So, she used a picture from the Internet to make her point - you can't refute the facts outlined that the disease is affecting salmon.
From the Q1 profit statement for the company in question "Marine Harvest":
"For Marine Harvest Canada, the 2011 profit was affected by exceptional customer
claims and discards at harvesting totalling NOK 67.7 million due to the parasite Kudoa thyrsites.
They are admitting right in their company information that they are having a major problem with this disease.
About C$11 million in farmed Atlantic salmon had to be discarded because of it.
As well, we are not sure that she had the wrong pic.
At the bottom of the Wiki post, it says "Probably Henneguya zschokkei" - it may or may not be kudoa.
More bad news:
"in their first quarter report, 2012, Marine Harvest suggests there will be no dividend paid to shareholders this year"
“The world's largest fish farmer, Marine Harvest, said first-quarter operating profit fell sharply even as harvested volumes were ahead of plan as salmon prices fell.”
Mainstream/Cermaq not doing too well either:
While Cermaq reported an EBIT of NOK 101 million, their BC operations reported a negative EBIT pre fair value of NOK 1.6 million, despite “certain cost reduction programmes.”
The beginning of the end:
We are risking all for an industry that is not only failing, it is failing most dramatically right here in BC.
The Chilean divisions of Marine Harvest and Cermaq are escalating and that is what is driving global farm salmon prices down.
The huge 2007-2010 ISA epidemic in Chile significantly raised the price of farm salmon enormously worldwide.
Everyone stocked their farms as fast as they could hoping for a few years of high prices, but the Chilean banks pushed Chilean operators to restock rapidly and so everyone was caught with too many fish in their pens.
British Columbia is the region of greatest loss to the Norwegians using coastlines around the world to grow "their" fish.