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Not a farmed salmon |
Bay Journal,
Salmon farm developer withdraws discharge permit request amid sturgeon
concerns
Facing growing public pushback, a Norwegian company hoping to build a large
indoor salmon farm on Maryland’s Eastern Shore has — at least for now —
dropped its bid for a permit to discharge wastewater into the only waterway
in the state where endangered Atlantic sturgeon are known to spawn.
AquaCon
Maryland LLC notified the Maryland Department of the Environment on Oct. 14
that it was withdrawing its application to discharge up to 2.3 million
gallons a day of treated “purge” water into Marshyhope Creek, a tributary of
the Nanticoke River.
The company said in a press release
that the public comments on the application “drew attention to Atlantic
sturgeons’ use of Marshyhope Creek, which warrants further consideration and
evaluation.”
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Not an Atlantic Sturgeon |
Ryan Showalter, the company’s Easton-based lawyer,
said in an email that AquaCon has not given up on developing an 18-acre
salmon production facility in Federalsburg. Expecting that MDE would require
additional information to address “uncertainties” about the facility’s
impacts on the sturgeon, Showalter said, company officials decided to
withdraw the application and investigate alternatives to year-round
discharge into the Marshyhope.
MDE gave preliminary approval to
the company’s permit in June, but since then the project has drawn pushback
from scientists, environmentalists and local residents concerned about the
plant’s potential impact on the creek and its fish, particularly sturgeon.
An August hearing drew more than 100 people, with nearly all who spoke
opposing it.
I didn't necessarily oppose the salmon farm, but I did wonder if it made a whole lot of economic sense to have an all indoors salmon farm on Maryland's Eastern Shore. But they could use the jobs.
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