Canadian Tax Dollars going to good use...fish farm bailouts...

http://www.thewesternstar.com/News/Local/2014-01-11/article-3571724/N.L.%26rsquo%3Bs-destroyed-salmon-tab%3A-$33M/1

N.L.’s destroyed salmon tab: $33M

Critics slam federal payouts for salmon anemia compensation
The federal government has paid more than $33 million in compensation for five separate outbreaks of infectious salmon anemia in Newfoundland and Labrador, according to documents obtained by The Telegram.

In response to an inquiry in August from St. Barbe Liberal MHA Jim Bennett, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency — which had previously said it wouldn’t disclose compensation amounts paid to producers ordered to destroy salmon infected with the disease — provided the amounts paid to two New Brunswick companies in each of the outbreaks, dating back to July 2012.
In response to an inquiry in August from St. Barbe Liberal MHA Jim Bennett, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency — which had previously said it wouldn’t disclose compensation amounts paid to producers ordered to destroy salmon infected with the disease — provided the amounts paid to two New Brunswick companies in each of the outbreaks, dating back to July 2012.

In all, $33.1 million has been paid to Gray Aqua for three outbreaks — in Butter Cove, Goblin Bay and Pass My Can Island — and Kelly Cove, a division of Cooke Aquaculture, for two outbreaks — in Pot Harbour and Manuel’s Arm. The amount paid per fish varies by the outbreak, as compensation is intended to reflect market value for what the company would have received for healthy stock, to a maximum of $30 per fish.

Bennett, speaking to The Telegram, said the provincial aquaculture industry isn’t sustainable if it has to depend on compensation to be viable.

“If the feds realize how much they’re paying in compensation and decide to pull the plug on this type of reimbursement, then the industry simply couldn’t survive,” said the Liberals’ fisheries critic, adding the compensation makes aquaculture farming a no-lose prospect for producers.

“They go into a pristine environment — our waters — they take no precaution measures like closed containment, which would eliminate this completely.”

The provincial industry’s largely open-pen system results in farmed salmon catching diseases from wild stock — or infecting the wild stock, said Bennett.

“This can only be resolved by going to closed containment, either on land or using tanks in the ocean. Either technology would work. It is more expensive, but it’s nowhere near as expensive as having to pay this compensation for diseased fish.”

The economic effects of diseased fish aren’t felt just by the producer, noted Bennett — destroyed fish don’t benefit the processing and grocery industries either, he said.

Provincial Fisheries and Aquaculture Minister Keith Hutchings said there have been challenges to the aquaculture industry in the province, but contends overall it’s doing well.

“We recognize some challenges. We’ve invested heavily in our biosecurity,” he said. “We’ve gone through a consultative process now with industry which has been very receptive, developed a whole lot of information and feedback — we’ll look at that in terms of growing into our next five years and what we need to do to continue to improve.”

As for the amount of compensation paid, Hutchings said reimbursement has to be enough of a motivation for producers to report salmon outbreaks so the damage can be minimized and preventive measures taken.

“If a producer — whether producing cattle, sheep, vegetables or farmed salmon — the incentive now, if they see an irregularity in their product they’re growing, is to report that, and that the disease is then recognized, and the process starts to eradicate it,” said Hutchings.

If the reimbursement wasn’t there, producers would have less incentive to report disease, he said.

That’s not good enough, says Bill Taylor.

“Two wrongs don’t make a right,” said the president of the Atlantic Salmon Federation, a New Brunswick-based group that is heavily critical of salmon-farming methods and regulation. That producers might cover up outbreaks if they’re not compensated well enough isn’t a point in the industry’s favour, he said.

“If they would be inclined to, then that tells me that there needs to be better checks and measures, more effective control and management and monitoring by both the provincial government in Newfoundland and the federal government.”

The provincial industry is unsustainable if it requires that much compensation for producers to keep going, said Taylor.

“We certainly understand that some things happen to farmers, salmon farmers included, that are beyond their control, and there’s insurance and certain avenues for compensation available for failures and things of that nature,” said Taylor.

The problem with Newfoundland’s industry, he said, is its largely open-pen system.

“There are going to be continual issues like infectious salmon anemia, diseases and sea lice outbreaks, and pollution at the bottom of the sea floor that affect other species.”

The federation has warned the provincial and federal governments about potential problems with the industry.

