Fish Farmer

Bremnes warns tax burden may halt new factory plan

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NORWEGIAN salmon company Bremnes Seashore has warned that it may be forced to shelve plans for a new processing facility because of the Oslo government’s increasing tax burden on the industry.

The NOK 400m (£35m) factory and cold store is planned for Kvednavikj­o in the south-west of the country.

The warning was delivered by Simon Nesse Økland, the family-owned company’s Communicat­ions Director, at the Aqkva Conference in Bergen in January. He said there would no money to build the factory if the latest plans for a “ground rent” tax go through.

Aqkva, which focuses on technology and general aquacultur­e developmen­t, is the first industry-related gathering of the year.

Økland said the tax burden was already too high, pointing to the wealth tax on family businesses, plus the dividend tax and now the proposed ground rent tax.Taken together, he said, the company could face a total tax rate of 80%.

He said there was no money to build the new Salma brand factory at Kvednavikj­o, but a final decision would be made once the Storting (Norway’s parliament) had taken a decision on the ground rent tax.

Økland also said the tax proposals favoured foreign owners over those resident in Norway.

Bremnes Seashore is not only a family business – it is one of the country’s oldest seafood-related companies, with roots going back to the 1930s. It started fish farming in the 1960s, first with rainbow trout and later salmon.

It unveiled plans for a new processing facility more than a year ago to increase production for its SALMA and BOMLO brands. It was initially hoped to complete constructi­on of the facility this year.

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