DFO’s transition plan for salmon farms “from BC waters” extended indefinitely past summer 2023 timeline.
Response from Wild First @wildfirstcanada to Fisheries Minister’s stalling on salmon farm transition plan due but delayed indefinitely since June 2023.
February 22, 2024 âThe Ministerâs marching orders are âto transition open net pen salmon farms from BC waters by 2025â. Her Department, seeing no need to do that, is currently consulting on issuing new salmon farm licences for terms of 2-6 years, when they expire in June of this year.â
Read full Letter to the Editor here: bit.ly/3T9Cy56
Send a letter saying âNOâ to licence extensions here: bit.ly/3t3aztQÂ
Minister to delay plan for closure of B.C. salmon farms after pressure from industry, Indigenous chief
May 31, 2023 The federal Fisheries Minister is delaying a decision on closing the remaining ocean-based salmon farms in British Columbia, after pressure from First Nations and the fish-farm industry (during DFO salmon farm transition consultations).
Joyce Murray had been expected in June to release a transition plan to move open-net fish farms out of B.Câs coastal waters, to land-based farms.
But on Wednesday her office issued a statement saying it was extending a consultation on the future of the remaining open-net salmon farms off the coast of B.C. throughout the summer.
Read Globe & Mail article
Alexandra Morton Comment:
So depressing to see the Norwegian salmon farming industry convince one First Nation after the next to act as human shields against a brave minister doing her best to protect wild salmon. The Fraser River First Nations are going to pay the greatest price as they are getting 0 benefit agreements even as their fish are swimming through the pathogen streams released by salmon farms and failing to return…
Department of Fisheries and Oceans — Pacific aquaculture salmon farm transition –
What we heard report phases 1 and 2 — May 18, 2023
- Transition from open-net pen salmon aquaculture
- (Some of) We have heard:
- Interest in Indigenous self-determination and First Nation management of aquaculture and fisheries in their territories
- Salmon aquaculture is a sustainable economic opportunity for First Nations to become self-sufficient and to address issues of food security
- There would be impacts to other local businesses that rely on existing salmon aquaculture infrastructure if the industry was phased out
- First Nations with industry partnership agreements are already holding the industry to high environmental standards and they are developing their own local transition plans
- There is significant interest in area-based aquaculture management, but different views on what that should look like
- Desire to see a transition away from all ocean-based salmon aquaculture based on views that land-based aquaculture is the only alternative technology that would eliminate interactions between wild and cultured salmon
- Land-based aquaculture is not feasible in some territories of First Nations with industry partnership agreements
- Interest in adopting a Broughton Aquaculture Transition Initiative type of process beginning with sites between the B.C. mainland and Vancouver Island (viewed as most linked to migratory salmon routes of interest to Nations that are concerned about the impact of aquaculture)
- The impacts of open-net pens are widespread; they can affect salmon migratory routes and communities down-river
- Should open-net pens be phased out, Government of Canada support would be required to allow communities to transition to other sources of economic development
- Interest in conducting a cost-benefit analysis of the industry that would include the cultural value of wild salmon
- Interest in the Government of Canada conducting a thorough analysis of the social and economic contributions from salmon aquaculture, including year-round employment and other factors
- Language used in the discussion framework such as âprogressively minimize or eliminate interactionsâ suggests status quo
- Language used in the discussion framework such as âprogressively minimize or eliminate interactionsâ puts too many constraints on industry and eliminates the creativity and trials needed to advance innovative solutions
- Â Fisheries and Oceans Canada May 18, 2023
What we think about DFOâs âWhat We Heardâ report on salmon farm transition out of BC waters — May 24th, 2023
May 24th, 2023 Our review of their âWhat We Heardâ report and federal documents we uncovered through an Access-to-Information request further suggest the AMDâs transition process is biased toward a pro-salmon farming industry outcome.
