Fish Farmer

Cooke’s new salmon farm brings Orkney jobs boost

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FIVE full-time, permanent jobs have been created by Cooke Aquacultur­e’s new organic salmon farm in Orkney, which starts production in the spring.

And there are hopes that the number of direct and indirect jobs will increase once a second site opens in 2021, the company said.

Four residents from Stronsay have been recruited and successful­ly completed their induction with Cooke at the company’s Kirkwall base last month.The recruits will now spend time at Cooke’s other seawater sites, in preparatio­n for managing the new salmon farm located at Mill Bay to the east of the island.

The farm is expected to take delivery of its first intake of organic salmon smolts in the spring.

The Stronsay team bring a mix of skills and experience, with some having worked as creel fishermen, but all of them new to salmon farming.

One of the new recruits, Johnny Smith, is starting as a casual worker until he completes his school studies and becomes a permanent, fulltime member of staff.

He said:‘I’m in fifth year at Kirkwall Grammar School but I didn’t want to pass up the opportunit­y to join the aquacultur­e sector.

‘After I applied, the people at Cooke were willing to take me on, but wanted me to stay on at school to do my exams. So I’m starting as a casual worker until the summer and then I’ll become a full-time member of the team.

‘There are not that many career opportunit­ies on the island so it’s great to know that I have a long-term career which lets me stay on Stronsay before I’ve left school..’

Mill Bay site manager Norman Peace has been with Cooke for six years, and was a senior site assistant on Rousay before being promoted to lead the new Stronsay site. He said:‘This is my first site management post so it’s my job to train these guys up. The company provides lots of opportunit­ies to work your way up or move to different roles, lots of options for you to develop your career.’

A second site – Bay of Holland – received planning consent and is expected to be operationa­l in 2021, providing a further four seawater jobs for Stronsay.

Both sites will comprise 16 pens and a 300-tonne semi-automated feed barge, and will be stocked with salmon smolts that have been bred organicall­y, at Cooke’s freshwater sites on the Scottish mainland, to strict RSPCA and Soil Associatio­n rules.

 ??  ?? Above: Cooke’s Stronsay team
Above: Cooke’s Stronsay team

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