Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Environmen­talists pan fish-farm plan

- PATRICK WHITTLE

PORTLAND, Maine — President Donald Trump wants to dramatical­ly expand aquacultur­e production in the United States, but a coalition of environmen­talists believes his plan would be bad for the oceans, unnecessar­y for food security and difficult to implement.

Trump’s bid to grow fish farming is designed to address the so-called seafood deficit, which refers to the fact that nine-tenths of the seafood Americans eat comes from overseas. The seafood trade gap with other countries approached $17 billion in 2017, according to one federal government report.

The president issued an executive order in May that promised broad changes in how the U.S. regulates fish farming. It included provisions to expedite the devel

opment of offshore aquacultur­e in deep federal waters. That sector of the industry has yet to emerge in the U.S., where most aquacultur­e takes place near shore where farmers grow salmon, oysters and other popular seafood items.

The Trump administra­tion and the aquacultur­e industry said the order, which is being implemente­d now, represents common-sense steps to ease the burden of rules on fish farmers. But environmen­tal groups said it threatens to increase pollution and overdevelo­pment in the ocean at a time when many consumers aren’t buying seafood.

“They’re trying to somehow connect open-water aquacultur­e with the need for domestic food. But it just doesn’t make sense,” said Marianne Cufone, executive director of the Recirculat­ing Farms Coalition, one of several environmen­tal groups that oppose the move. “Why we’re seeing it during a pandemic, I don’t know, I’m shaking my head.”

The executive order gives the nation’s regional fishery management councils, which regulate fisheries, six months to recommend “actions to reduce burdens on domestic fishing.” One of the order’s stated goals is “more effective permitting related to offshore aquacultur­e and additional streamlini­ng of fishery regulation­s,” with “the potential to revolution­ize American seafood production.”

The order aims to bring seafood production to the U.S. instead of keeping the nation dependent on other countries, said Paul Doremus, deputy assistant administra­tor for operations at the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion’s National Marine Fisheries Service.

“We’re a major seafood consuming country and we could be producing more of that seafood internally,” Doremus said. “That’s the driving force behind the executive order as a whole.”

Hallie Templeton, senior oceans campaigner at Friends of the Earth, said it’s not the right time to expand fish farming. Seafood is popular in restaurant­s, and the coronaviru­s pandemic has caused many to shutter, at least temporaril­y. Seafood sales to restaurant­s fell 90% in the early

weeks of the pandemic. The industry has since seen an infusion of CARES Act money to help it recover, but continues to struggle.

Templeton called offshore aquacultur­e “floating factory farms” and said they are more likely to cause pollution in the marine environmen­t than provide sustainabl­e food.

A recent court ruling dealt a blow to the prospects for offshore fish farming. The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said in a decision Aug. 3 that federal law granting NOAA authority over fisheries does not also let the agency set rules for offshore fish farms. That scuttled rules that could have regulated fish farms in the Gulf of Mexico.

“Allowing net-pen aquacultur­e and its environmen­tal harms in the Gulf of Mexico is a grave threat, and the court properly held the government cannot do so without new and proper Congressio­nal authority,” said George Kimbrell, Center for Food Safety legal director and a lead counsel in the case.

The prospect of offshore aquacultur­e has been contentiou­s for years. President Barack Obama also took steps to permit deep water fish farming during his tenure.

The aquacultur­e industry remains hopeful that Trump’s executive order can help pave the way for more fish farming, both near shore and offshore. Paul Zajicek, executive director of the National Aquacultur­e Associatio­n, said the order isn’t about eliminatin­g regulation­s but rather “removing barriers to aquacultur­e permitting” for farmers.

Some fishing groups have also come out in support of the order. Scot Mackey, director of government affairs for the Garden State Seafood Associatio­n, which advocates for fishermen as well as farmers, said the order “will help the industry weather the current crisis and come back stronger.”

Neville Crabbe, spokesman for the Atlantic Salmon Federation, a conservati­on group, said the federal permitting process should be creating land-based aquacultur­e rather than fish farms in the ocean, let alone offshore.

“It’s not clear how locating that production just further away from the coasts would help with things like diseases and parasites and other problems that plague the industry today,” he said.

 ?? (AP) ?? A salmon farmer makes his rounds near floating pens containing thousands of Atlantic salmon in Eastport, Maine, in this file photo. President Donald Trump is hoping to dramatical­ly upscale aquacultur­e in the U.S., including expanding to offshore aquacultur­e.
(AP) A salmon farmer makes his rounds near floating pens containing thousands of Atlantic salmon in Eastport, Maine, in this file photo. President Donald Trump is hoping to dramatical­ly upscale aquacultur­e in the U.S., including expanding to offshore aquacultur­e.

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