White House National Science and Technology Council Finalizes New Aquaculture Plan

The United States is releasing an updated National Aquaculture Development Plan to strengthen U.S. commitment to food security, climate resilience, and the protection of threatened and endangered marine and freshwater species. 

Aquaculture plays an important role in fisheries restoration. The National Fish Hatchery System raises millions of fish and aquatic wildlife to improve sustainable recreational fishing, support fisheries that have been impacted by a federal dam, recover federally listed threatened or endangered species, fulfill our Tribal Trust responsibilities, and prevent at-risk species from becoming endangered. The hatchery system is supported by a network of health and technology centers, as well as the Aquatic Animal Drug Approval Partnership is a fish medicine research and development program dedicated to obtaining U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval of new medications needed for use in fish culture and fisheries management.

Aquaculture is also becoming an increasingly important means of food production. Seafood farming, if done responsibly—as it is in the United States—is one of the most environmentally sustainable ways to produce healthy food. 

The National Aquaculture Development Plan

The National Science and Technology Council's Subcommittee on Aquaculture finalized the draft Overview of the National Aquaculture Development Plan, which was released earlier this year for public comment. It includes three strategic plans.

Two of them, the Strategic Plan to Enhance Regulatory Efficiency in Aquaculture and the National Strategic Plan for Aquaculture Research, were completed and published in 2022. The third plan, the draft Strategic Plan for Aquaculture Economic Development, is now final.

Together these four documents comprise an updated National Aquaculture Development Plan that provides a holistic framework describing how federal agencies are advancing the contributions of aquaculture to support public health and nutrition, resilient communities, a strong economy, and a healthy planet.

The Subcommittee for Aquaculture

The Subcommittee on Aquaculture serves as the federal interagency coordinating group to increase the overall effectiveness and productivity of Federal aquaculture research, regulation, technology transfer, and assistance programs. 

The Subcommittee on Aquaculture’s Economic Development task force includes partner agencies from:

  • U.S. Department of Agriculture
  • Department of Commerce
  • U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
  • Food and Drug Administration
  • Environmental Protection Agency


Learn more about the Subcommittee on Aquaculture and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Fish and Aquatic Conservation Program. 

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Aquaculture
Fish hatcheries
Freshwater fish
Marine fish