“We take absolutely no satisfaction in saying ‘told you so,’” said Taylor. “That Canadian, Newfoundland taxpayers have to foot the bill to the tune of in excess of $30 million is an absolute disgrace.”

Newfoundland producers have “a sweet deal,” said Taylor.

“They’re using a public resource, which is our marine environment, which you and I own just as much as they own. They are paying next to nothing for the leases to put their sites there, and they are being paid handsomely in compensation for their poor practices. So when you have a disease outbreak, it’s very little skin off their nose, because they’re compensated for poor practices.”

Miranda Pryor, executive director of the Newfoundland Aquaculture Industry Association, called the compensation a security to keep the industry going.

“It’s no different, really, from all food-producing sectors, from the agricultural sector,” she said. “If this were to happen with chicken or beef, or say it’s an off-year for any crop production, like wheat and things like that — we’ve certainly known of instances over the years where unfortunately something does happen and the federal or provincial government has stepped in to help ensure an industry can continue.”

Pryor said the cost of transferring all provincial aquaculture production to land pens would be considerable, but that’s not the only factor, she said; raising salmon in a natural environment reduces risk factors for the farmed salmon, and she disputes the claim that contained pens would eliminate disease.

“It’s not their natural environment. Production levels have to be much higher so you have much more fish in a much more contained area,” she said. “There’s a lot of considerations.”

Pryor said she understands why the public would be concerned about compensation.

“For the most part, the companies may still break even, but there’s no benefit. The financial benefit that they would have made if the product could have been grown to market size would have been considerably more.”

In 2013, said Pryor, the industry produced about $180 million in sales.

“Obviously, yes, we share the concern, but we feel we have a long future ahead.”

A request for an interview with a Canadian Food Inspection Agency official was declined. A spokeswoman for the agency provided a written response on how compensation is determined.

“Compensation is determined on a case-by-case basis, following an assessment of the particular situation,” states the response. “To determine the actual amount of compensation, an assessment team would visit the premises. The assessment team would consist of CFIA veterinarians and may also include industry representatives and/or economists.”

Calls requesting interviews with Tim Gray of Gray Aqua and Glen Cooke of Cooke Aquaculture were not returned.



maceachern@thetelegram.com

Twitter: @TelegramDaniel
 
Salmon Farming Spokesperson Says Canada Needs New Aquaculture Strategy
TELEGRAPH JOURNAL - Commentary

Canada needs a national aquaculture strategy
PAMELA PARKER, Executive Director, Atlantic Canada Fish Farmers Association
December 27, 2013

No region in the world is better poised than Atlantic Canada to reap the benefits of aquaculture’s potential and at the same time, revitalize its rural, coastal communities.

Norway is not about to let this unprecedented opportunity pass. Neither is Scotland, Chile, New Zealand or Australia.

Canada? I hope not.

What opportunity? The unparalleled one for Canada to help feed the world and create economic growth in our coastal communities, especially in Atlantic Canada.

We live in a world where almost one billion people starve every day, another billion suffer from malnutrition and yet a further billion are obese. By 2050, our total population will rise to nine billion and the need for food security and poverty alleviation will be even greater.

Árni M. Mathiesen, Assistant Director General, Fisheries and Aquaculture, at the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, wrote recently that aquaculture, the world’s fastest growing food sector, will be instrumental in meeting this challenge.

“A significant increase in Canada’s aquaculture productivity and production could well make a significant impact on global supply,” said Mathieson. “As an advanced and environmentally conscious country, through new technologies and innovations, Canada also has a chance to lead the way: To disseminate the knowledge, secure investments, and contribute significantly to achieving our common goal of global food security.”

No region in the world is better poised than Atlantic Canada to reap the benefits of aquaculture’s potential and at the same time, revitalize its rural, coastal communities.

But we need a plan to make it happen.

Both Norway and Scotland have bold visions and solid plans to sustainably grow their salmon farming industries to help meet the world’s growing demand for healthy protein. Norway’s goal is to produce 2.7 million tonnes of salmon and trout -– enough to feed 100 million people by 2025. That production translates to 56,000 full-time jobs and a $62 billion contribution to the country’s GDP. That’s enough to finance about 65 per cent of the country’s nursing homes or meet 60 per cent of the demand for kindergarten spaces. Scotland – a country viewed by many as having a similar production capacity to Atlantic Canada – has increased its salmon production from 14 tonnes in 1971 to 154,164 tonnes in 2010. Scotland plans to increase its salmon production to 220,000 tonnes by 2020 -- or as they call it “220 by 2020.”

