Obviously, I can't discuss the nature of these charges, in this case laid by Environment Canada, because that's now before the courts and that's not the topic for today. But the broader question about how we manage fish health on our farms is a very important one, and what products we would use, how we would use them, and how much they are used. I guess the allegations, as you outlined, are referencing some lobster deaths investigated by Environment Canada. There has been no massive lobster kill. Lobster landings continue to be at record levels in the Bay of Fundy in the area right around our farms.
In fact, if you were to fly over our farms—and we just had some photographs taken last week, lobster season having just opened on Grand Manan—the whole farm is peppered with lobster traps all around, around the cages. That's been a practice going on for many years. It's a very good example of how we do coexist. Fishermen and farmers work off the same wharves. They're often the same families. Our kids go to school together. So it's not like two solitudes. If there really were this terrible devastation occurring, you would not continually find fishermen setting their traps—choosing to—right around the farms. We provide a natural habitat for lobster. Those are the facts.
In terms of sea lice management, in recent times in New Brunswick we had a real struggle with managing sea lice because a treatment we had been using in feed was no longer as effective. We had exceptionally warm water temperatures and we had no other options, even though for a whole year before we worked with both levels of government to develop a national fish health program with access to the kinds of treatments available in other countries. We didn't have anything to use. It got out of control, and that has created a lot of fear in the community about what the industry is doing. But I think if the industry were using a whole lot of illegal chemicals, we wouldn't have problem with sea lice. You have to sort of think that through to its natural conclusion.
I don't mean to diminish the concern. It's very important to us that we sit down directly with the fishermen, have a dialogue, and tell them what we're doing. That particular summer, information on all the treatments that occurred on the farms was shared with anyone who wanted it—the fishermen, the conservation groups got that data. There was some confusion about how to understand it, unfortunately. I can tell you that since we had that problem summer, we've invested millions of dollars in well-boat technologies so that we could use a closed containment system for treating sea lice. The fish are pumped out of the farm into the hold of this huge vessel with sea water, a very small amount of an approved treatment is administered under a veterinarian's care, and then the fish are pumped back into the cages.
This past year, we have only used bath treatments with hydrogen peroxide, which is a benign product; the fishermen have supported that. In Grand Manan, for example, we didn't do any bath treatments at all. Last week was our first one. It's a manageable problem with the right tools. We can handle it.
Over and above that, we've been investing in green technologies. We consider well boats and hydrogen peroxide to be one, but also we're exploring something that's being done very well in Norway. Some of you have been to Norway. They've discovered there's a native fish called the wrasse that actually eats sea lice. So you can put them in the cage with the salmon. It's worked so well that they are now actually having hatcheries where they grow these wrasse so that they're not depleting the wrasse from the wild. We can't bring those fish here because they're not native to our area. But we can explore if there is a native fish that would do the same thing. So our company has invested in a project with cunner fish that come from the Bay of Fundy. We've had some trials at the Huntsman Marine Science Centre that worked quite well. We got our first field trial.
There's no silver bullet. We're doing whatever we can to invest in good solutions.