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How You can Have Your Healthy Environment and Eat Farmed Salmon Too

Posted: 08/02/2012 4:18 pm

Farming Atlantic salmon in high tech closed containment land based operations, rather than in nets that sit in the ocean, is catching on. Today, viable technologies produce healthy farmed fish completely separate from the surrounding environment and wild fish. Around the world, farmers are recognizing that there is a lucrative market in supplying chefs and consumers who increasingly demand fish grown in an environmentally-sustainable manner.

A partnership between The Conservation Fund Freshwater Institute of West Virginia and the Atlantic Salmon Federation, a conservation organization with headquarters in St. Andrews NB, is producing healthy, unstressed farmed salmon, free of disease and sea lice, without vaccines, harsh chemicals, and antibiotics in closed-containment freshwater facilities on land. The goal is to give fish farmers and regulators the opportunity to choose a different way to grow fish that is, not only better for the environment but better for business, too.

The open net pen salmon farming industry greatly underplays the environmental impacts of farming salmon in open net pens in the ocean. Just one example is this industry's portrayal of outbreaks of Infectious Salmon Anemia (ISA) as a disease occurring naturally and to be expected as part of the business of farming salmon. In fact, this deadly flu-like disease is spread quickly among farmed salmon that are stressed in densely-packed open ocean net cages, wherever these farms exist -- Norway, Scotland, the Faroes, Chile, Maine, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and now Newfoundland and Labrador.

In the Atlantic Canadian aquaculture industry, millions of farmed salmon have had to be slaughtered and the industry compensated with millions of taxpayers' dollars from provincial and federal governments. Would it not be more "economical" to circumvent the expense of destruction and compensation by growing salmon in disease-free closed containment facilities?

On the other hand, the industry greatly exaggerates the amount of land, water, and energy required in land-based freshwater closed containment facilities. The industry claims that 8,000 football fields would be required to put the salmon farming operations of NB and NS on land. In 2010, Canada produced 39,000 tonnes of farmed salmon on the Atlantic coast. The Conservation Fund Freshwater Institute in its research over two decades has found that growing 30,000 tonnes of salmon per year would require only 75 to 150 football fields (including the end zones), and growing 100,000 tonnes per year would require well under 500 football fields.

Then there are the myths most recently perpetuated by the industry that closed containment requires "too much energy" and "too much water." In actual fact, the technology used to farm fish in closed containment can be adapted for freshwater, brackish water, and seawater. Most of the water is cleaned and re-used; any that is not re-used is treated before being returned to the environment.

We have also come a long way in designing energy efficient closed-containment farms with electricity use for a 3,000 tonne farm in the range of 2,250kW. European companies investing in this technology indicate that they are now achieving electrical load that is 70 per cent less than this estimate. When considering carbon footprint, it is also important to take into account the local effects of untreated pollution being discharged from open net pen farms directly into the ocean. Ocean-based net pens do not have discharge limits, effectively placing the burden on the marine environment and other resource users, rather than where it belongs -- with the farmer.

Sure, transitioning to closed containment might mean that the aquaculture industry will not get its more than 50 per cent profit, but then taxpayers will not have to foot bills for disease compensation and lose the economic and social benefits from industries such as tourism, lobster fishing and the recreational fishery that rely on a healthy environment.

 
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Farming Atlantic salmon in high tech closed containment land based operations, rather than in nets that sit in the ocean, is catching on. Today, viable technologies produce healthy farmed fish complet...
Farming Atlantic salmon in high tech closed containment land based operations, rather than in nets that sit in the ocean, is catching on. Today, viable technologies produce healthy farmed fish complet...
 
 
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08:29 PM on 08/07/2012
Closed containment can be done in the ocean as well as on land. Why would any company or industry be defend the practice of dumping their shit in the ocean, all the time calling themselves farms ? What other type of farm does this ? What other type of farm says, I'm just going to dump my waste on your organic farm (i.e. wild caught lobster, shellfish, irish moss, etc.) just because I can.

What is this, the 1700's ?

Who are these people ?

