Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumOver One MIllion Dead Farmed Salmon At Scottish Site; Owners Blame Rising Ocean Temperatures
More than a million dead fish, the biggest mass die-off of farmed salmon in Scotland in a decade, have been recorded at a farm belonging to the UKs largest supplier. The deaths at two adjacent Mowi Scotland sites in Loch Seaforth on the Outer Hebrides licensed as one farm by the Scottish government rose to just over a million during the year-and-a-half production cycle that it usually takes to raise a salmon in seawater, and which in this case began in spring 2023. Mowi supplies salmon to retailers including Sainsburys, Tesco, Asda and Ocado. Many of its farms, including those in the Hebrides, are certified under the RSPCA Assured label, which guarantees higher animal welfare standards.
The data, analysed from government statistics by Scotlands Coastal Communities Network (CCN), which exists to protect Scotlands coastal and marine environments, and NGO Free Salmon, is deeply concerning, said John Aitchison, speaking on behalf of CCNs 30 member groups. Mass deaths of farmed salmon are a growing problem, he said, and can in some cases be an indicator of poor welfare. At the end of last year, when mortality in Scotlands farms hit record levels, Chris Packham called for a halt to the expansion of the Scottish salmon farming industry. Despite this, salmon remains the UKs second most popular fish (after tuna), with sales in the year to June worth £1.3bn.
This is the first time since 2014 [when regular reporting began] that more than a million farmed salmon deaths have been reported at a single farm site in one production cycle, said Aitchison. We expect to see more salmon deaths in Scotland because farms are becoming even larger. Meanwhile, activist group Animal Rising filmed salmon at Seaforth during the same production cycle in which the million deaths occurred, with the video appearing to show sick fish with patches of raw, descaled flesh, scraped mouths and swollen or burst eyeballs.
Mowi Scotland confirmed the death total of 1.05 million fish, which it said was a combined figure for two sites, Seaforth and Noster. Ben Hadfield, Mowi Scotlands chief operating officer, rejected any suggestions mass mortality is a sign of poor welfare and said the deaths were due to an unprecedented rise in sea temperatures which resulted in jellyfish blooms, a problem blighting Scottish production. Jellyfish stings to salmons eyes, skin and gills risk health problems and death. [Any] suggestion that this is caused by bad farming, fixation with profits [or] overstocking is
very false and misleading, Hadfield said.
Ed. - Yeah, well, he would say that, wouldn't he?
EDIT
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/oct/22/more-than-1m-farmed-salmon-die-at-supplier-to-leading-uk-retailers
Think. Again.
(17,324 posts)It's amazing how many people can sustain their denial of the risk our food sources are in with climate instability.