While other countries have seen their aquaculture industries grow consistently over six per cent annually, Canada’s aquaculture production has flatlined over the past decade. Despite our enormous competitive advantages, Canada’s share of the world’s farmed fish market has fallen by 40 per cent during the same period. Canada now accounts for only 0.2 per cent of global aquaculture production. This stagnation has taken place while other producers in New Zealand, Norway, Scotland and Chile have raced ahead.

One of the reasons for this is Canada’s lack of a national strategy to move aquaculture forward. Canada’s aquaculture industry is governed in large part by the Fisheries Act, which doesn’t even mention the word ‘aquaculture’. It was designed to manage a wild resource not a food production sector.

The consequence is a regulatory framework that is complex and uncertain. Federal and provincial regulations overlap and duplicate. Ultimately, this halts growth and discourages investment and innovation. Our famers recognize they face a unique obligation to ensure they operate responsibly. They are not advocating against regulation; they simply want to make sure it meets the public interest with as little ‘red tape’ as possible. Our farmers are committed to environmental sustainability, fish health, innovative research and development and involvement in their communities.

New Brunswick and Nova Scotia have aquaculture development strategies that help guide our industry’s development. But more is needed. With a national vision, we will unlock the full range of economic, environmental and public health benefits that flow from a competitive, sustainable and growing farmed seafood sector.

Canada’s aquaculture industry currently generates just over $1 billion in economic activity across this country. Increasing production by just six per cent annually would bring that to $2.8 billion and would result in significant job growth.

Our region is facing record debt, skyrocketing health care costs, an aging population and high unemployment. Salmon farming represents an extraordinary opportunity to bring economic prosperity to Atlantic Canada’s rural communities – while producing one of the world’s healthiest foods.

The rest of the world is grasping this opportunity. Atlantic Canada can too. All we have to do is work together to make it happen.

Pamela Parker
is the executive director of the Atlantic Canada Fish Farmers Association.

NOTE: ASF would like to hear your comments on the above Commentary. Please send to: savesalmon@asf.ca
- See more at: http://asf.ca/salmon-farming-spokesperson-says-canada-needs-new-aquacultu.html#sthash.l3OmZKG2.dpuf
 
Responses to Aquaculture Association Commentary
Recently a commentary appeared in the Telegraph-Journal (Saint John, NB) submitted by the aquaculture association that proposed a massive expansion of the industry. To read this commentary, click here.

Below are some of the responses printed by the TELEGRAPH-JOURNAL

1 - INKA MILEWSKI
2 - PETER SALONIUS
3 - JOHN BAGNALL
4 - C. M. 'RIP' CUNNINGHAM
5 - LOWELL DEMOND
6 - GRAHAM SMITH
7 - GEOFF CHISLETT
8 - SUSAN LINKLETTER

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January 2, 2014 - INKA MILEWSKI COMMENTARY

Globally, only 17 per cent of the population’s average per capita intake of animal protein comes from fish.

If you believe what the salmon aquaculture industry is saying, they are poised to feed the hungry of the world, close the global protein gap, employ legions of workers and save coastal communities from economic oblivion. Nowhere in their feel-good message do they tell the public where the hungry and protein starved of the world live or the likelihood that salmon jerky and fillets will fill their bellies. It’s unlikely salmon will be feeding the 25-35 per cent of people living in Chad, Liberal, Angola, Ethiopia, Zambia, Namibia or Lesotho who, according to the United Nation World Food Program, are undernourished.

