Fish Farms Destroying BC Wild Salmon

The following has been re-printed from the
Sea Shepherd
website,
specifically from
THIS PAGE.
If you feel compelled, motivated or inclined to write to the DFO,
Gail Shea or your MP that would be grand.
*******
Fish Farming in British
Columbia- Destroying the Wild Salmon
Rafe Mair is the
former Environment and Health Minister for the Province of British
Columbia. He is now an outspoken conservationist and the Sea
Shepherd Conservation Society is proud to have him as a member of
our Advisory Board.
From Rafe Mair:
It's not often one gets the chance to read a classical presentation
but here is one. If you never read another word on fish farms
please read this from two of the most eminent fish biologists in
the nation, both of whom relate what has happened to our salmon
fishery under the care of our governments, especially the federal
department of fisheries and oceans. The behavior or Minister Gail
Shea in Oslo cuddling up to the fish farmers as documented by
my colleague Damien Gillis, is the catalyst for this letter, but I
can tell you from long association and immense admiration for Dr.
Gordon Hartman and his brave colleagues in the DFO of yesteryear,
you are about to read the real story, the lamentable story of the
pacific salmon at the mercy of our governments, most especially the
federal government. Please, please, please pass this on as widely
as you can:
August 31, 2009,
1217 Rose Ann Drive,
Nanaimo, B.C., V9T 3Z4
The Hon. Gail Shea,
Minister, Fisheries and Oceans,
Parliament Buildings,
Ottawa, Canada.
Dear Ms. Shea,
Re: DFO’s
poor record for wild salmon protection as opposed to
un-restrained support for salmon farming in
B.C.
This is the perspective of two of us who have a combined experience
of over 85 years in biology and oceanography – most of this
time with DFO. We mention this experience because we believe that
it qualifies us, quite well, to comment. We are not alone in the
views we hold about the following:
A)
DFO – Abandoned
Mandate
Historically, we recall times when DFO stood out clearly on
environmental issues. These included effective input in hearings on
marine oil exploration, research and management initiatives on
estuarine fish habitat, research and results application in
connection with coastal logging, and strong involvement in the Site
C dam proposal.
As opposed to this, DFO’s performance during the past 25
years or so, is lamentable. Considering Pacific salmon
protection the following record is particularly
disappointing:
1. ‘Rolling over and playing dead’ in connection with
the Alcan and Nechako situation
2. Sitting quietly by while fish-bearing streams are pre-empted for
private power development in run-of-the-river projects,
3. Condoning massive gravel removal in salmon habitat in the lower
Fraser River, and
4. Playing hand-maiden to the aquaculture industry.
In regard to aquaculture in coastal B.C., we are deeply concerned
about the policy direction and the inadequacy of federal government
science. We are concerned not only because the high profile
conflict in the Broughton Archipelago area is unresolved, but
because the industry apparently wishes to expand beyond where it
now extensively operates.
Many knowledgeable people in universities and the public have
written extensively about this issue. However, after having seen
pictures of DFO’s aquaculture booth at a trade show in
Norway, and after hearing your comments to Damien Gillis, we feel
obliged to try to help those who would protect wild salmon.
We may not understand what has caused the near collapse of
the Fraser River sockeye salmon run this year. However, the specter
of you at a aquaculture trade show booth in Norway while the Fraser
River sockeye run ‘melts down’, has symbolism of
DFO’s priority and policy that troubles us.
B)
Policy
Direction
The behavior of Fisheries and Oceans, Canada, (DFO) is at odds with
the department’s own precautionary principle. The department
behaves more like an aquaculture promotion organization than a
responsibly involved fisheries research and management
agency.
Several years ago the Government of Canada established the
“precautionary principle” in: A Framework for the
Application of Precaution in Science-based Decision Making
About Risk. (Date modified: 2003-07-25). In the case of the
salmon aquaculture business, this policy seems to be ‘far
back in the shadows’. In the salmon net-pen farming
industry, particularly in areas such as the Broughton Archipelago,
risks and impacts have been documented by research workers outside
of DFO. In this situation they show that a “credible case
that a risk of serious or irreversible harm exists” .
We have copies of six refereed publications that support such
concern. Notwithstanding the precautionary policy aspect and
independent, published/refereed research that indicates risk, DFO
supports expansion of the industry. Your department is failing in
its mandate in three ways:
1. It does not meet the requirements of its own
‘precautionary principle’
2. It straddles two objectives:
a) Managing and protecting wild salmon and,
b) Supporting aquaculture. By the way they are being met, these
objectives are in conflict.
