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Salmon Farming

The transition to closed containment is gaining momentum

The transition to closed containment is gaining momentum as pilot projects are now either on the drawing board or up and running.

One company in Washington State is already supplying coho salmon raised in a land-based containment system to Overwaitea Food Group stores in B.C. and Alberta.
The company has announced plans to double production to serve the growing demand for more sustainable farmed salmon.

We are co-sponsoring a collaboration to share sea lice data and research in the Broughton Archipelago

Through the Coastal Alliance for Aquaculture Reform (CAAR), we are co-sponsoring a scientific collaboration with industry, government and academics to share data and conduct research and analysis to monitor and assess the interactions among sea lice, farm salmon and wild juvenile salmon in the Broughton Archipelago. The monitoring program is known as the Broughton Area Monitoring Plan (BAMP). More information about the collaboration, the research and the results is posted on the BAMP website.

Keeping the bar set high on Aquaculture Stewardship Certification

Living Oceans is an active stakeholder in the Aquaculture Stewardship Certification process, responding to every application for certification in Canada and participating in the scheme's various projects to revise the Salmon Standard.

ASC's Salmon Standard was created through a formal dialogue with industry.  It was only implemented in 2015; almost immediately, we began to notice problems.

Working with grocery retailers to grow the demand for more sustainably produced farmed salmon

People around the world are increasingly aware of the crisis facing global fish stocks. Many wild fish species are in decline and there is growing demand for more ocean-friendly options in grocery stores. Living Oceans led a markets campaign for over a decade, encouraging shoppers and retailers to demand more sustainably produced farmed salmon. Thanks to your help, our efforts were rewarded with significant steps by leading grocery chains.

Promoting commercial-scale closed containment systems

Land-based salmon aquaculture was pioneered right here in B.C., in the Kuterra facility owned by 'Namgis First Nation, near Port McNeill. While recirculating aquaculture technology has been used all over the world to raise fish to smolt size, Kuterra was among the first to tackle raising salmon to market size in its recirculating tanks.

Today, the industry stands on the cusp of change and B.C. can benefit from the work done at Kuterra, capitalizing on the global trend toward closed containment facilities.

Salmon Farming

Living Oceans has been working since its inception in 1989 to find solutions to the harm caused by open netpen salmon farms. We have worked directly with scientists, the industry, the regulators and the general public to educate and inspire action to protect wild salmon. We've gone to Court to defend wild salmon against the parasites, pathogens and pollution generated by the farms.

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