Saumon d'élevage : ce que l'industrie nous cache | RTS
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Ce documentaire révèle les réalités cachées et l'impact environnemental désastreux de l'élevage intensif de saumon en Écosse et en Norvège, dénonçant les pratiques de l'industrie et ses conséquences sur le bien-être animal et les écosystèmes marins.
- 0:00 Can you turn the light off? Just until we get round the corner.
- 0:18 Can you smell the fish? You can put the light on if you want.
- 0:45 It's very heavy.
- 0:55 Ah, it's disgusting.
- 0:59 You can see the head gone on that one.
- 1:03 You can see lice infestation.
- 1:05 You can see infectious diseases.
- 1:07 See the skin eaten away.
- 1:11 This is dead diseased salmon.
- 1:15 Could be 5,000, maybe more.
- 1:24 I'm just going to do a video.
- 1:27 But this is the welfare nightmare of salmon farming in Scotland.
- 1:32 They're trying to fence off, to shut me down, to stop me filming inside the farms.
- 1:38 Unlike salmon farmers, the camera never lies.
- 1:41 Please boycott Scottish salmon. Don Stanaford. It's late January 2025.
- 1:59 Does it make you feel hungry?
- 2:01 It's probably the highest level of mortality I've ever seen.
- 2:11 This bale may contain 30 tonnes of salmon.
- 2:15 People have to see the truth.
- 2:17 Don Stanaford is the black sheep of the world salmon industry.
- 2:22 He's been denouncing intensive farming in Scotland for 25 years,
- 2:26 and record mortality in certain marine farms.
- 2:30 Despite the denunciations of activists like him,
- 2:33 despite these images stolen from the cages,
- 2:35 which document the suffering of these sick fish and victims of parasites,
- 2:40 here in Scotland or elsewhere, in Chile or Norway,
- 2:43 this industry continues to grow.
- 2:54 It is Norwegian producers who dominate it.
- 2:57 They show respect for nature and fish,
- 2:59 raised and monitored through high-tech methods.
- 3:03 They show us healthy and vigorous salmon,
- 3:06 whose emblematic pink flesh lands on our plates and in our shops every day.
- 3:11 Their production has tripled in 25 years, and profits have skyrocketed.
- 3:20 In Switzerland, we are crazy about this fish.
- 3:23 In the last 10 years, its consumption has increased by 40%.
- 3:27 In the media, we are shown the image of an industry as pure as these landscapes.
- 3:32 And yet, these farms pose serious problems
- 3:35 in terms of animal well-being and environmental damage.
- 3:39 We are going to tell you how we, the consumers, are made of smoke.
- 3:54 It is in these fjords of Norway that it all began, already in the 1960s.
- 3:59 This man knows them like the back of his hand.
- 4:05 And for good reason.
- 4:06 It's been 20 years since Ruben Odekalv has been investigating the intensive salmon farming.
- 4:11 At the head of the Norwegian Environment Protection Association,
- 4:14 he closely monitors the activities of this industry.
- 4:17 He is a member of the Norwegian Environment Protection Association,
- 4:20 and he is documenting its impacts on nature.
- 4:25 He takes us to sea cages,
- 4:27 some kind of enclosures 15 to 50 meters in diameter and up to 50 meters deep.
- 4:34 We can't get close to the nets.
- 4:36 The biggest producers have all refused our shooting requests at their aquaculture farms.
- 4:44 There can be up to 200,000 fish per cage.
- 4:46 They swim one direction.
- 4:48 If you look closely at these salmon,
- 4:50 you will see that their muscles develop more on one side
- 4:53 because they only go in one direction.
- 4:55 They don't shift.
- 4:58 The salmon raised here for two years
- 5:00 have only a distant relationship with their wild ancestor,
- 5:03 an athletic and brave fish that crosses the Atlantic.
- 5:06 These are genetically selected fish, generation after generation.
- 5:10 The main thing they've been focusing on is the size.
- 5:15 They wanted to grow as fast as possible
- 5:17 to have the biggest, most fleshful salmon possible.
- 5:22 This is like the McDonald's in the world of salmon.
- 5:26 This is the lazy fat, just sitting in the couch salmon.
- 5:32 This is the lazy fat, just sitting in the couch salmon.
- 5:37 To feed this carnivore,
- 5:39 a supply boat delivers bags of several hundred kilos of granules,
- 5:43 a kind of concentrate of flour and fish oil
- 5:46 to which cereals are added, mainly Brazilian soy.
- 5:50 There is also pink color to pimp the salmon's flesh.
- 5:55 The balls are distributed in the cages by these pipes.
- 5:58 In recent years, the proportion of fish in the granules has dropped significantly.
- 6:03 The main reason they did that is because this industry is so big
- 6:07 that they are using everything, all that is available.
- 6:10 So they have to find other sources of food.
- 6:14 But still, we can also eat soy, like protein from soy,
- 6:19 and only using soy, you are taking our own food,
- 6:23 giving it to the salmon and giving it to the fish.
- 6:26 Raising a carnivore is not sustainable, period.
- 6:30 Seafood farming also has consequences on wild salmon,
- 6:33 whose population has dropped by half in Norway.
- 6:38 These lazy cousins escape and mix.
- 6:42 And when you have this kind of mix,
- 6:44 you have to be careful not to mix it too much,
- 6:47 because if you mix it too much,
- 6:49 the salmon will not be able to digest it.
- 6:52 These lazy cousins escape and mix.
- 6:57 And when you have these lazier, fattier genes in wild fish,
- 7:02 it makes them degenerate and they destroy the wild population.
- 7:08 You don't see that with chickens.
- 7:10 You don't see that with cows.
- 7:12 You don't see that with pigs.
- 7:14 If they escape you, you can catch them.
- 7:17 At each mission, he posts videos for the members of his organization.
- 7:23 We have been informing you for almost 20 years
- 7:25 about these marine farms and their impact on nature.
- 7:32 That's what's crazy.
- 7:34 The problems related to salmon farming
- 7:36 have been denounced since the beginning of this industry,
- 7:39 even in our country.
- 7:43 Look at this excerpt from Abonnentendeur,
- 7:45 the RTS console program.
- 7:47 It dates from 1997, almost 30 years ago.
- 7:52 And there is a war of differences today
- 7:54 between salmon farming and poultry and chicken farming.
- 7:57 This implies a very rich diet,
- 7:59 based on fish flour,
- 8:01 and a density that can go up to 10 kg of salmon per m3 of water.
- 8:07 In farming, the animal has transformed.
- 8:09 It has become too fat and not enough muscular.
- 8:11 But this did not prevent the formidable growth of the Norwegian industry.
- 8:16 ABE was telling you about a density of 10 kg of salmon per m3 of water.
- 8:20 Today, we are often twice as much.
- 8:27 More than 1,000 farms produce here
- 8:29 some 400 million salmon each year.
- 8:31 A production that has tripled in 30 years.
- 8:35 In 30 years, it has also become a global industry
- 8:37 that thrives in Chile, Scotland, Canada,
- 8:40 the Faroe Islands, Tasmania, New Zealand, Iceland, Ireland.
- 8:45 Farming very often in the hands of three Norwegian giants,
- 8:48 Mövi, Salmar, the King.
- 8:53 And this empire, which collects billions of benefits,
- 8:56 does not appreciate those who come to put their nose in the cages.
- 9:00 The employees of the farm in Kwakol call on Ruben O'Dekalb,
- 9:03 reproaching him for being too close to the enclosures.
- 9:08 No law forbids us to film the facility
- 9:12 as long as we stay 20 meters from the buoys.
- 9:15 No, no, you have to stay 100 meters.
- 9:17 No, reread the rules.
- 9:19 100 meters from the cages, that's if we fish.
- 9:24 Do you have problems when you criticize the industry?
- 9:27 Have you been pressuring on you?
- 9:30 Yes, absolutely.
- 9:32 This is the only industry that has acted like this.
- 9:35 We are attacking the oil industry, the chemical industry.
- 9:39 The fish farm in Kwakol is the only one that has pressured our sponsors,
- 9:43 the only one that has attacked us in the media
- 9:46 and the only one that has tried to destroy our organization.
- 9:52 They are not answering the critics.
- 9:54 They are attacking the messenger,
- 9:57 which is a very valid point that there is something to what we are saying.
- 10:10 In Scotland, the vast majority of salmon farms
- 10:13 are also in the hands of Norwegian producers.
- 10:16 And here too, they do not appreciate war, their contradictor.
- 10:26 Don Staniford in particular is in their sights.
- 10:29 He is the one who showed us the dead salmon during a night operation.
- 10:33 He is preparing a new attack.
- 10:36 We are here in a beautiful forest.
- 10:38 When the forest is cut down,
- 10:40 for example when they cut down the Amazon forest,
- 10:43 you can see it.
- 10:45 It is very visible.
- 10:47 You can see it from the sky.
- 10:49 But if you look at a salmon farm overnight,
- 10:52 it looks like nothing.
- 10:54 People may not even see it.
- 10:56 You can see it from the sky.
- 10:58 But if you look at a salmon farm overnight,
- 11:01 it looks like nothing.
- 11:03 People may not even see it.
- 11:05 And even less the damage it causes.
- 11:07 You have to film inside a farm to see the abuse.
- 11:11 Otherwise, it is far from the eyes, far from the heart.
- 11:18 To denounce the salmon industry,
- 11:20 he made a reputation thanks to his kayak
- 11:23 and a certain sense of self-deception.
- 11:26 This is Don Staniford in a clever disguise.
- 11:29 I am here in front of a salmon farm.
- 11:33 This is me.
- 11:35 They want to block access to public salmon farms.
- 11:38 They are trying to stop us, me and others,
- 11:41 from filming inside salmon farms.
- 11:45 Look at these shocking photos.
- 11:47 I obtained them thanks to the law on transparency
- 11:50 and hidden cameras.
- 11:54 I started off as a university student.
- 11:57 I was studying the impact of salmon farming
- 12:00 on the environment in the early 1990s.
- 12:03 Then I became an activist.
- 12:07 Governments around the world have allowed these salmon multinationals
- 12:11 to privatize the coast,
- 12:13 to close off the marine environment and the freshwater environment.
- 12:18 It's all about money.
- 12:21 They do support jobs, but it's a huge cost.
- 12:26 Since 2018, he has multiplied his kayak expeditions
- 12:29 to get closer to the cages
- 12:31 and even climb on these facilities to film them better.
- 12:34 But several salmon producers have sued the law
- 12:37 to prevent this.
- 12:40 One of the Norwegian giants has obtained a cause.
- 12:43 The activist is no longer allowed to set foot on the cages,
- 12:46 but he can still get closer.
- 12:48 Other complaints are being dealt with by the Scottish courts.
- 12:52 The boat is coming towards me. I'm going to stop.
- 12:55 They want an exclusion reserve.
- 12:57 They want to ban our drones.
- 12:59 You can see the boat behind me.
- 13:01 They want to shut down the criticism.
- 13:05 And we understand why.
- 13:07 Don Staniford's videos reveal what's going on under the surface.
