Extreme Activism #1 (in an occasional series @tavishscott): After dressing the kids, dropping Dad off at the dentist, walking the dog & washing up I clicked onto a Government website to check for infectious diseases killing Scottish salmon @marinescotland https://t.co/r6jks42ZdA
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) April 8, 2021
When the chief executive of the Scottish Salmon Producers Organisation (the lobby group for the Norwegian Salmafia controlling ca. 80% of 'Scottish' salmon farming) labelled me an 'extreme activist' several times on BBC Scotland's 'The Nine' last week (6 April 2021), it got me thinking about what action it takes to earn the moniker "extreme activist".
World Exclusive: What does it take to be labelled an "extreme activist"? I've been called many things - 'eco-terrorist', 'salmon farming nemesis', 'fish farm bogeyman', 'prophet of doom', 'salmon's No.1 enemy' & 'c**t' (I get that a lot). Here's the scoop!https://t.co/lNyg86xk9f pic.twitter.com/pr5hcUqsIU
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) April 14, 2021
I am happy to wear it as a badge of honour rather than the slur that was intended by Tavish Scott, former leader of the Scottish Liberal Democrats and now a lobbyist caught lying for the Scottish Salmon Producers Organisation. Don't forget also that 99% of 'Scottish' salmon is controlled by six foreign owned companies with Norwegian money accounting for ca. 80% of 'Scottish' salmon farming production.
Fair enough, I have climbed up tankers full of diseased farmed fish exposing the shocking mortality levels of Scottish salmon (sometimes even in the rain and in the dark without even asking permission from the salmon farming company - as featured in Netflix's 'Seaspiracy'). And I have been so extremely smelly - the rotten fish guts, maggots and skin get encrusted into your trainers - that I once needed three showers to get the smell off. Now that's extremely uncomfortable - especially for RSPCA Assured salmon farming companies who have to respond to questions from journalists.
Last year I even vomited after filming RSPCA Assured dead fish at a Mowi salmon farm on the Isle of Skye.
That same evening in July 2020 I had the extreme nerve to walk onto a public pier - that's right, you heard it here: a pier which is open to the public - and film diseased 'Scottish' salmon in broad daylight.
And I have kayaked out from a public beach perhaps over half a mile to film secretly inside lice-infested salmon farms which operate in public waters (even if sometimes I don't even paddle as someone else is doing all the donkey work!).
As you can see we sometimes head out in treacherous conditions and extreme weather.
Once I wasn't feeling extremely active so I lazily took a boat out to a remote salmon farm and filmed how dead farmed salmon were disposed of with baths of Formic acid (it was extremely exciting and brought back memories of Harvey Keitel playing 'The Cleaner' in The Assassin/Point of No Return).
Another time I climbed over a gate just off a main road near Oban one sunny evening and filmed more Formic acid bath disposal and bins full of RSPCA Assured Scottish salmon.
I've even had the extreme cheek to question the authority of Police Scotland (who were forced to apologise last year after acting as private security to Norwegian-owned Scottish Sea Farms) and even went so far as to write a letter raising safety concerns.
Last year, I had the extreme audacity to question the ethical nature of the Norwegian Government's investments in ca. 80% of 'Scottish' salmon farming.
Did you know that the Norwegian Government's Pension Fund (derived from Norway's oil revenues) is the largest or 2nd largest shareholder in companies which account for 80% of 'Scottish' salmon farming? @Folketrygdfond @MowiScotlandLtd @salmon_scottish https://t.co/4P1m3g2CvT pic.twitter.com/Sl6bFlcwaK
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) November 30, 2020
Once - and I still can't quite believe I had the gall to do this - I walked down a public street in Charlotte Square in Edinburgh and filmed outside the First Minister of Scotland's residence which was sandwiched by properties owned by the then largest shareholder in The Scottish Salmon Company.
Caught on Camera - Mowi's Reckless Breaches of Health & Safety in Loch Alsh! https://t.co/0nvWGe0MkQ Complaint vs @MowiScotlandLtd filed with @H_S_E & @MCA_media Who's policing salmon farms? @policescotland @marinescotland @APHAgovuk @CrownEstateScot @ScottishEPA @HumzaYousaf pic.twitter.com/f4oClqkpiA
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) November 15, 2019
Mowi's lawyers threatened further legal action in September 2020 following visits to other Mowi salmon farms.
