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Chamber and committees

Official Report: search what was said in Parliament

The Official Report is a written record of public meetings of the Parliament and committees.  

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Dates of parliamentary sessions
  1. Session 1: 12 May 1999 to 31 March 2003
  2. Session 2: 7 May 2003 to 2 April 2007
  3. Session 3: 9 May 2007 to 22 March 2011
  4. Session 4: 11 May 2011 to 23 March 2016
  5. Session 5: 12 May 2016 to 4 May 2021
  6. Session 6: 13 May 2021 to 25 March 2026
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Displaying 6548 contributions

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Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]

Salmon Farming in Scotland

Meeting date: 25 February 2026

Edward Mountain

:Yes, please.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]

Salmon Farming in Scotland

Meeting date: 25 February 2026

Edward Mountain

:And did you move Loch Duich?

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]

Salmon Farming in Scotland

Meeting date: 25 February 2026

Edward Mountain

:I put on record that I am absolutely not dismissing the work that goes on on Loch Carron. There is a huge amount of work, and I know all the people who are involved. If they thought that I was dismissing that work, I would probably be strung up from a lamppost in Lochcarron village. A huge amount goes on, but the issue is what happened with the fish farm on Loch Carron, and the only way out of the River Carron is past the fish farm.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]

Salmon Farming in Scotland

Meeting date: 25 February 2026

Edward Mountain

:I am not asking you to qualify it—I am just asking you to give me the figures for Mowi in 2023, 2024, and 2025. I am entitled to do that, and I expect an answer.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]

Salmon Farming in Scotland

Meeting date: 25 February 2026

Edward Mountain

:I cannot believe that, as the senior representative, you do not know those figures off the top of your head, given that you are saying that mortality is the most important thing.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]

Salmon Farming in Scotland

Meeting date: 25 February 2026

Edward Mountain

:I have read the Official Report very carefully and you never mentioned the Faroes in anything that you said.

Secondly, you said:

“Having worked in the industry in a scientific and farming capacity for 18 years, my observation is that if you farm in the seawater stage, which lasts about 18 to 20 months, and you have below 5 per cent mortality, you can count yourself as among the best in class.”—[Official Report, Rural Economy and Connectivity Committee, 2 May 2018; c 41.]

That is exactly what you said—you did not quantify anything or say where that was in the world. At the time, we were talking about 5 or 7 per cent, and I think that, in 2024, the industry was talking about somewhere between 21 and 25 per cent. Therefore, the figures have risen from between 5 and 7 per cent to almost four times that.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]

Salmon Farming in Scotland

Meeting date: 25 February 2026

Edward Mountain

:In fairness, Mr. Hadfield, the figures that I am giving you are the figures that you gave the REC Committee on 2 May 2018 for its inquiry into aquaculture in Scotland—not the Faroes or anywhere else.

Lastly, on the issue of spatial separation that you were talking about, recommendations 45 to 49 in the REC Committee’s report in 2018 were about moving fish farming away from areas where it would conflict with wild salmon. Since 2018, how many farms have been moved away from areas where there is such a conflict? I can think of one, if it helps you, but I cannot think of any more.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]

Salmon Farming in Scotland

Meeting date: 25 February 2026

Edward Mountain

:Well, Poolewe is, I think, one example. I cannot see any more.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]

Salmon Farming in Scotland

Meeting date: 25 February 2026

Edward Mountain

:So, how many farms has the industry, which you are representing now, moved?

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]

Salmon Farming in Scotland

Meeting date: 25 February 2026

Edward Mountain

:I will ask one more question, if I may, just so that I understand this. Despite the problems at the Kishorn A, B and C sites with disease, deaths and mortality, they continue to operate. The report says that, in areas where there are high mortality rates, re-siting or removal should be the chosen option. You mentioned Loch Duich as an example of where you thought about doing that but have got on top of the issues. Across the industry, how many sites have closed because of constantly high mortality?