- 13:12 Filmed illegally in many marine farms
- 13:15 and published in the media,
- 13:17 Don Staniford's videos reveal what's going on under the surface.
- 13:22 Filmed illegally on social media,
- 13:24 they have also been broadcast all over the world
- 13:27 thanks to several documentaries.
- 13:30 The salmon from the farms swim in a cloaca
- 13:33 full of waste.
- 13:35 They are exposed to infectious diseases.
- 13:38 They are infested with lice.
- 13:41 Filming in 2023, I discovered what I call zombie fish.
- 13:46 These are fish that are pretty much dead.
- 13:49 Pieces of flesh have been devoured.
- 13:51 They are zombies. It's shocking.
- 13:57 What does the Scottish industry say?
- 14:00 In the capital Edinburgh,
- 14:02 the doors of its holiday association, Salmon Scotland,
- 14:05 have remained closed.
- 14:07 The theme is still burning.
- 14:10 In January, a parliamentary commission
- 14:12 led by the Conservative MP Finlay Carson
- 14:15 published a highly anticipated investigation
- 14:17 on Scottish farming
- 14:19 after a first alarming report.
- 14:22 Back in 2018, we had issues of mortality.
- 14:25 That was probably one of the most important points of the report.
- 14:29 At that stage, we had 25% of mortality within the sector
- 14:33 and the committee stated that to be unacceptable.
- 14:36 Now, we find that that mortality is still the same.
- 14:40 There are even farms in Kwakol
- 14:42 that have a mortality rate as high as 85%.
- 14:47 85% is a hecatomb,
- 14:49 often due to the attack of micro-jellyfish,
- 14:52 more and more frequent due to sea water warming.
- 14:56 As shown in this video by a British NGO,
- 14:59 it mortally hurts the salmon that are already weakened
- 15:03 and trapped in their cages.
- 15:07 In its report, the parliamentary commission is concerned
- 15:10 about the situation and denounces the lack of progress in the industry.
- 15:14 It asks the government to tighten the bolts.
- 15:17 We also made recommendations
- 15:19 that a competent authority should have more power
- 15:23 to enforce certain regulations.
- 15:26 We recommended the closure of farms
- 15:28 that show a high mortality rate and would be closed down.
- 15:33 But there is no question of too embarrassing this industry
- 15:36 that is at the origin of some 12,000 direct and indirect jobs.
- 15:41 It is also the largest exporter of food products in the United Kingdom.
- 15:48 At this point, we did not ask for a pause or a moratorium
- 15:52 because the exact implications of such a measure are not clear.
- 15:56 We do not want to jeopardize jobs
- 15:59 or compromise the future investments of the big salmon companies.
- 16:05 This sector is an important employer
- 16:07 but also a major player in the Scottish economy.
- 16:18 In Norway, the weight of the salmon industry is even greater.
- 16:22 There are 50,000 jobs and sales of 10 billion francs in 2024,
- 16:26 which makes it a strategic export sector,
- 16:29 the second after oil and gas.
- 16:33 It is the first country in the world to have created a Ministry of Fisheries
- 16:37 and inevitably the interests of the government and the industry converge.
- 16:43 The government wants the industry to develop.
- 16:49 The main objective is not necessarily to increase volume
- 16:53 but rather to add value
- 16:55 or the contribution of the industry to our GDP,
- 17:00 to our economy.
- 17:04 Of course, if we can also increase production,
- 17:07 that's a good thing,
- 17:09 but it has to be done in a sustainable way.
- 17:13 Sustainable is a key word for the government and the industry.
- 17:17 Here too, farming has recorded a record mortality in recent years.
- 17:22 62 million salmon died prematurely at sea in 2023
- 17:27 and nearly 40 million in hatcheries.
- 17:32 This photo of thousands of dead salmon at the bottom of a cage
- 17:35 that leaked in the press in 2023 made a lot of noise.
- 17:40 We take the issue of fish well-being very seriously.
- 17:45 We have just published a strategic plan for Parliament
- 17:49 which will be discussed in the coming months
- 17:52 in which we recognize that the current mortality is too high.
- 17:56 We need to reduce this mortality
- 17:58 and we are looking at how we can do that.
- 18:04 As a reminder, no major salmon producer has accepted our interview requests.
- 18:12 So we went to see Trick V. Popé
- 18:15 to understand the causes of this record mortality.
- 18:19 He is one of the most respected fish health experts today, retired.
- 18:30 Today I can speak freely.
- 18:35 It's clear, there is a certain pressure from the industry.
- 18:40 Many scientists hesitate to show too much negativity about the industry.
- 18:49 They risk, in particular, to see their funding reduced by the government
- 18:53 to carry out independent research, as we say.
- 18:57 It's really a problem.
- 19:01 Training veterinarian, he is still very active.
- 19:04 With other retired scientists,
- 19:06 he is determined to raise the veil on breeding methods.
- 19:11 It's very intensive from the very beginning,
- 19:14 from the incubation of the eggs to the slaughtering of the fish.
- 19:19 We are constantly accelerating the process to maximize the profits.
- 19:26 This is why we frequently observe what we call diseases related to production
- 19:31 as well as infectious diseases.
- 19:34 Dozens of thousands of fish in cages,
- 19:36 it's the feast for the viruses that attack their gills, their pancreas, their hearts.
- 19:43 It is also open bar for this little creature, the seahorse,
- 19:46 a mini crustacean that feeds on the flesh and blood of the salmon.
- 19:54 This photo dates from the early 1980s,
- 19:57 when we first became aware of the fact
- 20:00 of the gravity of the problem posed by the seahorse.
