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OPINION: Biggest threat facing wild Pacific salmon is Fisheries and Oceans Canada

91ƵOnly Canada allows the farming of Atlantic salmon on the migration routes of wild Pacific salmon91Ƶ
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FILE 91Ƶ A salmon pictured in this undated photo (Joel Krahn/Black Press File)

Thirty years ago, the federal department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) mismanaged the Atlantic cod fishery into near oblivion 91Ƶ ignoring the scientists who foresaw the collapse.

Instead, DFO rigged the science to support an unsustainable commercial fishery. Politicians vowed 91Ƶnever again91Ƶ and enshrined the precautionary principle into law 91Ƶ always err on the side of caution 91Ƶ but did nothing to reform the institution responsible for one of the world91Ƶs greatest self-inflicted ecological disasters. Today, DFO does whatever is necessary to support Atlantic salmon farming along B.C.91Ƶs coast to the significant threat of wild Pacific salmon.

Only Canada allows the farming of Atlantic salmon on the migration routes of wild Pacific salmon. And, just like thirty years ago, DFO continues to rig science so it can skirt its primary duty to protect B.C.91Ƶs iconic, keystone species.

In 2009, after conducting a three-year federal Inquiry into declining salmon runs, Mr. Justice Cohen saw the essential problem 91Ƶ DFO might ignore fish farming91Ƶs risks to promote the industry. Along with 74 other recommendations, he recommended that DFO not be required to both promote and regulate fish farming. But, DFO91Ƶs conflicted mandate persists.

In 2015, the Federal Court found DFO had not adhered to the precautionary principle 91Ƶ the law of our land 91Ƶ when regulating the foreign Piscine orthoreovirus saying DFO91Ƶs 91Ƶarguments with respect to the precautionary principle are inconsistent, contradictory and, in any event, fail in light of the

evidence.91Ƶ Four months later, DFO reinstated the same policy, adopting a risk threshold that prohibited only risks that could sterilize entire populations, species, or ecosystems. The Federal Court again struck down the policy, which DFO reinstated and is before the Federal Court for a third time.

In 2018, the Auditor General found DFO was woefully behind in its risk assessments, was not enforcing aquaculture regulations, and was 91Ƶvulnerable to claims that it prioritized the aquaculture industry over the protection of wild fish.91Ƶ The same year, Canada91Ƶs Chief Scientist recommended DFO have unbiased advice from an external advisory committee. Still, no external oversight exists.

In December 2019, our Prime Minister mandated DFO91Ƶs minister to transition B.C.91Ƶs 91Ƶin ocean91Ƶ salmon farms on to land by 2025. Welcome words. But, almost a year later, British Columbians and the 102 B.C. First Nations which support this transition have seen no action by DFO.

Mr. Justice Cohen also recommended fish farming in the Discovery Islands (a bottleneck for migrating salmon) be prohibited by September 30, 2020, unless DFO could confidently say the farms there posed less than minimal harm to wild Pacific salmon.

On September 28, 2020, with the Fraser River experiencing the worst sockeye returns in history, and with the Minister absent, DFO officials proclaimed that the Discovery Island fish farms posed less than a 1% risk to Fraser River sockeye. They did not explain how they calculated this risk or how their conclusion factored into the Prime Minister91Ƶs mandate to transition the open net-pens by 2025. They did admit, in response to a question, that they had not included sea lice from fish farms in their assessment. Well- established science shows that sea lice from fish farms kill out-migrating juvenile salmon.

Just four days earlier, John Reynolds, an aquatic ecologist at Simon Fraser University and chair of the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada, the committee responsible for designating endangered species said: 91ƵWe have an overwhelming weight of evidence from research coming at this from all different directions. The current open-net pen fish farm model that we have is not compatible with protecting wild fish.91Ƶ

Thankfully, one of DFO91Ƶs top scientists is speaking out. Dr. Kristi Miller-Saunders, head of DFO91Ƶs molecular genetics laboratory in Nanaimo and adjunct professor at the University of British Columbia, described how DFO91Ƶs dual role as regulator and industry advocate, coupled with its reliance on industry funding for research, skews risk assessments in favour of the fish-farm industry. Let91Ƶs watch what happens to Dr. Miller-Saunders now.

In the ten years DFO has regulated fish farming in B.C., a former B.C. Supreme Court judge, two Federal Court judges, the Auditor General91Ƶs office, Canada91Ƶs Chief Scientist, DFO91Ƶs own scientists, B.C. First Nations, and numerous NGOs have all sounded the alarm. But, so far, the politicians have done nothing to reform the institution mismanaging wild Pacific salmon to extinction.

Our leaders must act now and not wait to say, 91Ƶnever again,91Ƶ again.

91Ƶ Tony Allard, chair of Wild Salmon Forever



About the Author: Black Press Media Staff

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