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Norway's Shame: Auditor General Slams Salmon Farm Impacts as MP's Tour ...

Date: 
05 May 2013

Oslo, Norway – The Office of the Auditor General of Norway has published a highly critical report on the state of the Norwegian salmon farming industry including problems with escapes, sea lice, pollution offences and diseased farmed salmon. 

This unprecedented public criticism follows a ground-breaking report last year by the Green Warriors of Norway which exposed the horrors of Norwegian salmon farming. 

Meanwhile, a delegation of Norwegian MPs and the leader of the Sami Parliament are in Canada this week in an attempt to promote the beleaguered industry.  

"The

Oslo, Norway – The Office of the Auditor General of Norway has published a highly critical report on the state of the Norwegian salmon farming industry including problems with escapes, sea lice, pollution offences and diseased farmed salmon. 
This unprecedented public criticism follows a ground-breaking report last year by the Green Warriors of Norway which exposed the horrors of Norwegian salmon farming. 
Meanwhile, a delegation of Norwegian MPs and the leader of the Sami Parliament are in Canada this week in an attempt to promote the beleaguered industry.  
"The Auditor General's report echoes what the Green Warriors have been arguing for decades – that Norwegian salmon farming is unsustainable and a pollution hazard.  Consumers around the world should rise up in protest against this filthy industry and boycott Norwegian farmed salmon.  This report is one more nail in the coffin of the disease-ridden Norwegian salmon farming industry." 
Don Staniford, global coordinator for the Green Warriors of Norway, said:
"Green Warriors of the World must unite to fight the Norwegian fish farming menace.  Norwegian-owned salmon farming is spreading infectious diseases, genetic pollution and toxic wastes all over the globe as well as at home in Norway.  The salmon farming industry is an international embarrassment to Norway and is threatening Norway's green and clean image abroad."
Alexandra Morton, a critic of salmon farming in British Columbia, wrote in an open letter to the Norwegian delegation:
"We understand the BC feedlots are your gateway into China, since China refuses Norwegian salmon and so you come to Quadra Island to protect the interests of your corporations; Marine Harvest, Cermaq and Grieg. However, we see serious problems arising for us from your industry and we are not prepared to sacrifice wild salmon to profit Norway.  Please understand that the fight against what we see as an invasion of salmon feedlots into one of the most important wild salmon migration routes left on earth has only begun."

Location

Norway
60° 28' 19.2864" N, 8° 28' 8.2056" E

Scientists Are Divided Over Threat to Pacific Northwest Salmon

Date: 
01 May 2013

SEATTLE — Like mariners scanning the horizon from the crow's nest, scientists have for years been on the lookout in the Pacific Northwest for signs that a dreaded salmon-killing disease, scourge to farmed salmon in other parts of the world, has arrived here, threatening some of the world's richest wild salmon habitats. Most say there is no evidence.



A technician prepared salmon samples to be tested for viruses at a laboratory in Olympia, Wash.

Alexandra Morton, a biologist, has warned that infectious salmon anemia has reached the Pacific Nor

SEATTLE — Like mariners scanning the horizon from the crow's nest, scientists have for years been on the lookout in the Pacific Northwest for signs that a dreaded salmon-killing disease, scourge to farmed salmon in other parts of the world, has arrived here, threatening some of the world's richest wild salmon habitats. Most say there is no evidence.