- 20:03 Look at how the head of the fish has been rinsed down to the skull.
- 20:08 The industry first got rid of seahorses with pesticides,
- 20:11 but this affected other marine species.
- 20:14 So breeders have put in place other methods,
- 20:17 such as the so-called thermal.
- 20:19 They immerse the salmon, a cold-blooded animal, in water at 30 degrees.
- 20:23 A rare process,
- 20:25 The salmon are pumped up from the cages into a treatment chamber
- 20:29 and they are kept in these cages for about 30 seconds
- 20:32 and then pumped out again into a new cage.
- 20:35 During this process,
- 20:37 the high temperature is supposed to kill the parasite or paralyze it.
- 20:42 Of course, this is not the end of the story.
- 20:45 This is the end of the story.
- 20:47 This is the end of the story.
- 20:49 This is the end of the story.
- 20:51 Of course, the fish panic.
- 20:53 They swim in all directions.
- 20:55 They collide with each other
- 20:57 and hit each other on the wall
- 20:59 before they are pumped out again.
- 21:01 There is therefore a strong mortality just after the treatment
- 21:05 or in the following days,
- 21:07 or even a week later.
- 21:09 They also develop large cutaneous ulcers
- 21:12 that end up in the mouth of the fish.
- 21:15 This is the end of the story.
- 21:18 They also develop large cutaneous ulcers
- 21:21 that end up in the mouth of the fish.
- 21:26 Look at this article published yesterday
- 21:29 in the main Norwegian newspaper Afton Posten
- 21:32 which reads,
- 21:33 Your meal has been tortured.
- 21:36 This is a very strong term, tortured.
- 21:39 It's a very strong term.
- 21:41 But what we have seen in many cases
- 21:44 is far more than just an animal welfare problem.
- 21:47 It's abuse and abuse,
- 21:49 or torture, as they say here.
- 21:51 Because the industry knows exactly what they are doing.
- 21:54 They know the consequences of its actions
- 21:57 and they know that these fish are dying a terrible death.
- 22:00 So it's cynical
- 22:02 and I think the word torture is quite appropriate.
- 22:05 Absolutely.
- 22:06 When you are telling that,
- 22:08 consumers can say,
- 22:10 but it's just a fish.
- 22:14 Yes, that is the problem.
- 22:16 Just a fish.
- 22:18 But just a fish is not just a fish.
- 22:21 Because fish,
- 22:22 and in particular Atlantic salmon,
- 22:25 they are very sophisticated animals
- 22:28 and they have all the senses that you and I have.
- 22:31 They are capable of feeling pain and fear
- 22:34 and even despair.
- 22:45 In Oslo, we contacted the large producers' fair,
- 22:48 which represents 80% of the breeders
- 22:51 and 90% of Norwegian production,
- 22:53 to explain to us how salmon are produced
- 22:56 that we buy and eat in Switzerland.
- 22:59 In vain.
- 23:00 The door remained closed.
- 23:02 On our return, we witnessed,
- 23:04 and by force,
- 23:05 Christa Roas, regional director of Sjomat Norge,
- 23:08 answered our questions.
- 23:10 First of all,
- 23:11 how does the industry fight mortality?
- 23:16 The newest numbers on the mortality rate
- 23:19 came out just a few weeks ago.
- 23:21 It's an average of 15.4% in Norway
- 23:24 for all marine production.
- 23:27 That's down
- 23:29 4.8%
- 23:31 from last year.
- 23:33 It's been too high
- 23:35 and it's been too high level.
- 23:38 We hope that this is the beginning of a transition
- 23:41 that will take off.
- 23:43 Nobody has a bigger interest
- 23:45 in reducing mortality
- 23:47 than the breeders themselves.
- 23:50 We have more and more
- 23:52 methods that we are using
- 23:54 and they are more gentle.
- 23:59 BioSort presents iFarm.
- 24:02 What some producers are developing
- 24:05 are high-tech treatments
- 24:07 in the cages themselves,
- 24:09 as shown in this commercial video.
- 24:11 A kind of facial recognition of the salmon
- 24:14 that allows to count the fish individually
- 24:17 and to sort the fish that will be treated.
- 24:23 The thermal treatment
- 24:25 currently used to fight sea lice,
- 24:28 can we say that it's a torture?
- 24:32 No, I wouldn't say that.
- 24:34 The Norwegian Food Authority
- 24:36 doesn't say that either.
- 24:38 They authorise this treatment
- 24:40 and it's within the limits of what we can do.
- 24:44 And this process has also been improved.
- 24:48 The mortality rate has gone down considerably
- 24:51 during this kind of treatment.
- 24:53 We are always improving,
- 24:55 but talking about torture,
- 24:57 no, I don't agree with that at all.
- 24:59 Do people get hurt by this treatment
- 25:01 because they are stressed?
- 25:03 Yes, of course.
- 25:05 The whole handling of fish
- 25:07 is an additional stress factor.
- 25:09 That's why we are trying to reduce
- 25:11 the number of treatments
- 25:13 and the handling of fish as much as possible.
- 25:16 Do we get also this injured fish
- 25:18 in our plates?
- 25:20 Of course, yes.
- 25:22 Because lots of these injured fish
- 25:24 cannot be exported as whole fish.
- 25:27 They have to be transformed into Norway.
- 25:30 So you can cut away the ulcers,
- 25:32 you can remove the skin, etc.
- 25:35 And they can be marketed
- 25:37 for smoking them as smaller fish pieces.
- 25:41 And of course,
- 25:43 the consumption of these small fish
- 25:45 is not a danger for humans
- 25:47 because the bacteria that kill the fish
- 25:49 are not harmful for humans.
