A growing number of communities along Maine’s coast are enacting moratoriums on large-scale aquaculture operations as citizen opposition grows.
5 Reasons You Should Avoid Eating Farmed Fish
Farmed Salmon: Is It Bad for You and the Environment?
One of the most commonly farmed species today is salmon, often in intensive operations. Since the 1960s in fact, salmon farming has risen in popularity — today it produces 70 percent of the world’s salmon. Intensive fish farms raise large numbers of salmon in tightly confined spaces, which has consequences not just for the fish, but also for human health and the environment.
Maine lobstermen win appeal over new restrictions to protect right whales
With American Aquafarms farm stalled in Maine, Keith Decker resigns as CEO, moves to sell processing plant
Keith Decker, who joined American Aquafarms as its CEO in October 2021, announced his resignation in early May and is now seeking to sell his share in the facility the company planned to use for its processing operations.
Protests opposed to aquaculture target NOAA after release of scoping report
“Fishermen do not support aquaculture products that remove productive fishing grounds from harvest opportunity,” the Alliance of Communities for Sustainable Fisheries said in its comments to NOAA. “We have lost, and are continuing to use, areas to MPA’s [Marine Protected Areas], wind energy projects, telecommunication cables, shipping lanes, etc.
Waldoboro Residents to Consider Aquaculture Moratorium at Annual Town Meeting
Waldoboro residents will vote on a warrant article this June that could determine the future of the Medomak River. A moratorium ordinance regarding aquaculture project leases issued by the state is expected on the warrant while the town develops a permanent ordinance restricting the state-issued leases, which could stop them entirely.
April 2023 Update
The news is intensifying around industrial scale aquaculture along the Maine coast and across the world. Farmed salmon in the ocean is at the forefront in Canada. Our neighbors to the north are just the latest hitting the pause button on industrial-scale aquaculture as communities tackle the future of their coasts. In Maine, that conversation has not happened and in our opinion it should.
Liens placed on American Aquafarms as company ponders next move
American Aquafarms’ proposed penned salmon farm in Frenchman Bay may be dead in the water as originally proposed after the state terminated lease applications for two 60-acre sites, but the Norwegian-backed company still owes money in Maine and owns property in Prospect Harbor.