The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Salmon farming linked to 2m tonnes of carbon emissions annually

Industry under pressure to clean up eco footprint

- By Mark Howarth news@sundaypost.com

Scotland’s salmon farming industry will come under increasing scrutiny and strain because of greenhouse gas emissions, experts warn.

Fish reared in coastal pens are given food that creates millions of tonnes of carbon pollution every year and a report claims Scotland’s aquacultur­e sector – worth £2 billion to the economy annually – must adapt or face increasing legal curbs and reputation­al risk.

The research concludes “the Scottish salmon (industry) might find it increasing­ly hard to operate in a warming world and face reputation and legislativ­e challenges.”

The work by Edinburgh University and the Sustainabl­e Inshore Fisheries Trust – published in the journal Environmen­tal Impact Assessment Review – scrutinise­s salmon farming’s carbon footprints.

Those of Scottish operations tend to be disproport­ionately larger than in other countries, such as Norway and Canada, because they tend to be on a smaller scale but emissions from energy and fuel use at the sites themselves were minor compared with the greenhouse gases produced by the feedstuffs.

They are comprised of fishmeal and fish oil – made from wild marine stocks and leftovers from other farms – as well as vegetable and rapeseed oils, wheat and soy.

The ingredient­s are often imported from around the globe and, in some cases, grown on deforested and heavily-fertilised land.

Other indirect emissions are generated by getting the fish to market, often done by air rather than sea. In 2018, these so-called factors were responsibl­e for 2.2 million tonnes of CO2 emissions at 70 farms run by two major producers, Mowi and GSF – 1.8 million tonnes of which were attributab­le to feed.

The authors – led by Dr Sebastian Hennige, a senior lecturer in Marine Sciences at Edinburgh – conclude that unless these emissions “are properly targeted and resolved, the Scottish salmon aquacultur­e industry will find itself penalised by upcoming climate legislatio­n, locally and internatio­nally.

“Most internatio­nal aquacultur­e operators have sustainabi­lity plans. However, these clearly need to be much more ambitious, especially given Scotland’s net zero emissions target for 2045.”

The researcher­s said curbing the emissions will be challengin­g involving technologi­cal innovation.

The Marine Conservati­on Society said producers need to have a firmer grasp of the environmen­tal damage

they’re doing. Aquacultur­e programme manager Dawn Purchase said: “In order to reduce greenhouse gas emissions for specific producers and suppliers, a baseline of how much they are emitting is required.

“Once there is a comprehens­ive understand­ing of where and how they are emitted, standards can be developed to reduce them in a measurable way.”

Campaigner Don Staniford, of the Global Alliance Against Industrial Aquacultur­e, said: “Importing fishmeal from South America and Antarctica to fuel the insatiable appetite of Scottish salmon creates a huge ecological footprint.

“Salmon farming is draining our global oceans of wild-caught fish and krill and this is exacerbati­ng the problems of food insecurity and inequality. It is ethically and environmen­tally bankrupt.”

However, Dr Lindsay Pollock, head of sustainabi­lity at the industry group Salmon Scotland, said: “This report confirms salmon has a lower carbon footprint than all other mainstream forms of livestock protein production.

“But even from that position, we strive to do more.

“Our sustainabi­lity charter has been adopted by every farming company in Scotland, which includes measures to adopt greener energies, work towards zero waste, and achieve net zero greenhouse gas emissions in our own operations before 2045.”

Scottish salmon is the UK’s biggest food export with overseas sales of £614 million last year and there are scores of farms around the western and northern coasts.

The industry employs 2,500 people and the supply chain supports 3,600 businesses.

John Carmichael, technical director of fish feed supplier BioMar UK based in Grangemout­h, Stirlingsh­ire, said: “Sustainabi­lity has always been a key aspect for us and has been one of the main goals in our feed developmen­t to minimise adverse ecological consequenc­es of aquacultur­e activity.

“In 2021, BioMar launched new ambitious sustainabi­lity targets, which include reducing the carbon footprint of the feed by a third by 2030.”

Mowi communicat­ion director Ian Roberts said: “Our company is proudly ranked the world’s most sustainabl­e protein producer by the Coller FAIRR Initiative, a review that assesses 60 of the largest listed global meat, dairy and aquacultur­e companies on 10 environmen­tal, social and governance themes aligned with the United Nation’s Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals, including greenhouse gas emissions.

“Our Leading the Blue Revolution sustainabi­lity plan continues to aggressive­ly reduce emissions, which has resulted in a 52% reduction in GHG emissions at our feed plants from 2018 to 2021.”

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 ?? Picture Philip Silverman ?? One of Scotland’s salmon farms, part of an important but questioned industry
Picture Philip Silverman One of Scotland’s salmon farms, part of an important but questioned industry

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