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Showing posts with label Nordic Aquafarms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nordic Aquafarms. Show all posts

Oct 20, 2023

BEP abandons its mandate AGAIN re Nordic aquafarms

 Audio  mp3 recordings from BEP 10/19/23 Nordic  meeting  (More to come!)

Maine Board of Environmental Protection reviewed the directive given them  by the Maine Supreme Judicial Court, defies clear intent of the court. 

1.  INTRO 2MIN 44SEC

2   BEP EXEC ANALYST HINKEL 7MIN

. KIM TUCKER MLU  (Chair prefaces)  24MIN 

4.  UPSTREAM WATCH 21 MIN 35 SEC

4b. U/W BEP EXCHANGE 2MIN 41SEC   Shows what's wrong with BEP

5   NORTHPORT REP  10MIN 21SEC

6. NORTHPORT REP  Q&A  6MIN 20SEC

7. ASST AG QA 8MIN 23SEC   Shows what's wrong with Asst AG office

8 .  ASST AG QA2 7MIN  

9.  KEVIN MARTIN DEP 16 MIN

14/ Closing remarks, VOTE.  2MIN 39SEC 














Sep 30, 2022

Nordic Aquafarms' alleged TRI challenged again LISTEN to testimonies of 3 attorneys before Maine Supreme Judicial Court in Sept 8th, 2-22

The furious legal fight that has so far fended off aggressive polluter-wannabee Nordic Aquafarms continues. 

Listen as each of the legal eagles soars then swoops to the attack.  From  ever awesome eco-lawyer  Kim Ervin Tucker, to her opponents that day: Nordic's hired legal guns:  David M. Kallin of Drummond Woodsum  and David Perkins of Curtis Thaxter (and their entourages). . Each recording starts with an intro

Intro and Attorney Kim Ervin Tucker speaking for shoreowners  Mabee-Grace, Friends and the Lobstering Representatives  6min 42sec

Atty David Perkins, Curtis Thaxter, pro Nordic,  8min41sec 

Atty David M. Kallinn  Drummond Woodsum   for Nordic  & QA 16min 

Atty Kim Tucker's Rebuttal 3min14sec   (to end of state recording)

Yes,  that tideland is what  Nordic's  wastewater and water intake pipelines must cross to reach Penobscot Bay.  The combination of  shorefolk and fishfolk and their legal team has been potent against the machinations of  Norwegian investors, their legal team and, regrettably, those Quisling types ever ready to bend the knee to Big Money, local or global.

Justices of Maine's Supreme Judicial Court.

Hon. Valerie Stanfill Chief Justice
Hon Rick E. Lawrence Associate Justice
Hon. Andrew M. Mead Associate Justice
Hon. Joseph M. Jabar Associate Justice
Hon. Andrew M. Horton Associate Justice
Hon. Catherine R. Connors Associate Justice
Hon. Rick E. Lawrence Associate Justice




Aug 18, 2022

Sierra Club UW attys 8/23/22 AUDIO on the Clean Water Act & how Maine DEP misuses state laws based on the CWA

On August 23rd 2022, Sierra Club held an online "Community Conversation" (links to audio below) featuring two veteran environmental attorneys, David Losee and Charlie Bering. 
Each  gave  online briefings on  the history  of the federal Clean Water Act, and how Maine DEP and its Board of Environmental Protection have developed strategies to get around the law when reviewing pollution permits sought by favored companies, for example, Nordic Aqua Farms.

Introduction by Jim Merkel, Sierra Club  5min   *  Spkr 1. David Losee 19min 20sec  *  .Spkr2  Charlie  Bering 23min 

Losee excerpt: How DEP/BEP  misuse state laws & rules to favor certain applicants & foil appellants 6min

Takeaways from their talks:  

1 This federal CWA and the state laws related to it  are adequate to the task: eliminating water pollution.  

2. Maine DEP and its Board of Environmental Protection are abusing the process:  The agency grants pollution licenses to favored applicants like Nordic Aquafarms  even when they know the applicant cannot meet required  pollution limits. How?   The discharger-wannabees must promise to meet the requirements  later, once their salmon tankfarm is operating at full capacity.

