Farmed Salmon Exposed

Wild Salmon Circle Presents: New Film on Global Salmon Farming Industry + Panel Talk + Citizen Action

Date: Thursday, November 12
Time: 7-9 PM
Location: SFU Segal Centre  - Room 1500-500 Granville St. (Downtown Vancouver – Granville & Pender)
Cost: $10 for Public / $5 for Students & Seniors

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Join the Wild Salmon Circle on Nov. 12 from 7-9 PM at Vancouver’s SFU Segal Centre for the premiere of a new short documentary by filmmaker Damien Gillis, which shows how the British Columbia experience of salmon farming fits into a global pattern of catastrophe wrought by a predominantly Norwegian-owned industry.

“Farmed Salmon Exposed” is a 20-minute film showcasing footage and images from Norway, Scotland, Ireland, Chile, and Canada. The short film will be followed by a panel discussion and audience Q & A, with film-maker Gillis and:

• Former BC Environment Minister Rafe Mair
• Hereditary Chief Robert Joseph of the Broughton Archipelago Territory
• Chilean-Canadian biologist Pablo Trujillo from UBC’s Fisheries Centre
• SFU salmon researcher and behavioural ecologist Dr. Larry Dill

The event will conclude with a short-letter writing party for give those who are interested a chance to take direct action for wild salmon in BC.

The documentary lifts the lid on facts that government and industry hoped Canadians would never learn about:

• That 90% of BC salmon farms are owned by 3 Norwegian corporations, with profits leaving our province
• That the industry has unleashed a deadly virus (ISA) that has decimated the industry in Chile, is currently hitting Scotland, and looms as a threat to wild salmon in Canada
• That there are possible links between the Fraser River sockeye collapse and open-net salmon farms on BC’s coast
• That wild forage-fish stocks worldwide are being ravaged to make pelletized feed for farmed salmon

Featuring interviews with scientists, conservationists, indigenous and labour leaders from around the world, “Farmed Salmon Exposed” reveals the underbelly of industry now known as the “asbestos of the oceans” — a corporate agribusiness that externalizes its waste and problems onto the ecosystems and coastal residents in the countries where it operates, while exporting profits into the pockets of foreign shareholders.

1 comment to Farmed Salmon Exposed

  • This looks and sounds great. Excellent announcement and I hope lots of people show up! I would suggest using the film title “Farmed Salmon Exposed” in the title of the event, it’s compelling and catchy.

    THanks for a great site and regular update postings. That’s a big job. Oh, and there’s another event to post. The GSA one, I think on Nov. 8 or 9. I sent a mail around about it.

    This note is a sort of test to see how the Leave a Comment feature works :-)

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