Washington’s net-pen fish farm ban has Canadian consequences
SEATTE, Wash. — A conservationist says Washington state legislature’s recent decision to phase out ocean-based Atlantic salmon farms shows how pushing a species’ biological limits can be bad for Canadian business.
Neville Crabbe of Canada’s Atlantic Salmon Federation said a bill passed by Washington state lawmakers could pose “incredible business loss” for New Brunswick-based company Cooke Aquaculture.
Cooke Aquaculture said in a written statement that it is “deeply disappointed” with Friday’s vote to phase out ocean-based net-pen farms — where fish are raised in pens made of netting that allows water to flow freely between the containment area and marine environment — as leases come up for renewal over the next seven years.
The bill was passed in response to an incident last summer when high winds collapsed the pens of a fish farm owned by Cooke Aquaculture Pacific.


