Students collaborated with two companies to develop a healthy ready-to-eat product made with shrimp and designed to promote conservation of fisheries resources.

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https://featured.japan-forward.com/japan2earth/2023/02/2322/


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Susan Yoshimura

A US citizen based in Asia for over 20 years, Susan has a postgraduate degree in Environmental Education. She is a former environmental activist and media relations coordinator at Greenpeace Japan and research programme assistant at United Nations University, Tokyo. She has 15+ years experience in Japanese-to-English translation and editing in the environmental management field.


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00:00
Welcome to the SDGs in the NEWS Podcast. This is Susan Yoshimura, Managing Editor of Japan 2 Earth,
coming to you from Tokyo. Today, we bring you another English article on Japan and the SDGs.
You can find the full text on our website. Just click the link in the episode notes. Have a listen.
Ritsumeikan's students' new shrimp product is more than a convenience food.
Students collaborated with two companies to develop a healthy ready-to-eat product
made with shrimp and designed to promote conservation of fisheries resources.
Students from Ritsumeikan University's College of Gastronomy Management, Kusatsu City,
Shiga Prefecture, have collaborated with major supermarket chain Haywato to develop a new shrimp
product with sustainability in mind. Haywato is based in Hikone City of Shiga Prefecture.
The new product is designed not only to be healthy, but to contribute to environmental
protection and the conservation of marine resources. The students named it Ingredient
Rich Shrimp Brown Rice Doria. Doria is a Japanese gratin-inspired rice dish. The product is on
sale at Haywato stores in Shiga and nearby metropolitan areas of Kyoto, Osaka, and Kobe.
This new product satisfies the mind, body, and environment.
We hope many will try it, commented one of the students involved in the product's development.
Awareness of sustainability has increased alongside implementation of the SDGs. Yet
interest and concern for managing the fish, shrimp, and other marine resources that end
up on our dinner tables remains low. According to Ritsumeikan, the initiative was designed to
raise awareness of sustainability initiatives in the fisheries industry and to foster consumer
awareness. The project was organized by three students from the College of Gastronomy Management.
They developed the new product after taking a class organized in collaboration with Tokyo-based
Nichire Fresh Inc., a company dealing in marine and livestock products. The three students learned
that Nichire Fresh was involved in the Inochi no Mori, Forest of Life, project in Indonesia.
This project aims for a sustainable supply of shrimp and coexistence with the global environment.
A portion of company's proceeds from imported farmed shrimp is used for mangrove planting
activities on Kalimantan Island. Using the knowledge of nutrition they had learned in class,
the students proposed the project to Haywato, with whom the college has a cooperative agreement.
They then were able to commercialize their product.
The colorful ready-to-eat brown rice shrimp Doria incorporates 15 ingredients. These provide 20 grams
of protein, or one-third of the protein required daily to ensure the health those consuming the
03:00
product. The main ingredient, shrimp, is raised via extensive aquaculture in ponds that take
advantage of the natural terrain under the Forest of Life project. Farming is done without cutting
down seaside and waterfront forests to maintain aquaculture ponds. White sauce and cheese are also
used to bring out the great taste of the ingredients. The product is priced at 538 Japanese yen including
tax. It will be on sale through mid-April or until 20,000 servings are sold. A total of 125
stores including Haywato and Al Plaza supermarkets in Kyoto, Osaka, and Hyogo prefectures are carrying
the product. Second-year student Manami Fujimitsu, 20, one of the students involved in developing
the dish, commented on the project. We worked hard to make the product rich in protein and ingredients.
We hope it encourages people to think about the marine environment, she said.
for our latest news and don't forget to subscribe so you never miss an episode
until next time this is susan yoshimura of japan to earth signing off
04:29

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