- 25:52 But the quality is obviously inferior
- 25:55 and the consumers do not pay for that.
- 26:04 Does all this make sense
- 26:06 for our other consumers?
- 26:08 Why have we become accustomed
- 26:10 to eating so many salmon
- 26:12 as if they were falling from the sky?
- 26:14 In the south of England,
- 26:16 we met a man who has long been
- 26:18 investigating our food production
- 26:20 intensive systems
- 26:22 and their impact on our environment.
- 26:24 He is a scientific by training.
- 26:26 Georges Monbiot is the author of several books
- 26:28 that document this impact.
- 26:30 We started by submitting him
- 26:32 our packets of salmon.
- 26:40 The great majority of people
- 26:42 who buy this product
- 26:44 completely ignore the realities
- 26:46 of their production.
- 26:48 Look at these packages.
- 26:50 Smoked salmon is almost
- 26:52 the perfect example
- 26:54 of the disconnected consumerism
- 26:56 of reality.
- 26:58 Because this product
- 27:00 has been so far removed
- 27:02 from its manufacturing process
- 27:04 that one might think
- 27:06 it comes from Mars.
- 27:08 It says,
- 27:10 here is this substance,
- 27:12 this orange gelatineous stuff
- 27:14 which you'll like to taste
- 27:16 and it comes from somewhere
- 27:18 in the shadow of some detached
- 27:20 and without physical realities.
- 27:24 It is interesting to note
- 27:26 that none of these packages
- 27:28 show a fish
- 27:30 or even the place
- 27:32 where these fish come from.
- 27:34 Even people who might have
- 27:36 heard about the realities
- 27:38 of salmon farming
- 27:40 have relayed this information
- 27:42 in a corner of their mind.
- 27:44 And so when you step into
- 27:46 the supermarket,
- 27:48 you see that
- 27:50 there is a vacuum
- 27:52 in the package
- 27:54 and they are vacuum packed
- 27:56 in your mind.
- 27:58 And so it's that disconnection,
- 28:00 that disappearance
- 28:02 of our moral values
- 28:04 which is one of the great
- 28:06 diseases of our food system.
- 28:08 So what do those
- 28:10 whose mission is to regulate
- 28:12 the industry and its production methods do?
- 28:14 In Norway,
- 28:16 farmers are the ones
- 28:18 who have this responsibility.
- 28:20 Farmers must declare
- 28:22 any disease or parasite infestation
- 28:24 and the treatments used.
- 28:26 If a certain threshold is reached,
- 28:28 they must reduce their production.
- 28:30 But there is no greater constraint.
- 28:34 Everything depends on
- 28:36 the production technology
- 28:38 used on each site.
- 28:40 There are good sites
- 28:42 and there are bad sites.
- 28:44 There is no single
- 28:46 or unique treatment
- 28:48 to solve that problem.
- 28:50 You have to be able to consider
- 28:52 several measures simultaneously.
- 28:54 So shouldn't practices
- 28:56 such as thermal treatment be banned?
- 29:00 A ban
- 29:02 is not always a solution.
- 29:06 It is preferable
- 29:08 to give incentives
- 29:10 to producers
- 29:12 and to ban
- 29:14 a thing because
- 29:16 someone does not work
- 29:18 in an acceptable way.
- 29:20 It is not perhaps very fruitful.
- 29:22 We therefore prefer
- 29:24 to modify the operational procedures.
- 29:28 So we regulate,
- 29:30 but not too much.
- 29:32 Norway relies
- 29:34 on salmon as the main
- 29:36 export resource in the long term
- 29:38 once its oil and gas reserves
- 29:40 are depleted.
- 29:44 Independent journalist
- 29:46 Simen Satre spent four years
- 29:48 investigating behind the scenes
- 29:50 of this gigantic industry.
- 29:52 In his book,
- 29:54 he explains that for a long time
- 29:56 the industry had a kind of special status.
- 30:02 It is as if laws and regulations
- 30:04 had been written
- 30:06 for the industry to develop
- 30:08 according to its own needs.
- 30:12 But today,
- 30:14 the state becomes a little more critical.
- 30:16 The sector has taken great importance.
- 30:18 A lot of money is at stake.
- 30:22 And there is probably today
- 30:24 a greater will to regulate.
- 30:26 Nevertheless, the state remains very careful
- 30:28 when it comes to imposing
- 30:30 requirements on the sector.
- 30:32 His book and several other
- 30:34 investigations published recently
- 30:36 have undermined the reputation
- 30:38 of salmon producers in Norway.
- 30:40 In particular, those who benefit the most
- 30:42 are the big billionaire bosses.
- 30:44 By the way,
- 30:46 several of them have found
- 30:48 a tax haven in Switzerland.
- 30:52 When those who are nicknamed
- 30:54 the salmon barons,
- 30:56 that is to say managers
- 30:58 and owners of the industry,
- 31:00 appeared in the media,
- 31:02 they left a bad impression.
- 31:04 They showed themselves rich and arrogant
- 31:08 and little inclined
- 31:10 to understand criticism.
- 31:14 They have thus acquired
- 31:16 a very bad reputation over the years.
- 31:20 And today, many Norwegians
- 31:22 say that they have simply
- 31:24 stopped consuming salmon
- 31:26 and that they boycott it.
- 31:30 Norwegians know that there are
- 31:32 a lot of salmon in the sea.
- 31:34 But very recently,
- 31:36 they have also discovered
- 31:38 that salmon hatcheries
- 31:40 have an impact
- 31:42 on their well-loved fjords.
