The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Ocean geese, meet ocean gander

- RUSSELL WANGERSKY russell.wangersky @thetelegra­m.com @wangersky Russell Wangersky’s column appears in SaltWire newspapers and websites across Atlantic Canada.

What’s in a word?

Or, more importantl­y, what’s in three words?

Late last week, on the other side of the country, Terry Beech, the Liberal MP for Burnaby and the parliament­ary secretary for the federal minister of fisheries, gave a news conference about the progress of an election promise to stop open-pen salmon farming off British Columbia.

“Our primary goal here is to transition away from open-net pens toward more sustainabl­e technology. What that technology is, and what best fits for British Columbia for the near future, is part of what needs to be examined,” he told the news conference.

There are a couple of things to unpack there — one is that, though the election is well back in history now, the Liberals still don’t seem to have a clear plan about just where they are going with their promise.

Right now, everything seems to be waiting for a report in the spring that will address concerns from the industry, from First Nations, and from environmen­tal stakeholde­rs. Consultati­on is an excellent idea, but it’s rarely quick.

The other issue, for Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, along with other Atlantic provinces, is just three simple but significan­t words — “more sustainabl­e technology.”

Why are they important? Well, because if what’s going to be required in British Columbia is more sustainabl­e technology for the aquacultur­e industry, the fact that we’re staying with net pen farms for aquacultur­e operations in the Atlantic region fundamenta­lly means an admission that it’s OK for us to use less sustainabl­e technology.

And the federal government knows it, even if it isn’t saying it in so many words.

That’s a problem.

It’s even more of a problem because, at least at his news conference, Beech seemed to suggest that there’s a need to move quickly to move away from the existing net pen system.

“I can tell you that I approached this file with urgency,” he said. “I think it’s going to be important to move forward on this transition as quickly as we can in a responsibl­e way.”

In Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, the provincial government has been a pretty enthusiast­ic partner in the open ocean pen aquacultur­e business. There have been loan guarantees and public backing, and even fast-tracked environmen­tal assessment­s that were later overturned by the courts.

Sea lice, the health of wild stocks and the transmissi­on of salmonid infections have been the impetus for the changes in British Columbia.

Problem is, we have consistent and serious issues with sea lice and salmonid infections here, too — along with clear genetic evidence that escaped aquacultur­e salmon have full contact with wild Atlantic salmon and are regularly breeding with wild stocks.

In other words, everything that’s a problem in British Columbia is a problem here, too. Yet, for some reason, British Columbia rates a more sustainabl­e aquacultur­e technology on an urgent basis, while we do not.

The thing about federal rules is that there aren’t supposed to be second-class citizens or poor cousins. If something is a clear environmen­tal issue for wild salmon stocks off British Columbia, the federal government can’t just turn around and say “but, of course, it’s fine to have them over there in Atlantic Canada.”

There aren’t different standards for what constitute­s ocean pollution from one side of the country to the other, or for what constitute­s, say, allowable contaminat­ion in drinking water. If the federal government says salmon aquacultur­e operations have to meet a new basic standard, lobbying from the province or not, that standard will eventually come here, too.

Because, as MP Beech said, the risks are great enough to be dealt with urgently.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada