Fisheries Minister Joyce Murray has announced the federal government will not renew licences for 15 open-net Atlantic salmon farms around British Columbia’s Discovery Islands.
Murray says in a news release the Discovery Islands area is a key migration route for wild salmon where narrow passages bring migrating juvenile salmon into close contact with the farms.
She says recent science indicates uncertainty over the risks posed by the farms to wild salmon, and the government is committed to developing a responsible plan to transition away from open-net farming in coastal B.C. waters.
Open-net fish farms off B.C.’s coast have been a major flashpoint, with environmental groups and some Indigenous nations saying the farms are linked to the transfer of disease to wild salmon, while the industry and some local politicians say thousands of jobs are threatened if operations are phased out.
“I have to take into account the plight of wild salmon, which are in a state of serious decline,” she said in an interview Friday.
Consultation with First Nations
She said the decision came after extensive consultations with First Nations, the industry and others, and the department is taking a “highly precautionary” approach to managing salmon farming in the area.
Murray said she called First Nations and industry representatives Friday before announcing what she said was a difficult but necessary decision to protect wild salmon from the potential risks posed by farmed fish.
Bob Chamberlin, spokesperson for the First Nations Wild Salmon Alliance, is pictured at Ambleside Park in West Vancouver. The alliance is calling for a land-based, closed-containment system where salmon are raised outside of the ocean and rivers. (Jennifer Chrumka/CBC)
“There have been some assessments from DFO that suggest minimal risk and there’s also been science since that main assessment that has been suggesting that there may well be risk from the viruses and sea lice from the farms,” she said.
In the news release she says there are multiple stressors on wild salmon, including climate change, habitat degradation and both regulated and illegal fishing.
Murray’s mandate letter from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tasked her with developing the plan to shift from open-net salmon farming in B.C. waters by 2025, while working to introduce Canada’s first Aquaculture Act.
Fisheries and Oceans said last summer that open-net salmon farms may continue operating during a consultation process that’s currently underway, with the final plan to transition 79 farms expected to be released later in the year.
The federal government announced in December 2020 that it would phase out 19 Atlantic salmon farms in the Discovery Islands area of Vancouver Island.
It also said fish farm licences would not be renewed.
A juvenile sockeye salmon with sea lice.
Former B.C. premier John Horgan sent a letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau last March saying there is widespread concern the federal government is poised to make a decision that could threaten hundreds of jobs and the economies of coastal communities.
Horgan urged the prime minister to assure the salmon farming sector that an appropriate transition program will be implemented and must include First Nations and communities that rely on fish farms economically.
Murray said the federal government is committed to developing a “responsible plan to transition from open-net pen salmon farming in coastal B.C. waters.”
Fear over job losses
The B.C. Salmon Farmers Association has said an economic analysis concluded the province could lose more than 4,700 jobs and up to $1.2 billion in economic activity annually if salmon farm licences are not renewed.
It called Murray’s decision “devastating” for the coastal communities that rely on the aquaculture sector.
“Local communities have been hurting since the decision to remove the farms was announced in 2020, and thanks to this wilfully uninformed decision announced earlier today, these communities will continue to experience negative socio-economic impacts of an outcome that was based on politics rather than science,” Brian Kingzett, the association’s executive director, said in a statement.
Diane Morrison, the association’s chair and managing director of Mowi Canada West, said the federal government has turned their backs on coastal communities.
“As a sector, we saw the elimination of nearly a quarter of our farms in a single announcement. This resulted in companies laying off hundreds of employees from well-paid careers – in a region of Canada that is struggling to attract and retain its youth,” she said.
The Canadian Aquaculture Industry Alliance also said the decision will cut jobs in rural communities and increase food costs.
Last month federal fisheries minister Joyce Murray spent a week Vancouver Island holding consultations. The federal government』s goal is to phase out open-net pen salmon farms by 2025. CBC Victoria reporter Emily Vance spoke with people about what is at stake and where the industry might be headed.
“This decision goes against First Nations Reconciliation, increases food costs for Canadians and undermines food security and has broad-reaching implications for employment and economic opportunity for people in rural, coastal and Indigenous communities, and our global trading markets,” the alliance said in a statement.
But B.C.’s First Nations Wild Salmon Alliance says more than 100 First Nations support the federal government’s plan to transition away from open-net salmon farms.
Alliance spokesman Bob Chamberlin said earlier wild salmon runs are suffering and decisions must be made to help stocks rebound.
source & photo:CBC