Why the insults Dave? Why not add something of value to the discussion rather than just flinging insults?
When I read this study I got a few things from it....
1. Contrary to what we keep hearing from the feedlot industry, closed containment is financially viable.
2. DFO knows there are problems with open net feedlots, otherwise they wouldn't have done any feasibility studies on closed containment.
I certainly don't get the same things from reading this that you did. What I see is that RAS technology can be marginally profitable, and more sensitive to factors outside the aquaculturists control (market price, exchange rate) that would then render it unprofitable.
I agree that RAS technology poses less risk to the marine environment (note I don't just say less risk. There is then the issue of effluent discharge into freshwater bodies, with a much lower dilution rate than what would be seen in the marine environment). With the economics I see in this report, it isn't an industry I would choose to put my money in right now. A 4% ROE after 3 years compared to over 50% ROE with open pens doesn't exactly scream financially viable to me (unless you propose that the industry receive significant govt subsidy).
I also don't see this report as DFO "knowing there is a problem" with open net pen technologies. What I see is a proactive approach to address a perceived issue from some parties with a balanced, quantitative analysis. No opinion, no slant, just numbers. It's called risk assessment and management. Assess the risks, both the likelihood and potential impact, and then assess options, risks that go along with options, and the potential benefits of options.
Once again, for the record (since we seem to have to provide disclaimers every post lest we be labelled a pro-feedlot shareholder, incompetent angler and non-report posting web lurker): I do not work in the feedlot industry, I derive zero income from the fish farm industry, I own several fly rods, level winds, centerpins, and spinning reels which I can cast without tangling, I tie my own flies, I catch and release, I have read Haig-Brown, I fish less now than I used to (working with fish every day seems to have driven me to spend more time in the mountains than on the rivers), I still spend 50+ days a year on the water, I gave up posting internet fishing reports when I was 19 and realized how pointless they are, and I've been around the fishing sites long enough to be bored of the majority of the other repetitive topics that continue to come up, hence the focus on this relatively new one. Not sure if this legitimizes my postings, but since these attributes have been called into question in previous posts (by those who are getting bullied lol), I figure I will be proactive as well.