3. While being quick to criticize outside research, DFO’s own
research provides a weak and fragmentary foundation for management
of aquaculture in B.C. (See “Sustainable Aquaculture Research
in BC: DFO Publications Related to Fish health and Salmon
Aquaculture) .
This failure is even more worrisome given that the aquaculture
industry is demanding that it be allowed to move further north
along the B.C. coast. If it is not allowed to ‘go
north’ then it calls for permission to ‘grow
bigger’ where it is. Who calls the tune here?
C)
Inadequacy of DFO Science
The DFO has not carried out adequate research to permit a
scientifically legitimate management role in the salmon farming
industry (see “Sustainable Aquaculture
Research….. Publications … 2003 -2007).”
above) This list may not be up to date, however, it covers the time
period in, or before which, research, relevant to aquaculture
impacts and policy formulation, should have been carried out.
The list of publications includes very few papers that bear
directly on the impacts, or potential impacts, of Atlantic salmon
net-pens culture on juvenile pink salmon in critical areas such as
the Broughton Archipelago. Of 53 titles listed, only five appear to
be directly, or partly, relevant to impacts on juvenile pink salmon
in the Broughton Archipelago. We are aware that there is more
government and non-government research, being planned or carried
out now. This is desirable. However, it is unfortunate that this
increased effort was not made before the industry expansion was
allowed to occur. With the history of land use conflicts that
lies behind us, it is most unfortunate that we still ‘turn
business loose’, and then after the fact, try to understand
impacts and clean up the problems.
If the Government of Canada, through DFO, continues to require a
better assessment of connection between salmon farms impacts and
wild salmon population responses in areas such as the Broughton
Archipelago, they must engage in ecosystem-scale research that
meets or exceeds the standards that they require of others, and
that:
1. Extends over a period of time that would permit analysis of the
environmental variables that are considered to confound the effects
of sea lice,
2. Is enough in control of the experimental situation to permit
operation and closure of net pens to provide sound experimental
design, and
3. That has funding and people that are independent of political or
corporate control.
D)
Wild Salmon – Gift of
Nature
Salmon culture may now out-produce wild fish catches if simply
measured in tons. However, these ‘tons’ come with a
spectrum of environmental costs. Furthermore there are important
elements beyond such ‘tonnage counting’ in the salmon
farming debate.
Culture of farmed fish requires energy, fish food originating in
other parts of the world, and it takes space that is useful for
other sectors of society. Salmon farms in some locations produce
layers of rotting waste below them. We know someone very well who
has worked in the salmon farming business – this individual
has seen this first hand. Most of the public has not seen it. If
the jobs that salmon farming creates are, in the end, offset by
loss of jobs involving wild salmon fisheries, their value may be a
bitter illusion.
Production of wild salmon does not require all of the ‘front
end’ costs associated with food production, energy
consumption, freshwater diversion, … etc; that occur in
salmon farming. It does, however, require two things: first that we
protect their environments, and second that we have the good sense
to avoid over-exploiting them. There is an additional benefit to
doing these things. The efforts that we make to sustain wild salmon
and their habitats also help to support an array of other wildlife.
This, plus the environment itself, constitute a positive legacy,
beyond the fish, for future generations. Bays full of net-pen farms
with material rotting on the sea floor and “Keep Out”
signs do not provide such a legacy.
It is clear that wild salmon face a daunting array of man-made
environmental challenges, including: other land uses, climate
change, forest loss, water abstraction, and ocean condition changes
that we do not understand well. This given, your government should
protect them as well as possible for as long as possible. This can
be done. However, it requires a more sincere concern for wild fish
than is evident to date on the part of DFO. In the long term, it
requires a vision on the part of elected people and senior
bureaucrats that goes beyond winning 2-4 year electoral popularity
contests and serving the apparently biggest “business”
on the block.
In a long term ecological context, both society and governments
must soon come to the realization that human populations and
activities must come into some environmentally sensible balance
with the limited space and resources of the land. Humanity
will not get to this state of realization and behavior with
growth-driven business as its moral and intellectual
flagship.
The salmon farming industry and how it is managed is an important
part of our future. In this regard, the public is justified in
expecting better than has been given. If nothing else, we would ask
that your department carry out research that is independent, and
that it begin to honor, fully, its responsibility for wild salmon
protection in a manner that is above politics and short-term
gain.
Sincerely yours,
G. Hartman Ph.D.
C. McAllister Ph.D.

lice on fry







