As I believe you work for the FF industry do you see any negatives or is everything fine from your standpoint?
I do work in the salmon aquaculture industry, and have for more than a decade.
During that time I have never seen an example of where salmon aquaculture in BC has been shown to cause a decline in wild salmon populations anywhere farms exist.
What I have seen - from a boat, from a kayak, from the beach, from the riverbank, from anywhere I have actively and passionately fished for any number of species over the years - is many, many, observable one-time and annually repeating impacts on fish populations that have absolutely nothing to do with the culturing of salmon in pens on the Coast.
The criticisms of salmon aquaculture start at an assumption of harm lacking evidence, and then work backwards to fill in areas where limited and incomplete data serves to support the "Precautionary Principle" in the construct of peer-reviewed risk analyses utilising "may" and "could" to give the appearance of a statistical reality.
What has been, and continues to be lacking, is a testable and repeatable hypothesis which identifies a signal from aquaculture within the wide range of factors known to influence wild salmon populations.
I've spent almost half my time in the industry working directly with enhancement groups trying to boost salmon populations in the areas we operate, and have also led wild salmonid sea lice data collection projects mirroring Morton's work in the Broughton, as well as being Co-Chair of the Clayoquot Salmon Roundtable group for the last few years - so I am quite familiar with what we know and don't know about the success of many different runs on the coast.
I am thankful that there are many groups and individuals out there who are asking all the questions regarding salmon survival, and not simply beating the dead horse of a "smoking gun" they seem to think aquaculture holds.
I don't mean to rag on you personally Chris, but I have to say you are part of a group which is so startlingly myopic in your campaign against farmed salmon, I truly feel you miss out on a great deal of opportunity to find common ground.