Scottish salmon farmers say no to SEPA feed cap proposal

by
editorial staff

Limits on how farmers feed their stock? Strong words from SSPO who say that “poor performance” of Scotlands Environmental regulator may stifle sector and constrain sustainable growth.

In a press release, the industry organisation The Scottish Salmon Producers Organisation (SSPO) have described an initiative to introduce a feed cap as “lazy regulation”.

SEPA’s Terry A’Hearn. PHOTO: SEPA

It said that if introduced, it would “raise significant fish health and welfare concerns and could undermine the global reputation for quality the sector has built up over the last few decades”.

Concerns
SSPO Chief Executive Julie Hesketh-Laird said she had now written to SEPA chief executive Terry A’Hear raising serious concerns about the performance of the regulator.

SEPA is mulling a feed cap as a way of controlling organic deposits from salmon farms.

“SEPA’s decision to consider a feed cap as a way of controlling organic deposits from salmon farms has no environmental basis, is wrong, misguided and could threaten fish health and welfare. It would also undermine the global reputation for quality Scottish salmon that farmers have built up over decades,” Hesketh-Laird said:

Dismayed
She added:

“The consultation proposes to introduce a limit on the amount of feed given to salmon. But farmers must be able to judge the appropriate amount of feed necessary to rear their stock and keep them healthy. This sets a dangerous precedent for a regulator to limit how farmers feed their stock. They should not face arbitrary restrictions. Feed is central to fish health, welfare and growth. It is also key to achieving first-class quality and nutritional benefits for consumers.

“This consultation is simply lazy regulation. I am dismayed that SEPA is considering a system which has already been tried and rejected elsewhere. The Scottish salmon farming sector has worked effectively with SEPA’s existing biomass controls for many years and are committed to do so into the future.”

Licenses 120 days not 294
Hesketh-Laird has written to A’Hearn setting out a number of concerns about what she said was the “poor performance” of the regulator that stifles the sector and constrains sustainable growth. Licenses for new salmon farms or for changes to existing farms should be determined by SEPA within 120 days. According to data collated by the SSPO, the average time for salmon farming applications to be dealt with by the regulator in April 2019 was 294 days.

Ms Hesketh-Laird said:

“The relationship between a regulator and sector must be rigorous and call companies to account. But it must also be enabling. The delays in responding to applications are damaging on a day to day operational level but are also undermining strategic planning and decision-making. Salmon is a major player in Scotland’s food industry and a key contributor to the rural and national economy, so it deserves timely, efficient, strategic and enabling regulation.”

She added:

“It is in all of our interests to nurture and protect Scotland’s marine environment but this is best done through strong, robust and clear regulation that enables the sustainable growth of aquaculture.”

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