

The horror show that is Norwegian salmon farming scared the living daylights out of consumers in the United States on prime time TV last night (3 October).

The mainstream media have shamefully missed two important questions in reporting on news on the smoked salmon salmonella outbreak:
1) Is the contaminated salmon farmed or wild?
2) Where was the contaminated salmon farmed (e.g. Norway or Scotland)?
Within the week (“on or before 30 September, 2012”), Justice Bruce Cohen will finally close the door on Canada’s $25 million judicial inquiry into the decline of wild salmon after almost three years of public meetings, evidential hearings and heated discussion.
A petition signed by employees of both Marine Harvest and Cermaq is calling on the Canadian Government to "restrain" Alexandra Morton from speaking out on salmon farming issues and from taking further samples of disease-ridden farmed salmon!



Late on Friday (25 May), the Coastal Alliance for Aquaculture Reform (CAAR) finally did the right thing and pulled the plug on their dirty deal with Marine Harvest.
A letter was sent today (24 May) to Cermaq's CEO Jon Hindar regarding the non-disclosure of disease data - read online here!
Cermaq's Annual General Meeting takes place today in Oslo, Norway, with an eerie sense of Déjà vu. "I told you so" really doesn't cut it.