Mowi Scotland: "will be forced to take further action unless you co-operate with its requests & desist from further unauthorised access....no choice but to take steps to protect the Company’s Sites, and its rights in relation thereto, through the courts" https://t.co/TRIgbdBz1q pic.twitter.com/PNZpWmva3f
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) September 25, 2020
In September 2019, Mowi was extremely menacing when we visited their salmon farms around Shuna. But I guess when faced with an "extreme activist" dressed up as a seal in a bullet-proof vest and armed with a sampling jar to take water samples in public waters extreme measures are required.
And being extremely stubborn I have fought a number of court cases - win, lose and draw - being described by a judge in Canada as a "zealot" in the process. As a non-religious person, I am certainly not a "a member of a fanatical sect arising in Judea during the first century a.d. and militantly opposing the Roman domination of Palestine" from which true zealots take their name.
I don't even think it is "extreme" to oppose toxic and disease-ridden salmon farming but I take it as a compliment that I am prepared to stand up for what I believe in.
Most of my time is spent not fighting a religious war but sat down on a chair in front of a computer screen trawling through data on mass mortalities published by the Scottish Government's Fish Health Inspectorate (in fact I was so inactive during lockdown that I've put on so much weight that I am now extremely fat - hopefully a Summer of kayaking around Scotland will help shed the pounds!).
If you downloaded this data - supplied by salmon farming companies - would that make you an 'extreme activist'? Go on, I double dare you to be dangerous!
Data Update: 1,886 'Mortality Event Reports' filed in Scotland since 2017 detailing over 21 million dead farmed salmon @marinescotland @SSPOsays @ScotlandMowi @salmon_scottish @scotseafarms @rspcaassured @GriegShetland @CookeScotland @LochDuartSalmonhttps://t.co/tfxR0VWuMN pic.twitter.com/3812SPYKKS
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) March 15, 2021
Or I spend my time (between dropping the kids off at school and picking them up - minus the time walking the dog and trying to persuade my elderly father to get out of bed and take his Alzheimer's pills) trying to decipher the sanitised mortality data published monthly by the Scottish Salmon Producers Organisation.
Shocking Scottish Salmon: 78.3% mortality rate reported at Grieg Seafood's Leinish salmon farm on the Isle of Skye - four out of five @rspcaassured fish died a horrible death! @GriegShetland @SSPOsays @onekindtweet https://t.co/a3w08wp8bt@KateForbesMSP @Ianblackford_MP @WHFP1 pic.twitter.com/wzA2j4E6CD
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) November 6, 2020
Mowi claim that "current monthly survival rates across all its farms exceed 99%". Yet even 1-2% mortality per month at an @rspcaassured salmon farm can add up to well over 30%! @ScotlandMowi @scotseafarms @SSPOsays @salmon_scottish @GriegShetland @ASC_aqua https://t.co/q3jC9vPnbo pic.twitter.com/HAtKsTsYa1
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) April 1, 2021
Or sifting through 'Case Information' published monthly by the Scottish Government's Fish Health Inspectorate (data for 2021 is still not available but data for the whole of 2020 - save a few open case files - is available).
Be warned though as searching through this damning 'Case Information' is time-consuming, eye-opening and may result in the foreign-owned 'Scottish' salmon farming lobby branding you an "extreme activist".
Fresh from Scottish Salmon's Plocropol salmon farm on the Isle of Harris - their "eyes had burst" reported @marinescotland with lesions, physical damage, Piscine Reovirus, lice infestation, torn fins & 80,000+ mortalitieshttps://t.co/1ZYSFmwryO @salmon_scottish @Try_Lochlander pic.twitter.com/VtLxqYulXW
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) March 10, 2021
Mmm Mowi's @rspcaassured farmed salmon from Loch Torridon comes marinaded in diseases & viruses including salmon gill poxvirus, amoebic gill disease & epitheliocystis @ScotlandMowi @marinescotland @SSPOsays @sainsburys @AldiUK @LidlGB @coopuk @waitrose @Tesco @Morrisons @ASC_aqua pic.twitter.com/EbGosMFv56
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) March 9, 2021
Anyone for disease-ridden Scottish salmon fresh from Landcatch marinaded in antibiotic & cancer-causing Formalin? https://t.co/rSvO6Hz6V7 @HGSalmonUK @salmon_scottish New 'Case Information' published today @marinescotland The horror of #Scottish #Salmon @ciwf @PETAUK @APHAgovuk pic.twitter.com/NWDVRGdb4Y
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) April 6, 2020
But sifting through data and reports is certainly safer that climbing up skips full of diseased salmon in the dark or early in the morning.
