Fish Farmer Magazine - March 2020

Page 26

Trade Associations– Scottish Salmon Producers Organisation

BY HAMISH MACDONELL

Trust the retailer Context is key to the information provided by food producers

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T is the year 2030 and, after parking your electric vehicle on the charging pad outside your local supermarket, you wander inside to do your weekly shop, armed with a trolley load of biodegradable hessian bags. Stopping at the fish counter, you pick up a (paper, not plastic) packet of two salmon fillets and zip your smart watch over the packaging. Up pops a virtual image of the farm the fish came from plus a host of other information. There are tables showing the treatments used, the dates the fish were treated and the amounts of medicine used. There are other charts, going back years, showing sea lice levels, survivability stats and escapes, all on a weekly basis. Antibiotic use – when these fish were just smolts- is also scrolling before your eyes along with Sepa (Scottish Environment Protection Agency) compliance scores for this and every farm in the area, going back years. Even for those working in the farmed salmon sector, this would be bewildering and confusing, let alone for ordinary consumers, but this is the future some pressure groups and charities want us to deliver. Their mantra appears to be: make everything available to everyone. They believe the consumer should have every piece of information from every farm and this information should be readily available and linked to every piece of salmon sold. Those who doubt this is the case should have been at a recent conference organised by Fidra, the environmental charity, in London recently. Fidra are one of the bodies pushing for more and more information to be made available and they are supported by other lobbying and pressure groups too. This puts the farmed salmon sector in a difficult position, not because we object to the publication of information – we don’t – but because information, in itself, is not the answer. We want to be as open and transparent as possible. We have already committed to moving towards the swifter and more frequent publication of lice and survivability data and we also voluntarily publish wrasse data. But the key to all this is context. There is no point in linking a piece of fish bought in a supermarket to a particular farm – and all the data that flows from that – unless it actually means something to the consumer. Bald figures showing a cohort of salmon received one treatment of emamectin benzoate 12 months before harvest doesn’t say anything about the overall health and welfare of the fish or the farm or the company running that farm. There is then the issue of whether consumers actually want this information.

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It is undoubtedly true that retailers are coming under pressure to provide more and more information and they are responding to this by publishing layers of graphs and statistics on their websites showing the sustainability of the food in their stores. But how many consumers actually want to see it? About nineteen million portions of salmon are sold every month in the UK yet, on average, only about 65 people from the UK search for the survivability data the SSPO publishes each month and just 66 people search for sea lice data. And, guess what? These are almost always the same people. Some are from within the sector, more come from pressure groups and lobbying organisations, and even more from the small number of anti-farm organisations looking for information to use in their anti-salmon crusades. The simple reality is that consumers want to trust the retailers. They want to know the retailer has done the work and analysed the data so they, as consumers, don’t have to. So, as long as the retailers have the information they need from us, as a sector, then everything should be okay, right? Well, not quite. We have to be aware that there will be pressure on us to match up with the best standards set for other food producers. If a consumer can pick up a beef steak and find out immediately which farm that meat came from, what the cattle there were fed and how they were looked after, then some of them – just some of them- will expect something similar from us too. This means we are in a sustainability information race, forced on all producers by a section of the most demanding consumers, and we have to be in it or risk falling behind. And that brings us back to context. We want to publish information about sea lice,

Above: Smart phones could be used to check details of salmon’s provenance

www.fishfarmermagazine.com

10/03/2020 11:46:16


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