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good luck with your quest, I have zero experience in RAS but I run a Aquaponic setup and can't imagine the cost, work and hassle of filtering the water...my grow beds work great 24/7.
If you are doing RAS then AP is really a way to make money off of your waste stream. Take a look at Australis, I believe they take their waste and divert it to farms in the local area. Using what would normally be waste and growing food with is much more sustainable that just releasing that waste into the environment.
I didn't realize you are in the bronx... I'm in the east village. Where are you thinking about setting up?
I think that the real issue is developing a business model to make a profit. Do you have relationships to sell your fish or veggies? I have spoken to several chefs who have expressed interest and have thought about starting a farm, but with how expensive real estate is and how costly energy/labor is it will be hard to be profitable in NYC. It is possible to have a successful venture but it is a risky investment.
Greenhouse income selling wholesale greens will only be around $1.00-$1.50 per square foot per month. Very difficult to find real estate around NYC to make that pay.
I didn't realize you are in the bronx... I'm in the east village. Where are you thinking about setting up?
I think that the real issue is developing a business model to make a profit. Do you have relationships to sell your fish or veggies? I have spoken to several chefs who have expressed interest and have thought about starting a farm, but with how expensive real estate is and how costly energy/labor is it will be hard to be profitable in NYC. It is possible to have a successful venture but it is a risky investment.
Greenhouse income selling wholesale greens will only be around $1.00-$1.50 per square foot per month. Very difficult to find real estate around NYC to make that pay.
It would be really difficult to compare apples to apples between RAS and Aquaponics since they are not both apples.
One issue with aquaponics and making the fish themselves profitable is that you need quite an extensive operation with fish to have a steady supply of a certain amount of fish per day or per week or how ever often you are going to harvest. Most processing houses are not interested if you are not bringing in a truckload. Most restaurants want a guaranteed amount to be available on a regular schedule (be it daily or weekly) but they won't necessarily guarantee they will order or buy that amount every time so it can be difficult to sell fish if you are not able to supply a fairly large amount unless you have the commercial food processing facility to process them yourself. If you have Asian markets that want live fish, that would probably be your best bet to sell fish on the smaller aquaponic scale. Selling my fish here is a challenge since I can only sell them live or whole on ice, I don't have the commercial facilities to process them legally myself.
So hence why many will tell you to make it profitable to grow fish, you have to go high intensity RAS so you can grow the volume needed to sell lots of fish cheap to a processing plant.
However, as water becomes more valuable, it becomes less and less cost effective to simply waste water to water changes while polluting the environment with a strict RAS system.
The question is, what is your market? Wholesale food is cheap still. Big ag still gets away with using cheap oil and government subsidies and wasting water and polluting the environment. It will be difficult to compete with that trying to sell wholesale and it is really difficult for a small operation to compete wholesale.
Find your market. You don't make money raising fish or growing veggies. You can only make money selling them. Also, if the person who is going to be running the operation has their heart in horticulture, don't expect them to thrive being forced into something they are not really interested in. Do what you like, that way not making a fortune won't be so bad. Aquaponics or RAS are both still farming. Either way, I don't think you want to go into debt to do it. If you have to take out huge loans to build it and it will be months of construction and then months or even years (depending on the crops) before harvest, it gets really hard to pay for living as well as start making payments on the loans.
This is farming, lots of risk and minimal profits so you have to figure out how to make the best of it.
At least with Aquaponics, once the system is cycled up and running you could be starting to harvest lettuce and other fast crops to sell in about 2 months. Fish, the first harvest is likely 10-12 months away.
Trick, in the city if growing veggies, make sure your greenhouses are not going to be shaded out by buildings and that you have supplemental lighting for the winter up there. At least with RAS you don't have to worry about sun or trying to simulate sunshine artificially but I don't know that pure RAS is a good choice to go in a place where water and waste water may be at a premium in the near future.
It would be really difficult to compare apples to apples between RAS and Aquaponics since they are not both apples.
One issue with aquaponics and making the fish themselves profitable is that you need quite an extensive operation with fish to have a steady supply of a certain amount of fish per day or per week or how ever often you are going to harvest. Most processing houses are not interested if you are not bringing in a truckload. Most restaurants want a guaranteed amount to be available on a regular schedule (be it daily or weekly) but they won't necessarily guarantee they will order or buy that amount every time so it can be difficult to sell fish if you are not able to supply a fairly large amount unless you have the commercial food processing facility to process them yourself. If you have Asian markets that want live fish, that would probably be your best bet to sell fish on the smaller aquaponic scale. Selling my fish here is a challenge since I can only sell them live or whole on ice, I don't have the commercial facilities to process them legally myself.
So hence why many will tell you to make it profitable to grow fish, you have to go high intensity RAS so you can grow the volume needed to sell lots of fish cheap to a processing plant.
However, as water becomes more valuable, it becomes less and less cost effective to simply waste water to water changes while polluting the environment with a strict RAS system.
The question is, what is your market? Wholesale food is cheap still. Big ag still gets away with using cheap oil and government subsidies and wasting water and polluting the environment. It will be difficult to compete with that trying to sell wholesale and it is really difficult for a small operation to compete wholesale.
Find your market. You don't make money raising fish or growing veggies. You can only make money selling them. Also, if the person who is going to be running the operation has their heart in horticulture, don't expect them to thrive being forced into something they are not really interested in. Do what you like, that way not making a fortune won't be so bad. Aquaponics or RAS are both still farming. Either way, I don't think you want to go into debt to do it. If you have to take out huge loans to build it and it will be months of construction and then months or even years (depending on the crops) before harvest, it gets really hard to pay for living as well as start making payments on the loans.
This is farming, lots of risk and minimal profits so you have to figure out how to make the best of it.
At least with Aquaponics, once the system is cycled up and running you could be starting to harvest lettuce and other fast crops to sell in about 2 months. Fish, the first harvest is likely 10-12 months away.
Trick, in the city if growing veggies, make sure your greenhouses are not going to be shaded out by buildings and that you have supplemental lighting for the winter up there. At least with RAS you don't have to worry about sun or trying to simulate sunshine artificially but I don't know that pure RAS is a good choice to go in a place where water and waste water may be at a premium in the near future.
What does N & P and RAS stand for?
Nelson & Pade and Recirculating Aquaculture System
Bob Campbell said:
What does N & P and RAS stand for?
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