Unsustainable fish
Don Staniford was just a lad in short trousers when I and many, many other people started campaigning against the floating factory fish farms which blight Scottish waters.
If Martin Jaffa thinks opposition to salmon farming is a “one-man crusade” his arithmetic isn’t very good.
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Hide AdAs for the amount of fish fed to pet cats, I’m afraid the good doctor is guddling red herrings. What myself, Don Staniford and others are concerned about is the frequent use of the word “sustainable” in relation to salmon farming.
On more than one occasion during the past 12 months I have had to challenge the First Minister and other members of his government for describing salmon farming as sustainable.
The fact is that salmon farming is not sustainable, as the industry consumes a greater weight of wild caught fish than it produces in farmed fish. The industry is shy in producing figures but it is estimated that it can take between three to five tonnes of wild fish to produce one tonne of marketable product.
I do, however, agree with one statement from Dr Jaffa.
If you take into consideration the other adverse effects of salmon farming (pollution, use of chemicals, high levels of parasites, damage to wild salmon and sea trout stocks, routine shooting of seals) he is perfectly correct when he describes salmon farming as an “easy target”.
John F Robins
Save Our Seals Fund
Dumbarton