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Showing posts with label Whole Oceans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Whole Oceans. Show all posts

Jan 18, 2020

Maine Aquaculture R&D and Education Summit 1/17/2020 Audio Pt 2 .RAS.

On January 17, 2020, the Maine Aquaculture Innovation Center hosted "Maine Aquaculture Research, Development and Education Summit" at the University of Maine Hutchinson Center.  (Read event agenda)  Listen to part 2 The role of RAS systems

*1. RAS Part 1 Public Outreach 19min

*2 RAS  Public Outreach  Introductions

* David  Noyes   Nordic Aquafarms_intro_1min

*3 RAS Public Outreach. Megan Sorby Kingfish Zeeland 8min

*4. RAS  Public Outreach Jennifer Fortier Whole Oceans 2minb47sec

*5  Fish feeds updates discussion 27min 





Mar 10, 2019

News: Second Battle of Penobscot Bay. Melee of estuary and aquaculture interests over fate of estuary

For Immediate Release
PENOBSCOT ESTUARY This dynamic zone, where the dissolved tincture of 8,000 forested square miles of interior Maine  encounters the  Penobscot Bay pressing its salty tides inland, is become a war zone. (cont'd below image)
For more than a year, multinational  and local aquaculture interests, pitted against  community activists  and bay fishery and conservation groups, have  brawled their way through municipal and state hearings and  public events.

Now foes of two land based aquaculture plans, flush from bringing  the  permit review of one to a standstill, are pressing the legislature to make state regulators "think like an estuary" with a series of reform and science bills, the first of which  LD 620 An Act Regarding Licensing of Land-based Aquaculture Facilities -  faces its first committee vote Tuesday in Room  214 of the Cross Building.

LD 620 adds this clause twice  to the existing law when it is deciding whether to deny the application or revoke an existing  one. 

"alone in the use of a body of water or in combination with the aquaculture activity of any other land-based aquaculture operations using the same body of water " 

" Estuaries like ours are small enough and their flushing rate slow enough," said bay activist Ron Huber   "that  while one of these landfarms could be an  lawfully defensible burden,  multiple fish farm effluent discharges, especially of  hormones and other biochemicals released by salmon  could  have a demonstrable unacceptable effect."    He said that  the survival of smolts, elvers  and alewives  transiting the estuary in their migrations could be put at risk. (Continued below image)

The bill gives the Department of Agriculture Conservation and Forestry the authority to  require its consulting agencies, DEP, DMR and DIFW  to prepare a cumulative impacts assessment  when multiple salmon tankfarms  are proposed for a single estuary/ 

Without this,  reformers warn,  Maine is in danger of triggering a goldrush  scramble  for permits  and land leases along the lower river and upper bay.    "I've looked at dozens of Maine agency comments on big  coastal developments and small." said Huber  "Concerns about  the cumulative impact of new projects  when combined with existing ones, rarely enter the calculations. "

One 


LD 620 empowers the Dept of Agriculture to  produce a  big picture of what decisionmakers can expect  for the greater estuary if they approve going ahead with an additional salmon tankfarm. This is vital to smart bay management. 

Agency review of Nordic Aqua Farm's ambitious plan for building one of the world's largest land-based salmon aquaculture facilities  has been suspended, after a sharp-eyed activist tipped attorneys  for NGO Upstream Watch and Maine Lobstering Union, to a glaring fault in the project design,.

Attention has turned to Augusta,  where Tuesday the legislature's  Agriculture, Forestry and Conservation Committee will examine its evidence and conscience, then approve, amend or kill  LD 620 the aquaculture reform  bill.    

Filling the Gap  Critics say the state is so new to land based salmon farming that its selected overseer, the Department of Agriculture Conservation and Forestry, has yet to put together rules and regulations to interpret the one page law, 7 MRSA §1501."Land-based Aquaculture license".  

"Taking on a multinational industry with a flimsy one page statute and non existent rules is an open invitation  to repeat the disastrous start of Maine's fishpen salmon aquaculture in the early 1990s." Huber warned legislators at their earlier public hearing on the bill. "That is when  investors triggered  a gold rush for permits, that were grandfathered in under the then-new  salmon fish pen laws.  Don't worry, they said."

What happened? Too many salmon farms, licensed too close to each other in too many environmentally sketchy areas . The fouled seafloors, disease and parasites  that these immense unmoving schools of salmon  stimulated were as bad for the natural ecosystem outside the pens as for those inside.

It took years  and much bad blood between  conservation and fish pen farmers to bring salmon net penning down to more realistic levels.

"We do  NOT want to go down that same path with a flurry of land based salmon farms pumping effluent into the Penobscot Estuaruy . But we will if we don't  use LD 620 to let the agency take these first steps  slowly."








END

Feb 5, 2019

Whole Oceans as of January 2019

Since  its March 20, 2018 public presentation,   Whole Oceans LLC has rather sailed through a six month journey from application to state permit approval on November  22, 2018. 

This was followed by a  12/17/18 appeal of Whole Oceans permit by bay citizen  Holly Faubel . The  administrative appeal was dismissed January 17, 2019  by Maine Board of Environmental Protection   based on the state's questionable  challenging of her legal standing  - not on the risk identified by Faubel of boosted methylmercury production, and  its circulation into the western bay - her neighborhood -  - thanks to boosted  & concentrated salmon manure production at that critical Bucksport location. See  Faubel's  References & data pages  There, a remnant elemental mercury pool is pushed to and fro by tide and current - and reacts with nutrients such as the  RAS salmon excrete by methylizing with it into much more neurotoxic methylmercury .

There things stand for the moment. Now it is time for state legislative initiatives

Nov 23, 2018

Mercury levels off Bucksport: safe for RAS salmon farming?

From: Lower Penobscot River Mercury Study   2006-2007  See study documents repository 

Sample study site PBR 27B is next to Whole Oceans proposed  RAS salmon tankfarm location. 


In Figure 5-9 , below, study site  PBR 27B is 5th highest of 24 sample sites tested

Jul 7, 2018

Whole Oceans discharge application online. Shows importance of chemical biosecurity.

Maine DEP recently released an application by land based salmon farm developer Whole Oceans. READ IT,  AT LINKS BELOW.   WO proposes to uptake and discharge millions of gallons of water to and from the tidal Penobscot River as it passes Bucksport.

The uptaken river waters will be lived within and breathed for a day by millions of atlantic salmon,  replaced by  continually imported riverwater, passing it through the fishes, then discharging into Penobscot River. Maine DEP is lead state agency  on reviewing the permit water, along with a coterie of commenting state agencies: DMR DIFW, MCP,  Submerged Lands and more.

* Part 1 Discharge application 12 pages

*  Purchase & title 27 pg

* Topographic map 2pgs  Attach c

*  Food Processing Facility permit 6pgs  Attachment D

* US EPA New  Source Dischargers 5pgs

* Water Effluent Flows Sterilizing discharges 4pgs

* Estimated Annual Chemical Use for outfall 003. 2pgs

 * Fish Rearing Application 4pgs

*  Outfall information from WO. 3pgs

*  Description of waste treatment facilities. 10pgs

* Certificate of Public Outreach

*  WO Rsponses to Significant Issues. 3pages


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