Medicine Hat News

Ottawa plans to move from open-net fish pens to ‘sustainabl­e technology’ in B.C.

- HINA ALAM

The federal government says it has a game plan to transition away from open-net fish farming on British Columbia’s coast.

Terry Beech, a Burnaby MP and parliament­ary secretary for the minister of fisheries, said the government is committed to moving from the ocean-based pens to more sustainabl­e technology, but that still needs to be examined.

Beech said during a news conference Thursday they are looking at the technology that may help support the transition.

“Part of the exercise that we need to go through is understand­ing what state-of-the-art looks like.”

Phasing out net-pen fish farming in B.C. waters by 2025 was a Liberal campaign promise in the federal election and it formed part of the mandate letter for Fisheries Minister Bernadette Jordan.

Some studies say the opennet farms spread parasites and viruses to wild salmon.

While the government set the timeline to end the ocean-based farms, Beech did not have a date for when the businesses would move.

“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.”

The government will be working with First Nations, the aquacultur­e industry and environmen­t stakeholde­rs on an interim report expected to be handed to the minister in the spring, he said, adding that part of entering into a “meaningful consultati­on” is not predetermi­ning the outcomes.

“It’s going to be a difficult process to find a reasonable path forward.”

In 2018, the B.C. government recommende­d a transition plan for 17 fish farms to leave the Broughton Archipelag­o by 2023, allowing for a farm-free migration corridor for wild salmon off northeaste­rn Vancouver Island.

The Fisheries Department says on its website that there are about 130 marine finfish sites in B.C. waters.

The B.C. Salmon Farmers Associatio­n said it’s members support 7,000 jobs in coastal communitie­s and contribute­s about $1.5 billion to the provincial economy ever year.

Allison Webb, director of the aquacultur­e management division for Fisheries and Oceans Canada said the government is looking at “an area-based management approach,” which takes into account the number of farms when making regulatory decisions.

“We would also consider things like specifics of those condition areas for things like timing windows for wild salmon that are migrating,” she said.

“We could customize the conditions of licence for sea lice management, to protect those wild stocks, looking at their specific timing versus a cookie-cutter approach across the entire province.”

Karen McAllister, operations director of the wildlife conservati­on group Pacific Wild, said the federal government is avoiding its own pre-election promise, which was based on the best available science for a policy to remove open net-cage salmon farms from B.C. waters.

“From what we can tell, areabased management is simply a way for the government to sidestep its commitment to remove salmon farms from B.C. waters and to allow them to continue in areas where there is local support,” she said in an email.

“Unfortunat­ely, wild salmon do not have borders and the negative impact that open-net cage salmon farms have on wild salmon throughout the B.C. coast will not be mitigated by any ‘area’ that supports fish farms in their current form.”

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? An Atlantic salmon is seen jumping inside its tank at a fish farm B.C. in this October 2018 file photo.
CP FILE PHOTO An Atlantic salmon is seen jumping inside its tank at a fish farm B.C. in this October 2018 file photo.

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