- 31:48 We are in the village of Erand,
- 31:50 with 240 inhabitants
- 31:52 and 2.5 million salmon babies.
- 31:54 Here, the Norwegian Mövi,
- 31:56 the world's largest producer,
- 31:58 exploits a hatchery.
- 32:00 The salmon grow
- 32:02 in sweet water tanks
- 32:04 for 12 to 18 months.
- 32:06 They are fed with industrial fish
- 32:08 and cereal granules.
- 32:10 Exploited since 1986,
- 32:12 this hatchery provides jobs
- 32:14 and income to many inhabitants.
- 32:16 It has changed the life of the village,
- 32:18 but not always for the better,
- 32:20 because these rejects
- 32:22 are directly evacuated to the bay.
- 32:26 Twice a week,
- 32:28 the Norwegian Mövi
- 32:30 bathes a few dozen meters
- 32:32 from the hatchery.
- 32:34 It's around 3 degrees.
- 32:36 These last two weeks,
- 32:38 the water was between 1 and 4 degrees.
- 32:44 It's been very good
- 32:46 for the last couple of weeks,
- 32:48 but sometimes it's a little bit stinky.
- 32:50 And they say they don't know
- 32:52 what it is,
- 32:54 but it smells like
- 32:56 and if it's too disgusting
- 32:58 here to swim,
- 33:00 then we go on the other side
- 33:02 or further out the fjord.
- 33:10 Lars Kettil Holdus
- 33:12 is also a neighbor of the hatchery.
- 33:14 This passionate fisherman
- 33:16 is disgusted by the fish
- 33:18 he catches.
- 33:22 They are pouring
- 33:24 unfiltered rejects into the bay.
- 33:28 There are food pellets
- 33:30 floating all around.
- 33:34 A lot of fish we used to catch here
- 33:36 are full of these granules
- 33:38 and their liver is green.
- 33:42 They smell bad.
- 33:44 It's not good at all.
- 33:46 So we throw it away.
- 33:48 Another neighbor of the hatchery,
- 33:50 Stuart Barry,
- 33:52 has dived several times
- 33:54 in the Erand Bay
- 33:56 near the evacuation ducts.
- 34:00 It's easy to see
- 34:02 where the evacuation ducts stop.
- 34:04 It's about 15 to 16 meters deep
- 34:06 where these birds are.
- 34:08 It's really not safe
- 34:10 to actually dive there.
- 34:12 I've experienced it myself.
- 34:14 Why that?
- 34:16 The amount of bacteria
- 34:18 and chemical products in the water
- 34:20 irritates the skin
- 34:22 and can cause cutaneous eruptions.
- 34:24 I also had an infected eye
- 34:26 for a month or two.
- 34:28 It stinks and the hatchery
- 34:30 doesn't tell us anything.
- 34:32 When we complain,
- 34:34 they tell us that everything is fine
- 34:36 or they ignore us.
- 34:38 Like us, by the way.
- 34:40 He shows us this video
- 34:42 filmed last summer
- 34:44 of fish waste
- 34:46 and a lot of other chemical products.
- 34:48 You can see the gas bubbles
- 34:50 escaping.
- 34:52 The evacuation duct is
- 34:54 150 meters from here.
- 34:58 These images were shot
- 35:00 by another passionate diver,
- 35:02 a famous war photographer.
- 35:06 Alexander Nordahl
- 35:08 has given himself a mission
- 35:10 that now takes up all his time
- 35:12 all along the Norwegian coast
- 35:14 and shows how human activities
- 35:16 affect them.
- 35:18 We are in one of the most famous
- 35:20 fjords in Norway.
- 35:24 We dive there in winter
- 35:26 because the ocean is clean
- 35:28 and we can see everything.
- 35:32 There is no algae proliferation.
- 35:34 It's extremely cold
- 35:36 but the water is clear.
- 35:42 This is the farm.
- 35:46 This is one of the
- 35:48 salmon hatcheries
- 35:50 that somebody had tipped me off.
- 35:58 So here we are.
- 36:00 I'm going to check
- 36:02 if we can dive here.
- 36:06 With another diver friend,
- 36:08 he wants to see
- 36:10 how the local marine ecosystem
- 36:12 is affected.
- 36:16 I'm putting in hot water
- 36:18 and soap
- 36:20 to put my suit on more easily.
- 36:24 I do all the free diving
- 36:26 which allows me
- 36:28 to swim longer
- 36:30 and be more flexible.
- 36:34 We're swimming over there
- 36:36 and observing
- 36:38 the surface.
- 36:54 Four degrees.
- 36:56 He dives
- 36:58 near the evacuation points
- 37:00 at a depth of ten meters.
- 37:02 Little life,
- 37:04 organic waste
- 37:06 and a lot of fish.
- 37:08 It's too deep.
- 37:10 No fish,
- 37:12 just an anemone.
- 37:20 But he saw much worse
- 37:22 than in his video
- 37:24 filmed off the coast of Erindh.
- 37:26 We showed it
- 37:28 to a specialist
- 37:30 from the Norwegian University
- 37:32 of Science and Technology
- 37:35 You see what we call
- 37:37 the marine snow.
- 37:39 That's food waste
- 37:41 mixed with fish excrement.
- 37:43 It creates an ideal environment
- 37:45 for bacteria to proliferate.
- 37:47 These bacteria
- 37:49 are consuming oxygen.
- 37:51 It's just a very simple phenomenon
- 37:53 to understand.
- 37:55 It doesn't make these habitats healthy.
- 37:57 That's for sure.
- 37:59 It's degrading.
- 38:01 And what we see here
- 38:04 is that the fish
- 38:06 are getting sick.