A technician prepared salmon samples to be tested for viruses at a laboratory in Olympia, Wash.
Alexandra Morton, a biologist, has warned that infectious salmon anemia has reached the Pacific Northwest, but other scientists disagree.
But for years, a biologist in Canada named Alexandra Morton — regarded by some as a visionary Cassandra, by others as a misguided prophet of doom — has said definitively and unquestionably that they are wrong. Wild Pacific salmon, she has said, are testing positive for a European strain of the virus that causes the disease, infectious salmon anemia, or I.S.A.
The virus, which has struck farmed salmon populations in Chile, among other places, is not harmful to humans who eat the fish, but could potentially pose grave threats in a part of the world where salmon plays a huge role in local economies and ecosystems. If the virus, which is in the influenza family, mutates into a virulent Pacific strain in the crowded fish farms in British Columbia, where wild and farmed salmon are sometimes in proximity, fish populations on both sides of the farm/wild divide, Ms. Morton believes, could be devastated.
"It's an uncomfortable truth," she said.
But scientists and government testing groups in Canada and the United States have said repeatedly over several years that Ms. Morton's findings were not sufficient to sound an alarm, and that the risks to wild salmon, even in the event of a fish-farm outbreak, are unclear. After rounds of government hearings and millions of dollars spent on research, the two sides are in an increasingly bitter standoff.
"We're trying to re-create the situation that she's saying is out there, and to date we cannot re-create the results," said Dr. Penny Greenwood, national manager of the domestic disease control program at Canadian Food Inspection Agency.
Now, Ms. Morton has new test results that she said are positive for the infectious salmon anemia virus — though not necessarily the disease — in farmed salmon she bought at a fish market in Vancouver late last year. At the same time, the biggest effort ever on the American side of the border to find the virus is shifting into high gear, with fish samples arriving in labs in Idaho, Alaska and here in Washington State.
"I think we're probably pretty close to having a definitive answer," said Martin Krkosek, an assistant professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at the University of Toronto.
The stakes are enormous, and not least for reputations. Salmon, in all their varied and usually pink-hued glory, have been an ecological anchor from Alaska to Oregon, intertwined with the region's culture and economy since long before the arrival of Lewis and Clark.
The search for the virus raises questions that have swirled through commercial fishing and oceanography: Has the growth of open-ocean fish farming over the last three decades and the vast netted pens of Atlantic salmon from Chile to Maine and Norway to Canada created a reliable source of sustainable, inexpensive protein? Or, as critics contend, are the farms unsustainable because they pollute the seabed and because the close confinement of the fish raises the risk of disease?
Salmon farmers say that the broader controversy over aquatic farming has informed the narrower discussion of the salmon disease, and that Ms. Morton in particular has been out to get them, whether a virus is involved or not.
Adding further fuel — or at least, smoke — to the fire is a new documentary that accuses the Canadian government of deliberately covering up evidence that would support Ms. Morton's conclusions. A Web site has since emerged that tries to debunk to the documentary.
"She says one thing, everybody else says something different, and therefore, in her view they're all in collusion, and not doing a good job," Ian Roberts, a spokesman for Marine Harvest Canada, the biggest salmon farming operation in British Columbia, said of Ms. Morton. He said his industry had sent upward of 8,000 samples for testing in recent years, without a single confirmed finding of the I.S.A. And he said the survival rate at his company's salmon farms was better than 90 percent.
There is no doubt that the disease can wreak havoc. First described in Norway in the mid-1980s, it has flared on fish farms from Maine and the eastern coast of Canada to Scotland and Chile, which reported a new outbreak last month. The virus is also capable of mutating rapidly, which scientists on all sides of the issue say increases the need to keep an eye on it. Its victims can be seen gasping at the surface, lethargic and often swollen with fluids; mortality can reach 90 percent.
The global seafood industry, meanwhile, has become harder than ever for researchers to monitor, with well-established problems of labeling and provenance. A recent study, for example, of fish purchased in markets and restaurants around the nation by a nonprofit ocean protection group, Oceana, found that about a third of the samples tested were mislabeled.
Dr. Greenwood, of the Canadian food agency, said that research to determine where one of Ms. Morton's market-purchased samples came from produced conflicting accounts from people in the supply chain. Without a clear chain of custody, she said, there was no point testing the fish at all. She said there had been no attempt to cover up anything.
"We couldn't even verify that that fish was in fact Canadian in origin," she said.
Wild fish coming into proximity with farmed fish is partly what raised disease concerns in British Columbia in the first place. Some fish pens, notably near the Fraser River, straddle the very corridor through which millions of sockeye salmon pass each year, both during their juvenile outmigration to the ocean and upon their return as adults to breed.
Those anxieties skyrocketed in 2009, when the salmon run on the Fraser suddenly collapsed, leading to a government inquiry in which infectious salmon anemia was discussed but never definitively implicated as a factor. (The Fraser's sockeye salmon bounced back in 2010 with one of the biggest runs ever recorded, and have hovered around their long-term averages since then.)
James Winton, chief of the Fish Health Section at the United States Geological Survey's Western Fisheries Research Center in Seattle, one of the labs involved in the new wave of tests, said that assessing disease risks to wild salmon went far beyond how close they get to their farmed cousins. Climate change, habitat loss, contaminants, variability of food supplies and ocean acidification, among other factors, may also play roles in affecting the susceptibility of wild salmon to diseases, he said.
Wild salmon remains a popular choice among diners, in part for its omega-3 fatty acids, which studies have shown are important for heart and brain health. The Washington State Department of Health sums up its advice in three succinct words and a bit of pro-wild caveat: "Keep eating salmon!" the agency says in its Web site. "Wild salmon is a great choice and farmed salmon is a good alternative."

