FishyLeaks today (8 January 2013) published leaked internal e-mails from a whistleblower inside the Scottish Salmon Company - the company who kicked the viper's nest.
The leaked e-mails reveal the utter contempt foreign-owned salmon farming companies have for local communities in the Western Isles of Scotland. “Let the locals get used to it” is the privately held view of a company publicly listed on the Norwegian Stock Exchange, registered in Jersey and owned by a who’s who of Swiss and Norwegian banks and investors (over 85% of Scottish salmon farming production is now controlled by foreign - mostly Norwegian – interests exported to overseas markets such as China).
One community on the Isle of Harris in the Outer Hebrides is disparaged by the Scottish Salmon Company’s ‘Environmental Manager’ Rebecca Dean as a “vipers nest” despite a company policy which advocates “building strong relationships with the community”.
“Yes, there is a biomass strategy target, and I am well aware of it and we will max out what we can, where we can,” writes Rebecca Dean. “But Plocrapol is a guaranteed vipers nest, with the huge delays that will create, and the demands on Council (and The Scottish Salmon Company) time, could be better spent on other sites that may be less oppositional (couldn't get much worse than Ploc...well, there is always Arran of course...or Toa, but).”
"Let’s spend the energy fighting those battles, and filling the Council’s time,” writes the Scottish Salmon Company’s ‘Environmental Manager’ who recommends focussing on expansion in the Uists. “We might as well try avoid, for now at least, the ones we are certain will be lengthy, tiring, negative PR battles.”
“I absolutely agree we look where there is less chance of time consuming opposition,” replies the Scottish Salmon Company’s CEO Stewart McLelland who admits expansion at their disease-ridden Isle of Arran farm at Lamlash Bay is “difficult”. “This way we ensure we get the good publicity and demonstrate the advantages of working together,” he writes. “What we need to do is have a session just on the Hebrides to discuss strategy then tactics.”
With these leaked internal documents published via FishyLeaks and the prospect of further revelations, the Scottish Salmon Company’s policy of avoiding what it refers to as “angst” and “hoo-haa” has now come back to bite it on the corporate ass.
“The Scottish Salmon Company is a venomous snake in the grass,” said Don Staniford of the Global Aquaculture Alliance Against Industrial Aquaculture who received the leaked documents anonymously in the mail. “Thanks to this brave whistleblower the Scottish public can now see the poisonous bile being spewed by this shameless Swiss/Norwegian-owned company. Local communities across the Highlands and Islands are now fighting back against the deadly diseases and PR poison being peddled by the foreign-owned salmon farming companies choking the lifeblood out of the Scottish coast.”
“Don’t be fooled by the oily handshakes of corporate Fish Farming PR,” urged the Outer Hebrides Against Fish Farms in November 2012. “Get the facts from independent sources…but remember a lot of the facts that shame this industry are hidden behind government supported nets of secrecy.”
Community opposition to the Scottish Salmon Company is growing across Scotland. On the Isle of Lewis and Isle of Harris, the campaign group Outer Hebrides Against Fish Farms is fighting expansion plans by the Scottish Salmon Company.
Photo: Protestors outside Bays Community Centre, Harris, in December 2012
“Stewart McLelland’s Trump-like rant in last week’s Gazette was wholly inaccurate, and it is very worrying that the CEO of a company with such grave responsibility for the stewardship of the environment should refuse to address a single point of fact we raised in our press release,” wrote Peter Urpeth of the Outer Hebrides Against Fish Farms in a letter published in the Stornoway Gazette (6 December 2012). “His company signs up to a code of guidance on good practice in farm fish production, established by the industry itself, and does so in order to secure planning permission for new sites. But that code of guidance is both ineffective and, due to such factors as the rapid spread of disease and the ineffectiveness of treatments for infestations, impossible for fish farmers to implement – let alone the times when it is simply not followed, as our figures revealed.”
“Last week we saw a load of 26 tonnes heading down to Uist to get buried,” said Harris fisherman Angus Campbell in an interview with STV News (11 October 2012). “It’s just incredible the amount of dead fish coming out of these sites.”
Watch video reports via “Salmon Farms Displace Fishermen in Scotland” and “Future of Fishing Compromised by Fish Farms”
Read more via FishyLeaks and the media backgrounder online here
Read more revelations from the whistleblower inside the Scottish Salmon Company online here and online here
Comments
You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.