January-February 2007

A Balance of Power

For 11 powerless days after Hurricane Wilma, backup generators kept a unique shrimp farm operating.

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By George Leposky

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“For 2006 we expanded our storage capacity to 15,000 gallons before the hurricane season began,” Wilson says.

Another Fuel Alternative
Although Gillette says OceanBoy’s best option is increasing its diesel-fuel storage, he also suggests that the firm consider acquiring a supply of compressed natural gas (CNG). “These generators won’t run completely on CNG, but they will run partially on it,” he says. “CNG is available in bottles and tanks. It’s a means of extending the diesel supply. Using bi-fuel technology would allow them to conserve diesel fuel, giving them a longer run time on both fuels. Ultimately, if they run out of CNG, they can operate on diesel alone. That scenario may make sense because diesel may be the harder fuel to get.”

Gillette also notes that CNG is cleaner than diesel fuel and less expensive. He suggests that OceanBoy determine the distance from its farms to the nearest natural-gas pipeline and explore the feasibility of extending a pipeline directly onto one or both properties.

“Generac offers four models of factory-designed bi-fuel generators, rated at 300, 375, 600, or 750 kilowatts of output,” Gillette says. “Their ability to operate on up to 90% natural gas and 10% diesel fuel allows them to run up to 10 times longer on a tank of fuel than diesel-only gensets of comparable output. The bi-fuel option costs about 15% more but can be invaluable during an extended outage.”

George Leposky is a science and technology writer based in Miami, FL.

[SIDEBAR] A Different Kind of Shrimp Farm

The concept of growing organic saltwater shrimp in low-salinity inland ponds originated with the founder and chief science officer of OceanBoy Farms Inc., David Z. McMahon.

“In the past 50 years, coastal shrimp farming has shared a great deal of the responsibility for destroying naturally growing mangroves along beaches worldwide, either by cutting them down to build shrimp ponds or by polluting or otherwise devastating their habitat, while ships fishing for wild shrimp destroyed reefs and seagrass beds,” McMahon explains.

In addition, many foreign countries feed antibiotics to their pond-raised shrimp to combat white-spot virus and other diseases of crustaceans raised in dense concentrations in a seawater habitat. Consumers could be ingesting residues of potentially harmful drugs in the shrimp they eat.

“I was determined to see if there was a way to move an operation away from the shore and not use marine waters,” McMahon says. “So now we raise marine shrimp inland in artesian freshwater ponds.”

Beginning in 1997, McMahon undertook a feasibility study of sustainable saltwater shrimp production at an inland location as a dissertation topic for his Ph.D. in oceanography and marine biology at the Nova Southeastern University Oceanographic Center in Dania Beach, FL.

After conducting geological studies to find the water best suited for raising shrimp, McMahon selected south-central Florida and raised money from a group of investors to fund land acquisition and development of facilities, first in the LaBelle area and later near Clewiston. OceanBoy Farms harvested its first crop in 2001 and incorporated in March 2002.

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In 2001, McMahon purchased his initial batch of shrimp larvae from Florida Shrimp Improvement Systems (FSIS), a hatchery in the Florida Keys. There he met Michael Mogollon, a respected international aquaculturist who was FSIS’s operations manager. Mogollon had earned a bachelor of arts in biology from Harvard University and a master of science in fisheries and aquaculture from Auburn University in Alabama. He had worked in or consulted for shrimp operations in Central and South America, the Caribbean, and Florida.

After working briefly with McMahon and his team to help acclimate the larvae, Mogollon joined OceanBoy in 2002 to enhance the firm’s efficiency and expand its operations to a commercial scale.

Author's Bio: George Leposky is a science and technology writer based in Miami, FL.

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