Location

Canada
56° 7' 49.3176" N, 106° 20' 48.3756" W

BC's Fish Farm Falling out, Explained

Date: 
01 May 2013

[Editor's note: With voting day fast approaching, we look back on big issues that have driven debate in our province during the last 12 years of BC Liberal governance. What did B.C.'s leaders and opposition parties say and do on these major files? What are they saying now? What are the facts? Humbly offered here, a cure for political amnesia among candidates and media alike. Today, a primer on B.C.'s fish farms.]

When fish farms first appeared on the B.C. central coast 25 years ago, Alexandra Morton was a supporter.

Living on the co

[Editor's note: With voting day fast approaching, we look back on big issues that have driven debate in our province during the last 12 years of BC Liberal governance. What did B.C.'s leaders and opposition parties say and do on these major files? What are they saying now? What are the facts? Humbly offered here, a cure for political amnesia among candidates and media alike. Today, a primer on B.C.'s fish farms.]
When fish farms first appeared on the B.C. central coast 25 years ago, Alexandra Morton was a supporter.
Living on the coast to study orcas, Morton also came to know the communities that -- like the orcas -- lived on the salmon and other fish. In an interview with The Tyee, Morton said she thought the farms would help to support those communities.
It didn't work out that way. Morton was then studying orcas, but "acoustic harassment" drove them out of the area. Even worse, the fish farms were being established on some of the communities' best fishing grounds.
"I'd had good relations with DFO about killer whales," Morton told The Tyee, "so I thought it would be easy to talk with them about the fish farms. I was very naive."
Since then, Morton and the anti-farming movement have been in increasing conflict with both the fish farms and the provincial and federal governments. The Tyee has documented that conflict as far back as 2004, 2005, and 2006. After the failure of the Fraser River sockeye run in 2009, Morton called for an independent inquiry; the Cohen Commission was the result.

