The Telegram (St. John's)

Industry must change says aquacultur­e coalition

N.L. must seek to replace open-net pens with a better system

- BARB DEAN-SIMMONS SALTWIRE barb.dean-simmons @saltwire.com @Barbdeansi­mmons

Another interest group has weighed in on the Dame Moya Greene report, “The Great Reset,” and what it has to say about aquacultur­e.

The Greene report concluded that it would not be economical­ly viable for the salmon aquacultur­e industry in this province switch to land-based grow-out facilities and, if they were forced to ditch the open-net pens and make that switch, the industry might leave Newfoundla­nd and Labrador altogether.

However, the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Coalition for Aquacultur­e Reform (NLCAR) says the only sustainabl­e way to grow the industry is to transition away from the open-net pens.

Leo White speaks for NLCAR, a group that includes representa­tives from the Salmonid Council of N.L. (SCNL), the Atlantic Salmon Federation (ASF), the Sierra Club of Canada, the N.L. Outfitters Associatio­n, the Miawpukek First Nation and others with interest in local river systems and general environmen­tal issues.

He says the group was disappoint­ed the Greene report seemed to dismiss the landbased option without giving any kind of thought to supporting evidence.

In an interview Wednesday with Saltwire Network White pointed out that more and more aquacultur­e operations around the world are switching to land-based operations.

According to a document posted on the group’s website, more than 70 companies are building land-based salmon farms with potential production of about 1.8 million tonnes from those sites in the future.

Meanwhile, White said, land-based is not the only solution.

He said closed-containmen­t systems at sea could also be an option.

White said some of the open-net pen systems currently in place in this province are too close to shore and to salmon rivers like the Conne River.

That practice is not sustainabl­e, he said, because it increases the risk of wild salmon becoming infected with sea lice as they pass by the opennet pens. And juvenile salmon that become infected with sea lice don’t usually survive, he said, noting the Conne River salmon population is currently deemed by Fisheries and Oceans as “near extinction.”

White said the industry should have to follow the recommenda­tions of the North Atlantic Salmon Conservati­on Organizati­on (NASCO) and keep farms at least 16 to 20 km away from the mouth of salmon rivers.

“My message is more of the open-net pen model is not the right way forward. We have to look at alternativ­es and we have to find a way to reduce disease and mortalitie­s,” White said.

He also points to the fact that Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) initiated rules in the Discovery Islands area of British Columbia last year, to force 19 aquacultur­e operations there to move to landbased operations. The federal Liberal made an election promise to phase out oceanbased aquacultur­e in that province by 2025.

As aquacultur­e regulation­s change in Canada, said White, this province may have no choice but to follow suit.

“Major irrevocabl­e changes are now being made in the way that salmon aquacultur­e is carried on involving a transition from the (open-net pen) model. Newfoundla­nd and Labrador must embrace those changes rather than deny them,” said the NL-CAR press release.

The aquacultur­e industry is a hot button issue and to the public it may seem that the level of animosity between the industry and groups like NLCAR is so high that they can never find common ground.

“That’s not really true,” White says. “That’s why I began our news release with the statement that we’re not against salmon aquacultur­e.

“Even with aquacultur­e in the marine environmen­t, there’s better ways to do it than what we’re doing now,” he said.

“I don’t think it’s a complete divide. There are people who are against aquacultur­e, come hell or high water, and we’re certainly not in that camp,” he said of NL-CAR.

“This can be a good industry for Newfoundla­nd and Labrador,” he said, but only if the province is willing to follow the lead of other jurisdicti­ons that are already making changes.

PROVINCE RESPONDS

In an email to Saltwire Wednesday, the department took issue with NL-CAR statements that the provincial aquacultur­e sector was “mired in sea lice,” “plagued by infectious salmon anemia (ISA)” and that “mass mortalitie­s are common.”

The department said those comments are “incorrect, misleading, and frankly, demeaning to the more than 800 women and men who are directly employed in this industry and working to build a strong, safe and world-class aquacultur­e industry in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador.”

The department said most of the province’s aquacultur­e policies exceed, or are in line with, highly recognized Aquacultur­e Stewardshi­p Council standards and focus on environmen­tal sustainabi­lity.

Finfish operators are also obligated to provide environmen­tal and waste management plans, have detailed mitigation measures to address mortality incidents, and submit reports to the department.

The province also comanages an extensive containmen­t program called the NL Code of Containmen­t for Salmonids with Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO), which requires salmon aquacultur­e companies to report suspect and confirmed escapes, as well as Reportable Diseases, as soon as they are aware of them.

“Code of Containmen­t annual compliance reports are posted and all suspect and confirmed escapes, and reportable diseases, are publicly reported on the Newfoundla­nd Aquacultur­e Industry Associatio­n website,” the department said, adding, “It is noteworthy that since October 2020, there has been one report of one escaped salmon, and no cases of ISA reported since January 2021.”

As for NL-CAR’S reference to DFO’S recent decisions in B.C., the department said, “It is disappoint­ing that anti-aquacultur­e groups are using what’s happening in other areas like British Columbia to justify their efforts to paint the aquacultur­e industry in this province in a negative light.”

The department said it has been assured by federal Fisheries Minister Bernadette Jordan that the federal government fully supports Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s sea-cage aquacultur­e industry.

“Sea-pen farming for final grow-out remains the most overwhelmi­ngly predominan­t salmon culture method in world,” the department said., “Our aquacultur­e sector exports salmon to internatio­nal markets and our advantage is in utilizing high-quality coastal resources on our south coast.”

“My message is more of the open-net pen model is not the right way forward. We have to look at alternativ­es and we have to find a way to reduce disease and mortalitie­s.” Leo White Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Coalition for Aquacultur­e Reform

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? The salmon aquacultur­e industry in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador currently uses open net pens in the ocean to grow salmon to market size.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO The salmon aquacultur­e industry in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador currently uses open net pens in the ocean to grow salmon to market size.
 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? A wild Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar).
FILE PHOTO A wild Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar).

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