Sub-Saharan Africa has the highest prevalence of hunger (24.8 per centof the population) and Asia has the largest number of hungry people (over 500 million). Farmed salmon, haddock, cod or halibut will not be on their menu anytime soon According to the 2013 Statistical Yearbook of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, the world’s hungry (and well-fed) get their protein from plants and animals not fish. Globally, only 17 per cent of the population’s average per capita intake of animal protein comes from fish. China alone produced more than 60 per cent of global aquaculture production (mostly seaweeds and freshwater fish), while Asia as a whole accounted for about 90 per cent. Furthermore, global aquaculture production is dominated by species that are raised in inland tanks, channels or ponds and feed low on the food chain such as carp, tilapias and catfish. As for creating legions of workers, employment statistics show that increased technological efficiencies have resulted in increased production levels without comparable increases in employment. Statistics Canada and DFO report that in 1990, 1,000 people in Atlantic Canada were employed in aquaculture and they produced 15,000 mt of product. In 2008, production had quadrupled (67,000 mt), but the workforce increased by only two and half time to 2,600 workers. The world’s leader in salmon farming, Norway, has increased its production by six times over the past 20 years but it’s workforce has remained at 1990 levels. The salmon aquaculture industry says new legislation will help to make all their promises come true. The industry does need legislation. It needs federal regulations like those imposed on effluent from Canada’s pulp and paper and metal mining industries and municipal sewage facilities. There are no federal or provincial regulations to control the impacts of aquaculture. The open net pen salmon aquaculture industry is in deep trouble in Atlantic Canada. Disease outbreaks in 2013 resulted in the destruction of over a million fish. The industry is desperate to find a poison that will kill the sea lice infesting their farms. Poor environmental performance at some farms means longer wait times before production can begin again. Escaped fish continue to be a problem and, as storms intensify due to climate change, the likelihood of storm damage and escaped fish will only get bigger.

A new federal aquaculture act is not going to fix any of these issues. The simplest way to address all the issues plaguing the industry is to move fish farming onto land. Critics of this method say land-based operations are not economic. Money can be, and is being, made growing fish in land-based facilities. The profits are not as great as growing them at sea where the cost of disposing of waste and compensating for disease is paid by the environment and the public. Fish farming does have a place in the economic mix of communities but it is on land where, as with other industrial operations, the real and total cost of production is paid by the industry and not by the public, environment and traditional fisheries.

Inka Milewski 
is a science advisor with the 
Conservation Council of 
New Brunswick
---------

Jan. 4, 2014 - PETER SALONIUS

Salmon farming expansion questioned

The increase in salmon aquaculture recommended by Pamela Parker (“Canada needs a national aquaculture strategy,” Dec. 28) to me is completely unrealistic given the disease and parasite problems faced by the industry at this time.

There are licenced sites that are not even stocked any more because salmon farmers have so little control of sea lice infestations that attack juvenile salmon shortly after they are placed in the salt water sea cages.

The dismal returns of wild salmon to rivers in the southern Maritimes and Maine may well be directly related to the loss of effective chemical controls for sea lice since 2010. Large numbers of sea lice eggs and unattached by infective juveniles, carried by the cold water currents of the Bay of Fundy, attack young wild salmon during their seaward migration. This is likely the primary cause of the devastation of wild salmon populations seen since 2011.

A program of synchronous stocking, grow out, harvesting and fallowing would benefit both the sea cage industry and wild salmon because for six months every two years aquaculture origin sea lice would die out, allowing a fresh start in the spring after all farmed salmon in the area had been harvested in the fall of the previous year.

Peter Salonius
Durham Bridge, NB
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Jan. 6, 2014 - JOHN BAGNALL

Give true cost of salmon farming

I was interested in reading the Dec. 27 commentary by Pamela Parker of the Atlantic Canada Fish Farmers Association on aquaculture opportunities in Atlantic Canada. The following views are personal and not necessarily those of the New Brunswick Salmon Council.

Aquaculture could help feed the world and provide benefits to humanity. However, Atlantic salmon should not have high priority among the species chosen to do so. Salmon are carnivores, and we are losing energy by feeding animals to animals. Herbivorous fish should have priority for population maintenance.

Pamela Parker is being disingenuous in saying that an expansion of aquaculture in Atlantic Canada would be conducted in order to feed the world’s masses of humanity.

Her unstated agenda is for companies to accrue benefits from the production of a luxury food product that would be sold to the rising middle classes of developing countries. There’s nothing wrong with this if these companies paid their true cost of production.

This cost would include line items such as the loss of wild salmon from the spread of disease, the spread of sea louse infestation from caged to wild fish, the effects of escapes such as the resulting genetic out-breeding among wild populations as well as predator population enhancement with resulting suppression of wild salmon stocks. In addition, government should not compensate producers for fish that have to be destroyed because they have contacted a disease such as infectious salmon anemia.

Where is the incentive to reliably and predictably produce a healthy, healthful product?

It should be a regulatory role of government to ensure that these costs are paid by the producers. I am sure that if producers paid a rate closer to their true cost of production, land-based salmon farming would be much more cost effective than the current practice of open net pen feedlot production.