And it is more enjoyable than badgering the Scottish Environmental Pollution Agency - sorry I meant the Scottish Environment Protection Agency - to hurry up and publish information. Data on the numbers of mortalities on salmon farms in Scotland has not been published since 2012 after lobbying by the SSPO who argued that publication would be "commercially damaging". Data on the use of the shellfish-killing chemicals Azamethiphos, Deltamethrin and Emamectin benzoate is still not available beyond September 2020 (data on the use of Hydrogen peroxide, Formalin/Formaldehyde and antibiotics as well as use of chemicals via well boats is not published at all) via the Scotland's Aquaculture web-site. Maybe it is published on the dark web along with other stolen data?
The Devil is in the Data - why no published figures on the use of the toxic chemicals Azamethiphos, Deltamethrin, Hydrogen Peroxide & Imidacloprid via wellboats? @ScottishEPA @marinescotland @nature_scot @salmon_scottish @FergusEwingMSP @SSPOsays @scotgp https://t.co/ylOo17mBul pic.twitter.com/CDPHpSfBTX
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) November 10, 2020
Be careful on clicking on 'CSV Export' or you could be labelled an "extreme activist"!
Why is Scottish Pollutant Release Inventory data on use of Azamethiphos & Deltamethrin via well boats still not published for 2019 when data on use of toxic chemicals via salmon farms is now available up to March 2020 via Scotland's Aquaculture? @ScottishEPA @marinescotland pic.twitter.com/8wrMq7yTkR
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) July 2, 2020
Under the Cloak of #Coronavirus - SEPA open floodgates to lobster-killing chemicals! https://t.co/6AgXQXNlS2 @ScottishEPA Emamectin benzoate is so toxic to shellfish it should be banned not used at higher concentrations & at unlicensed sites @TerryAHearn @SSPOsays @marinescotland pic.twitter.com/4PVFfGl1NU
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) April 9, 2020
If I'm feeling slightly less active or my RSI is making it difficult to type, I while away my spare time looking at data on salmon farms killing seals (all legal, as sponsored by the Scottish Government, until killing was banned on 31 January 2021) or filing Freedom of Information (FOI) requests for details of seals illegally 'executed' by salmon farms.
Photo Exclusive: Seals 'Executed' by Scottish Salmon https://t.co/88Kn1lZwpx@SSPOsays @salmon_scottish @scotseafarms @strandings @marinescotland @NOAA @RuralPolicySRUC @SRUC @rspcaassured @SSPCA_Mike @SSPCA_Kirsteen @RSPCAChris @Try_Lochlander @coopuk @marksandspencer @Tesco pic.twitter.com/XDimhpTbXi
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) March 8, 2021
Sometimes if I feel extremely curious I file repeated FOI requests for photos of diseased Scottish salmon which despite legal threats from salmon farms were published by the Scottish Government.
Edie Bowles @Animallawyersuk said the dossier, compiled by Don Staniford, a critic of salmon farming, indicated “systemic and obvious” pain & suffering that could justify legal action against @scotgov @MairiGougeon @SSPOsays https://t.co/ZuzAis8gEr @SundayTimesScot @ciwf @scotgp pic.twitter.com/RPVIAL3KlS
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) February 2, 2020
It's not difficult to see why salmon farming lobbyists such as Tavish Scott would desperately attempt to stop the public from viewing such 'irresponsible' images.
Mowi: "the risk of people turning away from a healthy food such as salmon as a reaction to irresponsible use of photos for the sole purpose of creating fear in the consumer, is a risk to public health" https://t.co/u9Fk2kOkxz @MowiScotlandLtd @marinescotland @FergusEwingMSP pic.twitter.com/M3AyD3jMTm
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) October 24, 2019
It's amazing what extremely interesting information you can extract via FOI - like how 'Scottish' salmon is actually imported as ova (eggs) from Norway, Iceland and Ireland.
And how Norwegian companies are compromising the genetic integrity and health of 'Scottish' salmon.
