The Province

Salmon farm sues over cancelled lease

Washington state pulls the plug on Canadian-based Cooke Aquacultur­e Pacific’s operation in Port Angeles

- Phuong Le

SEATTLE — Cooke Aquacultur­e Pacific is appealing after Washington state last month cancelled a lease for one of its farmed salmon operations in Port Angeles.

In a lawsuit filed in Clallam County Superior Court on Thursday, Cooke said it was not in default of its net pen lease and there was no basis for the terminatin­g its contract.

“We can only assume that the recent decision to terminate the Port Angeles lease is based upon misinforma­tion or a misunderst­anding of the facts and history related to this site,” said Joel Richardson, a Cooke vice-president said in a statement Friday.

Public Lands Commission­er Hilary Franz ended the company’s 10-year aquatic lands lease last month, saying the New Brunswick-based company, which has operations in several countries, had violated the terms of the lease at that site.

In August, net pens at Cooke’s facility at Cypress Island collapsed, releasing thousands of non-native Atlantic salmon into Puget Sound. The state is currently investigat­ing that collapse.

After the salmon escape, Franz directed her staff to inspect every net pen in the state to make sure the company was meeting its contract and to ensure the state’s waters were safe.

The agency said a December inspection found “serious safety concerns” at the Port Angeles site. It said two net pens were outside its lease area, and two of the net pens’ anchor chains were not connected. Franz also said the company has failed to maintain the salmon farm in a safe condition, posing the risk of another fish escape.

Franz said Friday that her team will defend against what she called a “meritless lawsuit.”

“I encourage Cooke Aquacultur­e to drop this lawsuit and work collaborat­ively with the Department of Natural Resources to safely close down the facility,” she said.

Cooke owns and operates eight commercial salmon farms in Washington state which it bought from Icicle Acquisitio­n Subsidiary in 2016. It is the largest producer of farmed salmon in the U.S.

The company is asking a judge to find the state was wrong in declaring Cooke in default of the lease.

The farm holds nearly 700,000 juvenile Atlantic salmon that won’t be ready for harvest until late this year.

 ?? — ELLI KINLEY ?? Thousands of non-native salmon escaped the Cooke Aquacultur­e Pacific facility in Washington state last August.
— ELLI KINLEY Thousands of non-native salmon escaped the Cooke Aquacultur­e Pacific facility in Washington state last August.

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