But the Commission itself became a focus of national and international controversy over the Harper government's silencing of researcher Dr. Kristi Miller. Dr. Miller did eventually speak publicly about her findings, and also said she believed the Prime Minister's Office had ordered her not to speak the media before giving her testimony.
Local goes international
By then, the British journal Nature had published an editorial condemning the silencing of Dr. Miller in particular and Canadian government scientists in general. The "muzzling" issue persists.
Morton took an active role in the Cohen Commission hearings, expressing concern not only about sea lice but also various fish diseases such as infectious salmon anemia (ISA). She has since carried the campaign into various Lower Mainland supermarkets as well as on the east coast.
In the weeks leading up to the election, Morton has been touring a new 70-minute documentary by Twyla Roscovich, Salmon Confidential, as well as posting frequent items about the tour and the issues on her Facebook page.
Asked about the role of the provincial government, Morton told The Tyee: "They're the landlord of the salmon farms. They get money from every tenure on this coast. They can remove farm licences if it's in the public interest. No other feedlot is allowed to threaten wild animals."
Morton went on to say, "I would love to see compensation packages for farm workers' families." She said the wild fishery, worth $600 million, is ten times as valuable as the $61.9 million of fish farms, citing B.C. Stats on wages paid to workers in the wild fishery as $218 million, versus $55 million in the farms. (More statistics are available on her blog.)
Morton said the fish-farm issue is increasing in importance in the provincial election. "The NDP has put out conflicting statements," she said. "First they said they might ban the farms, but then they issued a much softer statement." (The NDP website has little to say about the issue except to criticize the Liberals for failing to protect wild salmon and not taking unspecified "action" on fish farms.)
"The Greens say they'll close them, and the Liberals are calling for a moratorium on new farms in the Discovery Islands until 2020."
A search of the Liberal website turned up little on the subject except old news releases criticizing the NDP for being "against the salmon farms that provide jobs to coastal communities." The B.C. Conservative website, meanwhile, has no search function and its "What We Believe" page is blank.

Location

Canada
50° 33' 56.0232" N, 124° 58' 49.6884" W

Infectious salmon anaemia, Norway [OIE ALERT]

Report Type:
Host:
Source:
Date: 
30 Apr 2013

Infectious salmon anaemia, Norway

Information received on 30/04/2013 from Dr Keren Bar-Yaacov, Chief Veterinary Officer, Legislation, Norwegian Food Safety Authority, BRUMUNDDAL, Norway

Summary

Report type

Immediate notification

Date of start of the event

23/04/2013

Date of pre-confirmation of the event

26/04/2013

Report date

30/04/2013

Date submitted to OIE

30/04/2013

Reason for notification

First occurrence of a listed disease

Manifestation of disease

Clinical disease

Causal agent

Infectious salmon anaemia virus

Nature of diagnosis

Clinical, Laboratory (basic), Laboratory (advanced), Necropsy

This event pertains to

a defined zone within the country

New outbreaks

Summary of outbreaks

Total outbreaks: 1

Outbreak Location

  • NORDLAND ( 11201, Lofoten )

Total animals affected

Species

Susceptible

Cases

Deaths

Destroyed

Slaughtered

Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar)

411410

6900

1830

2

0

Outbreak statistics

Species

Apparent morbidity rate

Apparent mortality rate

Apparent case fatality rate

Proportion susceptible animals lost*

Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar)

1.68%

0.44%

26.52%

0.45%

* Removed from the susceptible population through death, destruction and/or slaughter;

Epidemiology

Source of the outbreak(s) or origin of infection

  • Unknown or inconclusive

Epidemiological comments

From an epidemiological point of view, the Norwegian Food Safety Authority considers the ISA outbreak in Lofoten to be a first occurrence in this geographical area. Infectious salmon anaemia (ISA) was already present in Nordland in February 2013. However, at that time, the disease did not affect the area in which this notified outbreak has occurred, and therefore the currently reported outbreak is not a reoccurrence of ISA disease.
The occurrence of these disease outbreaks is quite different both in time and place, with a distance of about 100 km between them. The ISA cases are two completely separate outbreaks without any epidemiological correlation, although the previous occurrence of the disease belongs to the same administrative region, Nordland, which is an extensive region.

Control measures

Measures applied

  • Movement control inside the country
  • Zoning
  • Tracing forward
  • Tracing back
  • Surveillance outside containment and/or buffer zone
  • Official destruction of clinically diseased aquatic animals
  • Surveillance within containment and/or buffer zone
  • No vaccination
  • No treatment of affected animals

Measures to be applied

  • No other measures

Diagnostic test results

Laboratory name and type

Norwegian Veterinary Institute ( National laboratory )

Tests and results

Species

Test

Test date

Result

Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar)

histopathological examination

23/04/2013

Positive

Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar)

immunohistochemical test

23/04/2013

Positive

Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar)

nested RT-PCR

26/04/2013

Positive

Future Reporting

The event is continuing. Weekly follow-up reports will be submitted.

