Tag Archives: Salmon

Raven Coal Mine’s Port Proposal for Alberni Valley

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At a recent event co-sponsored by The Common Sense Canadian, Coal Free Alberni’s Stacey Gaiga discussed the proposed coal port in her community, designed to export coal mined on the other side of Vancouver Island to Asia. If proponent Compliance Energy has its way, it will build the underground Raven Coal Mine near Fanny Bay and truck 100 loads of coal every day across the Island to Port Alberni – jeopardizing communities and ecologies along the trucking route, in Port Alberni, and in the Somass River estuary (a key salmon river) and other waterways en route to Asia.

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The relevance of sea lice, toxins and fish still debated

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From the Vancouver Sun, Feb 21 – 2011

Letter by Dr. Craig Orr

Re: Industry disputes fish farm sea lice is harming wild salmon, Letters, Feb. 17

The
irony is likely not lost on most Sun readers. Mary-Ellen Walling,
spokeswoman for the salmon farming organization running glitzy and
expensive ads telling us not to believe everything we hear about farmed
salmon-but giving us few facts to judge-now tells us not to worry about
the impacts of lice on juvenile sockeye. Because they have scales,
juvenile sockeye are resistant to lice, she claims.

She also cites
one outlier study by two veterinarians associated with the farming
industry as a reason not to take sea lice concerns too seriously.

Smolts
with scales, and larger than juvenile sockeye, have been absolutely
decimated by farm-source lice in Europe. Dozens of papers document this
sad fact. Another paper on B.C. coho published before Christmas suggests
lice have serious impacts on larger predatory fish (with scales no
less).

And, as we pointed out in our original PLOS One paper, lice
are known vectors for transmitting diseases, one of the key concerns
being investigated in the Cohen Inquiry into declining Fraser River
sockeye. But hey, let’s keep the facts to a dull roar-and the fingers
pointing elsewhere. Pump up the glitz. Everyone’s eyes might just glaze
over, and little will change.

Craig Orr Watershed Watch Salmon Society Coquitlam

Read original letter here


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Video of 2010 Fraser River Gravel Mining as 2011 Program Cancelled!

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In February 2010, filmmaker Damien Gillis captured the gravel mining operations on the Fraser River with a team of expert biologists and local conservationists. Now, at the 11th hour, this year’s planned mining projects have been unexpectedly cancelled. The rationale given by DFO is logistical complications and low market prices for gravel, only confirming critics’ position that this program is not about reducing flood risks – and all about money. Watch this video to see what these huge mining operations really look like – and why the ecologically damaging program should be scrapped altogether. Be sure to check out this new report from common sense contributor Otto Langer on the subject as well.

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2010 Fraser River Gravel Mining

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In February 2010, filmmaker Damien Gillis captured the gravel mining operations on the Fraser River with a team of expert biologists and local conservationists. Now, at the 11th hour, this year’s planned mining projects have been unexpectedly cancelled. The rationale given by DFO is logistical complications and low market prices for gravel, only confirming critics’ position that this program is not about reducing flood risks – and all about money. Watch this video to see what these huge mining operations really look like – and why the ecologically damaging program should be scrapped altogether. Be sure to check out this new report from common sense contributor Otto Langer on the subject as well.

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Fraser River Gravel Mining: Misdirected Government Priorities & Ongoing Environmental Degradation

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[Editor’s Note: This time last year, we brought you in-depth coverage on the ongoing Fraser River gravel mining program and its resulting ecological impacts on salmon and sturgeon spawning grounds – featuring a report by retired DFO senior biologist and manager Otto Langer. One year later, on the eve of another season of mining operations, comes the surprise revelation from DFO that this year’s planned mining of 184,000 cubic metres of gravel from Tranmer Bar, near Agassiz, has been cancelled! The rationale cited was logistical delays and low market
prices for gravel – only confirming critics’ position that this program isn’t safety-driven (for flood risk management, as the public has been told), but rather market-driven.
Hopefully this year’s hiatus will provide time for
the public to convince the Province and DFO to permanently scrap
this unnecessary, environmentally destructive program.
]

