Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Washington cites salmon safety in ban on net-pen aquacultur­e

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SEATTLE — Washington banned fish-farming with net pens in state waters earlier this month, citing danger to struggling native salmon.

Public Lands Commission­er Hilary Franz issued an executive order banning the aquacultur­e method, which involves raising fish in large floating pens anchored in the water and has been practiced in Puget Sound for more than three decades.

California, Oregon and Alaska have already outlawed net-pen aquacultur­e, and Canada is working on a plan to phase it out of British Columbia’s coastal waters by 2025. Supporters say fish-farming is an environmen­tally safe way to feed the world’s growing population; critics argue that it can spread disease to native stocks and degrade the environmen­t.

“As we’ve seen too clearly here in Washington, there is no way to safely farm fish in open sea net pens without jeopardizi­ng our struggling native salmon,” Franz said. “I’m proud to stand with the rest of the West Coast today by saying our waters are far too important to risk for fish farming profits.”

Salmon aquacultur­e is among the fastest-growing food production systems in the world, according to the World Wildlife Foundation. It accounts for about 70% of the market. In 2018 the World Resources Institute released a report that said the industry needs to more than double by 2050 to meet the seafood demands of 10 billion people.

Since 2016, all of the net pens in Washington’s marine waters have been owned by the same company — New Brunswick, Canada-based seafood giant Cooke Aquacultur­e. In a recent statement, after the state said it would terminate the company’s remaining leases in Puget Sound, the company said it was disappoint­ed.

“Environmen­tal organizati­ons and Commission­er Franz are choosing to ignore

the fact that farm-raised fish is one of the healthiest and most efficient ways to feed the global population with a minimal environmen­tal impact and the lowest carbon footprint of any animal protein,” Cooke said. “Farmers work closely with worldrenow­ned scientists from academia, government, and the private sector to develop rigorous standards and implement best practices for fish health and environmen­tal protection.”

In 2017, a net pen operated by Cooke off Cypress Island, near the San Juan archipelag­o, collapsed and released 260,000 nonnative Atlantic salmon in Puget Sound. The escape prompted a frantic response by the Lummi Indian tribe, which mobilized its fishing crews to capture tens of thousands of the Atlantic salmon before they could intermingl­e or breed with native salmon.

The company argued that the fish were sterile and would simply die without threatenin­g native salmon stocks, but the Legislatur­e responded in 2018 and banned raising nonnative fish in the pens.

Cooke transition­ed to raising native steelhead, but many Native American tribes and environmen­tal groups, including Wild Fish Conservanc­y, still objected, saying that the unnaturall­y large clusters of farmed fish spread disease to wild population­s and that their bulk feeding and excretions degrade the marine environmen­t.

Several studies have found that young sockeye salmon from British Columbia’s Fraser watershed were infected with higher levels of sea lice after swimming past fish pens, The Seattle Times reported. And in March, an audit revealed sea lice counts at about five times the legal limit at a farm in Clayoquot Sound on the west coast of Vancouver Island. The lice can affect salmon growth, and in severe cases, cause death.

“It’s about the disease vectors and how that can escape into wild population­s,” said Todd Woodard, natural resources director for the Samish Indian Nation. “When you say, ‘We’re raising native fish,’ native fish are not raised and reared in those kinds of concentrat­ed environmen­ts.”

After the 2017 collapse, Washington’s Department of Natural Resources increased its inspection­s of net pens. In Port Angeles, on the Olympic Peninsula, the department terminated a net-pen lease for failing to maintain the facility in a safe condition and operating in an unauthoriz­ed area. Cooke challenged the decision unsuccessf­ully in court.

And earlier this month, the state terminated Cooke Aquacultur­e’s remaining netpen leases, in Rich Passage near Bainbridge Island and near Hope Island in Skagit Bay. The company has until Dec. 14 to finish steelhead farming and to start deconstruc­ting its equipment.

The decision will force Cooke to kill 332,000 juvenile steelhead that were planned to be stocked at its two remaining net pens next year, the company said.

“This is a big victory for everyone who values the Puget Sound ecosystem,” Suquamish Tribe Chairman Leonard Forsman said, according to The Seattle Times. “This action eliminates a harmful impact in our ancestral waters. The Rich Passage net pens have … blocked and polluted our fishing grounds for too long, and we are relieved to know they will be removed, restoring our waters back to a more natural state.”

 ?? (AP/Washington State Department of Natural Resources) ?? A crane and boats are anchored next to a collapsed “net pen” used by Cooke Aquacultur­e Pacific to farm Atlantic Salmon near Cypress Island in Washington state in the summer of 2017.
(AP/Washington State Department of Natural Resources) A crane and boats are anchored next to a collapsed “net pen” used by Cooke Aquacultur­e Pacific to farm Atlantic Salmon near Cypress Island in Washington state in the summer of 2017.

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