They are already history in many people's minds (did anyone say Target). All it would have taken is for them to be open minded. Good riddance.
08:26 PM on 08/07/2012
I live next to a salmon farm and have done so for more than 30 years. The 700,000 overcrowded salmon in this small bay put an immense amount of feces into the water. The lice problem is legendary. When they treated the fish with peroxide, the whole bay would smell very odd and sick for days. Our beautiful bay that used to be so full of life now has nothing moving in it. I have seen huge changes - the red necked grebes that always came like clockwork did not come this year, The kingfishers that nested here are gone. No porpoise come here now, no minke whales come here now, no mackerel jump in season here any more. No baby pollock live in the shallow water any more. No krill pile up on the beaches in the fall any more. No osprey dive for fish here any more. No salmon leap, no tuna jump, no basking sharks cruise by, no herring boil the water, no jellyfish come up on the beaches. No eiders dive; the loons that come by do not linger, neither do the visiting seabirds. Our whales, porpoise and herring are struggling. Slime coats the beaches for miles around.. Controls on aquaculture are not working, despite all claims to the contrary. We are losing herring, lobster, feed, and the species that feed on them to pesticides. There is no meaningful oversite. Certainly aquaculture has made major negative changes in the composition and appearance of this bay.
06:31 PM on 08/03/2012
What basis does ASF, to say the Atlantic salmon industry is misleading the public? Our farmers are experts on closed containment because all farmed salmon are grown in fresh-water tanks for the first year of their lives before moving to ocean pens. Adult broodstock are kept on land. We know the energy costs, fresh water and oxygen requirements and optimal stocking density for healthy fish. We are know the quality and taste of the salmon from closed systems is far from acceptable without at least 10 days flushing in fresh water. Closed systems work for some species but not yet for full salmon grow-out.
ASF is making some big assumptions about commercially-viable closed containment based on one small pilot project that wasn't even able to grow all its fish to market size. Maybe if they publish all their data there could be a comparative analysis. Salmon in ocean pens are stocked at about 18kg/m3. ASF is talking about stocking at 40kg/m3 -100kg/m3. How does this fit with their rhetoric about comparing modern salmon farms to 'feed lots'? Our salmon farmers are backed by 30 years of experience and are global leaders in our industry. They keep abreast of the latest research and technology advances in all parts of our industry. We also know that despite efforts to prove otherwise, there is no science that shows that modern salmon farming is having negative or long-term impact on either the environment or on other species.
04:06 PM on 08/03/2012
What basis does Ms Scott have in saying the Atlantic salmon industry is misleading the public? Our farmers are experts on closed containment technology because all farmed salmon are grown in fresh-water tanks for the first year before moving to ocean pens. Plus, we keep adult broodstock on land. We know the energy costs, the fresh water and oxygen requirements and optimal stocking density to keep fish healthy. We are aware that the quality and taste of the salmon from such closed systems is far from acceptable without over 10 days flushing in fresh water. Closed systems work for some species but not yet for salmon grow-out. The ASF, is making some pretty big assumptions about commercially-viable closed systems based on one small pilot project that wasn't able to grow all fish to market size. Maybe they need to publish their data for a comparative. Salmon in ocean pens are stocked at about 18kg/m3. ASF is talking about stocking at 40kg/m3 -100kg/m3. How does this fit with their rhetoric comparing modern salmon farms to 'feed lots'? Our salmon farmers are backed by 30 years of experience and are global leaders in our industry. They keep abreast of the latest research and technology advances in all parts of our industry. We also know that despite efforts to prove otherwise, there is no science that shows that modern salmon farming is having negative or long-term impact on either the environment or on other species.
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11:13 AM on 08/03/2012
I think that in conjunction with new laws preventing open-sea salmon farming, this would be a great idea..and is being done successfully in Scandinavian countries..also, as a source of new international business, it would be a plus.
Unfortunately, the current BC government is in the pocket of those fish farms, with a tight, tight hold, so nothing much will be done unless and until we get a new government that believes that going greener is not only better for the environment, but economically feasible and even profitable..getting the Norwegian expats to change is the tough part..
I'll stick to wild salmon until that day comes..
08:14 PM on 08/02/2012
This may seem like a dumb question, but wouldn't it just be easier to harvest "wild" salmon? Assuming you have competent fisheries management (we don't yet), surely it is easier and cheaper to let nature do all the work? They even swim up rivers by the thousands or millions to be caught--virtually free food!