—————————————————————————

We are in the midst of the Cohen Inquiry on the collapse of the 2009 sockeye runs into the Fraser River. Despite that, in the past two years the Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) continued to approve some of the largest mining programs on Lower Fraser River gravel bars that are essential habitat for salmon, sturgeon and eulachon populations. This is despite the fact white sturgeon and the eulachon are endangered species in the Fraser River and that the Federal government has initiated a 25 million dollar inquiry to determine why its sockeye runs have declined prior to 2010.

DFO and the BC Government signed a five year agreement to mine excessively large quantities of gravel from essential gravel bar habitats in the Chilliwack to Wahleach Creek section of the Fraser beginning in 2004. Considering that the gravel removal agreement ended in 2008, why would gravel mining be an issue in 2011? The agreement ended in 2008 but was extended without any public consultation into 2009, 2010, and now 2011. This lack of public consultation should not be a surprise to anyone in that the original agreement was developed and signed without any attempt to obtain public input.

One can only be critical of government’s way of doing business at the expense of a public resource under the alleged claim of “flood risk reduction”. The Province’s and DFO’s own engineering consultants have concluded in their studies that the large-scale continued long term mining of many essential gravel bar habitat areas will cause long-term hydrological and ecological damage to the river and provide negligible public safety benefits.

A recent inspection of the mining of Gill, Little Big Bar and Hamilton Bars in December 2010 by the Fraser River Gravel Stewardship Committee (FRGSC) showed that the gravel bars had recovered little after the spring freshet of 2010 and two of the bars were mined so as to create ponds that trapped fish and exposed them to dehydration and predation. DFO was specifically warned that the mining practices seen in 2010 would cause that impact, but, again, this public input was not acted on.

Also, the inspection showed that the largest single mining project to date on Spring Bar in 2008 (i.e. 400,000 cubic metres), had recovered little after three freshets and the mining at that site has resulted in a small lake isolated from Fraser River flows. DFO had previously claimed that such sites would rehabilitate in two to three years and therefore habitat compensation works were not required.  In addition, temporary bridge structures were left in the river and have posed a great risk to navigation, almost killing two fishermen in one boating mishap.

In the fall of 2010 the FRGSC learned that Emergency Measures BC (EMBC), the promoter of gravel bar mining for alleged flood control purposes, was planning to again mine Powerline and Tranmer Bars in 2011. Despite the costly consultant surveys and impact reviews, the FRGSC was advised that gravel sales were slow and of the two applications submitted, EMBC would probably only proceed on one. This thought process threw doubt on the necessity of gravel mining for flood control purposes. Was this a real flood risk reduction project or a commercial gravel mining venture rationalized as a public safety project? This approach also shows utter contempt for the costs involved and the wild goose chases the public and the reviewing agencies would be led on. Why do costly studies at two sites when one would only be selected at the eleventh hour based on the wrong rationale?

By late December it was obvious that EMBC would only proceed on the mining of Tranmer Bar. Tranmer Bar has been mined repeatedly in the past few years and in 2010 it was dropped from mining plans due to various concerns related to the impacts of mining that site.

To date, the mining of certain bars was allowed by Ministry of the Environment (MOE) and DFO, even though inadequate data existed on the value of those high bar spawning sites to the endangered Fraser River white sturgeon. This despite the fact a DFO habitat engineer previously determined that this bar habitat was in short supply and the value of them has high and the mining activity on them would cause a significant impact.

Sturgeon studies were begun in 2010 but were poorly funded by the Province and initiated in a near-historic low-flow year and were bound to supply very inconclusive results. Despite this, MOE and DFO did not object to allowing more mining in probable sturgeon spawning habitats and the Canadian Wildlife Service of Environment Canada seemed not to care about the use of these habitats by thousands of birds – including swans, blue herons, eagles and many species of ducks.