3. Maine's  Board of Environmental Protection likewise abuses the law. How?  By deciding not to review the whole pollution application  but just some parts of it.  Big Problem: the parts that BEP does NOT consider - cannot later be raised in a court appeal.  

For example, in Nordic's case DEP and the Board of Environmetal "Protection" decided before the BEP hearing that, among other things, none of the  climate concerns raised (in detail by environmental attornies would  even be considered in its review. This despite the state recently adopting the very Climate Goals and water quality goals that DEP and its Board decided to ignore.

In essence, exempting  Nordic aquafarm  from the Clean Water Act and such related state laws  as the Site Law  and NRPA.

###


Jun 14, 2022

Maine PUC caves to industrial sprawl in our region approving taxpayer funding of a powerline upgrade to benefit power eaters like the proposed Nordic aquafarm with Section 80 powerline decision

Below read the 6 minute transcript of the  Section 80 Powerline decisionmaking on June 14, 2022  by each of the three PUC members:  Chair Phil Bartlett, Patrick Scully and Randall Davis.   Listen to audio of the 6 minute section of the meeting

At issue is whether (1)  a non-wires distributed power system including solar, lunar  and wind would be adequate to the projected future or (2) stay with the wires-only and  make them massive   and replace all the main powerlines    All three voted for Maine to stay  hooked on wires.  No grid? No go!    Seemingly  uneasy with Change  unready for that newfangled eco-stuff'.  Many a buggywhip maker felt the same , time back

Chair Bartlett: "[T]he evidence does not support a finding that the proposed non powerline alternative meets the applicable reliability criteria and can reliably meet the identified need. " Can['t depnd on the fickle sun moon and ...tide?

PUC Chair Phil Bartlett opened the June 14th meeting

Good morning. Welcome to deliberations of June 14, 2022. We have six items on our agenda today.

The first is Docket Number 2011 -138. Pending before us is CMPs petition for Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity to rebuild Section 80, which runs between Windsor and Warren. 

The non wires alternative coordinator issued a report identifying an unwired alternative for our consideration. 

Pursuant to 35A MrsA 30 sec 31 and 32, we first must assess whether there's a public need for the proposed transmission line. 

Here the need has been well documented over the years. The potential need for this project was identified over a decade ago, but deferred for consideration of non transmission alternatives. 

More recently, ISO New England found reliability deficiencies in studies conducted in 2020 and 2021, and reaffirmed the need for this project at a technical conference in February of this year. 

Accordingly, I find that there is a public need as required by Section 31-32. 

The next question is whether the identified need can be reliably met by the non wires alternative. 

What is striking about this record is how many disputes of fact there are around seemingly technical issues. In some cases, the parties seem to be talking past each other with respect to the import or need for certain studies and analysis. 

After reviewing the record, I tend to agree with the examiner's report that the evidence does not support a finding that the proposed non powerline alternative meets the applicable reliability criteria and can rely reliably meet the identified need. 

Of particular significance is the potential impact on the sub transmission system of the non wires alternative. 

The Section 80 rebuild proposal put forward by CMP was limited to the bulk electric system. In contrast, the non wires alternative relies on upgrades to the underlying 35.5 KV system. CMP's analysis identified adverse impacts on the lower voltage system that would need to be resolved. 

The NWA coordinator did not study this impact and offered no analysis to counter this evidence.

Another issue in dispute was whether to consider the winter peak. Doing so is consistent with their criteria. And there's significant evidence in the record that questions the adequacy of relying on DRS as proposed to the NWA during the winter peak.

 Given the reliance on solar generation, it'd be irresponsible not to consider whether the reliability achieved in the summer months would apply to the winter peak as well. 

For these reasons, as well as others detailed in the examiner's report, I find there's insufficient evidence in the record to support the contention that the non wires alternative can reliably meet the identified need. 

Even if it could, it is doubtful the nonwires alternative could do so more cost effectively. The benefit cost analysis shows a razor thin net benefit, it does not include significant costs, including the need for additional upgrades to make the non wires alternative reliable solution. 

Accordingly, I would grant CMPs petition for Certificate of Public convenience and necessity. 

While I cannot accept this particular non wireless alternative, I do want to emphasize the importance of exploring cost effective alternatives to transmission. 