- 38:08 It's worse than a hamburger.
- 38:10 It's a food waste
- 38:12 that is not healthy for the fish.
- 38:14 That's why it's getting sick.
- 38:16 On other sites,
- 38:18 Alexander Nordahl
- 38:20 has captured several of these wild fish.
- 38:22 They are not salmon,
- 38:24 but other species.
- 38:26 And we can see
- 38:28 that they have swallowed
- 38:30 industrial granules
- 38:33 but no brown algae
- 38:35 like the varek
- 38:37 that should be present
- 38:39 if the ecosystem is healthy.
- 38:41 So we just see
- 38:43 a lot of species disappearing
- 38:45 and we see a decline
- 38:47 of the organisms
- 38:49 that should be there
- 38:51 for a functional living area.
- 38:53 And they are gone.
- 38:55 The industry says
- 38:57 that there was a syria
- 38:59 in the region for centuries
- 39:01 that was responsible
- 39:03 basically.
- 39:05 Yes, I mean, this is a classic.
- 39:07 They are just
- 39:09 giving the responsibility
- 39:11 to others, you know.
- 39:13 But when you look at this
- 39:15 marine snow,
- 39:17 that's not from a sawmill.
- 39:19 That's not from a sawmill.
- 39:21 It's an evident sign
- 39:23 of extreme environmental stress.
- 39:25 And that we do know.
- 39:27 To understand who is
- 39:29 responsible for
- 39:31 the effects of
- 39:33 this environmental stress,
- 39:35 we have to look
- 39:37 at the report
- 39:39 of the inspections
- 39:41 carried out in Herand
- 39:43 by the Regional Environmental Protection Agency.
- 39:45 The first date is 2001.
- 39:47 It indicates that
- 39:49 the aqua farms'
- 39:51 exploitation of the aqua farms
- 39:53 is in a state of infraction.
- 39:55 It has exceeded
- 39:57 80 tonnes.
- 39:59 And so it has doubled its rejections.
- 40:03 The second date is 2015.
- 40:05 And it also denounces
- 40:07 non-conformities,
- 40:09 notably the absence of reports
- 40:11 and rejection plans
- 40:13 as required by the authorities.
- 40:15 Fourteen years after the first inspection,
- 40:17 there was still no filtration system.
- 40:19 And today,
- 40:21 nothing has changed.
- 40:23 Herand is far from being an exception.
- 40:25 A Norwegian daily report
- 40:27 recently revealed that,
- 40:29 over a period of 20 years,
- 40:31 9 inspections out of 10
- 40:33 have found violations
- 40:35 in the country's
- 40:37 some 200 hatcheries.
- 40:39 At sea, under the cages,
- 40:41 there are the same rejections
- 40:43 of food and waste,
- 40:45 but in much larger quantities.
- 40:47 The farms carry out
- 40:49 an auction
- 40:51 between each breeding cycle,
- 40:53 which brings out cages
- 40:55 along the whole coastal line.
- 40:59 So all of this food
- 41:01 and salmon excrement
- 41:03 is transported further away.
- 41:05 Of course it will be diluted,
- 41:07 but with the enormous
- 41:09 number of cages
- 41:11 along the shoreline,
- 41:13 it affects the whole ecosystem.
- 41:15 I've been full-time diving
- 41:17 all along the Norwegian coast,
- 41:19 from south to north.
- 41:21 And the only way
- 41:23 I can describe what I see
- 41:25 as being an absolute nightmare
- 41:27 is that this is going to hell.
- 41:29 And for me,
- 41:31 it's destruction,
- 41:33 it's death.
- 41:35 It's basically the same mechanism
- 41:37 as in wartime,
- 41:39 but we don't see the destruction
- 41:41 that we create.
- 41:43 That's why I feel it's really important
- 41:45 to document it.
- 41:47 The industry, it,
- 41:49 relies on the research
- 41:51 of government institutes
- 41:53 to refute these criticisms.
- 41:57 Under each site,
- 41:59 there are tests
- 42:01 before and after
- 42:03 every breeding cycle
- 42:05 in the pens.
- 42:07 These tests are carried out
- 42:09 by a third party,
- 42:11 and they are sent
- 42:13 to the Directorate of Fisheries
- 42:15 in Norway,
- 42:17 and 94%
- 42:19 of all sites
- 42:21 get good or very good
- 42:23 evaluations.
- 42:25 So there could be problems
- 42:27 in some fjords
- 42:29 or under certain farms,
- 42:31 but then you just have to
- 42:33 increase the duration
- 42:35 of the hatchery
- 42:37 or reduce the volume
- 42:39 of the hatchery.
- 42:41 If we can really change
- 42:43 the way we produce food,
- 42:45 it's a lot cheaper
- 42:47 to change your marketing,
- 42:49 to change your marketing
- 42:51 in a way that enables
- 42:53 to increase
- 42:55 the number
- 42:57 of aquaculture projects
- 42:59 in the world
- 43:01 and increase
- 43:03 the number
- 43:05 of aquaculture projects
- 43:07 It's a lot cheaper
- 43:09 to change your marketing
- 43:11 and convince people
- 43:13 that doing the same thing
- 43:15 will give different results.
- 43:17 You're going to stick words
- 43:19 like sustainable, regenerative
- 43:21 or organic on your products
- 43:23 but actually the impacts
- 43:25 remain the same.
- 43:27 You might have changed
- 43:29 one or two impacts
- 43:31 to a small extent
- 43:33 but you're causing
- 43:35 a lot of trouble.
- 43:37 Look, we've produced
- 43:39 a far more efficient machine.