 

Location

Lofoten
Norway
68° 13' 11.4384" N, 13° 46' 36.678" E

Sernapesca confirms that ISA virus spread was not detected

Date: 
29 Apr 2013

The National Fisheries and Aquaculture Service (Sernapesca) confirmed that to date no new cases indicating the spread of infectious salmon anemia (ISA) virus has been detected in the north of Aysen.

The authority inspected more than 90 per cent of the farms installed in the so called macrozone six.

Sernapesca national director, Juan Luis Ansoleaga, recalled that the macrozone six (covering 64 Atlantic salmon farms in the northern part of the Aysen region) was declared a health emergency after detecting two ISA virus outbreaks.

The centres that were affected were Garrao, Los F

The National Fisheries and Aquaculture Service (Sernapesca) confirmed that to date no new cases indicating the spread of infectious salmon anemia (ISA) virus has been detected in the north of Aysen.
The authority inspected more than 90 per cent of the farms installed in the so called macrozone six.
Sernapesca national director, Juan Luis Ansoleaga, recalled that the macrozone six (covering 64 Atlantic salmon farms in the northern part of the Aysen region) was declared a health emergency after detecting two ISA virus outbreaks.
The centres that were affected were Garrao, Los Fiordos, and King, belonging to Multiexport Foods.
The official explained that in the High Security Zone, corresponding to an area having 16.2 nautical miles around the first outbreak that was detected, the existence of new ISA outbreaks has been ruled out.
"In this area inspections were conducted at the 28 centres categorized as 'at risk,' and no clinical signs of the disease or the presence of the virus were detected," he added.
Furthermore, he highlighted the speed with which the reaction took place given the outbreak detection, making it possible to take control and the necessary containment measures to prevent its spread to other farms, Sernapesca reported in a press release.
"However, it is still a watchful situation so we will continue implementing the measures which correspond to the health emergency status, which implies, among other actions, movement control, surveillance at farms according to the risk, sampling every 15 days, biosecurity control in processing plants, wellboats, and mortality landing sites," he concluded.
On the other hand, a team of researchers from the Basal Financing Programme (PFB) Copas Sur Austral developed a different method from the one using animal tissue to detect the ISA virus.
This breakthrough, achieved in the framework of a project to assess the presence of the disease in the native fauna, has great importance at a time when in the country outbreaks of the virus have been detected on two farms.
The technique is based on a concentration method of ISA virus particles, from sea water, for which an animal protein is used as a flocculant (an element that allows binding the particles).
The patent of the new technique has already been applied for at the National Institute of Industrial Property (Inapi).
Related articles:
- New method to detect ISA virus
- Salmon firms confirm ISA virus absence in their centres
By Analia Murias

United Kingdom
The sustainability credentials of Scottish-caught fish has been further buoyed by recent data from the International Council for the Exploration of the Sea, which reveals a significant fall in fishing pressure on stocks in the north-east Atlantic.

Spain
The Galician fishing sector engaged in catching cephalopod specimens has expressed concern not only about the fact whether it will fish in Mauritanian waters again, but also about a likely agreement between the governments of Mauritania and China.

Location

Chile
28° 23' 12.8004" S, 70° 18' 45" W

UPDATE 1-Fish farmer Marine Harvest sees strong demand ahead

Date: 
29 Apr 2013

Tue Apr 30, 2013 2:50am EDT



* Fish prices to stay high at least through 2014

* May raise capex, plans solid dividends

* Chile market trouble create investment opportunity (Adds outlook, guidance, company quotes)

OSLO, April 30 (Reuters) - Marine Harvest, the world's largest fish farmer, raised its forecasts on Tuesday due to higher salmon prices and predicted a strong market ahead, and unveiled plans to list its shares in the United States to tap strong investor demand.

Oslo-listed Marine Harvest, controlled by shipping tycoon John Fredriksen, said s

Tue Apr 30, 2013 2:50am EDT

* Fish prices to stay high at least through 2014
* May raise capex, plans solid dividends
* Chile market trouble create investment opportunity (Adds outlook, guidance, company quotes)
OSLO, April 30 (Reuters) - Marine Harvest, the world's largest fish farmer, raised its forecasts on Tuesday due to higher salmon prices and predicted a strong market ahead, and unveiled plans to list its shares in the United States to tap strong investor demand.
Oslo-listed Marine Harvest, controlled by shipping tycoon John Fredriksen, said salmon prices would stay high at least through 2014 due to strong demand pushing profits higher as volumes fall due to problems in Chile, where farming troubles were creating investment opportunities.
"A balanced market will provide the possibility to fund significant growth, capex and reintroduction of solid dividend payments," it said. "The board anticipates a material improvement in operating profit in the second quarter, and strong results for the full year."
The firm lifted its guidance for return on capital employed to 12 percent from 10 percent, well above last year's 3.22 percent as it expects fish prices to be around 34 Norwegian crowns per kilogram this year versus 26 crowns in the fourth quarter of last year.
It added that infectious salmon anaemia disease in Chile, the world's second biggest salmon farmer after Norway, was not affecting its operations and it would raise its spending to keep its stock healthy.
In the first quarter its operating profit jumped to 482 million crowns ($82.39 million) from 276 million a year earlier, even as its harvested volumes fell by 17 percent.
For the full year, it predicted harvest volumes of 350,000 tonnes, below last year's 393,000 tonnes, but at much higher prices.
Marine Harvest's shares have risen 102 percent over the past 12 months. ($1=5.8503 Norwegian krones) (Reporting by Terje Solsvik and Balazs Koranyi; Editing by Greg Mahlich)

Location

Chile
35° 40' 30.5292" S, 71° 32' 34.6884" W

Infectious Salmon Anaemia Detected in Lofoten | Global Seafood ...[Norway]

Date: 
24 Apr 2013

Other farms in the area have been notified and those living and working in the area have been asked to show care and caution to prevent the spread of the disease.

TheFishSite News Desk

Infectious Salmon Anaemia Detected in Lofoten

News

26 April 2013

NORWAY – Infectious salmon anemia (ISA) has been detected on a farm in the locality Kolvdden in Vestvågøyik O.

The ISA virus was found in all the samples submitted.

The Food Safety Authority is now working to create a control area, comprising of a control zone and a surveillance zone, around the affected farm.

Other farms in the area have been notified and those living and working in the area have been asked to show care and caution to prevent the spread of the disease.

TheFishSite News Desk

Location

Lofoten
Norway
68° 10' 45.0444" N, 14° 6' 23.202" E

Documentary explores plight of farmed salmon

Date: 
24 Apr 2013

Survey results are meant for general information only, and are not based on recognised statistical methods.



'Audiences are going to see a coverup and they are going to see a detective story'




License













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When biologist Alexandra Morton discovered B.C.'s wild salmon were testing positive for dangerous European salmon viruses she set off a chain of events she alleges led to a government coverup.

The documentary that filmmaker Twyla Roscovich made about Mo

Survey results are meant for general information only, and are not based on recognised statistical methods.

'Audiences are going to see a coverup and they are going to see a detective story'

