SCOTLAND,
UK - Fish farming could be banned in some coastal areas in a bid to
protect wild fish stocks, BBC Scotland reports. This claim has been met
with furious opposition from many Scottish fishery groups. BBCNewsScotland
reports that anglers and landowners have claimed that parasites from
farms are at least partly to blame for declines in wild salmon and sea
trout.
The Scottish government may now follow the example of Norway and restrict the spread of farms.
The fish farming industry said there was no evidence that parasites were threatening wild fish stocks.
BBC Scotland interviewed environment Minister, Stewart Stevenson, as part of its investigation into fish farming.
When asked if new legislation planned for later this year might see
farms banned from areas that are important to wild stocks, he replied:
"Of course it may do - and we'll consult on that. Everything is open for
discussion."
"But we have to have the consultation, we have to understand in the
environment we have in Scotland what the effects of different options
would be."
Mr Stevenson also revealed he is considering forcing salmon farmers to
publish information about lice levels on specific farms, a measure which
has been called for by critics of the fish farm industry and which has
been implemented by the Norwegian government.
However, Steve Bracken from Marine Harvest, Scotland's largest salmon
producer, said there was not enough evidence to suggest that parasites -
known as sea lice - were responsible for any declines in wild fish
stocks.
He argued producers should not be forced out of existing farming areas.
"We can't say that we're not having an impact. It's just knowing how much of an impact we've got," he said.
"And that's why I think it would be wrong to say 'well, we don't know,
we don't really like this but we think you should go out of the loch'.
We don't think that's a reason for moving."
The BBC Scotland Investigates: Scotland's Fishy Secrets programme also
examined whether lice have become resistant to the range of chemicals
being used to treat them and revealed evidence that the industry may be
hiding the scale of problems it has encountered in treating the
parasites.
During the investigation, BBC Scotland made a Freedom of Information request to the Scottish government.
The response contained notes of discussions between the drug companies that make the treatments and government officials.
In those documents a government official writes: "The view from the
[fish farming] industry was that there is a clear evidence of lack of
efficacy and that some fish farms have even been closed as a result of
sea lice infestation. However, fish farms are reluctant to report these
officially."
In another document relating to the Veterinary Medicines Directorate
(VMD) which is responsible for monitoring residues of drugs in food, a
government official reports: "The [fish farming] industry, the
pharmaceutical companies and the VMD are therefore in a Mexican
standoff."
Lice burdens
The group which represents salmon farms in Scotland said the industry
was not concealing information from regulatory authorities.
Scott Lansburgh, chief executive of the Scottish Salmon Producer's
Organisation, said: "We're regulated by the environmental protection
agency, SEPA.
"So they keep a close eye on what's going on in the industry as do the
fish health inspectorate and their reports are open to all to see and
we're regularly reported on and we're regularly inspected so we're not
hiding anything."
Mr Landsburgh also commented:
"I am very angry that this proposition has been put forward. It is
ludicrous to suggest that fish farms could be banned. Salmon farming has
always developed on the west coast and in the Northern and Western
Isles where conditions are ideal and away from where 90 per cent of all
wild salmon in Scotland are caught."
"There is no empirical evidence to link salmon farming with declines of
wild salmon on the west coast. International declines are seen
throughout the North Atlantic in areas where there are no salmon farms."
Environment Minister Mr Stevenson was also asked about the scale of the problem.
He said: "At the moment there isn't evidence of resistance to the
various treatments there are, some other countries have that resistance
if you continuously use the same treatment."
The wild fish lobby said that any resistance could have serious implications.
Guy Linley Adams, a lawyer working for the Salmon and Trout Association,
said: "If we're getting resistant sea lice we need to know where the
populations of those resistant sea lice are.
"If it does spread we get multiple resistance in sea lice across the
west coast of Scotland and in the isles then you've got this awful
scenario of farms with huge lice burdens causing problems not just for
the farmers but for the wild fish as well."

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