Inshore ireland 10 5 dec 2014

Page 1

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The Marine & Freshwater Environment Publication

A century of boat building skills

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page 22-23

page 16

Interview with Acadian Seaplants

December 2014/January 2015 Vol 10 Issue 5

ONLINE EDITION

You can now view the August/September issue on www.inshore-ireland.com or you can follow us on Twitter www.twitter.com/inshore_ireland and Facebook www.facebook.com/InshoreIreland

Elusive report at the heart of salmon farming investigation Gery Flynn & Gillian Mills

A

scientific report quoted by an Irish environmental group in a formal complaint to the European Commission on the potential impact of sea lice on wild salmon stocks in Ireland, has not been made readily available - despite being

partly publicly funded, and also of critical interest to the aquaculture sector. The complaint by Salmon Watch Ireland in February 2009, which resulted in the EU Commission initiating a Pilot Investigation (see page 18) lasting five years, makes several references to the SUMBAWS report. SUMBAWS (Sustainable Management of Interactions between Aquaculture and

Wild Salmonid Fish) was a project involving research on the impact of sea lice on wild salmonids by participants from Ireland, Scotland, Netherlands and Norway.

Industry search

Speaking to Inshore Ireland, IFA Aquaculture Executive Richie Flynn revealed his efforts to secure a copy of this part-publicly funded report: These included two Freedom of Information

Requests in 2009 and 2013 and a Public Access to Environmental Information Request in 2013 – all of which have been refused. “SUMBAWS was a major component of Salmon Watch Ireland’s complaint to the EU Commission in early 2009. It was a significant so-called Shared Cost RTD (Research and Technological Development) project with a budget totalling €2,370,803 million.

“Of this, the EU contributed €1,615,787. The project ran from October 2002 to December 2005 - threeand-a-quarter years - so this was a major study.” IFA Aquaculture’s first FoI submission specifically sought correspondence between the Central and Western Fisheries Boards and records of mortalities of fish used in the SUMBAWS Project.

‘Midnight Breach’ - Humpback Whale near Assiaat, Greenland. Taken on board the Killary Flyer during the ‘North of Disko’ expedition.

»» page 18

Photo Daragh Muldowney


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