Studies by the FRGSC in December 2010 showed that the habitat on Tranmer Bar was characterized by many spring-fed streams/backwaters that supported large populations of rearing fish including mountain whitefish and juvenile sockeye salmon and was a resting site for swans. Despite the concerns over the past many years, DFO again determined that public consultation was not necessary in their Fisheries Act and Canadian Environmental Assessment Act reviews. This determination was despite the fact that the public have continuously voiced objections to what was proposed. The proponent (EMBC) has also refused to meet with the public to discuss the program.

Despite this lack of consultation, the DFO CEAA screening report notes that DFO received 18 submissions on the project – most opposed. It was obvious that MOE and DFO largely dismissed public concerns and expedited the approvals in mid-January so the mining could be initiated in order to be done by March 15, 2010. The Province and DFO have an agreement in place to allow an early seasonal review of these projects but in 2011, as in all previous years, they were again some three months behind schedule on their own review and issuing of permits.

The project as approved by DFO allows for the disturbance of 275,000 m2 (68 acres) of Tranmer gravel bar habitat and the mining of up to 184,000 m3 of gravel and the processing of gravel on site for market-ready sales. Considering the very late review and approval of works by the regulatory agencies, by early February the construction of the roads and bridges to allow the mining had yet to begin. The reason given to the public is that EMBC did not have equipment lined up to do the work and the price of gravel is not economic to mine. This is despite the fact that the government in the past has waived the need to collect royalties on such mined gravel.

The above development is rather amazing but not surprising. Several times in the past the BC Government has led the public to fear the next flood and has rationalized the mining of the river’s gravel bars to address the upcoming spring’s flood threats. DFO staff have even convinced their Minister that the mining had to occur or flooding could take place, causing the loss of life and property. DFO then would document in internal correspondence how they were not convinced of the value of the mining as related to flood control benefits and that alternatives such as better dykes could be more effective.

Despite DFO staff reservations, their Vancouver Director General advised them not to discuss alternatives and to not question any EMBC rationale for mining gravel bar habitats. For instance, in 2007 great urgency was put on mining Spring Bar to address  floods that could occur that spring due to high snow pack. Despite the Provincial and DFO-created panic, the mining did not take place. When it did take place a year later, DFO consultants and the BC dyke safety engineer noted that the mining would not address any reduction in flood risks and the latter expert said the mining was largely promoted by DFO to allow a local aboriginal band to profit from the sales of gravel so DFO could improve relationships with that band.

To some degree it is obvious that the mining program is being done under a near-fraudulent rationale and the public have been geared up to support the program due to a fear campaign run by certain politicians. The EMBC managers even have admitted that when they took the lead in promoting gravel mining, they said they could best sell it as a flood control program. The MLA for Chilliwack – who has always promoted gravel mining – happened to be the Minister in charge of EMBC at the time and ran his own media campaign to promote gravel mining in the river.

Once again the politics of gravel removal seem not to need a solid and valid scientific rationale. Those who are most entrusted to protect the river and its fish and wildlife habitats have been ordered to not question the need or value of the mining and to learn to deal with the impacts caused by that program. Furthermore, they have not required habitat compensation works so as to assure an ongoing no net loss of habitat as required by the Fisheries Act habitat policy.

One can argue that some gravel removal will always be necessary. Certain bottlenecks to flow will occur. However, such a program must be embedded into an overall long-term environmental management plan for the gravel reach of the Fraser River, similar to the downstream Fraser Estuary Management Plan which was put into place some 30 years ago to address development and environmental protection concerns in that part of the river. Despite the EMBC commitment to annual gravel mining and the ill-advised MOE and DFO support for that program, absolutely nothing has been done by the environmental agencies to require a long-term environmental management plan to protect river values, examine the cumulative long-term impacts of annual gravel mining, develop a convincing flood risk plan, and allow full and open public consultation on this entire issue. Considering that it is now 2011, the absence of this long-overdue basic work and planning is an absolute condemnation of the conservation mandates of the BC Government, DFO and Environment Canada.

