The Definition of 'Taking the Fish' - as salmon farmers in Shetland tackled illegal dumping of diseased fish via alternatives to landfill, companies in the Western Isles extended the geographical scope to Lewis, Harris & even mainland Scotland @scotgov https://t.co/kZPwlysv8d pic.twitter.com/iUGJbwD6yf
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) July 3, 2021
A Freedom of Information (FOI) disclosure by the Scottish Environment Protection Agency (SEPA) back in June 2017 lifts the lid on how the 'Scottish' salmon farming industry - 99% of which is controlled by six foreign-owned companies - has been desperately "struggling" with the industry's mort mountain for decades.
Salmon farmers in Scotland were "struggling" with guidance to their members on the legality of waste disposal back in 2015 - why in 2021 is it still not clear that dumping diseased salmon in landfill is illegal? https://t.co/xFJFgjSgJj (F0187308) @ScottishEPA @APHAgovuk @SSPOsays pic.twitter.com/krOzOmlYS2
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) July 2, 2021
Scottish Salmon Watch is calling on Scottish Ministers to take immediate action against salmon farming companies such as Mowi, The Scottish Salmon Company and Loch Duart for continuing to illegally dump diseased salmon in landfill at Whiteshore Cockles. Documents disclosed via FOI reveal Whiteshore Cockles started taking in lorry loads more diseased salmon from sites on the Isles of Lewis and Harris and even from mainland Scotland (according to an email from the Scottish Government in March 2021) in 2017 after a six-month derogation had lapsed in 2016.
The increased quantity of morts (dead salmon) - due to Whiteshore Cockles taking in morts from the Isles of Lewis and Harris (and even the mainland) from 2017 - delayed the installation of a fish drier as an alternative to landfilling. A letter from the Managing Director of Tidy Planet to Whiteshore Cockles in February 2019 detailed how bigger machinery was required to cope with the ever increasing scale of Scottish salmon's mort problem.
How long will the authorities allow Whiteshore Cockles to keep taking the fish? They've been taking the piss for nearly two decades!
Back in 2005, The Times and Bruce Sandison of The Salmon Farm Protest Group blew the whistle on the illegal dumping of diseased salmon by Marine Harvest (re-named Mowi in 2019 due to "negative consumer perception" in the name Marine Harvest).
As a salmon farmer (by your Tweets I assume you work for Mowi), you will no doubt remember that the illegal dumping of diseased salmon in North Uist was raised back in 2005 by Bruce Sandision & @thetimesscot https://t.co/HOfHROuI4i
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) July 2, 2021
It's a fact that EU law was introduced in 2003!
That the issue of illegal dumping of diseased salmon is still rearing it's ugly head nearly two decades later illustrates not only the scale of salmon farming's mortality problem but also the sector's incapacity to follow basic laws and regulations.
Today's Times: "The dumping of rotting fish in uncovered pits has 'severely hampered' quality of life at an island beauty spot" @thetimesscot https://t.co/H6pD4mg7Ye @cne_siar @marinescotland @MairiGougeon @MairiMcAllan @SSPOsays @APHAgovuk @VisitScotland @VisitScotNews @scotgp
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) July 1, 2021
"Fish morts from all over the Western Isles and even the mainland going to the site" @scotgov "Whiteshore are taking advantage of derogation by extending their scope or range to bring in more income...it should not be a cheap disposal route" https://t.co/OvxPfiOiaO @ScottishEPA pic.twitter.com/taTsvodHMi
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) July 2, 2021
Yesterday's front page article published in the Press & Journal (2 July 2021) named and shamed Whiteshore Cockles for raising a stink and hampering residents' quality of life in North Uist.
SEPA's FOI disclosure back in June 2017 followed media coverage in The Sunday Herald in 2013 and The Sunday Herald in 2016 on the investigative work by retired lawyer Ewan Kennedy who exposed the illegal landfilling of diseased salmon and filed an EC complaint.
Read more background via Letter to Scottish Ministers on Illegal Dumping of Diseased Scottish Salmon in North Uist
When @_KateForbes visited Whiteshore Cockles was the illegal dumping of disease-ridden salmon raised? Did @marinescotland inspect the leaching cess-pit or did @ScotGovNetZero look the other way? https://t.co/wDdz2GMJ0x @cne_siar @APHAgovuk @ScottishEPA @SSPOsays @MairiGougeon https://t.co/8cA2mRSXq1 pic.twitter.com/fPkiBqGuUa
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) July 1, 2021
So we have a backdrop of the salmon farming industry - aided and abetted by the Scottish Government and Comhairle nan Eilean Siar (Western Isles Council) - flouting EU law on the dumping of diseased salmon in landfill at Whiteshore Cockles. No wonder the authorities have desperately attempted to bury the evidence of illegality.