"Norwegian interests risk bringing the whole rotten edifice of 'Scottish Salmon' crashing down" warns @HGSalmonUK to @Feorlean & @FergusEwingMSP https://t.co/7leCLZarz1 @GAA_Advocate @salmonfarming1 @IntraFishNorge @thefishsite @Salmon_Business @GreenerScotland @fiskeridir pic.twitter.com/79CBueZzXB
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) October 1, 2020
Norwegian Salmon Egg Exports Banned Due to Disease Risks https://t.co/rEeHFKqewt @EFTAsecretariat @InfoMattilsynet @marinescotland @fiskeridir @NFdep @WeAreBenchmark @scotseafarms @MowiScotlandLtd @HGSalmonUK @FergusEwingMSP @DefraGovUK @SSPOsays #ISA #Norway #ScottishScamon pic.twitter.com/XmW4SaPYG2
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) February 24, 2020
On other occasions, "extreme activism" takes the form of extremely tedious and time-consuming research and may even involve a calculator to add up how six foreign-owned companies control 99% of 'Scottish' salmon farming (thankfully I have my Grade C Mathematics 'O' Level to help me out).
As much as 99 per cent of farmed salmon production from Scottish-branded companies is controlled outwith Scotland. Most of the industry is Norwegian, and one major parent company is registered in Jersey, an offshore tax haven.https://t.co/vxzBIgSWYy
— The Ferret (@FerretScot) February 24, 2019
It doesn't sound very extreme but delivering letters to Her Majesty the Queen (asking her to stop the certification of Scottish salmon via RSPCA Assured) or to the King of Norway (asking him to stop Norwegian salmon farming companies killing wild salmon) is at least active enough to get you out of the house/office even if the kids find it so boring that they fall fast asleep.
Last year, I even looked into legal action against salmon farms for the torture of fish via mechanical devices called 'Thermolicer' which heat up the farmed salmon to extreme temperatures and have killed over half a million Scotttish salmon. How extreme is that?!
Scottish Salmon Watch said it plans to challenge @scotgov “on the lawfulness of the thermolicer under animal welfare legislation”. “The weight of scientific and damning case evidence demands an immediate ban” https://t.co/A6fEIuS75E @Animallawyersuk @ciwf @PETAUK @rspcaassured pic.twitter.com/4MrDy5jQFh
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) March 9, 2020
REVEALED: Over Half a Million Salmon Tortured to Death by De-Licers! https://t.co/ItJDnGHzdB @marinescotland @FergusEwingMSP @scotgp @Animallawyersuk @MairiGougeon @ProfCMDwyer @MowiScotlandLtd @GriegShetland @scotseafarms @salmon_scottish @rspcaassured @ciwf @onekindtweet pic.twitter.com/Rwj3HSkxfo
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) June 10, 2020
Occasionally, I get so bored in front of my computer that I try some online shopping and end up complaining to Trading Standards about misleading advertising by celebrity chefs like Rick Stein.
Victory: Rick Stein Forced to Advertise Farmed Salmon from the Faroes After Trading Standards Investigation https://t.co/dG62ULpbSA @Rick_Stein @RickSteinRest @TSCornwall @SevernWye @julesspaceman @timbrouwer89 pic.twitter.com/cvs6x8D4ev
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) April 9, 2021
I've also been known to use the search engine Google - sorry, I know that is very extreme and I do feel guilty afterwards - and stumble across (sometimes following tip offs) shocking stuff like the salmon farming industry is planning to use the banned neonicotinoid Imidacloprid (hidden behind the trade name BMK08/Ectosan).
Revealed: Toxic Neonicotinoid Insecticide Used to 'CleanTreat' Lousy Salmon https://t.co/ORQS4EAeDS @WeAreBenchmark @MowiScotlandLtd @scotseafarms @salmon_scottish @GriegShetland @ScottishEPA @SSPOsays @IntraFishNorge @FergusEwingMSP @ASC_aqua @marinescotland @rspcaassured pic.twitter.com/JOrTRbJExD
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) March 17, 2020
If you don't like Twitter - I know it's extremely popular but it can also be extremely addictive - then try reading The Sunday Times.
Or if you're a twitcher not Tweeter, British Wildlife magazine has featured the toxic issue (which is set to plague salmon farming for years to come).
Over a year after Scottish Salmon Watch filed an FOI appeal with the Scottish Information Commissioner, I'm still waiting for a ruling and any information the Scottish Environment Protection Agency has on Imidacloprid and Benchmark's 'CleanTreat' system (SEPA refused to disclose documents citing commercial confidentiality).