License

Tweet

When biologist Alexandra Morton discovered B.C.'s wild salmon were testing positive for dangerous European salmon viruses she set off a chain of events she alleges led to a government coverup.
The documentary that filmmaker Twyla Roscovich made about Morton's investigation is a detective story with an important environmental message, Morton said Wednesday.
"There's a lot of surprise that the government is treating wild salmon this way," she said. "Audiences are going to see a coverup and they are going to see a detective story."
Salmon Confidential screens Tuesday in the Alumni Theatre at Thompson Rivers University at 7 p.m. Roscovich will be in attendance.
Morton was a participant in the Cohen Commission, a three-year, $26-million inquiry into the collapse of the Fraser River sockeye salmon run.
She said bureaucrats with the Department of Fisheries and Oceans and key scientists withheld crucial documents from the commission. Outraged, she contacted Roscovich and asked her to make the film.
"I was concerned that all the testimony and all that we learned would be lost to the public," she said.
Salmon Confidential shows rare footage from the commission and follows Morton as she travels from the courtroom to some of the province's most remote rivers, the grocery store and even sushi restaurants.
She discovered farmed salmon in B.C. have fallen victim to three European viruses — Infectious Salmon Anemia, Piscine Reovirus and Salmon Alpha Virus. Morton even taught herself how to test for these viruses.
When the fisheries industry wouldn't let her test farmed fish, Morton went to the supermarket and tested the salmon on ice there. She said fish sold in the grocery store have all three European viruses.
"All three of these are causing lawsuits in the Norwegian salmon farming industry and nobody knows what they are going to do to wild Pacific salmon in British Columbia," she said.
The federal government suppressed a paper revealing Infectious Salmon Anemia was found in 100 per cent of the sockeye stocks in Cultus Lake, claimed Morton.
Morton has been to more than 25 showings of Salmon Confidential and people are consistently shocked. She said the documentary has its lighter moments, but it's serious stuff.
"Having the bureaucrats on the stand so people can watch them, that's what really makes this film so powerful because we all know when people aren't telling the truth," said Morton.

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Location

British Columbia
Canada
53° 43' 36.0048" N, 127° 38' 51.4356" W

Concern Over Chile's Antibiotic Use, ISA Cases not Reported?

Date: 
24 Apr 2013

CHILE - Concern is growing in Chile over the large ammounts of anti-biotics being used in fish farms to fight Infectious Salmon Anaemia (ISA) which is thought to have never left the Los Lagos and Aysen regions.

The Chilean Economy Minister, Pablo Longueira, referred to the overuse of antibiotics by the salmon industry and stated that "the government has not had any salmon vaccinated, unlike Norway who developed a vaccine."

According to experts, the overuse of antibiotics in the industry could cause people to become resistant to them, reports BioChile.

Mr Longueira said that a t

CHILE - Concern is growing in Chile over the large ammounts of anti-biotics being used in fish farms to fight Infectious Salmon Anaemia (ISA) which is thought to have never left the Los Lagos and Aysen regions.
The Chilean Economy Minister, Pablo Longueira, referred to the overuse of antibiotics by the salmon industry and stated that "the government has not had any salmon vaccinated, unlike Norway who developed a vaccine."
According to experts, the overuse of antibiotics in the industry could cause people to become resistant to them, reports BioChile.
Mr Longueira said that a total of 325 tons of antibiotics are poured into the salmon industry per year in the 2200 miles of sea between Los Lagos and Magallanes.
The heavy use of antibiotics also raises concern that many ISA outbreaks in the area may be going unreported.
Biologists and experts say the ISA virus has never left the area and it is still finding ISA present in farms in the Los Lagos and Aysen regions.
Disagreeing with scientists, Mr Longueira said he was unaware of the presence of the virus in these regions and believes that it is a resurgence of the virus, which the government could have controlled if a vaccine had been developed fast enough.
TheFishSite News Desk
Fish Health, Biosecurity and Hygiene, Markets and Economics, Salmon, Government and Regulatory, Aquaculture, Antibiotic

Location

China
33° 24' 55.9728" S, 70° 36' 13.0968" W

Irish Salmon Farm Controversy Roils the Waters of Galway Bay

Date: 
24 Apr 2013

A proposal by the Irish government to establish an 1,127-acre organic salmon farm off Inisheer (Inis Oirr in Irish), a tiny island in Galway Bay on Ireland's western coast, has met furious opposition from environmental activists, fishermen, and other concerned citizens in the area. A decision on whether or not to go ahead with the project is due soon, perhaps as early as next week.

