Home News BC expansion causes fish farming fury

BC expansion causes fish farming fury

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Farmed salmon pens 8

Recently, several letters to local First Nations groups announced that the federal government will be accepting applications to expand fish farming in the BC area.

The decision is highly controversial and critics claim it represents a lack of transparency in the federal government. Yet, according to an irate Green party, the government has already accepted twelve applications for farming in environmentally sensitive areas.

BC Minister of Fisheries and Oceans, Gail Shea is under particular scrutiny. When asked whether Shea had previously spoken publicly or issued any statements about the moratorium being lifted, a spokesperson claimed via email that the minister “talked about it openly” but was unable to provide evidence of a press release, a statement, or a quote according to the Vancouver Sun.

Further contention surrounds the possible impact on wild salmon populations if the expansion goes through. Applications for expansion from all areas of BC have been accepted, with the exception of those from the Discovery Island archipelago located near Campbell River on Vancouver Island — this area was deemed especially fragile in the 2012 Cohen report, which called for a moratorium on fish farm expansion after the collapse of the Fraser River salmon population in 2009.

Shea has assured the public that the government is making “major investments in research” to “bolster . . . environmental protection in the aquaculture sector through science, enhanced regulatory regime, and improved reporting.”

According to the Vancouver Sun, Department of Fisheries and Oceans spokeswoman Melanie Carkner said, “All applications . . . will continue to be evaluated through the lens of environmental sustainability and engagement with First Nations and other stakeholders.”

In response, SFU professor of statistics and director of the undergraduate environmental science program, Rick Routledge, said, “The federal government’s claim that such decisions will be made ‘through the lens of environmental sustainability’ is not credible.”

Routledge told The Peak that the federal government has shown no signs of paying attention to environmental impacts on wild salmon populations in the past; in fact, “in the past they have hidden away evidence [of this],” he said. According to Routledge, in the fall of 2011, his research demonstrated positive readings for ISAv disease in local wild salmon. ISAv (or infectious salmon anemia) is a viral disease affecting Atlantic salmon populations in Canadian fish farms.

Routledge proceeded to alert the media in a press conference, and it was later revealed that Canadian government labs had found similar evidence of disease in 2002 and 2003. However the information had not come forward and was never supplied to Cohen as information for his report, even though some of the positive testing samples had been sockeye salmon.

The Positive Aquaculture Awareness society (PAA) published a statement on Jan. 17, stressing the need for fish farm expansion. They argued, “The Federal Minister of Fisheries, Gail Shea gave a clear signal for the orderly expansion of the industry which is vital as a provider of employment and business opportunities for many coastal communities.”

The PAA claims that the concerns of critics such as Routledge are “hard to justify” since the 2012 Cohen report never revealed a “smoking gun.” The PAA further backed up the government’s decision by calling into doubt the validity of their critics’ expertise saying: “As expected, the usual suspects of salmon farming critics rose to the occasion and flooded the mainstream media — most of whom (both critics and media) don’t know the slightest thing about salmon farming.”

“Coastal communities rely on commercial and recreational fishing. If you ask whether they would rather have a chance to fish or work in a facility they’d rather fish,” said Routledge. He went on to accuse the government and the PAA of “misusing the precautionary approach” and attempting to cause a “campaign of doubt”.

When asked about the effects this expansion will have on local wild salmon populations, Routledge explained, “There’s very little evidence of direct impact on wild salmon, but lot’s of evidence on ISAv and other diseases are turning up.”

These diseases are related to fish farm prevalence, and over-farming. “In my opinion, conservation of wild salmon takes priority, period,” said Routledge.

Routledge continued we “vigorously explore land facilities” as an alternative solution. Land facilities would eliminate any interaction between farmed and wild salmon, and a more controlled environment would lower infection risks. The Save Our Salmon Initiative is currently working with the Namgis First Nations community in testing one such facility, to see whether it is a viable option.

8 COMMENTS

  1. Thanks for this fair and balanced look at this story, Sarah. However, Prof. Routledge leaves out a significant detail about the ISA virus. As scientists who study viruses know, the procedure for testing them goes like this:

    1) Test a sample of tissue by using PCR, which looks for a specific sequence of DNA unique to a virus.

    2) If you find this specific sequence of DNA, follow-up testing is required to confirm you have actually found something, and not just a false positive. PCR tests are sensitive and can be easily contaminated or corrupted, especially if the samples are in poor condition (as was the case with Routledge’s samples).

    3) If the follow-up tests, which include sequencing the entire virus and / or doing a cell culture, come out positive, then you have a genuine virus finding on your hands.

    This is the procedure outlined for identifying the ISA virus as proscribed by the OIE.

    Neither Routledge’s samples, nor the samples from 2002-2003 mentioned in your article, ever made it past step 1. Nor were other labs able to reproduce the results. They were false positives.

