NL aquaculture leader asks for support against 'foreign interest wolves’
The executive director of the Newfoundland Aquaculture Industry Association (NAIA) has issued a strongly worded plea for local people to support fish farmers in the wake of the die-off of 2.6 million salmon being grown by Mowi-owned Northern Harvest.
Mark Lane said he could no longer remain quiet while the industry was being destroyed by “foreign interest groups such as the Sea Shepherd Society and other ideological radicals”, who he compared to wolves feasting on the vulnerability of seafood farmers at a time of crisis.
In a social media post, Lane said the fish deaths were no different to a wheat farmer losing crops because of drought.
Mowi has blamed the fish loss on a combination of water temperatures as high as 20°C on the surface and 8-metre deep nets that it had inherited when it bought the company and that didn’t allow the fish to reach cooler water at a deeper level.
‘Support our dedicated seafood farmers’
Lane said the industry was committed to work with all stakeholders who are truly dedicated to meaningful and productive dialogue to ensure the industry continues to grow sustainably and environmentally responsibly.
“I truly feel in my heart that this attack on our province’s seafood farmers and their families was not warranted,” said Lane.
He added: “I am respectfully asking for fellow Newfoundlanders and Labradorians to stand up for and support our dedicated seafood farmers and their families in a time of crisis.”
His full statement is reproduced here:
As a proud Newfoundlander and Labradorian, I can sit in silence no more and watch an industry, pioneered by scientists and dedicated farmers of the sea since the 1970s be slowly eroded and destroyed by foreign interest groups such as the Sea Shepherd Society and other ideological radicals.
This September our farming industry suffered a catastrophic loss of stock due to an unforeseeable environmental event. This act of Mother Nature and the impact that it has had on our industry was no different than a wheat farmer losing his crops to drought or another farmer of beef, pork or poultry losing stock due to some other extreme weather event.
Farmers losing stock and capital investment as a result of an occasional unpredictable environmental event is unfortunate in all aspects. In every instance that I recall as Canadians and here at home we support our farmers and fishermen in times of crisis.
As Newfoundlanders and Labradorians we need to further unite and support our seafood farmers, plant workers, service suppliers and their families, who have been negatively impacted by this unfortunate circumstance.
We need to protect our seafood farmers and their families that live and work along our coasts.
We need to protect ourselves from those on the outside and their onslaught of relentless attacks on our industry and the people of this province.
Like wolves, the Atlantic Salmon Federation and Sea Shepherd Society, among other groups and individuals, feasted on the vulnerability of our seafood farmers in a time of crisis for nothing more than fanfare and fundraising.
As an industry we have accepted full responsibility for our mistakes in the past and maintain a commitment to the people of this province to always strive to improve and innovate in everything we do.
We are committed to work with all stakeholders who are truly dedicated to meaningful and productive dialogue to ensure our industry continues to grow sustainably and environmentally responsibly.
Just last week there was a mass mortality of chickens announced by the province. I truly feel for that farmer and his or her family’s loss, having just been through a similar ordeal ourselves. No one should ever wish harm to a farmer. Every farmer I have met in my life anywhere on the planet, works long and hard in all elements to provide income for their families and food for the world.
However, the difference between most other farming industries and ours is that there are no opportunities to capitalise and fundraise on the backs of traditional farmers. There are no large amounts of foreign money awaiting investment to destroy the traditional farming industry.
On the other hand, there is for salmon farming. There are many. The Atlantic Salmon Federation, Sea Shepherd Society and Ecojustice to name just a few.
Interest groups such as these make a livelihood by destroying others.
Throughout the 60s, 70s and 80s interest groups exploited and fundraised millions of dollars on the backs of our people by using foreign money to spread mistruths and misleading propaganda to the world.
Unfortunately, we let them win. We did not fight back as hard as we should have. International public trust was eventually lost for that industry. Most politicians beyond our provincial borders turned a blind eye. People lost their livelihoods, their sense of belonging in the world and their right to work and raise a family in their rural home town.
Having destroyed the sealing industry in this province, these groups and others have returned to our shores; set out to destroy the livelihoods of our people in rural coastal communities once again.
The unfortunate media feeding frenzy, sparked by a misleading FFAW (Fish Food & Allied Workers Union) and efforts of external forces from foreign interest groups, has created enormous uncertainty and confusion for our people.
I truly feel in my heart that this attack on our province’s seafood farmers and their families was not warranted. Hard-working Newfoundlanders and Labradorians living in communities such as St Alban’s, Hermitage-Sandyville, Harbour Breton, Poole’s Cove among many others in along our South coast do not deserve this.
I do know one thing for certain, as a proud Newfoundlander I will not sit idly by any longer and allow these groups and others destroy this critical industry. An industry that is critical to those [who] depend upon it to feed their families and provide food to the world.
I am respectfully asking for fellow Newfoundlanders and Labradorians to stand up for and support our dedicated seafood farmers and their families in a time of crisis.
We need to band together as a people and as a province to provide moral support to our friends and family in rural coastal communities during a time when they need it most.