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South Korea’s booming oyster farming industry harnesses vast tidal flats

Tongyeong, South Korea, Jan 20 (EFE).- South Korea has become the world’s second-largest oyster exporter, second only to China, a feat it has managed after harnessing the full potential of its vast tidal flats.

In 2020 South Korea produced 300,085 tons of oysters, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), with over 80% of production hailing from seaside towns in South Gyeongsang like Tongyeong city.

“The area near Tongyeong has many islands that provide the best conditions for oyster farming,” Kim Ji-hun, an auctioneer from Oyster Hanging Culture Fisheries Cooperatives, tells epa-efe.

“It is made up of a two-pressure coast, making it safe from typhoons,” Kim adds.

South Korea boasts a vast tidal flat which is the ideal environment for the mollusks to thrive.

The South Gyeongsang coastline, with its many small bays and islands, enjoys relatively calm waters making the area perfect for oyster farming on a large scale.

The region’s vast oyster output allows South Korea to offer competitive prices on the international market.

According to the United Nations food and agriculture agency (FAO), around 90% of Korean oysters come from farms on the southern coast.

The Namgyeong Fisheries in Tongyeong straddles an area of some 30 hectares and produces between 500 and 600 tonnes of farmed oysters a year.

Oysters are grown using the suspended longline system where young oysters are attached to longlines that are hung from buoys and remain submerged at sea until they grow to market size.

Once harvested, the oysters are transported by boat to an oyster shucking house for processing and washing.

At the shucking house in Namgyeong Fisheries, approximately 60 workers start work at 2 am and work until 2 pm, processing up to 3 tons of oysters a day.

Each worker prepares between 50 and 60 kilograms of oysters each day and gets paid 3,300krw ($2.6) per kilogram.

Processed oysters are then sent to auction by the truckload to be sold to fish brokers and sent to markets and restaurants.

Popular oyster dishes in South Korean restaurants include oyster pancakes, braised oysters and spicy raw oysters and oyster seaweed soup. Each dish, which can contain up to 30 oysters, will set diners back around $16.EFE

epa-jhk-ch/ks

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