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'No widespread impact' to coastline following N.L. salmon die-off, says DFO

Environmental monitoring of the shoreline in Fortune Bay North has determined that just a fraction of the coastline was affected by a massive salmon die-off in the summer of 2019.

Interim report from group hired by Northern Harvest says fat deposits found along less than 3% of shoreline

This image was taken Nov. 18 by a camera installed at a location in Fortune Bay called McGrath Cove. An environmental monitoring study into last year's salmon die-off says salmon fat in this photo is mixed into the sand, three inches deep. (Submitted by MAMKA)

One of the fisheries technicians who monitored the Fortune Bay coastline following a massive salmon die-off last year says the impact was not widespread or devastating.

"It wasn't major, in my opinion," Dean McDonald of Conne River told CBC News on Wednesday.

"There was a bit of grease on the shoreline, no doubt. Certain places it did gather up, which kind of looked bad. But after visiting the sites several times, we seen it dissipate, significantly."

The shoreline at a location called Little Burdock Cove in Fortune Bay, N.L., is seen covered in salmon fat on Nov. 5. (Submitted by MAMKA)

McDonald works with an Indigenous organization called the Mi'kmaq Alsumk Mowimsikik Koqoey Association, or MAMKA for short.

He helped carry out an investigation of shoreline not far from sea cages where 2.6 million farmed Atlantic salmon perished last summer because of what the owners, Northern Harvest Sea Farms — which hired MAMKA to do the monitoring — have described as unusually warm water temperatures.

50 kilometres of shoreline surveyed

An interim report into that monitoring effort has been completed and obtained by CBC News. It reveals that salmon fat deposits were found on less than three per cent of 50 kilometres of shoreline that was surveyed.

And that much of those deposits have since been washed off the shore, said McDonald.

Salmon farming is a major employer on Newfoundland's south coast, but the industry suffered a serious setback last year with the die-off of 2.6 million fish at sites owned by Northern Harvest Sea Farms. (Submitted by MAMKA)

The investigation did not find any evidence that birds were affected.

"I didn't think it was too bad. There was a bit of grease coverage, but we never found any dead birds, or anything other than a bit of grease on the shoreline," McDonald said.

McDonald, a commercial fish harvester, said he isn't concerned the die-off will impact his livelihood.

"Not one bit, for me," he said. "I've been on them sites and from what I first seen up until just before Christmas, no, I have no concern myself."
 

The Department of Fisheries and Oceans, in a statement to CBC, said the report is consistent with its surveillance activities, "which showed a few locations having a higher degree of organic deposits, but no widespread impact to the coastline."

And while "fatty material persists in some localized areas, much of the material previously seen on beaches and in coves has dispersed."

Apology from Mowi

The die-off reignited a debate over the environmental risks associated with open-net pen aquaculture, threatened the livelihood of hundreds of people working in the industry, and eventually prompted the government to suspend some of Northern Harvest's licences after the full extent of the die-off was revealed.

A top executive with Norwegian aquaculture giant Mowi, which owns Northern Harvest, also issued an apology and pledged to take corrective measures to prevent future die-offs.

Organic material from a massive salmon die-off on Newfoundland's south coast is pumped out of fish cages and into open water in the Fortune Bay area in October. (Chris O'Neill-Yates/CBC)

MAMKA is a joint aquatic resources and oceans management program of the Qalipu Mi'kmaq First Nation Band and the Miawpukek First Nation, with offices in Corner Brook and Conne River, respectively.

Because of poor weather, only seven of 10 aquaculture sites were monitored prior to the release of the interim report. The remaining sites will be investigated before a final report is released.

The monitoring was carried out using visual inspections of the shoreline, and video gathered through the use of aerial drones.

In some areas where salmon fat deposits were discovered, permanent cameras and grid transects were installed to monitor the shoreline. 

Monitoring of the potential impacts below the water's surface will take place when weather conditions are better, according to the report.

'There was no grease. No pieces of fish. No dead anything other than a broken dinner plate on the sea bottom.'​​​- Dean McDonald

But McDonald said one test using an underwater drone did not find anything out of the ordinary.

"There was no grease. No pieces of fish. No dead anything other than a broken dinner plate on the sea bottom."

DFO monitoring efforts suffer a setback

Meanwhile, efforts by DFO to do similar environmental monitoring have stumbled. 

In early December, the federal government issued a request for proposals to a pre-qualified list of companies for monitoring that would complement the work done by MAMKA.

But all the quotes exceeded the $100,000 threshold that requires DFO to advertise the RFP more broadly.

Since a new tender process would delay the monitoring, a DFO spokesperson said, the federal government is looking at options to get the work underway "as soon as possible."

The DFO plan is to collect water, sediment and fish sampling at four sites, on three separate occasions, after which an analysis of the samples will be completed.

Through further monitoring, DFO hopes to determine how waste from the die-off spread, and determine the long-term environmental effects.

CBC has requested comment from Mowi but has received no response.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Terry Roberts is a reporter with CBC Newfoundland and Labrador, based in St. John’s. He previously worked for the Telegram, the Compass and the Northern Pen newspapers during a career that began in 1991. He can be reached by email at Terry.Roberts@cbc.ca.