One can only draw the conclusion that in the Lower Fraser we can only afford to allow gravel mining for the alleged purposes of flood control when the economy needs and is ready to buy the gravel at an acceptable price.  Fortunately, we do not run other public safety programs in the same manner. Imagine if a slide was to occur in the Fraser Valley and the removal of the debris was not addressed until partnerships were in place to mine and sell it!

Our Federal government is committed to a proactive strategy to protect our living legacies for the benefit of all Canadians and, above all, to take a precautionary approach in doing this. Does the use of the Fisheries Act, its supporting no not loss policy, the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act, cumulative impacts and proactive management mean nothing to government over the past decade, especially after years of good progress to better protect the environment in the decades prior to the year 2000? Why should we now step backwards?

Note: On February 16, 2011, I received notice from DFO that EMBC has abandoned the Tranmer Bar gravel mining project for 2011. As previously advised, the cancellation is believed to be due to the very late scheduling of the project by the government agencies, the inability of the Province to line up the equipment to do the job at this late date, and the present low values in the commercial value of the gravel.

Otto E. Langer BSc(Zool) MSc

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Fish Farm Subsidies: “Facts” of Industrial Aquaculture Challenged

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From the Vancouver Sun – Feb 16, 2011

by John Werring

Re: Alaska’s salmon ranching vs. B.C.’s salmon farms, Letters, Feb. 9
Aquaculture industry advocate Vivian Krause and BC Salmon Farmers
association executive director Mary Ellen Walling can’t seem to agree on
whether governments subsidize their industry.

Krause says they do, citing $4.6 million granted by the federal government in 2009-10. Walling adamantly says they don’t.

Walling’s
denial is curious as she is quoted publicly in at least one source
(Courier Islander, July 17, 2009) defending federal financial support
for her industry.

Krause’s claim is equally dubious. It includes
money from only one source: Fisheries and Oceans Canada. That is just
the tip of the funding iceberg.

A recent academic text, (The
Aquaculture Controversy in Canada, UBC Press, 2010), refers to “the
striking array of direct and indirect subsidies to the aquaculture
industry from Canadian governments.”

It identifies several sources
-like Farm Credit Canada and the Western Economic Diversification Fund
-and estimates annual funding for aquaculture from the federal
government at around $50 million.

Provincial subsidies also are
generous, providing millions of dollars in additional support for
upgrades of equipment, production increases and business promotion.

Public
support for industrial development can be a good thing, but in the case
of aquaculture, it should be spent advancing more sustainable uses of
our public resources, like closed containment.

Other assertions by
Krause and Walling -about numbers of jobs created, industry regulation
and salmon biology -are equally suspect.

John Werring

Aquatic Habitat Specialist, David Suzuki Foundation

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Stephen Hume: Fish farms linked to sea lice infestations among wild sockeye

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From the Vancouver Sun – Feb 11, 2011

by Stephen Hume

Researchers find young salmon migrating past operations in Discovery
Islands, Broughton Archipelago pick up heavier load of parasites

Like the bad smell that won’t go away, another piece of research in
the scientific jigsaw puzzle links British Columbia’s salmon farms to
sea lice infestations that affect migrating wild salmon.

This time the link is to the iconic wild sockeye stocks of the Fraser River.

Fraser
River sockeye are the most important food and subsistence species for
more than 40 aboriginal communities, the much-prized foundation for the
province’s most valuable commercial fishery and a growing target for
sports anglers.

The study by scientists from the University of
Victoria, Simon Fraser University and several environmental
organizations with an interest in salmon conservation used genetic
analysis to determine the origin of sockeye from Canada’s two most
important salmon rivers, the Fraser and the Skeena.

