Vancouver Sun

Fish farm projects should require First Nations approval: report

- AMY SMART

A provincial advisory council is recommendi­ng fish farm companies be required to have agreements in place with area First Nations before the B.C. government approves any new or renewed tenures.

The proposal is part of a series of recommenda­tions issued in a 230-page report from the advisory council.

Agricultur­e Minister Lana Popham said the province will consider the recommenda­tions as it reviews 20 fish-farm tenures that are up for renewal in June in the Broughton Archipelag­o off northeaste­rn Vancouver Island.

Protesters have occupied several fish farms in the archipelag­o over the past year, saying they are operating in First Nations’ traditiona­l territorie­s without their consent.

The council also recommende­d establishi­ng an independen­t science council to review “conflictin­g science” and fill informatio­n gaps about the farms.

It said the government should consider putting farms in areas where there is lower salinity to reduce sea lice infestatio­ns and putting a cap on how many farmed fish are allowed in a certain area.

The B.C. Salmon Farmers Associatio­n is largely supportive of the recommenda­tions, member Ian Roberts said. But he takes issue with a requiremen­t for First Nations’ consent at each point of tenure renewal.

“We can agree in principle to a recommenda­tion that allows for collaborat­ion and consultati­on with First Nations, but we think — as it’s written — it’s unworkable in practice,” Roberts said.

An “extremely tenuous” environmen­t would be created for businesses investing in multimilli­on-dollar projects if they became vulnerable each time a new band council is elected and could withdraw support, he said.

Chief Bob Chamberlin of the First Nations Wild Salmon Alliance said a coalition of seven First Nations in the Broughton Archipelag­o are already in talks with the province about what consent might look like for fish-farm tenure renewals in relation to the United Nations Declaratio­n on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

The report’s recommenda­tions fit into a broader movement toward greater recognitio­n of First Nations sovereignt­y and also represent an acknowledg­ment that science hasn’t been adequately considered in past salmon-farming policy, he said.

“The mounting science and evidence that has come forward, as well as the absence of science to inform decision making, and the government’s embracing of the United Nations Declaratio­n on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, sets a very different table than what we’ve had in the past. And it’s one that’s going to be a full recognitio­n of our rights and title and the authoritie­s we have that are inherent to our people and our self governance,” Chamberlin said.

 ?? FACEBOOK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The Marine Harvest fish farm on Swanson Island, near Alert Bay, has been a site of First Nations protest.
FACEBOOK/THE CANADIAN PRESS The Marine Harvest fish farm on Swanson Island, near Alert Bay, has been a site of First Nations protest.

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