Appeal filed with @FOIScotland over FOI refusal @cne_siar who claim that information on diseased salmon dumping illegally in North Uist is "exempt from disclosure" since it "would prejudice substantially the effective conduct of public affairs" #Bollocks https://t.co/JgLgSCIEIC pic.twitter.com/4rihjWCjng
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) July 1, 2021
SEPA's FOI disclosure in June 2017 via F0187308 is worth re-visiting in the context of continued illegal dumping of diseased salmon by Mowi, The Scottish Salmon Company and Loch Duart at Whiteshore Cockles.
Officials claimed there was “evidence of seepage from the side of pits” & added: “Record keeping is not great. Handwritten notes being provided” @thetimesscot https://t.co/H6pD4mg7Ye @marinescotland @MairiGougeon @MairiMcAllan @APHAgovuk @cne_siar @ScottishEPA @SSPOsays @scotgp
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) July 1, 2021
Here's an email from the Scottish Salmon Producers Organisation (the lobby group which represents the 99% foreign-owned/controlled 'Scottish' salmon farming industry) in July 2015 which admits to the sector "struggling" with the "complexities in the area of waste disposal".
SEPA's FOI disclosure in June 2017 discloses various drafts of the SSPO guidance as comments from SEPA, the Animal & Plant Health Agency (APHA) and the Scottish Government 'refined' the text.
SEPA's Fiona Donaldson (listed as a 'Senior Policy Officer' on her LinkedIn profile) even found the time to comment before she soaked up the sun and wine in France:
Despite the salmon farming industry's struggles to understand the "complexities in the area of waste disposal", the law is a simple if not sobering reality for companies such as Mowi, The Scottish Company and Loch Duart who are still using landfill disposal at Whiteshore Cockles in North Uist. As a letter from Scottish Salmon Watch to Scottish Ministers in May 2021 and re-sent on 1 July 2021 pointed out:
SEPA's FOI disclosure in June 2017 via F0187308 provides some answers but raises more questions. This email exchange, for example, illustrates how even the Scottish Government disagreed on the interpretation of what consitituted 'Category 2' wastes.
A map of locations where Category 2 wastes could be disposed of in 2015 (published with SEPA's FOI disclosure in June 2017 via F0187308) illustrates how the salmon farming industry had numerous options - albeit more expensive ones - other than Whiteshore Cockles.
Yet, instead of stemming the tide of diseased salmon being dumped illegally at Whiteshore Cockles it seems that the geographical area was extended beyond the Uists to encompass Lewis and Harris. In December 2017, Whiteshore Cockles wrote in an email - disclosed via FOI in June 2021 - that "the fish farms in Lewis and Harris are keen for us to treat their mortalities".
The "extra quantity" of mortalities actually caused further delays in the installation of a fish drier at Whiteshore Cockles (something which still requires a SEPA permit and Whiteshore Cockles admitted in The Times this week may not take place until March 2022). A letter from the Managing Director of Tidy Planet to Whiteshore Cockles in February 2019 explained that there was at least a 28 week delay in delivering the ‘fish mort system’ when it became clear bigger machinery was needed:
"Following the higher incidence of mortality that you experienced at the end of last (sic) where you on occasion received up to 40 tonnes of morts in 24 hours and over 1000 tonnes in one month, we had to suspend the work on the dryers as they would not be able to process more than 20 tonnes per day. In addition, as confirmed by Animal Health, you are not able to store morts for longer than 24 hours following receipt to your site and this means that we had to re-design the main part of the drying and separation system to move from a fixed capacity batch type system to a semi continuous system that provides you with a significantly increased capacity of up to 50 tonnes per day"
A letter from the MD of Tidy Planet to Whiteshore Cockles in February 2019 detailed how bigger machinery was required to cope with the ever increasing scale of Scottish salmon's mort problem https://t.co/kZPwlysv8d @TidyPlanet @MairiMcAllan @ScottishEPA @salmon_scottish @scotgp pic.twitter.com/3NU9XfGcti
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) July 3, 2021
In other words, the salmon farming industry in Lewis and Harris (a ferry ride away from North Uist) blatantly ignored the law on the illegal dumping of diseased salmon at Whiteshore Cockles and thereby contributed to further delays. Video footage broadcast by the BBC 'One Show' in September 2018 shows diseased salmon from Loch Roag on the Isle of Lewis being transported illegally to Whiteshore Cockles in North Uist.
