Refine by MP, party, committee, province, or result type.

Results 1-15 of 24
Sort by relevance | Sorted by date: newest first / oldest first

Fisheries committee  Thank you very much, Mr. Chair. Yes, indeed, I would like to introduce Professor Ian Fleming from Memorial University of Newfoundland. He has worked on interactions between farmed and wild Atlantic salmon since the late 1980s. He's also worked on Pacific salmon and so he brings

March 12th, 2012Committee meeting

Dr. Jeffrey Hutchings

Fisheries committee  I would not recommend that open-net pen aquaculture be banned on Canada's coasts. I think the report meant to—and tries to—take a balanced perspective of the realized and potential environmental impacts of open-sea net pen aquaculture vis-à-vis the alternatives from a closed cont

March 12th, 2012Committee meeting

Dr. Jeffrey Hutchings

Fisheries committee  Yes, I can. The Royal Society report basically doesn't comment on the specifics of a particular region or salmon population. It identifies documented and projected influences on wild populations—not just fish—in the environment, in general, resulting from open-sea net pen aquacul

March 12th, 2012Committee meeting

Dr. Jeffrey Hutchings

Fisheries committee  Yes. With respect to the B.C. coast—not the Atlantic coast, which is a different situation because Atlantic salmon exist on the Atlantic coast—the report indicates that any direct spatial impacts are likely to be localized and restricted to the areas of open-sea net pens, primari

March 12th, 2012Committee meeting

Dr. Jeffrey Hutchings

Fisheries committee  Given the current levels of Atlantic salmon abundance, I think that is a good thing. However, what the report attempts to do—and what I think those of us who work in this field try to do—is balance the overall benefits and costs of any particular action from an environmental, eco

March 12th, 2012Committee meeting

Dr. Jeffrey Hutchings

Fisheries committee  I certainly can. One of the things that the Royal Society expert panel was asked to do was to provide broadly based strategic recommendations resulting from the potential consequences of climate change, fisheries, and aquaculture on Canada's marine biodiversity. We had policy exp

March 12th, 2012Committee meeting

Dr. Jeffrey Hutchings

Fisheries committee  I'll start, and then I'll pass it over to Dr. Fleming for an international perspective. ISA first appeared in Canadian waters in the mid-to-late nineties in New Brunswick and resulted in losses of enormous numbers of salmon. Many farmed salmon had to be destroyed. This disease

March 12th, 2012Committee meeting

Dr. Jeffrey Hutchings

Fisheries committee  Yes, thank you. With respect to open-net sea pens, as I indicated in my presentation, there have been a number of documented instances and cases of consequences particularly to local environments as a result of things such as the release of antifoulants, pesticides, vaccines, an

March 12th, 2012Committee meeting

Dr. Jeffrey Hutchings

Fisheries committee  Of course I am a scientist, and I have been reminded as such.

March 12th, 2012Committee meeting

Dr. Jeffrey Hutchings

Fisheries committee  What I will offer is the following. I can't really offer in terms of timeframes, but what I can say, as a fish biologist in this country, is this. We have an extraordinary richness of freshwater fishes across Canada. There are countries such as Finland.... I was there three week

March 12th, 2012Committee meeting

Dr. Jeffrey Hutchings

Fisheries committee  That's an extremely good question. I'm very glad you asked it. The panel indeed concluded that we have some very good policies in place. The sustainable fisheries framework, which you just identified, is indeed a very sound piece of policy. It reflects in fact the fisheries polic

March 12th, 2012Committee meeting

Dr. Jeffrey Hutchings

Fisheries committee  To backtrack slightly, again one of the issues that the panel was asked to address was to assess the degree to which Canada is fulfilling, or has been fulfilling, its national and international commitments to conserve marine biodiversity. The panel observed that other countries a

March 12th, 2012Committee meeting

Dr. Jeffrey Hutchings

Fisheries committee  The panel concluded that it could be in the form of a revised Fisheries Act or, indeed, in the form of an enacting new legislation, perhaps along the lines of the U.S. Magnuson–Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act.

March 12th, 2012Committee meeting

Dr. Jeffrey Hutchings

Fisheries committee  I can certainly address that. Certainly it is true today that the northeast Arctic cod, which inhabit the Barents Sea, feed there in the Barents Sea, and then spawn along coastal Norway about this time of year, are doing extraordinarily well right now. Upwards of half a million

March 12th, 2012Committee meeting

Dr. Jeffrey Hutchings

Fisheries committee  Yes, it wasn't—

March 12th, 2012Committee meeting

Dr. Jeffrey Hutchings