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Norway rules out fish farm ban despite ‘existential threat’ to wild salmon | Fish

Norwegian Minister of Environment has excluded the ban on the open net in the sea, despite the fact that wild North Atlantic salmon is in the “existing threat”.

With 1.2m ton export every year, Norway is the largest producer of agricultural salmon In the world. However, the number of wild salmon individuals has decreased from more than 1 million in the early 1980s to about 500,000 today.

Most of the wildlife number of species is due to the climate crisis, but with agricultural fish. Significant rise in lice Parasites help to reduce numbers to historical low -rise, Last summer, 33 rivers closed from salmon fishing

His work is “not to stop or close the human activity itself” by Andreas Berand Ericksen, the Minister of Climate Environment, but rather encourages industrial production while reducing contamination to “tolerable levels”. He said.

“This is basically an existing threat to the wilderness salmon, and if we overlook it, we don't think we can take measures we need to do,” a meeting in London last week.

Elixen states: “Looking at Wild Salmon, 2024 was a very bad year, but the other two worst years we had in 2023 and 2021 were not independent.

“So it's really a part of the trend, symbolizing something. For me, what we do is more than nature, us. He added that the shares can actually be processed. “

However, despite the approval, the Minister told the Guardian that he would not stop the open net sea agriculture.

“Looking at the aquaculture industry, they produce really important food for people around the world. The goal is to sustain the food in the future,” he said.

“Therefore, my main problems are not the production itself, but the impact of pollution and pollution, which is what we need to work on,” said Ericsen.

“And that's why it is necessary to work to get a regulatory system that encourages production, but it is within the pollution level that is not harmful to wild Atlantic shares.”

He said that the Salmon River in the Norwegian is still in good health to resume this year's fishing season, but has a better idea until spring.

The Minister said that it is planning to reduce the agriculture of the open net, but to seek pollution in the “tolerable level” of wild salmon groups.

“There is a level of pollution that can work on the environment, which may be within the restrictions that can work on wild Atlantic Thermostoc, so finding that level is really necessary to move forward. And some areas that may be zero.

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