate future seafood production. We find that under our estimated demand shifts and supply scenarios (which account for policy reform and technology improvements), edible food …
Total citations
201920202021202220232024232143209215117
Scholar articles
C Costello, L Cao, S Gelcich, MÁ Cisneros-Mata… - Nature, 2020
J Lubchenco, PM Haugan - The Blue Compendium: From Knowledge to Action for …, 2023