Please come clean on BMK08! Why is @ScottishEPA & @GreenerScotland refusing to disclose details on Clean Treat? @WeAreBenchmark https://t.co/pAgebu4rzW Whilst investors pump in £££££s the public are kept in the dark @FOIScotland @undercur @thefishsite @IntraFishNorge @SSPOsays pic.twitter.com/1lS6Vc74Wx
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) February 27, 2020
"Submission of our regulatory dossier for BMK08, our novel sea lice treatment, is a significant milestone" @WeAreBenchmark https://t.co/2vVe041WxV "needs separate approval in each of the countries" @ScottishEPA What is BMK08? Will the public find out how toxic AFTER approval?! pic.twitter.com/BKuJ9sIKdL
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) February 29, 2020
SEPA refuse to disclose information on the use of the toxic neonicotinoid insecticide Imidacloprid in salmon farming citing commercial confidentiality https://t.co/6dqW4x0iel @ScottishEPA @FOIScotland If disclosed it would prejudice economic interests @WeAreBenchmark @FerdOwner pic.twitter.com/m88qS2Tv2A
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) June 30, 2020
In the meantime, Benchmark (who has lobbied both SEPA and the Scottish Government) is pressing ahead with the commercial use of the toxic neonicotinoid.
Warning: Imidacloprid Moves A Step Closer to Commercial Use in Salmon Farming @WeAreBenchmark @FerdOwner @MowiScotlandLtd @scotseafarms @salmon_scottish @ScottishEPA @SSPOsays @FergusEwingSNP @strathearnrose @LeroySeafood @scotgp @PAN_UK @europeangreens https://t.co/u1n8Vl4UW0 pic.twitter.com/bIR6Nax1y3
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) March 26, 2021
In November 2019, Scottish Salmon Watch won a landmark FOI victory when the Scottish Information Commissioner forced the Scottish Government to disclose 'commercially damaging' data on 'Scottish' salmon.
FOI Victory: Scottish Ministers Forced to Come Clean on 'Scottish' Salmon https://t.co/JRCUmxkr71 @GreenerScotland @FergusEwingMSP @strathearnrose @KateForbesMSP @FOIScotland @CampaignFoI @Salmon_Business @IntraFishNorge @HGSalmonUK @scotseafarms @LeroySeafood @scotgp @SSPOsays pic.twitter.com/5sltwWOPpo
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) November 11, 2019
Once back in 2010 (before kids) I felt so energetic that I helped organise the 'Get Out Migration' down the length of Vancouver Island and joined thousands of extreme activists in protesting outside the Legislature in Victoria, British Columbia.
Sometimes my schedule is less hectic - especially over lockdown which is hardly conducive to "extreme activism" - that I find time to ask the Soil Association why they certify farmed salmon as 'organic' when they still permit the use of shellfish-killing chemicals such as Deltamethrin.
Think 'organic' salmon = zero toxic pesticides? Nope. "Parasite treatments, including Deltamethrin, are permitted in the organic standards" admit @SoilAssocScot @SoilAssociation
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) March 30, 2021
Please boycott 'organically' farmed #Scottish #Salmon as well as @rspcaassured @ASC_aqua @SaumonLabel pic.twitter.com/oAcSVpNM4V
When I was much younger - as a naive activist if you like (before I was led astray into the realms of "extreme activism" by salmon heroes like Bruce Sandison, Allan Berry, Alexandra Morton, Juan Carlos Cardenas and Kurt Oddekalv) - I used to think that penning an article in The Ecologist as I did in 2001 would make a difference.
Or that writing an article in Organic Standard magazine as I did back in 2001 would persuade the Soil Association not to certify farmed salmon as 'organic'.
However, as time has passed and my extreme activism took hold (along with the dodgy back and glaucoma making me blind in one eye) I came to the conclusion that in order to stop salmon farming there needs to be a boycott on farmed salmon.
As an "extreme" message, "Friends don't let friends eat farmed salmon" is a dangerously simple one.
Back in 2011 (before kids, obviously), I dressed up as Captain Condom to protest against the spread of STDs (Salmon Transferable Diseases) by salmon farms in British Columbia.
Apologies, I really don't know what came over me. But at least Cermaq's PR flunkey Grant Warkentin found the stunt extremely amusing. I've since tried to squeeze into the lycra red shorts but a decade of extreme inactivity has made it impossible (who knows, Captain Condom may resurface this Summer in Scotland wearing bigger granny pants).