With a new statutory planning process for our largest electric utility utilities, there may be opportunities to improve and strengthen the NWA process going forward. 

Finally, there were many comments to this docket with respect to a particular customer Nordic Aqua farms. I want to be clear that the evidence of the record demonstrates that the rebuild of Section 80 would be needed even without the potential future load growth from Nordic Aqua farms. 

Moreover, utilities are prohibited from unfairly discriminating against customers. And the commission generally has no role in deciding whether a particular customer shouldn't be allowed to interconnect electric system so long as they can do so safely and reliably. 

Commissioner Randall Davis:

" The OPA's  April 15th exceptions to the April 6 Examiner's Report urges the commission to reject the examiner's report recommendations and deny Central Maine Power a Certificate of Public convenience and necessity for the Section 80 project at this time. 

I am not persuaded by the OPAs arguments. Under other circumstances, I believe that many technical and engineering questions would or at least could have been answered.

I cannot decipher whether the unanswered questions are related to the passage of time, which has been approximately 14 years since a Section 80 rebuild was first proposed, or perhaps the changes in legal statutes or jurisdictional changes between the local TND and ISO New England over the 14 years are driving the lack of clarity. 

Most every project is faced with ever changing decision inputs and assumptions for the future, with this project being no different. 

What is different with this project is the general agreement among the parties that something must be done, and I believe that resolution should not wait for an additional undetermined length of time.

For the reasons articulated by Chair Bartlett. I will adopt the examiner's report recommendations. 

Thank you. 

Commissioner Patrick  Scully: 

"I agree with the analysis of my colleagues and I would grant this CPCN (Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity) for the rebuild of Section 80.

As has been said, based on the record, I conclude and there appears to be consensus among the parties, that of reliability need exist.. 

I'm unconvinced, based upon the record in this matter, that the proposed NWA meets that reliability need, particularly with respect to the two issues Chair Bartlett identified, involving both the winter peak question and the potential impacts on the sub-transmission system. 

And I find that the benefit-cost analysis of the proposed NWA does not support it as a less cost costly alternative, as it is, in best case, extraordinarily close . 

And very likely, if not certainly, doesn't reflect all of the costs that would be necessary to ensure that the NWA was built in a manner that preserve the reliability of the system. Thank you.

END OF PUC ON  SECTION 80



Aug 13, 2021

Belfast City Council 8/12/21 special hearing on taking tidal conservation land for Nordic's proposed tankfarm waste pipeline.

On August 12th the City of Belfast held a briefing, public hearing , council discussion then vote   on the proposal to exert eminent domain  and seize the intertidal flats owned by longtime landowner Jeffrey Mabee et al.   Have a listen or download mp3s of the meeting


HOW IT WENT The meeting begins with a brief introduction, Then comes  a 50 minute presentation by  city attorney William  Kelly, spinning the permit review history of this project in support  of exerting  eminent domain. 

The hearing next switches to a two hour  public hearing (each speaker awarded 3 minutes) most challenging attorney Kelly's statements, but some supportive of seizing the land (names in red ink, below). Some, as in Ms Braybrook's  dramatic readings of  anonymous testifiers,  may have violated the hearing rules that all submitters of testimony.comments be ID'd.  

Public Speakers 8/12/21   
Remote Speakers
Paul Bernacki  OPPOSED
Allen Cohen  Winterport  OPPOSED
Andrew Plessner STANDISH   SUPPORT
David Perkins  L'ville  OPPOSED notes fishing
David Smith Belfast retired teacher OPPOSED
Dick Swain  OPPOSED 
Jeffrey Mabee Belfast.    OPPOSED
Jeff Limlin, Belfast  SUPPORTS
Glenn Montgomery Belfast NEUTRAL/ SUPPORTS
Jeffrey Bast, Northport/Bayside OPPOSED
Karen Estie  SUPPORTS
Kathryn Shagas  Belfast OPPOSED
Kathy Hayes/ SUPPORTS 
Diane Braybrook  SUPPORTS - 10 Phantom quotes 
Lily Piel belfast opposed
Ron Huber  Belfast  opposed 
Seth Thayer Northport SUPPORT 
Steve Byers Waldo   OPPOSED 
Suzanne Stone Belfast   OPPOSED
Zafra Whitcomb Belfast    SUPPORTS
There were 65 in the Zoom Queue. Many only there as listeners not testifiers.

