Open Pen Salmon Farming Goes Away In Canada In 2029; Who Will Clean Up The Mess It Leaves Behind?
Aquaculture is big business in Canada. In 2023, open-net-pen salmon farming in B.C. alone produced 50,000 tonnes of fish worth just over US$350 million. But on June 30, 2029, the federal governments long-looming ban on open-net-pen salmon farming is set to take effect. On that day, 63 operations will be forced to shut down. For decades, B.C.s open-net-pen salmon farmers have faced criticism that their activities are harming the environment by promoting the spread of disease and fostering parasitic sea lice that can infect wild salmon. But closing a salmon or other kind of marine farm isnt as simple as letting a field lie fallow.
Whether degraded by poor maintenance, battered by heavy storms or beset by financial woes, aquaculture operations have gone under before sometimes literally. And when they do, derelict equipment can find its way to the sea floor or become suspended in the water column. Its pretty devastating, says Ben Boulton, program manager of Rugged Coast Research Society, a charity that works with the provincial government and First Nations to clean up marine debris from shellfish farms. These efforts have often involved smaller mom-and-pop oyster operations that lost gear to the ocean floor years or decades ago.
You come upon a mound of gear that is seemingly infinite a huge mess everywhere you look, he says. Abandoned nets, ropes, buoys, concrete blocks, plastic buckets and trays, PVC pipes, generators, steel anchors, iron rebar, floats, gangways, docks, drums, tires and polystyrene foam can all linger, threatening the marine environment. During one disturbing stint at a derelict operation on northern Vancouver Island, for instance, workers with the non-profit Ocean Legacy Foundation found that a group of river otters had started building dens inside the polystyrene foam from decaying floats and were eating the marine life growing on it.
EDIT
Provincial government regulations require licensed aquaculture operations, including salmon farms, to outline their future debris management plans and post a security deposit to cover cleanup. But the amount set aside, Prins says, can fall short of whats required. In the past, some purchasers of farm sites have also inherited the costs of removing the accumulated mess. Otherwise, taxpayers can wind up paying the price. In 2020, the province launched Clean Coast, Clean Waters, an initiative that has so far spent roughly $35 million to remove more than 2,100 tonnes of marine debris and 215 derelict vessels from the provinces coast. The program tackled the first two derelict aquaculture sites in 2024.
EDIT
https://thetyee.ca/News/2025/01/06/After-Aquaculture-Fails-Who-Cleans-Up/