Salmon is something the Irish feel passionate about. It isn't just a fish in Ireland, it's part of the culture — and even a symbol of wisdom and knowledge. The early 20th-century Dublin-born novelist and poet J

A proposal by the Irish government to establish an 1,127-acre organic salmon farm off Inisheer (Inis Oirr in Irish), a tiny island in Galway Bay on Ireland's western coast, has met furious opposition from environmental activists, fishermen, and other concerned citizens in the area. A decision on whether or not to go ahead with the project is due soon, perhaps as early as next week.
Salmon is something the Irish feel passionate about. It isn't just a fish in Ireland, it's part of the culture — and even a symbol of wisdom and knowledge. The early 20th-century Dublin-born novelist and poet James Stephens described the mythical "Salmon who lies in the pool of Glyn Cagny" as "the most profound of living creatures," and the River Boyne was said to have been the home of the Salmon of Knowledge, who drew his intelligence from eating magical hazelnuts that had dropped into the water. After accidentally tasting the flesh of this wondrous fish, a young poet named Demne went forth into the world to become the great Irish hero Fionn Mac Cumhaill, or Finn McCool.
In more prosaic terms, salmon has long been an important and highly regarded food source in Ireland. The old Gaelic chieftains served salmon roasted whole on a spit, basted with butter, honey, and herbs, at their important banquets, and in some parts of the country it was traditional to have a whole salmon as the centerpiece of a Christmas dinner, in place of goose or turkey. And of course Irish smoked salmon is widely considered to be the best in the world.
Besides being proud of their salmon, the Irish have long bragged (justifiably) about the quality and variety of the seafood caught off the country's lengthy coastline and about the purity of the waters in which that seafood swims. In particular, the people of Inisheer and the other two Aran Islands, Inishmore (Inis Mór) and Inishmaan (Inis Meáin), who depend largely on tourism and fishing for their livelihoods, were not happy when Ireland's Bord Iascaigh Mhara (BIM), or Sea Fisheries Board, which oversees the country's seafood industry, announced the impending construction of the salmon farm about a mile off Inisheer's coast. The facility, which would be government-owned but run by a private company whose identity has not yet been announced, would produce an estimated 15,000 tons of fish annually — translating to a little more than 3.5 million salmon worth roughly €100 million (around $130 million) on the export market — and, claims BIM, would supply jobs directly to about 350 locals by its fourth year of operation, and would account for the employment of about 150 more in supporting businesses. (The average number of employees for a farm like the one proposed, counter local seafood experts, would be more like 100 than 500, and the farm would probably displace at least that many jobs in the tourism business.)
Residents of the Aran Islands and of the Galway area in general have vigorously protested plans for the farm. They're concerned about pollution, to begin with. They fear that waste materials and drugs used to keep the farmed fish free from sea lice and infectious salmon anemia will leak into surrounding waters and even wash ashore, possibly polluting the land as well and scaring tourists from local beaches. A local fishery official, Christopher Egan, has also pointed out that the food pellets the fish will eat contain a colorant to artificially give their flesh the dark pink "salmony" hue consumers expect, and that wild fish in the area are likely to identify these pellets as "free food" and eat them, too — with the result that cod and other white fish that are important to the local economy may start turning up considerably less than white. Other concerned citizens maintain that even the very site of the salmon cages floating in Galway Bay will turn away potential visitors to the region.
My friend Enda Conneely, a fisherman and conservationist who runs the small Island Cottage café and bed-and-breakfast on Inisheer with his wife, Marie, is one of the more vocal foes of the project. "They're going to license operation of the farm to multinationals, essentially Norwegians, and they're going to want to build nine more farms of the same size around here if they want to compete with Scotland and Norway in the international marketplace, which of course they will. Salmon is a noble beast, and they're actually manipulating all the myths about it and coming up with all this horrible things. I happen to think that you should eat proper food if you can, and that you shouldn't be destroying the environment just because the Chinese want to eat salmon."

Location

Ireland
53° 24' 46.476" N, 8° 14' 38.004" W
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