- 43:41 It's much quicker,
- 43:43 it operates much more effectively
- 43:45 but you're still cutting
- 43:47 off people's heads.
- 43:49 This industry
- 43:51 is morally unacceptable.
- 43:53 We should no longer
- 43:55 accept an industry
- 43:57 whose economic model
- 43:59 is based on deceit
- 44:01 about its realities.
- 44:05 The Calves' Farm
- 44:07 continues to fight
- 44:09 to limit the damage
- 44:11 of wild animals
- 44:13 on nature,
- 44:15 pleading for closed enclosures.
- 44:17 But its fight
- 44:19 may be prolonged.
- 44:21 Other wild fish
- 44:23 are starting to be raised
- 44:25 in cages like the capybara.
- 44:27 These escaped
- 44:29 a farm in 2023.
- 44:31 You see a lot of
- 44:33 capybaras
- 44:35 in the wild.
- 44:37 And this one is another.
- 44:39 It is special to this place.
- 44:41 Its proportions are not natural.
- 44:43 It's the result of a genetic defect.
- 44:47 Little by little
- 44:49 these slower,
- 44:51 more stupid,
- 44:53 more lazy fish
- 44:55 will destroy the wild population
- 44:57 with their degenerated genes.
- 44:59 And that is really, really scary.
- 45:01 We know from the salmon industry
- 45:03 everything they did wrong
- 45:05 and they made the same mistakes again
- 45:07 with another species.
- 45:09 Today the wild salmon population
- 45:11 has collapsed largely
- 45:13 because of industrial farming.
- 45:15 And now they are starting to do the same
- 45:17 with the capybara.
- 45:19 That scares me literally.
- 45:31 .
Ce documentaire percutant, "Saumon d’élevage : ce que l'industrie nous cache", expose les sombres réalités de l'aquaculture intensive du saumon, principalement en Écosse et en Norvège. Le film débute avec l'activiste Don Staniford, qui révèle des images choquantes de saumons morts et malades dans des fermes écossaises, victimes de poux de mer et de maladies infectieuses. Il dénonce un "cauchemar de bien-être animal" et appelle au boycott du saumon écossais. Le reportage met en lumière la croissance fulgurante de cette industrie, dominée par des producteurs norvégiens, qui projette une image de respect de la nature et de haute technologie, tout en cachant des problèmes majeurs. En Suisse, la consommation de saumon a augmenté de 40% en dix ans, alimentée par une image médiatique idéalisée. Ruben Odekalv, de l'Association norvégienne de protection de l'environnement, mène l'enquête dans les fjords norvégiens. Il décrit des cages surpeuplées (jusqu'à 200 000 poissons par cage), où les saumons, génétiquement sélectionnés pour la taille et la croissance rapide, nagent constamment dans une seule direction, développant des muscles asymétriques. Leur alimentation, un mélange de farine de poisson, d'huile de poisson, de soja brésilien et de colorants roses, est jugée non durable pour un carnivore. L'évasion de ces saumons d'élevage affaiblit génétiquement les populations de saumons sauvages, dont la population a chuté de moitié en Norvège. Le documentaire rappelle que ces problèmes sont connus depuis des décennies, citant un reportage de la RTS de 1997 qui dénonçait déjà la densité excessive et l'engraissement des poissons. Malgré cela, l'industrie a triplé sa production en 30 ans, devenant un empire mondial aux mains de géants norvégiens comme Mowi et Salmar. Ces entreprises exercent des pressions sur les activistes et les scientifiques, tentant de bloquer les enquêtes et les tournages. Les images obtenues par Don Staniford révèlent des "poissons zombies" en 2023, des saumons à moitié morts, dévorés par des parasites. Un rapport parlementaire écossais de 2018 avait déjà jugé inacceptable un taux de mortalité de 25%, un chiffre qui n'a pas diminué, atteignant parfois 85% dans certaines fermes, souvent à cause des micro-méduses exacerbées par le réchauffement climatique. Le Dr Trygve Poppe, expert en santé des poissons, explique que l'intensification des processus pour maximiser les profits entraîne des maladies liées à la production et des infections virales. Les poux de mer, un fléau, sont traités par des méthodes brutales comme les bains thermiques, où les saumons sont immergés dans de l'eau à 30°C, provoquant panique, collisions et blessures graves. Ces pratiques sont qualifiées de "torture" par les experts, bien que l'industrie les défende. Les poissons blessés ou malades sont ensuite transformés et vendus, leur qualité inférieure étant masquée aux consommateurs. Georges Monbiot critique le "consumérisme déconnecté" qui permet aux consommateurs d'ignorer les réalités de production, notant l'absence d'images de poissons ou de lieux d'origine sur les emballages. L'impact environnemental est également dévastateur. Des rejets non filtrés d'alevinières, comme celle de Mowi à Herand, polluent les fjords avec des déchets alimentaires et des excréments, créant un "neige marine" qui consomme l'oxygène, dégrade les habitats marins et rend les poissons sauvages malades. Des plongeurs comme Stuart Barry et Alexander Nordahl témoignent de la destruction des écosystèmes. Malgré des inspections révélant des violations constantes, les régulations restent laxistes, le gouvernement norvégien privilégiant les intérêts économiques de l'industrie, deuxième secteur d'exportation après le pétrole et le gaz. Le journaliste Simen Satre souligne que les lois ont longtemps été écrites pour favoriser le développement de l'industrie. Le documentaire conclut que le modèle économique du saumon d'élevage est basé sur la tromperie et est moralement inacceptable, appelant à des systèmes en circuit fermé et avertissant des dangers de reproduire les mêmes erreurs avec d'autres espèces comme le capelan.
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