But this frenzy has hardly changed the world's culinary habits, especially in western countries.
An alternative marine solution
There is an alternative marine solution, one that could significantly help, if not guarantee, mankind's survival: algae, which has been popular in Asian cooking for centuries. This abundant resource is even more important considering that it can be cultivated or harvested in the wild.
But 40% ends up on plates in one form or another: fresh, as a condiment, dried, frozen, or mixed in with other ingredients. Algae is eaten every day without most people realising it. Agar-agar, for instance, is an algae additive that has been replacing the gelatin in cooked meats, candy, and biscuits over the past four decades.
Oceans and rivers contain more than 100,000 species of algae, but only 145 of these are consumed in the world, including 24 that are authorised in France: eight species of brown algae (wakame, kombu, thongweed, fucus), 11 of red algae (dulse, nori), two of green algae (sea lettuce) and three of microalgae (spirulina). Rich in protein, iodine, calcium, mineral salts and vitamins, the different types of algae help prevent cardiovascular diseases and boost our immune systems.
The only draw back
These undersea plants are not harmed by land disasters. The only drawback: they are vulnerable to oil spills and contamination by heavy metals, which harm their nutritional qualities.
The French, who grow and harvest 80,000 tonnes of algae along the 2,700km stretch of Brittany coast, consume only 1,500 tonnes a year, compared with the two million tonnes consumed by the Japanese. In their defense, the red tides that pollute Brittany beaches with excrement from intensive pig farms hardly stir up enthusiasm, let alone appetite.