LIVE SPEAKERS AT MEETING 16 ALL OPPOSED
Janie Philips Opposed
Amy Grant, Belfast Opposed
Mike Samway Bayside in 1940s Opposed
Kim Tucker, Opposed
Debbie Smith, Opposed
Christopher Grodin, Belfast  Opposed animal cruelty
Deborah Capwell,  Belfast  Opposed
Jane Giles, Belfast. Reads joint letter of Tozier Street residents opposed to em domain
Walden Merkel,   Belfast   Opposed
Jim Merkel, Belfast Opposed
Frances Pan(?), Belfast  Opposed
 Christopher Hyk, Jr Belfast   Opposed
Jim Campbell, Belfast  Opposed
Jonathan Fulford, Belfast   Opposed Climate change
Rachel Herberner,  Belfast. Opposed. Climate change
Douglas Misca.  Bayside  Opposes Eminent domain before court decision.

 Finally  Part three it becomes an hourlong City Council discussion on the merits of the issues and concerns raised by the public, concluding with a council member's variant on a standard "used to be from Away", mobile-home-evoking stump rant glorifying Belfast's Company Town capitalism of the past as precursor to a foreign-owned tankfish  farming future  before the council finally finally got him to stop. They then voted unanimously in favor of the proposal  to seize the Intertidal Conservation Area.  
So it goes.


Jun 19, 2021

Second Battle for the Bay begins in Superior Court June 21st. Fierce fighting against salmon tankfarming menace in Belfast to reach critical point

Attorneys for two bay defender groups have joined forces in a combined effort to fend off invading Norwegian corporadoes threatening Belfast Bay.   From June 21-24 their case, the "Matter of Mabee and Grace v. Nordic Aquafarms, Inc" (14pg pdf), will be tried before Justice Robert E. Murray in Belfast Superior Court.

At the above link, read the conservationists' brief to Superior Court in Belfast 

At trial,  Plaintiffe Upstream Watch (“Upstream”), Plaintiffs Jeffrey Mabee and Judith Grace (“Mabee/Grace”), and Friends Of the Harriet L. Hartley Conservation Area (“Friends”) will prove that: 

(i) the easterly boundary of Janet and Richard Eckrotes’ (collectively, “Eckrotes”) [...] is the high water mark of Penobscot Bay; and

(ii) the intertidal land abutting the Morgan’s, 1 Eckrotes’, and Schweikerts’ upland was initially retained by Harriet L. Hartley at the time of the conveyance of upland to Fred Poor and then subsequently conveyed to William and Pauline Butler (collectively, “Butlers”) in 1950.  Mabee/Grace now own the intertidal land that adjoins their upland,  and the upland properties now owned by Morgan, the Eckrotes, and the Schweikerts. 2

NORDIC WILL RESPOND

Nordic will argue that: 

(i) the phrase “along high-water mark of Penobscot Bay” in the 1946 Hartley-to-Poor deed3 and the 1964 Bells-to-Grady deed is a “call to the water” that actually means the low water mark of Penobscot Bay which did not cause a severing of the upland from the intertidal flats; and

 (ii) the Eckrotes always understood that they owned the intertidal land on which their lot fronts. However, neither the Eckrotes nor Party-inInterest Morgan—whose waterfront boundary is primarily derived from the same Hartley-to-Poor deed—have proof of title to this intertidal land beyond the speculations and erroneous legal interpretations offered by Nordic, previously rejected by this Court in its June 4, 2020 Order denying Plaintiffs’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. 

We'll keep an eye on this fast moving fight.

Dec 18, 2020

Upstream Watch files appeal of Maine's okay of Nordic AQ's permits

 On December 16, 2020 environmental group Upstream Watch filed an 80-C appeal of a recent Maine Board of Environmental Protection's  approval  of water and air pollution permits  for Nordic Aquafarms.  (Read appeal below) The company has proposed  building a large land based salmon farm in Belfast, Maine that would  take in water from Penobscot Bay  and discharge treated fish wastewater back into the bay.  Below, read the  28 page Upstream Watch appeal, and separately its attachments (PDFs)

Upstream Watch 80-C Superior Court appeal 12/16/20  28 pages.

