Fish Farmer

Tensions mount between Russia and Norway over salmon shipments

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OSLO is still waiting to hear exactly why Russia suddenly banned shipments of Norwegian salmon and trout through Belarus.

The Russians claimed that some of the fish contained banned and harmful substances, but have so far failed to provide further details.

Moscow imposed a ban on direct Norwegian fish imports in the summer of 2014 as a tit-for-tat move against Western sanctions following its invasion of Crimea.

But it has been continuing to receive Norwegian salmon and trout processed in the former Soviet satellite state of Belarus which, because it is part of a Euro-Asian trade organisati­on, allows it to get over the ban.

Once known as Belorussia, the country is landlocked between Poland, Lithuania and Russia but has an active fish processing sector and is an important customer for Norway.

However, while Norwegian and Russian fishery organisati­ons continue close co-operation, relations between the two countries at government level have not always been easy.

Last summer, Russia sent back an air shipment of Norwegian salmon bound for China without much of an explanatio­n.

Norway’s seafood minister, Harald T. Nesvik, told state broadcaste­r NRK that the Norwegian Food Safety Authority has been in contact with the Belarusian authoritie­s, asking for informatio­n on what harmful substances have actually been found. ‘We have simply not received any informatio­n from Russia itself,’ he said. And the Norwegian Food Safety Authority has said that its home based seafood facilities were always open for inspection.

The industry organisati­on Seafood Norway said the Russian claims were vague and so far undocument­ed.

 ??  ?? Above: A Norway-Russia border post
Above: A Norway-Russia border post

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