Fish oil prices rise on back of vegetable hikes

By Jess Halliday

- Last updated on GMT

Related tags Fish oil Fat

The soaring price of vegetables is having a knock-on effect on the price of fish oils used by the nutrition industry, says Croda Heath Care, which today announced a double-digit increase in the price of its Incromega range.

The cost of many vegetable oils has doubled in the past year as a result of a confluence of factors, including use of crops for biofuels and insufficient harvests. The impact of this has been felt across the food industry, but the effect in fish oils underscores the delicate balance that exists between ingredients that may, at face value, appear to be unrelated. David Cherry, vice president of Croda Health Care explained to NutraIngredients.com that the nutrition industry uses just a very small part of global fish oil stock. The main use of fish oil is in aquaculture; 80 per cent is used as feed for farmed fish, according to the International Fishmeal and Fish Oil Organisation (IFFO). Vegetable oils, such as rape seed oil, can also be used for this purpose. With vegetable oils so expensive, however, fish farmers have opted for the comparatively cheaper fish oil instead. This has led to greater demand for fish oil. According to data from the IFFO, the price of fish oil rose from US$800 per metric tonne in February 2007 to $2200 per metric tonne in February 2008. "If vegetable oil prices are high (as they are) then market forces will drive up fish oil prices. When vegetable oil prices are low, substitution of fish oil for vegetable oils in aquaculture keeps the fish oil price low too,"​ said Cherry. As a result, Croda is to increase the price of its fish oils by between 10 and 20 per cent, depending on the grade, as of July 1 or when existing contracts allow. Cherry said Croda, in the context of market forces, the price increase for Incromega is "fairly modest"​, and "what the market can bear".​ Croda said that the company has experienced additional pressure from increasing energy, packaging and transportation costs. No lack of fish oil​ Cherry stressed that there is not a problem with the sourcing or supply of fish oils for the nutrition industry. "Sustainability is fine, and the supply chain is working well."​ Fish oil is actually a by-product of the fish meal industry, with the protein part used largely for animal feed. Croda sources its fish oil from wild stocks of fish like sardines, anchovies and tuna from Peru, as well as other South American and Pacific coastlines. "The Peruvian government manages fish stocks very well​," Cherry said.

Related news

Show more

Related products

show more

Krill oil supports six key areas of healthy aging

Krill oil supports six key areas of healthy aging

Content provided by Aker BioMarine | 23-Feb-2024 | White Paper

The global population is getting older—according to WHO by 2050 the world’s population over 60 years will double and the population above 80 years will...

Nootropics Report 2.0: Brain Health Insights

Nootropics Report 2.0: Brain Health Insights

Content provided by dsm-firmenich | 20-Feb-2024 | Insight Guide

The brain health market is constantly growing and evolving, with more consumers looking for innovative ways to support total mind and body wellness.

Sweetening solution for active nutrition

Sweetening solution for active nutrition

Content provided by ADM | 19-Feb-2024 | Case Study

When you add GrainSweet® Liquid Maltodextrin to your active nutrition applications, you get the production efficiencies, clean labels, and clean tastes...

Related suppliers

Follow us

Products

View more

Webinars