Nova Scotia Fishermen protest salmon farm decision

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From CBC.ca – June 17, 2011

Demonstrators with bags of strong-smelling sludge protested against
the approval of two salmon farms to be located in one of Nova Scotia’s
most productive lobster fishing bays.

About 75 fishermen, environmentalists and concerned citizens gathered
in Halifax on Friday and brought sludge from existing salmon farms in
other parts of the province to the protest outside the legislature.

The Nova Scotia government recently approved the two salmon farms in
St. Marys Bay in the southwestern part of the province. Each farm will
stock about 700,000 fish and is part of a $150-million expansion by New
Brunswick-based Cooke Aquaculture.

The farms will total about 84 hectares.

Demonstrators said they want public consultation and answers to their concerns — which they said were ignored.

Lobster fisherman Sheldon Dixon said he believes the farms will
create residue that will harm the bay’s bottom and one of the province’s
most profitable lobster fishing grounds if the projects proceed.

He told the crowd that about 3,000 traps operated by 60 fishermen would be displaced by the sites.

“Where will we go? We have to go to somebody else’s [ocean] bottom and all the other bottom is covered,” he said.

Many demonstrators had to get up early on Friday morning for the four-hour drive from the mouth of St. Marys Bay to Halifax.

Cooke Aquaculture is a New Brunswick company that bills itself as North America’s largest producer of farmed salmon.

The company said its aquaculture operations will create hundreds of jobs and put millions of dollars into the local economy.

Nell Halse, a spokeswoman for Cooke Aquaculture, said her company is
trying to persuade local residents that the farms can operate without
damaging the ocean bottom.

The pens, which Halse described as being smaller than an 18-hole golf course, can co-exist with fishermen, she said.

“It’s not like we’re trying to fill the whole coastline of Nova Scotia with salmon farms,” said Halse.

Farm and fishing can co-exist: Cooke Aquaculture

She
said she believes the environmental movement is attempting to polarize
fishermen and aquaculture operators, despite evidence suggesting they
can co-exist.

“We have had an open policy to accommodating lobster fishermen to set
their traps around the farms and in fact they choose to do so,” Halse
said.

Cooke Aquaculture said the pens will comply with local environmental
regulations, including camera scans of the bottom looking for signs of
damage or degradation.

Greg Roach, the associate deputy minister of Fisheries and
Aquaculture, said there will be third-party monitoring of the fish farm
and the waters will be protected.

“There’s confidence the lobster fishermen won’t be negatively impacted by the footprint of this farm,” he said.

But residents of Long Island, at the mouth of St. Marys Bay, overwhelmingly oppose the salmon pens.

St. Marys Bay is the heart of the most lucrative lobster fishing
grounds in Nova Scotia, an industry valued in the hundreds of millions
of dollars a year, providing hundreds of local jobs.

Opponents say the sewage produced by more than one million salmon,
combined with the drugs needed to keep those fish healthy, endangers
prime fishing grounds — underwater nurseries for lobster as well as
scallop beds.

They say the practice of huge open-net salmon farms has already
caused ecological damage in other parts of the world and that Nova
Scotia should not head down that road.

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About Damien Gillis

Damien Gillis is a Vancouver-based documentary filmmaker with a focus on environmental and social justice issues - especially relating to water, energy, and saving Canada's wild salmon - working with many environmental organizations in BC and around the world. He is the co-founder, along with Rafe Mair, of The Common Sense Canadian, and a board member of both the BC Environmental Network and the Haig-Brown Institute.