Skeena River sockeye smolts migrate through waters where there are no net cage salmon farms, so it served as a control.

Migrating
Fraser River sockeye smolts, on the other hand, must run a gauntlet of
fish farms scattered among the islands that choke the narrows between
Vancouver Island and the mainland north of Campbell River.

The
scientists found that Fraser River sockeye passing salmon farms in the
Discovery Islands and Broughton Archipelago picked up a heavier load of
sea lice than Skeena River fish migrating through waters where there
were no salmon farms.

How important is this discovery?

“It’s
quite important,” says Mike Price, a graduate student at UVic who is
one of the researchers. “It indicates that fish farms are a source of
one potentially lethal pathogen for migrating sockeye smolts. Is this an
indicator for other pathogens? Like most scientific research, ours
generates more questions than answers.”

But the research paper,
Sea Louse Infection of Juvenile Sockeye Salmon in Relation to Marine
Salmon Farms on Canada’s West Coast, published Tuesday in PloS One, a
peer-reviewed open access scientific journal of the Public Library of
Science, is the first to demonstrate clearly the potential role of
salmon farms in transmitting sea lice to juvenile sockeye salmon.

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Must read from Halifax Chronicle-Herald: Aquaculture vs. wild salmon: an inconvenient truth

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From Halifax Chronicle-Herald – Feb 10, 2011

by Jim Gourlay

As debate on the environmental sustainability of sea cage-based
aquaculture rages on, the controversy is boiling down to a we-said,
they-said situation. The general public is confused.

Volunteer-based NGOs and private individuals are sounding off against
“public relations” professionals paid to spin the industry line.
There’s a credibility gap right there.

So it may be useful to simply deal with established, indisputable
facts and tone down the rhetoric a tad. It never hurts to look outside
one’s own backyard.

Iceland, where healthy stocks of migrating wild Atlantic salmon are
an extremely valuable cash crop via the sport fishery ($12,000 per week
per rod on some rivers), has opted to almost completely avoid cage
rearing of genetically manipulated domestic salmon in open water.
(Incidentally, in another very telling comparison with Canada, Iceland
has also carefully managed its cod stocks.)

In Norway (where most of this started), it is an established and
accepted scientific fact that unnatural blooms of billions of sea lice
larvae, produced as a consequence of rearing millions of caged salmon,
absolutely decimated wild stocks of Atlantic salmon and sea-run brown
trout by infecting outward migrating wild smolts in the fiords.

In the sea lochs of western Scotland, it is also an established and
accepted scientific fact that precisely the same thing happened. Indeed,
the Scots have banned sea cages on the east coast for fear the presence
of the industry would ravage the world-famous salmon streams that drain
into the North Sea.

In Ireland, it was the same story. One 10-year scientific study,
headed by pre-eminent British researcher Derek Mills, concluded the
following: “The relationships shown in the present study indicate that
sea lice from marine salmon farms were a major contributory factor in
the … stock collapses observed in aquaculture areas in western Ireland.
If recovery of depleted … stocks is to be achieved in this area, it is
critical to ensure that ovigerous sea lice levels are maintained at
near-zero levels on marine salmon farms over the spring period prior to
and during … smolt migration.”

The malignant relationship between sea lice infestations attributable
to sea-cage rearing and the collapse, within a decade, of wild stocks
in proximate rivers, is not disputed in Europe. Yet, in Canada it is.

We are asked to believe that it is nothing more than a coincidence
that wild stock collapses on both coasts, pursuant to sea-cage rearing
development, in rivers adjacent to those aquaculture sites, is unrelated
to the industry — that other, ill-defined and poorly understood causes
must be at work.

Frankly, it’s a bit of a stretch.

In the inner Bay of Fundy, within a decade of salmon aquaculture
development in open cages, wild salmon stocks utterly collapsed in 33
rivers — 23 in Nova Scotia and 10 in New Brunswick.

