Comparative assessment of the environmental costs of aquaculture and other food production sectors: methods for meaningful comparisons : FAO/WFT Expert Workshop, 24-28 April 2006, Vancouver, Canada / edited by Devin M. Bartley, Cécile Brugère, Doris Soto, Pierre Gerber, and Brian Harvey.
Series: FAO fisheries proceedings ; 10Publication details: Rome : Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, 2007.Description: viii, 241 p.: ill., col. maps ; 30 cmISBN:- 9789251058633
- 9251058636
- ORG SH335 F36 no.10
- Available both in print and online.
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Main | ORG SH335 F36 NO.10 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 82067-1001 |
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ORG SH335 F36 NO.7 Sixth World Congress on Seafood Safety, Quality and Trade: | ORG SH335 F36 NO.8 Methodological workshop on the management of tuna fishing capacity: | ORG SH335 F36 NO.9 Global trade conference on aquaculture : | ORG SH335 F36 NO.10 Comparative assessment of the environmental costs of aquaculture and other food production sectors: | ORG SH335 F36 NO.11 The future of mariculture: | ORG SH335 G85 2011 Guidelines for the ecolabelling of fish and fishery products from inland capture fisheries = | ORG SH335 S34 2010 Review of ecolabelling schemes for fish and fishery products from capture fisheries / |
Includes bibliographical references.
Genesis of the workshop -- Food production : intensification and environmental impacts -- Workshop findings -- A potential role for FAO -- Contributed papers.
he global food production sector is growing. In many areas farming systems are intensifying. This rapid growth has in some cases caused environmental damage. This document include an introduction and 12 review papers describing methods for such comparisons as well as the deliberations of their authors, a group of nineteen international experts on environmental economics, energy accounting, material and environmental flows analysis, aquaculture, agriculture and international development. Experts concluded that comparisons can be useful for addressing local development and zoning concerns, global issues of sustainability and trade and consumer preferences for inexpensive food produced in an environmentally sustainable manner. In order to be useful, however, methods to assess environmental costs should be scientifically based, comparable across different sectors, expandable to different scales, inclusive of externalities, practical to implement and easily understood by managers and policy-makers. Aquaculture in many locations and conditions is or could be much more environment friendly than other food sectors.--Publisher's description.
Available both in print and online.
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