The owner of Whiteshore Cockles claimed on the BBC One Show in September 2018 that dumping of diseased salmon would not continue for "much longer".
Video footage shot at Whiteshore Cockles in October 2020 (published in March 2021 by Compassion in World Farming) reveals that diseased salmon was still being dumped in breach of EU and Scottish law.
"Surely the aquaculture sector must be concerned about damage from media coverage?" asked @scotgov in March. "Whiteshore are taking advantage of derogation by extending their scope or range to bring in more income. It should not be a cheap disposal route" https://t.co/kZPwlysv8d pic.twitter.com/VybZYYFuls
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) July 3, 2021
Whiteshore Cockles admitted in a planning statement in January 2021 - cited in Scottish Salmon Watch's press release of 27 May 2021 - that in 2017 it started 'servicing' all salmon farms in the Western Isles (i.e. the Isles of Lewis & Harris now joined the Southern Isles - from North Uist to Barra).
Another document dated 3 March 2021 - cited in Scottish Salmon Watch's press release of 27 May 2021 - reported that Whiteshore Cockles was granted planning consent "to remove the restriction on the geographical source of the morts" in 2012 by Comhairle nan Eilean Siar (Western Isles Council).
Scottish Salmon Watch suspects that the reluctance of Comhairle nan Eilean Siar (Western Isles Council) to disclose information on Whiteshore Cockles via FOI is because they are desperate to hide fishy - nay illegal - goings on with respect to the dumping of diseased salmon in landfill.
Appeal filed with @FOIScotland over FOI refusal @cne_siar who claim that information on diseased salmon dumping illegally in North Uist is "exempt from disclosure" since it "would prejudice substantially the effective conduct of public affairs" #Bollocks https://t.co/JgLgSCIEIC pic.twitter.com/4rihjWCjng
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) July 1, 2021
Even worse than extending the scope of disposal to salmon farms on the Isles of Lewis and Harris, documents disclosed by the Scottish Government last month (published online on 29 June 2021) reveal that salmon farms on the mainland (i.e. not even in the Western Isles) were using Whiteshore Cockles as an illegal and "cheap" dumping ground. Here's an email from the Scottish Government in March 2021:
"Fish morts from all over the Western Isles and even the mainland going to the site" @scotgov "Whiteshore are taking advantage of derogation by extending their scope or range to bring in more income...it should not be a cheap disposal route" https://t.co/OvxPfiOiaO @ScottishEPA pic.twitter.com/taTsvodHMi
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) July 2, 2021
The email from the Scottish Government dated 19 March 2021 also cited concerns by CnES (Western Isles Council) that "Fish morts from all over Western Isles and even mainland going to site".
An email from Whiteshore Cockles to the Scottish Government in October 2019 - disclosed via FOI in June 2021 - cited the "scenario of hundreds of tons of fish mortalities lying around the Western Isles for days/weeks waiting to be collected and transported away" with 'bulker lorries' not being able to get a booking on ferries.
An email dated October 2018 from the Scottish Government to the Animal & Plant Health Agency - disclosed via FOI in June 2021 - attempted to explain the messed up situation.
SEPA's FOI disclosure in June 2017 via F0187308 also included this email from SEPA in January 2015:
SEPA's FOI disclosure in June 2017 via F0187308 detailed how salmon farming companies in Shetland (Cooke, Scottish Sea Farms and Grieg Seafood) proposed proactive steps in early 2015 to deal with Category 2 wastes (in comparison to the salmon farming companies in the Western Isles - Mowi, The Scottish Salmon Company and Loch Duart - who have continued to dump diseased salmon illegally at Whiteshore Cockles in North Uist):
Salmon farmers in the Western Isles should hang their heads in shame at the scale of illegal dumping of diseased salmon - if Shetland salmon farmers @scotseafarms @GriegShetland & @CookeScotland can follow the law then why not @ScotlandMowi @salmon_scottish & @LochDuartSalmon? pic.twitter.com/xsIh3yGYr4
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) July 3, 2021
When Scottish Salmon Watch visited Whiteshore Cockles in May 2021 we found mort bins with the names of Marine Harvest (Mowi), The Scottish Salmon Company and Loch Duart written on the sides.
