
“The camera never lies,” said Jody Eriksson who led the surveillance
operation. “Cermaq have been caught hook, line and stinker. Salmon Are
Sacred and the people of BC stand ready to ground-truth every new
salmon feedlot application, we have learned not to trust government or
the industry.”

“Cermaq’s claim that there is limited life under the proposed location
does not hold water,” said Farlyn Campbell who operated the video
camera. “The Clayoquot Sound UNESCO Biosphere Reserve is a healthy
marine ecosystem rich in spot prawns, eel grass, crabs and coral and not
the marine desert suggested by the application. How could Cermaq get
it so wrong?”
“Cermaq has turned Clayoquot Sound into a
crime scene,”
said Anissa Reed of Salmon Are Sacred. “A UNESCO Biosphere Reserve is
clearly no place to allow one salmon feedlot let alone over twenty.”

The Cermaq application to use Plover Point to dump waste from another
salmon feedlot in Clayoquot Sound will be presented at an open house
public meeting in Tofino today from 4-8pm, 634 Campbell St. and in Port
Alberni, 3555 5
th Ave 4-8pm on Thursday (16 June). Although
the application is posted on the Ministry of Agriculture and Lands
website and public submissions can be made
online until 18th June
the links to the full 380-page application say “file not found” leaving
the public unable read Mainstream’s application. Calls to the Ministry
failed to produce the files.
Friends of Clayoquot Sound
say the Plover Point area is “rich with marine life,” “frequented by
sea lions, porpoises, sea birds, and orcas” with a seal haul-out at
Plover Point. Stream assessments found cutthroat trout and salmon
nearby. There are also productive clam beds along the shores of the
Meares Island Tribal Park, as well as eelgrass and kelp beds and herring
spawning areas.

“What gives a Norwegian-owned corporation the right to pollute BC waters and put whole ecosystems at risk?” says
Friends of Clayoquot Sound.
Salmon Are Sacred would like to know how Mainstream could make the mistake of suggesting Plover Point is a polluted seafloor.
Later this afternoon, Salmon Are Sacred will be delivering fish farm
manure back to Cermaq in Tofino. In April, Salmon Are Sacred’s ‘Cut the
Crap’ campaign first revealed
video footage of salmon farm waste smothering the sea floor near Cermaq and Marine Harvest farms in the Broughton Archipelago and
returned fish farm manure to their offices in Campbell River. In May, more fish farm manure was delivered to the
BC Parliament in Victoria.