
A National Broodstock Centre (NBC) for marine tilapia has been established by the Singapore Food Agency (SFA) and Singapore Agro-Food Enterprises Federation (SAFEF) to help bolster food security by supplying local farms with genetically superior eggs and fingerlings with higher rates of survival. This will ensure a constant supply of good quality baby fish from the NBC is expected to help local farms scale up production, said the Singapore Agro-Food Enterprises Federation (SAFEF), reported CNA Asia and New Straits Times.
On May 20, Ken Cheong, chief executive of SAFEF, said the NBC Centre for marine tilapia aims to produce its first batch of selectively bred young fish by early 2026 for local farms to purchase. The six-month-old centre – located at Max Koi Farm in Lim Chu Kang – is managed by SAFEF and funded by SFA. The aim is for the tilapia fry produced to have desirable traits such as reddish-golden skin, immunity to disease and the ability to grow up to a kilogram in weight.
Having high-quality eggs and baby fish is crucial for viable aquaculture production. Currently, Singapore’s fish farms depend on imports of fingerlings, which come in inconsistent quality and may have undergone stress from the long journey, reducing their survival rate, said Cheong.