My journey into "extreme activism" started in the late 90s with Friends of Earth Scotland where many of us were volunteers signing on the dole and we received £3 per day to cover lunch and transport costs. I sometimes slept on the floor in the library and washed even less than I do today - that's me with the greasy hair next to Lang Banks, now Director of WWF Scotland, and Kevin Dunion, the first Scottish Information Commissioner.
One day whilst at Friends of the Earth Scotland in Edinburgh, I was extremely surprised to receive a phone call from the BBC's John Humphyrys (long time presenter of the Today programme on BBC Radio 4) who was conducting background research for his book 'The Great Food Gamble'. For his research he even dived under a Mowi salmon farm in Loch Sunart - talk about the extreme lengths some journalists go to in order to capture a story!
Another phone call I received in 2000 was from whistleblower Jackie Mackenzie who testified to the use of toxic chemicals at Ardessie Salmon - then a member of Scottish Quality Salmon (the forerunner of the SSPO) before it was kicked out later that year. The subsequent front page story in The Observer newspaper - with the banner headline 'The Scandal of Scottish Salmon' - and coverage on BBC Scotland when a second whistleblower stepped forward was extremely damaging to the salmon farming industry.
The early 2000s were an extremely exciting time with cancer-causing contaminants in Scottish farmed salmon front page news.
At least the salmon farming lobby is consistent in denouncing critics. In 2004, journalist Richard Girling wrote in The Sunday Times:
Another time I was so extremely angry after reading a scientific paper detailing the spread of the deadly Infectious Salmon Anaemia virus from Norway to Chile via infected salmon ova (eggs) that I even picked up the phone and spoke to a journalist from The New York Times who wrote a story on how "Norwegians Concede a Role in Chilean Salmon Virus".
.
"Extreme activism" is not all jumping onto a kayak and paddling out to salmon farms like I did in July 2019 when we uncovered welfare abuse at Mowi's aptly named 'Bay of the Dead Heads' salmon farm south of Oban.
This case of welfare abuse led to Mowi being reprimanded and, perhaps more importantly from a campaigning point of view, being named and shamed in a Sunday newspaper.
Behind the news headlines it can sometimes be a hard slog to access documents via FOI with denials and refusals extremely annoying.
Censored: Welfare Abuse on Salmon Farms - redacted FOI documents reveal welfare breaches of Animal Health & Welfare Act @rspcaassured @MowiScotlandLtd https://t.co/oJ5ad7XxZw @APHAgovuk @marinescotland @ProfCMDwyer @SSPCA_Mike @SSPOsays @ChrisGPackham @markruskell @scotgp pic.twitter.com/7Fr5ANyTC4
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) April 23, 2020
Often it takes years of filing FOI requests and appeals to the Scottish Information Commissioner to flush out the damning information.
And even then it may take years for a campaign to pay off in terms of a real victory (for John Robins, another "extreme activist", it took 5o years!).
It may be extremely frustrating to wait for concrete action but when it happens it can be extremely satisfying.
"Extreme activism" certainly didn't happen overnight to someone who The Sunday Times recently called a "veteran campaigner" (come on guys, I'm not even 50 years old yet!).
In Seaspiracy, Tabrizi steals onto fish producer Mowi’s Gorsten salmon farm - certified via @rspcaassured & @ASC_aqua - in Loch Linnhe in the dead of night with Don Staniford, a veteran campaigner https://t.co/Ykp54fenBh @seaspiracy @iamalitabrizi @ScotlandMowi @SSPOsays pic.twitter.com/wi4gUimotQ
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) March 28, 2021
Back in 2002, I was labelled a "fundamentalist" (after giving a speech in the European Parliament on the 'five fundamental flaws of sea cage fish farming') and then a "crusader" (after winning an award):
The Daily Mail even called me a "scientist" rather than an activist in a 2002 article on artificial colourings used in salmon farming (a subject tackled more recently by Netflix's 'Seaspiracy' and last week by BBC Scotland's 'The Nine').
"The color of the salmon flesh of is measured with the SalmoFan Roche" says @SaumonLabel "Coloring: 26 minimum on the SalmoFan" demands 'Label Rouge' @SSPOsays https://t.co/VLfQDbl6hA
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) April 7, 2021
So why is Tavish Scott so colour blind? @tavishscott @DSM @Roche @ScotlandMowi @scotseafarms pic.twitter.com/J8T5DJNTNl
Intrafish reported in 2003:
Thankfully the Greens have continued to campaign against salmon farming and are not afraid of being seen with "extreme activists".