The report appears to conceal or omit key results that suggest the majority of people who submitted comments to the AMD want open net-pen salmon farms removed. For example, the front end of the report presents a broad summary of all the opinions for and against salmon farming and suggests the issue is âhighly polarized,â but buried in Annex B (on pages 31-32) are the online public survey results which state:
âOverall, 70% of survey respondents supported a transition away from any marine salmon aquaculture to a sustainable land-based sector. Of those who support a transition away from marine aquaculture:
â Policy and management tools to progressively reduce or eliminate interactions between cultured and wild salmon were viewed as ineffective.â
The survey results suggest 78% of survey respondents view policy and management tools to progressively reduce or eliminate interactions between cultured and wild salmon as ineffective. Despite this significant majority, we are concerned the AMD continues to back away from the federal commitment to transition from open net-pens by 2025. Instead, they are driving the transition toward minimizing interactions between farm and wild salmonâa strategy that has consistently been proven to fail.
What options is DFO Minister Joyce Murray considering for aquaculture’s open-net salmon farms on BC’s coast?
A few considerations from Clayoquot Action (prior to DFO Public Input, but still on the table for the Minister’s decision). Semi-closed fish farm (SCCS)
Oct 5, 2022Â DFO Aquaculture is attempting to transition open net pen fish farms to ‘semi-closed’ in-water fish farms. After monitoring this system for over a year, we learned that the new system still harms wild salmon. Help stop this false solution.
ATIP Summary: DFO Aquaculture staff water down federal promise to transition from open net-pen salmon farming — Some background from Stan Proboszcz, Watershed Watch Salmon Society — Oct. 2022
DFO Engagement and Aquaculture Consultation Timeline
July 2022 through June 2023
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Living Oceans offers a virtual course deciphering the Aquaculture Public Consultations
(September to October 27 2022)
Living Oceans: Transition Plan Consultations: False Start
September 22, 2022
Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) was tasked by the Minister with undertaking consultations on the content of the Transition Plan that will guide the removal of salmon farms from B.C. waters. Living Oceans attended a consultation on September 1. Several First Nations consultations had taken place prior to this. The combined outrage of those consulted on the plan resulted in the whole procedure being stopped in its tracks by the Minister.
Living Oceans: Share your view on DFO’s aquaculture transition plan consultation:
Send the letter on Living Oceans site (that parallels the survey objectives) instead
How did the Consultations go off the tracks? DFO came up with a multiple-choice survey “predicated on the assumption that ocean-based salmon farms are here to stay and so designed that I cannot express my opinion on the content of a transition plan that would meet my expectations of the governmentâs promise to âtransition open-net pens from B.C. waters by 2025â.” See Letter via Living Oceans
Living Oceans Share your views
Living Oceans Guide to: DFO Aquaculture Transition Consultation Questions Unpacked!
Early October This guide reproduces the Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) questionnaire, with suggested answers and rationale. It is intended to assist you to answer the questionnaire, in order that once itâs tabulated, it does not disproportionately represent the opinions of the salmon farming industry and its supporters.
We found this guide necessary because the survey is extremely leading, based as it is on the presumption that ocean–based salmon farms will continue, with some regulatory and technological tweaks. Living Oceans has studied these issues in depth and our position is that it is impossible to regulate open–net pen salmon farms to be compatible with healthy, wild salmon;
and that there is no commercially viable in–ocean technology that will save our wild salmon.
You are also invited to use our online tool (previous post here) to express yourself more fully, to your MP/the Fisheries Minister and to the DFO engagement email.
Living Oceans Guide to DFO Aquaculture Transition Consultations
In a new report, Living Oceans looks at alternatives to ocean net-pens — the focus of DFO’s transition survey questions.
October 7 As the Canadian government launched its public consultation process for the long-awaited Transition Plan that will make good on their promise to transition open netpen salmon farms from British Columbia waters by 2025, DFO aquaculture staff appeared to be aligned with industry in an effort to define âtransitionâ as the addition of some technological innovations to ocean-based farms. All of the questions in their tightly designed public input questionnaire lumped together the only proven solution, land-based recirculating aquaculture (RAS), with experimental concepts such as âsemi-closedâ, âhybridâ and âoffshoreâ production systems, all of which still employ open netpens for all or part of the production cycle.
link to LOUSY CHOICES III: Why Salmon Farms have to come Out of the Water AUTHOR: KAREN G. WRISTEN
DFO Survey: “Comment on the discussion framework for a BC aquaculture open-net pen transition plan”
September 28
On September 6, this survey was taken down from this website and republished on September 28. As a consequence, the survey input window has been extended to October 27 to ensure the total available opportunity for input is not reduced.