John Bagnall
President, N.B. Salmon Council (NBSC)
---------


Jan. 7, 2014 - LOWELL DEMOND

Don’t allow open pen salmon lots

I am writing in response to “Canada needs a national aquaculture strategy” (Dec. 27), written by Pamela Parker, executive director, Atlantic Canada Fish Farmers Association.

In the article Ms. Parker writes, “Our farmers are committed to environmental sustainability, fish health, innovative research and development, and involvement in their communities.” I am of the opinion this statement is totally unbelievable to all those in the know.

In Canada, from 1996 to 2013, more than 11 million sick fish were slaughtered for which our governments paid more than $100 million. These fish were sick and they died from ISA (infectious salmon anemia). During the past year, off the coast of Liverpool, N.S., 240,000 salmon in an open pen feed lot were sick with ISA. They were allowed to be processed at the Cooke Aquaculture plant in New Brunswick. This caused a national outcry. The U.S. would not allow them across their borders. Some grocery stores refused to market them. Many restaurants would not serve them.

Who wants to eat an animal that is dying? Would anyone invite a dinner guests to their home and serve them aquaculture fish which are dying? Surely, Ms. Parker wouldn’t do this, would she?

The answer to solving the many aquaculture problems is to place the pens on dry land. If this were done, doubt would be removed for their edibility, they would not have sea lice, they would not get sick and require antibiotics, their waste could be contained, and their water recycled.

I fear if this present obscene effort is not ended and we continue to pollute our ocean bottoms, and our shore lands, we who live in Nova Scotia will have to discontinue calling our little province “Canada’s Ocean Playground.”

Lowell R. DeMond
 
Jan. 8, 2014 - C. M. "RIP" CUNNINGHAM

Salmon course isn’t sustainable

Pamela Parker’s commentary on the future potential of aquaculture in Atlantic Canada outlines a desire for a noble venture; feed the world’s starving masses and provide jobs for the coastal communities. The question is if this is really as sustainable as proclaimed and if it will actually do what it indicates.

Would this Atlantic Canada industry be viable without some level of government support? What are the real costs to the wild salmon resource? What are the impacts to communities that have been supported by the sport fishery for wild salmon. How many jobs are lost in the sport fishery for every subsidized job that is created in the aquaculture industry. Those numbers need to be brought forward as they may tell a far different story. As for a product that will feed the starving masses, aquacultured salmon is not it. Those folks who are struggling to get enough protein to survive are hardly the target market for what most label as a “white table cloth product.”

If one truly wants to grow salmon or any other aquacultured fish, they will grow approximately 15% faster in fresh water, since the animal does not have to expend energy in the process of osmoregulation (dealing with the sea water environment). Almost every aspect of the this industry points toward land based operations, except one. The upfront capital costs are higher for land based. It will take either a visionary political action to remove at-sea pens or another game changing economic advantage for shore based operations that will put the at-sea operations out of business.

I agree with Ms. Parker’s suggestion that there should be a visionary plan for the aquaculture industry. Where we disagree is on what that plan should look like. The current course for Atlantic Canada is truly not sustainable.

C. M. “Rip” Cunningham
Fisheries Consultant
Yarmouth, ME



---------
Jan. 9, 2014 - GRAHAM SMITH

Salmon claims challenged

In one of your recent issues, Pam Parker of the Atlantic Canada Fish Farmers’ Association called for a weaker regulatory process for aquaculture operators. I find this astounding.

Anyone can see what we have had over the past few years, during which Ms. Parker feels that we had excessively tight regulations: repeated outbreaks of infectious salmon anemia, fish escapes, sea lice in the salmon at grocery stores, massive infusions of the taxpayers’ money via the Canadian Food Inspection Agency to pay operators for sick fish, even permitting infected fish to go to market for human consumption, damage to lobster populations from pesticides used against sea lice. The list goes on.

Can Ms. Parker identify a single regulatory action that inhibited the finfish aquaculture industry, except when Cooke Aquaculture pleaded guilty to charges of poisoning thousands of lobsters through illegal use of pesticides?

Ms. Parker’s claim that her industry can feed a hungry world is nonsense. It conflicts with the fact that salmon aquaculture actually takes food fish away from humans, in net terms. Consumers can see the farmed salmon, but they don’t see the sardines and other species that fed the farmed salmon, or the people that would have eaten the sardines that fed the salmon. Canada imports fish to feed penned salmon, fish that could better feed hungry people in Third World nations.