    Finally, the most definitive way to know if you have the ISA virus is if your fish our sick. Farmed Atlantic salmon are highly susceptible to this virus, but have never been seen to show clinical signs of the disease it causes in BC. Fish farmers in BC have done close to 10,000 tests in the past decade and all have been negative for ISA virus. The CFIA, Alaska and Washington state have done thousands of tests in the past few years on wild salmon. They have all been negative for ISA virus.

    • Grant Warkentin works for and is an official spokesperson for the salmon feedlot industry and should have identified himself as such.

      What he also doesn’t say is that the Prime Minister’s Privy Council Office specifically ordered the DFO to muzzle their own world-class scientist, Dr. Kristi Miller (Google her name) after she published cutting-edge research findings around salmon diseases found in BC ocean waters, in the journal Science, and was then not permitted to give a single interview to journalists from around the world who wanted to learn more about this issue.

      Dr. Miller was subsequently denied access to any BC salmon feedlot to do her own testing, so that everything Mr. Warkentin says about test results cannot be independently verified.

      Feedlot salmon are carnivores. What other carnivores do you know that are “farmed”. It takes more than one kg of other small wild fish to grow one kg of feedlot salmon – this industry is not sustainable, and it is replacing our free wild salmon with feedlot salmon which are much more expensive in every way: they are destroying the environment.

      My personal opinion as a concerned citizen of BC is that our governments’ unwritten policy around aquaculture is to allow the industry to kill the wild salmon as a means of destroying indigenous culture, thereby freeing the coast for off-shore drilling and tankers. Go to this link and scroll down to the second Policy Actions blue window: http://www.energyplan.gov.bc.ca/bcep/default.aspx?hash=9

      STOP HARPER!

    • Nice spin Grant, you forget to mention that Kibenge and Nylund found ISAv in the exact same BC samples, with enough base pair hits on both of them to see it was Norwegian strain. You also forgot to mention that CFIA then took those degraded samples and surprisingly got a hit as well, but then they took that “weak” positive and instead of doing more testing they just made it a “strong” negative, like it didn’t even happen! The more degraded a sample is the harder it is to find a virus. So while CFIA should have done more testing, it’s no surprise they didn’t when it was leaked at Cohen commission they hid Molly Kibenges report showing she found ISA years earlier. The Naniamo lab also found ISAv and so did a still muzzled Kristy Miller. That’s 5 labs! As far as sequencing the entire virus, the scientific community has agreed that it’s near impossible to ever do that with some viruses, so it’s a ridiculous standard, check out the documentary Salmon confidential to see the truth about why BC is not allowed to have ISAv

      • Your readers just have to check out Salmon Confidential Exposed at http://salmonconfidential.com
        to learn just how fictional the documentary Salmon Confidential really is. The site provides a factual counterpoint to bogus claims and misinformation being spread via the documentary film created by Twyla Roscovich and Alexandra
        Morton… “The film is riddled with errors, false claims and incorrect assumptions which must be corrected. This blog will provide facts and realities which bust Morton’s myths about salmon farming in her latest film.”

      • In the interest of balance, I highly recommend readers check out Salmon Confidential Exposed. The site provides a factual counterpoint to bogus claims and misinformation being spread via the documentary film referenced above..

  2. Grant Warkentin has also left out a significant detail from his comment – he earns his living as a spokesperson for the Norwegian owned BC salmon farming industry. This industry continues to refuse independent testing of it’s Atlantic salmon.

    Mr. Warkentin has stated that other labs were unable “to reproduce the results. They were false positives.”This is not true. The Fred Kibenge lab in P.E.I. which was one of only two labs in the world designated by the
    OIE as an ISA virus reference lab, found positive ISA in samples of BC salmon. How was this news met by the CFIA? The CFIA recommended the lab be suspended, the OIE complied, but refuses to state why. They claimed that the positive findings were non-repeatable. The word “non-repeatable” suggests the CFIA
    repeated the tests with different results. But in a letter to Alexandra Morton, Dr. D. Ian Alexander (CFIA) says that the samples were never retested.
    http://alexandramorton.typepad.com/alexandra_morton/2013/12/it-is-official-the-cfia-never-retested-my-samples.html

    Clearly, something smells rotten here.

    Mr Warkentin is on record as stating that the ISA virus is “one of the biggest fears that salmon farmers have … so if it’s here, we would be in big trouble.” Last year on Canada’s east coast, when ISA was confirmed in 240,000 Atlantic salmon the CFIA declared them fit for human
    consumption and they were allowed to go in to Canadian grocery stores. This after the fish were refused entry into the USA. “The ruling is the first
    time the CFIA has opted not to destroy fish carrying the virus since it
    started regulating the fish farming industry in 2005.”
    http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/british-columbia/lethal-virus-found-in-bc-sockeye-threat-to-producers/article4248813/

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