Norwegian aquaculture engineering firm the Bluegreen Group has deployed the first example of a new design of closed fish farm designed to provide improved fish quality with minimal environmental impact.
The aptly named Marine Donut concept utilises a donut-shaped closed fish farm that will prevent escape and contamination as well as minimise the risk of disease, algae, and sea lice. The need for antibiotics and other medicines and preparations can be significantly reduced. With the aid of the system, fish farm operators can exercise full control over the fish and the environment through digitisation and monitoring. Operators can also have adequate control over efficient feed factor, which further reduces costs.
Marine Donut is a flow system that exercises the fish, where the flow can be adjusted according to the breeder's desire. This recreates the environment that salmon experiences in rivers. The dimensions and geometry are designed so that the resulting depth pressure is ideal for the salmon.
The Marine Donut consists of a donut-shaped closed breeding unit (torus) some 60 metres in diameter. The main structure is made of HDPE and acts as a tight barrier against the external environment to prevent lice infestation and infection from occurring inside the plant.
The farm has floating pipes at the top and bracing pipes at the bottom in addition to vertical ballast tanks on the sides to allow the system to be raised and submerged. A working platform sits on top of the facility. Up to 1.1 tonne of biomass can be housed in the main structure.
The plant has a solution for collecting sludge as well as inlets below the sea lice belt. The structure is designed to withstand high exposure to both waves and currents, which means it is just as suitable for breeding yellowtail kingfish in the tropics as well as salmon and trout in colder waters.
Six alternative production strategies have been proposed.
The Bluegreen Group said available research indicates that the concept will provide the following benefits:
In 2022, Bluegreen developed a one-tenths scale model of the Marine Donut for trials off Canada's Atlantic coast by local subsidiary Bluegreen Canada. A pilot plant was tested at the facilities of Norwegian private research organisation SINTEF and the Marine Donut concept itself is now ready for commercialisation.
The first example was recently deployed at Romsdal Fjord in the northernmost part of Western Norway. Upon its arrival, it was filled with 200,000 salmon weighing 2.5 kilograms each. The salmon, which was provided by local seafood company SalMar, will swim around in the current within the donut until they reach 5.5 kilograms, by which time they are ready to be harvested as food fish.