Video Exclusive: Salmon farming in Scotland is a disease-ridden dump! https://t.co/hLEPBM25OB
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) May 27, 2021
When will burial at Whiteshore Cockles be stopped & the law be followed not flouted? @_KateForbes @MairiMcAllan @cne_siar @ScottishEPA @salmon_scottish @LochDuartSalmon @WHFP1 pic.twitter.com/0FSuAht1R3
Scottish Salmon Watch stated in a press release (27 May 2021):
Scottish Salmon Watch has invited councillors at Western Isles Council to visit Whiteshore Cockles later this month to see (and smell) for themselves the disease-ridden dump.
Video footage shot last month by a tourist shows how close Whiteshore Cockles is to the beach and to EU-protected habitats.
Scotland's hidden beaches #1 - the secret gems Visit Scotland keeps hidden from the public! https://t.co/q98umfGggt@north_uist @cne_siar @OuterHebs @_KateForbes@Ivan_McKee @VisitScotland @VisitScotNews @SSPOsays @salmon_scottish
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) June 14, 2021
HS6 5DY #WhiteshoreCockles #NorthUist #Bayhead pic.twitter.com/HBgbjSt0xr
Earlier this week (1 July 2021), Scottish Salmon Watch filed an appeal to the Scottish Information Commissioner with respect to the FOI refusal by Western Isles Council on Whiteshore Cockles.
Read more via:
- FOI Lifts Lid on the Stench of Scottish Salmon: Government Legal Department Target Illegal Dumping of Diseased Salmon
- Letter to Scottish Ministers on Illegal Dumping of Diseased Scottish Salmon in North Uist
- Appeal to Scottish Information Commissioner re. FOI refusal by Western Isles Council on Whiteshore Cockles
- P&J: "Lives of Western Isles residents ‘severely hampered by rotting fish dump’"
- The Times: "Fish graveyard ‘severely hampers’ life for islanders, officials claim"
- Daily Mail: "Dumped into the dunes....thousands of rotten, disease ridden salmon"
- Independent: "Scottish islanders raise a stink over vast salmon graveyard"
- Video Exposes Mass Graves of Millions of Diseased Scottish Salmon
- The Times: "Islanders raise a stink over vast salmon graveyard"
“Surely the aquaculture sector must be concerned about damage from media coverage, do we have any levers we can use to alter their choice of disposal route?” asked @scotgov in March https://t.co/OvxPfiOiaO@MairiMcAllan @ScottishEPA @LochDuartSalmon @salmon_scottish @scotgp pic.twitter.com/WoNThuAeSS
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) July 1, 2021
You should follow that up then with unnamed Scottish Government official & @CVOScotland who reported non-compliance in March 2021 & published the information this week! @MairiMcAllan @ScottishEPA https://t.co/gFRS6TcvLx pic.twitter.com/zSY4U0DcxQ
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) July 2, 2021
By dumping diseased salmon in landfill, Whiteshore Cockles is breaching the law. And by using an illegal landfill site - instead of paying for more expensive waste disposal methods - Mowi, The Scottish Salmon Company & Loch Duart are breaking the law toohttps://t.co/b2bISFSg13
— Don Staniford (@TheGAAIA) July 2, 2021
Addendum:
Date: Sat, Jul 3, 2021 at 7:34 AM
Subject: Whiteshore Cockles - PPC permit application?
To: Ahearn, Terry <[email protected]>, Pollard, Peter <[email protected]>, Sinclair, Douglas <[email protected]>, Media <[email protected]>, Mackinnon, Alison <[email protected]>, AccesstoInformation <[email protected]>
Date: Sat, Jul 3, 2021 at 7:31 AM
Subject: Re: Letter to Scottish Ministers on Illegal Dumping of Diseased Scottish Salmon in North Uist
To: <[email protected]>, <[email protected]>, Gougeon M (Mairi), MSP <[email protected]>, Forbes K (Kate), MSP <[email protected]>, <[email protected]>, <[email protected]>
Cc: MSP <[email protected]>, Fergus Ewing <[email protected]>, MSP <[email protected]>, <[email protected]>, Ruskell M (Mark), MSP <[email protected]>, MSP <[email protected]>, Mountain E (Edward), MSP <[email protected]>, Tim Langley <[email protected]>, Enquiries <[email protected]>