Times Colonist

Four-year reprieve for fish farms draws praise and raises concerns

- LINDSAY KINES and JEFF BELL

A B.C. government decision to grant fish farms a four-year reprieve is drawing a mixed response from the industry, First Nations and environmen­tal organizati­ons.

Agricultur­e Minister Lana Popham said the province will allow the farms to carry on until June 2022 and then grant tenures only to those that have agreements with First Nations to operate in their territory.

The farms will also have to satisfy the federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans that their operations have no adverse effects on wild salmon, she said.

“This new policy marks a transition to sustainabl­e aquacultur­e. It protects wild salmon, it embraces reconcilia­tion with First Nations and it provides good jobs.”

Popham said the government set a 2022 deadline because that’s when most of the fish farm licences issued by the federal government expire.

The federal government regulates the farms and fisheries, while the province issues land tenures authorizin­g the use of the seabed and foreshore.

Farms with tenures that expire before 2020 — including 20 in the Broughton Archipelag­o this year — will be renewed on a month-tomonth basis. There are 120 finfish aquacultur­e tenures in B.C.

Environmen­tal groups, worried that open-net pen fish farms spread viruses and lice to wild stocks, voiced concern about the government’s timeline.

“Unfortunat­ely, that leaves wild salmon — all of the wild salmon runs of this coast — exposed to more disease and lice and predation for another four years,” said Karen Wristen, executive director of Living Oceans Society.

B.C. Green Party critic Adam Olsen added that he had no confidence in the DFO, given its track record, to assess the impact of farms on wild stocks.

“They have got two jobs — and it’s a conflict of interest, really — to protect wild salmon and to promote aquacultur­e.”

Olsen, MLA for Saanich North and the Islands, said the Greens would have given fish farms time to mature and harvest their existing stocks then cancelled all tenures and moved the industry on land.

The Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs, meanwhile, applauded the announceme­nt, calling it “an initial step on the pathway to preserve and safeguard the future of wild salmon, consistent with the rights, cultural practices and economic livelihood­s of many First Nations throughout B.C.”

The UBCIC said the announceme­nt shows the province’s attention to the United Nations Declaratio­n on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which recognizes the authority of First Nations’ decision-making processes.

UBCIC vice-president Chief Bob Chamberlin said open-net pen, finfish aquacultur­e poses “a very real threat” to wild salmon, and that a move to on-land closed containmen­t facilities is needed to ensure that wild salmon survive.

The Nuu-chah-nulth Tribal Council, which oversees 14 First Nations that extend along the Island’s west coast, takes no formal position on fish farms, said council president Judith Sayers.

“But we have a definite policy that every First Nation and their chiefs make the decisions on their territory, and we don’t interfere with that,” she said.

“I certainly support informed consent of all the nations to be able to determine their own future — fish farms and whatever goes on in their territory.”

It is important for fish-farm companies to seek consent from First Nations, she said, and to work out a mutually agreeable timeline to leave if a particular nation is against the farms.

The B.C. Salmon Farmers Associatio­n, which represents 56 businesses and organizati­ons, was still reviewing what it called a “significan­t policy shift” on the management of Crown land tenures.

Associatio­n spokesman Shawn Hall said salmon farmers in B.C. have a long history of respectful involvemen­t with First Nations.

“We would welcome a constructi­ve dialogue with the Nations that have any concerns so we can find solutions that address those issues while supporting their people who work in the industry,” he said.

Hall said salmon farming is a $1.5-billion industry that generates 6,600 jobs in rural and coastal communitie­s, and accounts for about 70 per cent of salmon harvested in the province.

He said that 20 per cent of people who work directly for the industry in B.C. are from First Nations.

“Farming responsibl­y is the key, with the health of wild fish, environmen­tal stewardshi­p and consultati­on with First Nations and communitie­s at the forefront.”

Hall said the industry has evolved in terms of things like choosing the best sites for salmon farms, and dealing with such issues as sea lice.

“We’ve invested millions of dollars addressing issues that have come up since we first put nets in the water over 30 years ago.”

 ?? DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST ?? Marine Harvest fish farm near Midsummer Island, near Alert Bay. The province will allow the farms to carry on until June 2022 and then grant tenures only to those that have agreements with First Nations to operate in their territory.
DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST Marine Harvest fish farm near Midsummer Island, near Alert Bay. The province will allow the farms to carry on until June 2022 and then grant tenures only to those that have agreements with First Nations to operate in their territory.
 ?? DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST ?? Agricultur­e Minister Lana Popham, announcing new policies on fish-farm tenures at the legislatur­e: “This new policy marks a transition to sustainabl­e aquacultur­e.”
DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST Agricultur­e Minister Lana Popham, announcing new policies on fish-farm tenures at the legislatur­e: “This new policy marks a transition to sustainabl­e aquacultur­e.”

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