Fish Farmer

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FISH farmers in Scotland would benefit from a less complicate­d regulatory system, under proposals set out by the Scottish National Party – but operators may also face a Norwegian-style auction in order to secure permits for extra production.The proposals have been welcomed by the salmon industry and look set to be enacted as the SNP emerged as the largest party in the new parliament.

The pledge to introduce a “streamline­d” system for permits was set out in the SNP’s manifesto for the Scottish parliament­ary elections, which took place on 6 May. The manifesto says a “single determinin­g authority” would decide whether or not to grant consent for new farm consents, based on the regulatory regime in Norway.

Currently, in Scotland companies have to apply to four different bodies for four different licences (the local authority for planning permission, Marine Scotland for a marine licence, the Fish Health Inspectora­te for a fish licence and SEPA the Scottish Environmen­t Protection Authority for an environmen­tal licence).This is in addition to applying to the Crown Estate, which effectivel­y owns the coastal waters, to secure access to a lease. Each one of these bodies is a statutory consultee on the licence applicatio­ns determined by the other bodies.

The SNP proposal is that applicatio­ns will be considered by a single authority.The manifesto says: “This will bring greater clarity, transparen­cy and speed to the process.”

The manifesto adds: “We will expect producers to contribute much more to the communitie­s which support them so we will also explore how a Norwegian-style auction system for new farm developmen­ts might generate significan­t income to support inspection and welfare services, provide real community benefit on islands and in remote rural areas and support innovation and enterprise.”

In August 2020, auctions for additional fish farming sites attracted successful bids from 30 companies and raised NOK 5.6bn (£0.51bn) for the Norwegian government. On average, each additional tonne of production was sold for NOK 219,758 (£19,000).

The SNP manifesto also pledges support for innovation in aquacultur­e, including developing closed containmen­t fish production on land and exploring “the potential to produce more shellfish in warm-water, land-based farms to cut the amount of unsustaina­bly produced fish and shellfish being imported into Scotland.”

It reiterates the SNP’s support for the sector, stating: “Fish farming is something that Scotland is well placed to do well in, but it must grow sustainabl­y, in harmony with the marine environmen­t that supports it.”

The Scottish Salmon Producers Organisati­on welcomed the commitment to reforming the consent process.Tavish Scott, SSPO Chief Executive said: “We have been clear: what we want to see is better regulation, not less regulation and this commitment in the SNP manifesto shows that the SNP wants to see this too.”

 ??  ?? Above: Nicola Sturgeon. Below: A Scottish salmon farm
Above: Nicola Sturgeon. Below: A Scottish salmon farm
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