I’d always thought fish the ‘better’ food choice. It’s the clean, safe option in between chickens that are pumped with hormones and pigs in pens where they can’t stand up and cows getting stunned and still not killed at abattoirs.
Fish felt like the safer, cleaner, kinder and more environmentally sustainable choice.
Until Monday night’s Four Corners on the ABC exposed the intensive farming and use of chemical colouring that fish farming in Australia involves.
The 45-minute program called ‘Big Fish’ painted a very different picture to the one seen on the packaging of smoked salmon or salmon fillets in the supermarket’s cold section. Forget open water and free, jumping fish. Instead think over-crowded nets, damage to the environment and chemicals that are used to replicate natural conditions.
The program has changed me.
I’m never buying farmed salmon again.
I’m not naive. I know that the farming of any animal needs to be profitable. To be profitable, it must involve high numbers. It can’t be all open spaces and wild animals and nothing industrial in sight.
But it doesn’t need to be this bad.
Fish farms in Tasmania are hurting the ecosystem.
Macquarie Harbour – on Tasmania’s West Coast – has a small opening to the ocean called Hell’s Gates. This harbour is used by the three biggest Australian salmon retailers – Tassal, Huon and Petuna – to intensively farm salmon.