Attachment A 

Attachment B

Attachment C

Attachment D

Attachment E

Attachment Maps

DEP memo NAF May 20- 21, 2020

Attachment. Service letters







Nov 21, 2020

Nordic Aqua Farms state permits: final BEP hearing 11/19/2020 AUDIO mp3s


On November 19, 2020 Maine Board of Environmental Protection held its regular meeting by ZOOM. One of the topics at the meeting: Nordic Aquafarms  DEP permits.  Listen to selections from the meeting

NORDIC

Closing arguments at start of hearing   Full 11/1920  BEP  Nordic hearing 2hrs

1.Closing Arguments_Intro and Dacid Lossee Upstream Watch 10min30sec

2. Barry Costa_Pierce U New England_8min33sec.mp3

3 Eric Heim NAF  6min 6sec

Closing argument Kim Tucker MLU  2min11sec

5. Michael Lannon Northport Village Corp (NVC) 3min 49sec   

DISCUSSIONS

Sue Lessard discussion DEP response to plant emergencies 16min

Sue Lessard 2. Discussion DEP oversight of Special  Conditions  6min23sec


Another topic at BEP meeting   NECEC Powerline Plan - Listen to 15min discussion at Maine BEP's 11/19/20 meeting, led by BEP executive analyst Bill Hinkel. TOPIC NRCM's appeal to BEP against transfer of ownership of planned powerline to new corporate LLC . What BEP decides.

Oct 14, 2020

Nordic's new intertidal gambit: Hartley v Hartley?

 Six brief legal notices of land transactions between Belfast property owners and Nordic Aquafarms  appeared the other day in the Belfast Republican Journal.  PDFs of each, below.

Nordic is apparently attempting to show a new interpretation of Harriet Hartley's property transactions involving the shore and intertidal lands of the northern half of the Little River delta.

David Nelson Woods to Nordic Aquafarms Inc.

Marcia L. Woods to Nordic Aquafarms Inc.

Robert L. Burger II to Nordic Aquafarms Inc.

Thomas A. Burger to Nordic Aquafarms Inc.

Robert L. Burger to Nordic Aquafarms Inc.

Karen L. Stockunas, Sandra L. Bell, David Wesley Bell, Constance Daily and Barbara Bell to Nordic Aquafarms Inc


Jun 27, 2020

Bay activists critical of federal approval of Nordic Aquafarms dredging and sedimentanalysis plan for its proposed fifhfarm's water/wastewater pipelines.

Attorney Kim Ervin Tucker has been a leader of the effort to keep Land based fishfarm wannabee Nordic Aquafarms building and operating i.e. discharging wastewater from their project into Befast Bay and Penobscot Bay, She is representing the Maine Lobstering Union and the Friends of the Harriet L. Hartley Conservation Area in opposing to the Nordic Aquafarms plan

 
Kim Ervin Tucker:
"The proposed sediment testing plan, as it must for CWA Section 404 reasons, includes the intertidal land that is protected by a recorded Conservation Easement that my clients, Jeffrey Mabee and Judith Grace, own and my other clients, the Friends of the Harriet L. Hartley Conservation Area, hold.  I have repeatedly filed documentation demonstrating that NAF has no legally cognizable expectation to use this intertidal land." 
.......

"The SAP [Sampling and Analysis Plan] fails to require any sediment testing in the submerged lands area where NAF proposes to place pipes above ground after “grading and filling” to place brackets holding these pipes above the seafloor every 15 feet, secured by cement anchors into this methane-rich, unstable holocene mud.":  

"The USACE is aware of the instability of the sediment in this area and the significant methane deposits in this area — it is part of the reason this area has been determined to be unsuitable for dredge spoils disposal since at least 1999.  

I"n light of the SAP’s acknowledgement that this area has buried HoltraChem mercury in the upper 1-foot of sediment — including in the area proposed for “grading and filling” that would likely disturb and re-suspend this buried mercury — this omission from the SAP is inexplicable and needs to be corrected immediately."