Salmon are the only predators we raise for food. Overall, the more carnivorous fish you produce, the less fish you have. Ms. Parker needs to be challenged on her claims.

Graham Smith
Brookside, N.S.
---------

Jan. 10, 2014 - GEOFF CHISLETT

Letters-to-editor
Salmon isn’t protein answer

Ms. Parker’s article (Canada needs a national aquaculture strategy,” Dec 27) has the same arguments salmon farmers have used for years. One, salmon culture can fill the protein needs of starving millions, and two, “governments must harmonize and streamline the regulatory framework so our industry can truly flourish and achieve its manifest destiny.”

First, the cost of farmed salmon precludes it as a protein source for the destitute millions of our world. Unless, of course, the industry envisages huge government subsidies to them to provide “inexpensive” protein to the starving.

The second point is simply code for “get out of our way government, and let us do what we want.” What Canadians need to do is ask themselves, “Which side of the competing interests of environmental protection versus industrial development has been spectacularly successful since contact?”

Fish, wildlife and other ecosystem attributes are lost daily to the greed of industry with the complicity of governments, and unfortunately to our apparently insatiable appetite for more.

I’m a retired fisheries biologist who worked for many years for the province of British Columbia in fish habitat protection. I have heard all about sustainable development, environmental concern, restoration and compensation, from industry and government. The fact is wild creatures and their habitats are slipping through our fingers.

When DFO was allowed to do its job the net gain or, as was more commonly known, No Net Loss policy was developed, and there was an effort to stem the bleeding. The Harper government has essentially killed DFO and it’s now virtually powerless in preventing habitat destruction or alteration if any jobs and dollars are at stake.

Citizen groups like the Atlantic Salmon Federation, various wildlife federations and others appear to be our best last hope until some balance and environmental ethic returns to our society.

Geoff Chislett
Sidney, B.C.

---------

Jan. 11, 2014 – SUSAN LINKLETTER

Make Salmon farms landbased

I agree with Pamela Parker, the aquaculture industry in Atlantic Canada needs to develop a long-term plan that enables the industry to grasp opportunities and develop into a more sustainable industry.

I also agree with her contention that aquaculture should not be under the control of the Department of Fisheries and Oceans.

In order to become a more sustainable industry, aquaculture needs to be moved out of the ocean and into land-based tanks. Only then will it be sustainable. Until then, it will continue to take its toll on wild fish populations, and not only salmon.

As a land-based farming system, this industry needs to be under the control of the Department of Agriculture, allowing DFO to do what it is supposed to do, which is to protect wild fish stocks.

Just think of all the regulations and red tape they will be able to avoid once the farmed salmon comes out of the ocean pens and into land based tanks. Since the industry is looking for the opportunity to re-invent itself, they should get at it.

Susan Linkletter
Salisbury.
- See more at: http://asf.ca/responses-to-aquaculture-association-commentary.html#sthash.7vFzRkfy.dpuf
 
one of the best reads on the topic of feeding the world with fish is contained in the book "four fish". its not only an easy read, it points out the fallacy that salmon raising can be self sustaining as an industry. without government support, it has failed worldwide. visit the library and check out a copy, an eye opener for me.
 
Thanks hambone... I had to post the text to make it easy for everyone to read.