The New Zealand Herald reported in 2003 that I was a "British activist dubbed the 'fish farm bogeyman'" (presumably because I have a nasty habit of getting right up the noses of filthy fish farmers):
Over in Australia I was labelled an "eco-terrorist" during a visit in 2003 (and that was long before I grew a dodgy-looking beard).
Intrafish reported in 2004:
EcoAmericas reported on my missionary zeal in 2004:
Somewhere over the last few decades I've morphed from a scientist into an "extreme activist". Back in 2004, Harbour Publishing's award-winning book 'A Stain Upon the Sea' still described me as a "scientist" (my extremely toxic chapter is called 'Silent Spring of the Sea').
Intrafish reported in 2008:
I was labelled an "activist" in 2010 for daring to deliver a letter to the King of Norway!
"Anti-salmon farming activist" seems to be the usual description.
Intrafish labelled me "Salmon's No.1 enemy" in 2012:
Norway's state broadcaster NRK labelled me an "aktivist" in 2012 (when I was clearly more active and carrying much less weight around my jowels and midriff):
The Norwegian newspaper used the term "lakseaktivist" (translated as 'salmon activist') in an article published in 2012:
Intrafish described me as an "anti-salmon activist" in 2015 following a landmark ruling by the Scottish Information Commissioner forcing the disclosure of damning data on salmon farms killing seals.
The Shooting Times described me as an "activist" and "the most inveterate campaigner against salmon farming" in a 2018 article.
The Press & Journal labelled me a "salmon farming nemesis" in 2017 after I had the extreme cheek to publish details of antibiotic use on salmon farms via a FOI disclosure from SEPA (sourced from returns submitted by salmon farming companies - i.e. the industry's own data).
Writing in The Guardian in 2017, John Vidal reported that I have "spent the past five years labelled an “eco-terrorist”, a “troublemaker”, an “exaggerator” and “a prophet of doom”:
Award-winning investigative journalist Rob Edwards knows how to cause 'trouble' too - and I think that is the essence of what the SSPO's Tavish Scott means when he labels me an "extreme activist". We've been dredging up the dirt about the toxic salmon farming industry in Scotland for a few decades via New Scientist, The Sunday Herald and The Ferret.
In 2017, the Norwegian newspaper Bergens Tidende featured me on the front page.
Salmon farming is certainly an extremely active issue when it comes to negative media attention over the years.
When I wrote "Scottish Salmon Farming 101" back in 2018 it was crammed full of extremely damaging information that the SSPO would prefer kept secret and hidden away from the public.
Whatever you do, and here is where I have to agree with salmon lobbyist Tavish Scott, please don't open the door to 'Scottish Salmon Farming 101' or you will be lost forever.
If you continue to ask 'difficult' questions and are extremely persistent the Salmafia will do everything in their power to intimidate, bully and harrass (even if you're on public property).
Police Scotland issue warning to Ormsary Estate for intimidation & harassment @HGSalmonUK pic.twitter.com/Kh3jSFhjfd
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) September 13, 2020
This cowboy - James Lithgow (Chairman of Lithgows & heir to the Baronetcy of Ormsary - the son of Sir William) - was warned by @policescotland for harassment & intimidation https://t.co/9ffifnT4wz What does @HGSalmonUK have to hide? @BetterBreeding @FergusEwingMSP @Feorlean pic.twitter.com/MYDe3W4fut
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) October 1, 2020
Hendrix boss Jarl van den Berg plays it heavy like Jimmy! https://t.co/0M4VvZGbaB When filming at Landcatch's salmon hatchery at Ormsary I was assaulted by @HGSalmonUK & @policescotland issued a warning @BetterBreeding Is Jarl the son of Hendrix CEO Antoon van den Berg? pic.twitter.com/yvx3ZQ4TLw
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) September 18, 2020
In view of such extreme tension it is only a matter of time before someone is hurt (an issue raised by Scottish Salmon Watch in a letter to Police Scotland last year).
Watch shocking video footage of a salmon farmer (Gregor Maclellan @kamesfishfarm) issuing a death threat and assaulting a local resident in Loch Tralaig! https://t.co/5kpgJpvOGD @rspcaassured @obantimes @policescotland pic.twitter.com/1Vrj12O5kn
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) November 5, 2020
"Here comes trouble" was the headline in GEO magazine last year when they profiled my 'extreme' campaign against salmon farming.
