Quarantined N.S. salmon sent to N.B. processor
CBC News
Posted: Jan 19, 2013 7:27 PM AT
Last Updated: Jan 20, 2013 12:28 PM AT
There has been a heavy presence of CFIA inspectors at the Black's Harbour plant and also during the transfer process. (Connell Smith/CBC)
Related
Related Stories
External Links
(Note:CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external links.)
Salmon from a quarantined Nova Scotia aquaculture farm are now being moved to a fish plant in Blacks Harbour, N.B. for processing.
Cooke Aquaculture is the first company to process fish with infectious salmon anemia (ISA) under a new set of rules set by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency.
According to the CFIA, ISA poses no threat to humans and fish with the virus are safe to consume.
About 240,000 salmon from Cooke Aquaculture's quarantined Coffin Island Farm near Liverpool, N.S. will be transported by tanker truck to New Brunswick in the coming weeks. The first shipments of fish were sent last week.
There is no treatment for ISA, which is fatal to fish and easily spreads throughout a population. The CFIA has taken steps to prevent contamination.
There has been a heavy presence of CFIA inspectors at stages throughout the transfer process and also at the Blacks Harbour plant. Plant employees have had to wear special suits to avoid spreading contamination.
Nell Halse, a spokesperson for Cooke Aquaculture, said it's a big job.
"The plant has to be completely disinfected," said Halse. "The employees have to change gear and then the ISA fish are brought in and again — this is nothing to do with human health, the fish are perfectly safe to eat."
In fact, Halse said, the company is obligated to process and market the fish if possible because the government has to compensate salmon growers for fish that are culled because of disease.
Cooke has several brand name classifications under which the fish can be marketed.
Janice Harvey, who has been a critic of the industry since 1990, said disease is a byproduct of industrialized fish growing.
"If it's going to continue, then you're going to expect to have diseases and you're going to have to deal with diseased fish," she said.
An outbreak of ISA at a Cooke facility in Shelburne in February resulted in the company destroying 700,000 fish.
Share Tools
Latest New Brunswick News Headlines
- Dennis Oland named as prime suspect in father's slaying
- Dennis Oland is considered the prime suspect in the killing of his father, Richard Oland, according to search warrants. more »
- Doctor loses legal fight over abortion policy
- A New Brunswick judge has ruled the labour board cannot conduct a hearing into whether the province's abortion policy is violating a doctor's ability to offer accessible health care. more »
- Environmental Trust Fund cash given to Perth-Andover
- Eligible New Brunswick community groups with "great projects" were denied money from the province's Environmental Trust Fund this year even as government took $4 million for its own use, Environment Minister Bruce Fitch acknowledged on Friday. more »
- Alcohol, slippery road factors in fatal Tracadie car crash
- A RCMP investigation said slippery road conditions and alcohol were factors in a fatal car crash that killed four young people in the Acadian Peninsula last December. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Senator Pamela Wallin leaves Conservative caucus
- Senator Pamela Wallin says she is recusing herself from the Conservative caucus while her travel expense claims are under scrutiny. Wallin's departure comes one day after Senator Mike Duffy left the Tory caucus amid controversy over his expense claims.
more »
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford denies crack cocaine allegations
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford says allegations he was caught on tape smoking crack are "ridiculous," following reports that someone had been trying to sell a purported recording of such an event to U.S. and Canadian media outlets. more »
- North Korea fires 3 short-range missiles, South Korea says
- A South Korea official says North Korea has launched three short-range guided missiles into its eastern waters. more »
- 12 young leaders changing Canada in this week's Generation Why
- If the number of young entrepreneurs and innovators in Canada is any indication, the generation that came of age alongside the modern web is ready to rethink everything. Meet 12 young people our readers nominated as the most dedicated, impressive, creative and intelligent Canadians under the age of 30 they know. more »
- Should genetic testing for cancer be available to all Canadians?
- The revelation that Hollywood celebrity Angelina Jolie had a double mastectomy as a preventative measure against cancer stoked heated discussion this past week, but one prominent cancer researcher says it demonstrates the need to make genetic testing available to all Canadians. more »
- Dennis Oland named as prime suspect in father's slaying
- Doctor loses legal fight over abortion policy
- Alcohol, slippery road factors in fatal Tracadie car crash
- Environmental Trust Fund cash given to Perth-Andover
- Quarter-sized hail pounds Charlotte County
- 'Everybody knew' Ashley Smith was in danger, guard says
- CUPE workers 'worried' over future health cuts
- Cohon challenges Maritimes to support new CFL team
- Fundy Trail extension gets $7.9M

