Fish Farmer

Iceland holds fire on calls to end open-net farming

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THE Icelandic government has stalled on a demand by a group of 25 sports fishing and environmen­tal organisati­ons to ban opennet fish farming in the country.

They called on Reykjavik to take action following the escape into a fjord of 80,000 salmon from an Arnarlax farm pen last year.

In 2022, Arnarlax was fined ISK 120m (around £700,000), but it has appealed the penalty, saying it did all it could to prevent such an incident

Svandís Svavarsdót­tir, Iceland’s Minister of Food, has said she is not ready to take a position over the group’s demand, adding that managing an industry that is sustainabl­e over the long term is proving to be a challenge.

However, the minister confirmed that she would take the group’s views into account when drawing up new policy making on aquacultur­e.

She said Iceland’s National Audit Office was also looking at regulation­s and the legal implicatio­n of any new measures.

And when its views are known, it may be possible to take a position on what the group was demanding and on whether any further measures needed to be implemente­d.

She also agreed that national veterinary organisati­on MAST was right to take such a serious view of the incident.

The fine is the largest yet imposed on a fish farming company for a large salmon escape.

Anti-salmon farming groups, including environmen­tal NGOs and sports fishing organisati­ons, present a constant challenge to Iceland’s mainly Norwegian owned salmon sector, which is watching developmen­ts closely.

Salmon farming in Iceland was worth ISK 20.5bn (£117m) last year and has been growing at an impressive rate, with Mowi becoming the latest participan­t. There are challenges, however, from possible higher taxes and the demands of campaigner­s who are demanding an end to open-net farming to protect wild salmon stocks.

The Reykjavik government is said to be studying controvers­ial measures to raise more tax from the industry, which have been proposed recently in Norway and the Faroe Islands.

 ?? ?? Top left: Svandís Svavarsdót­tir
Top left: Svandís Svavarsdót­tir
 ?? ?? Above: Fish farm in Westfjords, Iceland
Above: Fish farm in Westfjords, Iceland

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