That is what caught my attenti0n
 


Jun 21, 2020

BEP meeting 5/20/20/NORDIC related memos at meeting


Maine Board of Environmental Protection Received guidance memos from Gerald D. Reid, Commissioner  Kevin Martin, Compliance & Procedures Specialist, Office of the Commissioner  Gregg Wood, Director, Division of Water Quality Management


DEP Bureau of Land Resources (BLR) 5/20/20 briefing memos
All 5/20/20 briefing memos_50 pages
Memo sections
Intro to BLR memos (Staff)
Ransom Construction details  (Ransom Consulting)
Ransom  Appendix C dredging (Rasnsom Consulting
\

Feb 22, 2019

Panel discussion held on Nordic Aquafarms in Camden 2/21/19. Audio of the event

Complete Feb 21, 2019 panel discussions & Q&A on land based aquaculture, at the Camden Public Library.  MP3s

On Feb 21, 2019 a panel discussion on land based aquaculture and the health of  Penobscot  Bay was held in the Camden Public Library.

Hosted by Kathy Cartwright  Midcoast Audubon, the panel included, Retired EPA regulator Andrew Stevenson, Kathleen Thornton of Darling Center for Marine Science, and Belfast city councilor Eric Sanders. Moderated by John Morrison, WWF 















END

Jul 14, 2018

Regarding Penobscot Bay Aquaculture initiatives

Appleton citizen Randall Parr addresses common concerns about the proposal for land based salmon farming

Apprehensions been voiced about land-based Atlantic Salmon farms proposed near Penobscot Bay.

In their aquatic environment over 95 percent of baby wild salmon die before adulthood, while most of those in salmon farms fed copious amounts of food without predation should live through maturity.

Fish oil, which fresh Salmon when eaten as food provide, contain Omega-3 fatty acids that help heart and circulatory systems is prescribed by doctors to reduce risk of coronary heart disease, the leading cause of death for humankind. Salmon also contain Vitamin D, Riboflavin, Calcium, Phosphorus, Iron,  Zinc, Iodine, Magnesium, and Potassium. The American Heart Association recommends eating fish at least twice a week as part of a healthy diet.

Concerns were raised about the quantity of water Salmon farms would extract to circulate in fish tanks from wells in Belfast. Copious rainfalls in recent years continue to amply recharge aquifers in coastal Maine, and unlimited seawater is available for desalinization for land-based fish farms.

Land-based Atlantic Salmon farms can be expected to increase jobs, incomes, sales, tax revenues, and economic activity. These projects should expand the economy, reduce youth out-migration which has bedeviled Maine for decades, keep small businesses alive, and workers busy.

Fecal discharges through underwater pipes extending into Penobscot Bay from shore in Belfast has  been another concern of citizens. Predicted waste pipe contents have not yet been made public, but filtered salmon excrement is expected to be its principle contents. Due to over-fishing and other reasons, wild Haddock, Cod, Swordfish, Tuna, Atlantic Salmon and other Penobscot Bay fish populations have fallen in recent years, reducing the natural recurrence of fish excrement in the water.

Fish poop augments water plant propagation like fertilizer stimulates vegetable growth on land. Containing nitrogen and nutrients, fish waste nourishes species at the bottom of the food chain, which sustains fish and sea creatures that eat them and others that feed on them.

Chlorophyll-containing green water plants also photosynthesize oxygen from carbon dioxide in seawater so that fish can absorb it through their gills into their bloodstreams like mammals do from air through our lungs. If current aquaculture initiatives pan out, wild Cod, Haddock, Tuna and Swordfish poop reduction, due to decline of these species may be offset by farmed Salmon waste, which could increase sea life in the bay and make wild fish more abundant.

Some are afraid that forest wild life habitat will be clear cut to build this facility. Citizens should participate in this process to prevent that.

We should encourage these initiatives but ensure they have positive environmental impacts by participating in the process.