GEO magazine caught such an "extreme activist" sitting on the sofa with my kids. Obviously we weren't watching Gogglebox but extremely dangerous Greta Thunberg and Sea Shepherd documentaries (and yes, my belly is extremely fat due to the lack of exercise as an 'extreme activist' sitting in front of a computer screen most days).
It's a fair cop though that I also like dressing up - not in women's clothes but in Hazmat suits with gas masks.
I have even been known to don a suit and tie to attend the Annual General Meetings of salmon farming companies in Norway.
I do feel sorry for our brave police guarding the Scottish Parliament who clearly think a guy in a Hazmat suit carrying waste effluent from a toxic salmon farm poses such an extreme threat.
Sometimes I persuade other people - call them "extreme activists" if you like but I think they're brave warriors willing to stand up for what they believe in - to join me in protests.
The life of an "extreme activist" is certainly not for everyone and can often involve getting up extremely early - whether it is to video tankers for toxic chemicals.
Or container after container of toxic chemicals strewn around the banks of lochs like a drunken sailor leaving his empty bottles of rum everywhere.
Once - and this really is taking things to the extreme and is not for those who like posh hotels and a full Scottish breakfast - I slept in my car so I could capture video evidence of Mowi's use of the carcinogenic chemical Formalin (Formaldehyde) used on the estate of Conservative MSP Donald Cameron.
If you can't be bothered watching yet another video of an "extreme activist" droning on about cancer-causing chemicals, you can read a news story in The Sunday Times.
If you don't believe that lefty rag The Sunday Times - who clearly have an agenda against salmon farming and give a platform to "extreme activists" like myself - then perhaps the BBC's Countryfile can switch you on.
Read more about Scottish Salmon Watch's "extreme activism" online here
Shock horror - my protests have even featured members of my family including young children who have clearly been brainwashed into "extreme activism".
Even more shocking is the fact that my family has pledged never ever to eat farmed salmon.
Please help fund more "extreme activism" against salmon farms online here
Or if you want to join the global movement against salmon farming please record a video pledge to not eat farmed salmon.
Friends don't let friends eat farmed salmon - please make a video pledge today! https://t.co/4aHyVQVGGA#SalmonPledge #Boycott #Farmed #Salmon pic.twitter.com/cuPmMCXLlW
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) April 5, 2021
If you're the shy and retiring type don't worry - "extreme activists" like myself are always on hand to speak out.
If you're into audio books - maybe the kids are sick of Harry Potter - there's even podcasts.
You certainly need a big ego to be an "extreme activist" but you also need support - whether that is financial support via donations or support from film-makers and other 'activists'. We're still hoping to make a feature length film called 'Scottish Scamon'.
And we'd love to be able to fund more fieldwork in Scotland - including undercover filming inside salmon farms and short films like "The Poisoned Loch" and "Mowi’s ‘Bay of the Dead Heads’" exposing the underbelly salmon farming.
In March 2019, Sir David Attenborough added his powerful voice to the plight of wild salmon and the threats posed by salmon farms. Now there's an "extreme activist" I could get behind!
The Go Pro camera never lies - unlike salmon farming lobbyists such as Tavish Scott.
Lobbyist for 'Scottish' Salmon Caught Telling Pack of Lies on BBC Scotland! https://t.co/L0V3L4ubNu @tavishscott @SSPOsays @mmgeissler @BBCScotNine @marinescotland @salmon_scottish @seaspiracy
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) April 7, 2021
Maybe Tavish Scott should just stop talking bollocks? pic.twitter.com/Kz2vNM0NvE
The true cost of the Scottish salmon industry: while wild Atlantic salmon are disappearing, millions of farmed salmon are suffering in sea cages. This industry is also devastating the environment. @scotgov take action now #ScottishSalmonScandal pic.twitter.com/HKl5eJcVM3
— OneKind (@onekindtweet) March 24, 2021
Read more via:
- Lobbyist for 'Scottish' Salmon Caught Telling Pack of Lies on BBC Scotland
- Scottish Salmon & The 'C' Word (that's Chlamydia not the Clap or some other rude word)!
- BBC Scotland features Disease-Ridden Scottish Salmon & Seaspiracy