Is economies of scale driving the development in shrimp farming from Penaeus monodon to Litopenaeus vannamei? The case of Indonesia

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Is economies of scale driving the development in shrimp farming from Penaeus monodon to Litopenaeus vannamei? The case of Indonesia. / Asmild, Mette; Hukom, Venticia; Nielsen, Rasmus; Nielsen, Max.

In: Aquaculture, Vol. 579, 740178, 2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Asmild, M, Hukom, V, Nielsen, R & Nielsen, M 2024, 'Is economies of scale driving the development in shrimp farming from Penaeus monodon to Litopenaeus vannamei? The case of Indonesia', Aquaculture, vol. 579, 740178. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2023.740178

APA

Asmild, M., Hukom, V., Nielsen, R., & Nielsen, M. (2024). Is economies of scale driving the development in shrimp farming from Penaeus monodon to Litopenaeus vannamei? The case of Indonesia. Aquaculture, 579, [740178]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2023.740178

Vancouver

Asmild M, Hukom V, Nielsen R, Nielsen M. Is economies of scale driving the development in shrimp farming from Penaeus monodon to Litopenaeus vannamei? The case of Indonesia. Aquaculture. 2024;579. 740178. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2023.740178

Author

Asmild, Mette ; Hukom, Venticia ; Nielsen, Rasmus ; Nielsen, Max. / Is economies of scale driving the development in shrimp farming from Penaeus monodon to Litopenaeus vannamei? The case of Indonesia. In: Aquaculture. 2024 ; Vol. 579.

Bibtex

@article{223d44abd7814a6ba03d14f3bc1c9cc6,
title = "Is economies of scale driving the development in shrimp farming from Penaeus monodon to Litopenaeus vannamei?: The case of Indonesia",
abstract = "Globally shrimp farming have grown substantially over the last 2 decades. The growth in farmed shrimp is driven by increasing worldwide demand due to population and income growth, while wild supply is stagnating. The growth mainly seems to appear within the species Litopenaeus vannamei, while Penaeus monodon production is stagnating. The development in Indonesia mirrors the global development, were L. vannamei has surpassed the volume of P. monodon several times in 2020. Interviews with 96 L. vannamei and 87 P. monodon farmers are conducted to collect farm level economic data. Using data envelopment analysis, technical efficiency is estimated and production possibility frontiers are compared. Furthermore, a new permutation test is used for identifying returns to scale characteristics, and increasing returns to scale is identified. The production possibility frontiers are found significantly different for the two species without one being nested inside the other. For large farms with high production volume, L. vannamei is superior, whereas P. monodon has the advantages in smaller farms. Hence, one farm size does not fit all. The implication is that L. vannamei farms can take advantage of economies of scale and expand, while small P. monodon farms coexist by supplying larger shrimp to an international high-quality markets.",
author = "Mette Asmild and Venticia Hukom and Rasmus Nielsen and Max Nielsen",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1016/j.aquaculture.2023.740178",
language = "English",
volume = "579",
journal = "Aquaculture",
issn = "0044-8486",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Is economies of scale driving the development in shrimp farming from Penaeus monodon to Litopenaeus vannamei?

T2 - The case of Indonesia

AU - Asmild, Mette

AU - Hukom, Venticia

AU - Nielsen, Rasmus

AU - Nielsen, Max

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Globally shrimp farming have grown substantially over the last 2 decades. The growth in farmed shrimp is driven by increasing worldwide demand due to population and income growth, while wild supply is stagnating. The growth mainly seems to appear within the species Litopenaeus vannamei, while Penaeus monodon production is stagnating. The development in Indonesia mirrors the global development, were L. vannamei has surpassed the volume of P. monodon several times in 2020. Interviews with 96 L. vannamei and 87 P. monodon farmers are conducted to collect farm level economic data. Using data envelopment analysis, technical efficiency is estimated and production possibility frontiers are compared. Furthermore, a new permutation test is used for identifying returns to scale characteristics, and increasing returns to scale is identified. The production possibility frontiers are found significantly different for the two species without one being nested inside the other. For large farms with high production volume, L. vannamei is superior, whereas P. monodon has the advantages in smaller farms. Hence, one farm size does not fit all. The implication is that L. vannamei farms can take advantage of economies of scale and expand, while small P. monodon farms coexist by supplying larger shrimp to an international high-quality markets.

AB - Globally shrimp farming have grown substantially over the last 2 decades. The growth in farmed shrimp is driven by increasing worldwide demand due to population and income growth, while wild supply is stagnating. The growth mainly seems to appear within the species Litopenaeus vannamei, while Penaeus monodon production is stagnating. The development in Indonesia mirrors the global development, were L. vannamei has surpassed the volume of P. monodon several times in 2020. Interviews with 96 L. vannamei and 87 P. monodon farmers are conducted to collect farm level economic data. Using data envelopment analysis, technical efficiency is estimated and production possibility frontiers are compared. Furthermore, a new permutation test is used for identifying returns to scale characteristics, and increasing returns to scale is identified. The production possibility frontiers are found significantly different for the two species without one being nested inside the other. For large farms with high production volume, L. vannamei is superior, whereas P. monodon has the advantages in smaller farms. Hence, one farm size does not fit all. The implication is that L. vannamei farms can take advantage of economies of scale and expand, while small P. monodon farms coexist by supplying larger shrimp to an international high-quality markets.

U2 - 10.1016/j.aquaculture.2023.740178

DO - 10.1016/j.aquaculture.2023.740178

M3 - Journal article

VL - 579

JO - Aquaculture

JF - Aquaculture

SN - 0044-8486

M1 - 740178

ER -

ID: 369131424