By Peter O'Neil, Vancouver Sun January 16, 2014
OTTAWA — The Harper government has quietly opened the door to a major expansion of B.C.’s controversial fish farm sector despite warnings by the 2012 Cohen Commission about the effects of net-based farms on wild salmon.
The decision, revealed to fish farmers by Fisheries Minister Gail Shea in October, was laid out in letters to several B.C. First Nations last week.
An official in Shea’s department said Wednesday that Ottawa has already received 13 applications for expansions or new farms.
Shea’s letter said applications will be accepted for everywhere except the Discovery Islands archipelago between Campbell River and the B.C. mainland.
Justice Bruce Cohen’s 2012 report on the 2009 collapse of the Fraser River sockeye run urged Ottawa to maintain a ban on new farms in that archipelago.
Critics say the lifting of the 2011 moratorium violates the spirit of the Cohen report and could cause disaster for wild salmon stocks. And they condemned the lack of transparency by the government.
DFO spokeswoman Melanie Carkner said Wednesday the government is reviewing nine applications to expand production at existing sites and two new sites, for a total increase of 16,640 tonnes of capacity. Tonnage refers to the peak weight of fish a farm is allowed to have in the water.
“All applications … will continue to be evaluated through the lens of environmental sustainability and engagement with First Nations and other stakeholders,” said Carkner, who added that Canada has “some of the strictest regulations” in the world.
The letter to First Nations last week refers to the first of the new applications.
Norwegian company Cermaq Canada Ltd. wants to dramatically expand capacity, to 460 tonnes from 10 tonnes, at its Cypress Harbour broodstock facility in the Broughton Archipelago, a fish farm-heavy area near the northeast end of Vancouver Island. Cypress Harbour provides eggs and sperm for fish farms and Cermaq says they want to move production to this site from other operations.
Shea’s letter said the government is not putting wild stocks at risk. “Our government is committed to protecting and conserving fish habitat in support of coastal and inland fisheries resources.”
But critics said Wednesday Shea’s decision overlooks Cohen’s warning about the risks of fish farms, a warning that applies to all B.C. salmon stocks even though the judge was limited to making recommendations relating to the Fraser sockeye.
“The decision to expand destructive aquaculture practices anywhere along B.C.’s coast is a huge betrayal of the concerns raised in the Cohen inquiry,” said Watershed Watch Salmon Society executive director Craig Orr.
“They’re not applying the principles in Cohen that led to that moratorium (for the Discovery Islands) to our territories,” said Chief Councillor Bob Chamberlain of the Kwikwasutinuxw Haxwa’mis First Nation, based on Gilford Island in the Broughton Archipelago.
Orr noted that coho and especially young pinks and chums are far less mature than the Fraser River sockeye when they pass by the area’s fish farms. He said the pinks and chums weigh on average “barely a gram” when they exit rivers to pass by fish farms and are a tenth the size of young Fraser sockeye facing the same challenges in the Discovery Islands area.

Critics also condemned the lack of transparency.
Ottawa has not issued a news release on the fish farm decision despite producing a flood of statements since October on everything from the naming of a new hovercraft in B.C. to the donation of an old Canadian Coast Guard vessel in Nunavut.
Shea’s only public comment was an October statement that the Discovery Islands moratorium will continue indefinitely. Asked when Shea spoke publicly or issued any statements about the moratorium being lifted elsewhere, a spokeswoman said in an email that the minister “talked about it openly.” However, she was unable to produce any news releases, statements or quotations in the B.C. media to back up that claim.
One critic said the government deliberately down-played last October’s decision to avoid controversy.
“There’s an issue about transparency,” said John Werring, a science policy adviser at the David Suzuki Foundation. “It shows clearly the direction the government is taking on aquaculture. They do not want any opposition to their plans and I suspect their reluctance to release this information to the public is to mute any kind of concern that might be expressed by people opposed to the expansion of the industry in British Columbia.”
In 2011, the federal government ordered a moratorium on new and expanded fish farms that “would result in a significant increase in environmental footprint,” while Cohen was holding his inquiry.
While Cohen concluded said there was no single “smoking gun” to blame for the 2009 collapse of the Fraser River sockeye, he expressed concern about the risk that ocean-net fish farms might jeopardize wild salmon through the spread of disease and sea lice.
“I accept the evidence that management practices taken within net pens are intended to reduce the risk of disease as much as possible and to keep both farmed and wild fish healthy,” Cohen concluded. “However, I cannot determine on the evidence before me whether those measures ensure that the risk of serious harm from disease and pathogen transfer is a minimal one.”
Cohen singled out Discovery Islands, where the moratorium remains, because that’s on the key route for the young sockeye exiting the Fraser River, and it has the largest concentration of fish farms. Those fish are less mature and seen therefore as more vulnerable than those that later go through the Broughton.
Cohen called for more federal research into the effect of fish farms on wild stocks, and also said DFO is in a conflict of interest due to its dual role of protecting wild stocks and promoting fish farming.
While the Harper government ignored Cohen’s advice to end the promotional role, Shea did stress in its October statement that the government is making major investments in research. She cited the 2013 budget’s $57.5 million over five years to “bolster our environmental protection in the aquaculture sector through science, enhanced regulatory regime and improved reporting.”

The budget also included a program to support sport fishing conservation partnerships. The government also boosted the Pacific Salmon Foundation’s funding by $1 million annually.


I also heard that PSF is still waiting for the check. It seems that the feds are slow to hand over the money you and I pay with the salmon stamp on our license. Perhaps they gave the money to O&G.
 
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