Randall Parr
Appleton, ME 04862

Jun 28, 2018

Maine land-based salmon farming. Business, State and federal officials involved

INDUSTRY Contacts
Nordic Aquafarms
Erik Heim, CEO Nordic Aquafarms, Inc.    erik.heim@nordicaquafarms.com
Public affairs Ted O’Meara  ted@tedomearacommunications.com 
+47 900 74 907 (207) 653-2392

Whole Oceans    
Robert Piaiso CEO (207) 747-1400
Ben Willauer CDO bwillauer@wholeoceans.com
Jennifer Fortier Outreach & Development Associate (207) 747-1400
Bill Taylor of Pierce Atwood 207) 791-1100 WO's Attorney  

STATE 
Maine DEP Gregg Wood  Gregg.Wood@maine.gov
* Fish Rearing Facilities

Inland Fish & Wildlife ?  Bureau of Resource Mgmt  (207) 287-8000

DMR Jon Lewis Aquaculture Div dir jon.lewis@maine.gov 633-9594              Maine Coastal Program Kathleen Leyden. kathleen.leyden@maine.gov             287-3144 cell: 557-4014

* Agriculture  Conservation and Forestry Michele Walsh, Maine State Veterinarian Michele.walsh@maine.gov; (207) 287-7615
http://www.maine.gov/dacf/ahw/animal_health/landbased-aquaculture.shtml

FEDS  
Army Corps of Engineers  - 2 staff
Nordic Peter Tischbein.623-8367 ext 3 Peter.Tischbein@usace.army.mil
Whole Oceans Shawn Mahaney .623-8367   shawn.b.mahaney@usace.army.mil
* EPA  Danielle Gaito (gaito.danielle@epa.gov) (617) 918-1297
*NMFS   Max Tritt  Fishery Biologist for Maine Atlantic Salmon.
207-866-7322. max.tritt@noaa.gov

* US FWS Wende Mahaney Wende_Mahaney@fws.gov
(207) 902-1569    Maine Field office


Land-based salmon farming in Maine - how oversight went from DMR to DACF

On November 11, 2017, Maine PUBLIC LAW 2017 CHAPTER 94 came into effect.
Titled  An Act To Transfer Responsibility for Licensing of Landbased Aquaculture from the Department of Marine Resources to the Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry"  It describes the authority for the transfer to the land agriculture agency and how it will decide how safe these are.

Says Department of Agriculture Conservation and Forestry will deny land based salmon aquaculture licenses, if  either DMR or IFW informs DACF  "that the aquaculture activity presents an unreasonable risk to indigenous marine or freshwater life or its environment.Sounds like a strongish standard (no "unreasonable risk"), but only as strong as the information that the agencies have to determine its reasonableness or unreasonableness. Given tthis is new hitherto unused technology, it won't be easy.

Text of Public Law 2017 Ch 94 Law: 
(Sentences separated for ease of reading)

"Transfers authority for the licensing of land-based aquaculture from the Department of Marine Resources and Inland Fisheries & Wildlife to the Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry. 

"The Commissioner of DACF shall refuse to issue a license if the Commissioner receives information from the Commissioner of either DMR or DIFW that the aquaculture activity presents an unreasonable risk to indigenous marine or freshwater life or its environment. 

"The risk factors that DMR and DIFW shall consider include but are not limited to: risk of accidental or intentional introduction of marine or freshwater organisms, or organism products, into the waters of the State, risk of the introduction or spread of disease within the State and interference with the enforcement of possession, size or season limits for wild marine or freshwater organisms. 
"
The Commissioner of DACF shall monitor licensed facilities annually and if there are risks noted such as listed above the Commissioner shall notify DIFW and DMR"

(End )

Feb 22, 2018

Belfast: Nordic Aquafarms presentation on plan for world's largest upland salmon farm.

On February 21, 2018, representatives of Nordic Aquafarms gave a well attended presentation at the Hutchinson Center in Belfast on their plan to build and operate the world's biggest upland salmon farm.  Listen below to the presentation by Nordic CEO Erik Heim and the lengthy question and answer session.

Introduction by Belfast Mayor Paradis. 3min 19sec

Presentation by Nordic CEO  Erik Heim 33min

Question & Answer session


Part 1. 9min 36sec


Part 2 8min

Part 3. 10 min 5sec

Part 4. 9min 19sec

Part 5. 9min 25sec

Part 6 8min 25sec

Part 7 10min 45 sec

Part 8 6min 53sec

Closing Remarks 3min 7 sec