Fish Farmer

Norway plans new rules for offshore farms

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THE Norwegian government is preparing to set out its future regulatory proposals for offshore salmon farming. The rules proposed for farming further out to sea are set to be different from those imposed by the “traffic light” scheme which governs coastal aquacultur­e in Norway.

Fisheries Minister Bjørnar Skjaeran said in a press release: “We will develop a separate licensing regime for aquacultur­e with strict requiremen­ts for sustainabi­lity and coexistenc­e between different maritime industries.

“We have accelerate­d this work, and now we are sending out for consultati­on a proposal for a separate permit regime.”

The proposal is the first to be sent for consultati­on after an inter-ministeria­l working group submitted the report Aquacultur­e at sea new technology, new areas in December 2018. The consultati­on note builds on this report. The proposal document includes a plan for an overall regime for the identifica­tion and facilitati­on of suitable areas for offshore aquacultur­e, as well as the introducti­on of a separate licensing regime for farms located further out at sea.

The Minister added: “Experience shows that it is possible to establish farming further at sea, but then the authoritie­s must facilitate this.

“At the same time, it is important to find out how to effectivel­y handle challenges that may accompany such an operation and set a clear framework for it.”

He said the decision to place offshore aquacultur­e outside the traffic light scheme was taken on the recommenda­tion of Norway’s Institute of Marine Research.

A number of producers, such as SalMar, are already developing engineerin­g solutions that are robust enough to allow farms to be placed in offshore locations.

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