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Sea Lice From Salmon Farms Infect Fraser River Sockeye

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From Environmental News Service

SIDNEY, British Columbia, Canada, February 8, 2011 (ENS) – The
first link between salmon farms on the British Columbia coast and
elevated levels of sea lice on juvenile Fraser River sockeye salmon has
been demonstrated by new research published today.

While there has been speculation that lice from captive salmon has been
transferred to wild salmon, the new study is the first to show a
potential role of salmon farms in sea lice transmission to juvenile
sockeye salmon during their critical early migration to the sea.

The research by scientists from Raincoast Conservation Foundation,
Watershed Watch Salmon Society, and the Universities of Victoria and
Simon Fraser is published in the journal “Public Library of Science
ONE.”

The authors conclude that their work “demonstrates a major migration
corridor past farms for sockeye that originated in the Fraser River, a
complex of populations that are the subject of conservation concern.”

The rapid growth of marine salmon farms over the past two decades has
increased host abundance for pathogenic sea lice in coastal waters, and
wild juvenile salmon swimming past farms are frequently infected with
lice, the authors say.

“Given the high intensities of lice observed on some juveniles in this
study – up to 28 lice on a single fish – there’s an urgent need to
understand the extent of threat posed by sea lice to juvenile Fraser
River sockeye,” said co-author Dr. Craig Orr of the Watershed Watch
Salmon Society.

The scientists examined sea lice on migrating sockeye in an area of
Canada’s west coast between Vancouver Island and the mainland known as
the Discovery Islands, taking samples in 2007. This region hosts the
northeast Pacific’s largest salmon farm industry, 18 active salmon
farms, and also hosts one of the largest migrations of salmon in the
world, primarily to and from the Fraser River.

The scientists genetically identified 30 distinct stocks of infected
Fraser sockeye that pass by open net-pen salmon farms in the Strait of
Georgia, including the endangered Cultus Lake stock.

The study found that “parasitism of Fraser sockeye increased significantly after the juvenile fish passed by fish farms.”

These same species of lice were found in substantial numbers on the salmon farms.

Not only did juvenile Fraser sockeye host higher lice levels in the
Georgia Strait after they passed salmon farms, the researchers found
that these fish hosted “an order of magnitude more sea lice” than Skeena
and Nass River sockeye that migrated along the north coast where there
are no farms.

The new study contradicts the Canadian fisheries agency’s statement
that, “Juvenile sockeye that migrate past salmon farms in the Discovery
Islands are significantly larger than pink salmon … when they migrate
into the ocean, well beyond the threshold for susceptibility to sea
lice.”

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Salmon Farm Promoter Vivian Krause’s Claims Corrected in Vancouver Sun

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From the Vancouver Sun – Feb 8, 2011

by Ken Peterson

Re: The American attempt to kill B.C.’s salmon farms, Opinion, Feb. 1

The
Monterey Bay Aquarium Seafood Watch program has received $7 million
-not $407 million -from the David and Lucile Packard Foundation since
the program’s inception in 1999.

That money supports our efforts
to help consumers and businesses choose wild-caught and farmed seafood
from sources that preserve the health of the ocean -and the economic
health and vitality of communities whose people suffer when ocean
ecosystems collapse.

More than 700 industry leaders gathered in
Vancouver last week for the annual Seafood Summit, in support of just
that vision. They represent major seafood buyers and producers, as well
as non-profit organizations like the Monterey Bay Aquarium.

Part
of their shared vision is a commitment to work together so that
unsustainable fishing methods and aquaculture practices improve over
time, in ways that are broadly embraced and independently verified.

As
that vision becomes reality, the result will be thriving oceans,
increased consumer access to an important source of healthy protein, and
protection for fishing communities from the kind of devastation that
followed the collapse of cod in the Maritime provinces, or the slow
downward spiral of wild salmon that so defines the culture of the
Pacific Coast.

Ken Peterson Communications director, Monterey Bay Aquarium Monterey, California

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