We updated our survey questions on September 28th, 2022 to provide greater clarity. Submissions received prior to September 6 will continue to be taken into consideration and will be given equal weight to those received after the republication. If you filled out the survey prior to September 6, but feel that these updates could change your responses, you may fill out the survey again.
Enviro’s views on the DFO Aquaculture Consultation Survey:Â to fill it out or not?
Perhaps submit only select questions on the survey (so as to be included in the Survey returns) along with a letter from an Enviro? See Watershed Watch’s example.
Clayoquot Action:
Early October DFO is seeking your input right nowâuntil October 27th. But their online survey has a pre-determined outcome: that fish farms will remain in BC watersâindefinitely!
We recommend that you not wade into DFOâs tricksy online survey, as anything you say there will be used as proof that you support fish farms staying in the ocean. Link here to Clayoquot Action’s Letter:
Watershed Watch:
Aquaculture staff in DFO watered-down the federal promise to remove salmon farms (excerpt)
October 7
You can read our full summary of the government documents for yourself. We still believe the Minister of Fisheries and Oceans, Joyce Murray, wants to do the right thing but sheâs hampered by some rotten apples in DFO.
The federal government currently has an online survey for citizens to fill out on the salmon farming transition. Weâre not convinced filling out the entire survey is the best thing to do to get fish farms out, because DFO Aquaculture may just cherry-pick the answers they want from it. But if you want to help, there is one question that you can skip-to and answer to make things crystal-clear for them. Itâs the question below. Just go to the DFO survey and scroll down and youâll find this question and click on the first answer.
Watershed Watch also has their own letter to DFO for people to send: link here
Georgia Strait Alliance
October 7th Currently, the Department of Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO), is running a public consultation to inform the future of salmon aquaculture in British Columbia. However, while we welcome and encourage public processes like this, this survey does not seem to be information gathering with the goal of building a plan to remove all fish farms from BC waters by 2025.
Because of its vagueness and misleading questions, we believe that the survey put forward by DFO staff has been designed to support the continued existence of the destructive salmon farming industry in BC waters.
Why are we so sure that this survey is a problem? In conversations with DFO regarding this transition plan, it was clear that they are not fully set on removing open-net fish farms from BC waters by 2025. This contradicts the Ministerial mandate that clearly directs the Minister and DFO to âcontinue to work with the Province of B.C. and Indigenous communities on a responsible plan to transition from open-net pen salmon farming in coastal B.C. waters by 2025.â
That is why we are asking you not to engage with DFOâs public survey and instead, use our editable letter to Minister Murray to ensure your voice is truly heard. link here
Wild First
Mid October Despite the federal governmentâs promise to âtransition open net pens from BC waters by 2025,â Fisheries & Oceans Canada has launched a multiple-choice consultation survey that implies ocean-based salmon farms are here to stay.
Fisheries & Oceans is suggesting options like âsemi-closed,â âhybrid,â or âoffshoreâ farms in the ocean â this means open-net pen salmon farms will remain in BC waters. These systems will continue to expose wild Pacific salmon to parasites, pathogens and pollutants.
Let your MP, Minister Joyce Murray, and Fisheries & Oceans Canada know that band-aid solutions are not an option. Itâs time to get open-net pens out of BC waters.
David Suzuki Foundation: Petition to Brenda McCorquodale, Director, Aquaculture Division (conducting the Consultations)
Mid October Support transition from open-net pen fish farms.
The federal government has committed to transitioning B.C.âs aquaculture sector from open-net pens by 2025, but the proposed framework suggests the government is backtracking from its promise and plans to leave the door open to allowing industry to continue its harmful practices.
Thatâs why itâs so important for the government to hear from you!
Transitioning from open-net pens must require removal of salmon farms from B.C. waters along with support for coastal economies to develop shellfish, seaweed and land-based finfish aquaculture, or other sustainable economic sectors.
Anything less will continue to put wild salmon in jeopardy.
Hear Bob Chamberlin’s and read Alexandra Morton’s comments on the Consultations link here