June 26, 2019 — A couple researchers who focus on finfish aquaculture at the same prestigious Canadian university are squaring off this week over an eight-page paper from one of them that suggests “there is virtually no evidence to support decades-long narratives” about its sustainability in Canada.
That’s what it says in the summary of the study, which was published recently in the online journal Marine Policy. The article, written by Inka Milewski, a research associate in the biology department of Dalhousie University, in Halifax, Nova Scotia, and Ruth Smith, a community research partner, is also to be included in the September print edition of the publication, though it is already getting attention in the Canadian press.
Milewski and Smith say, for their research, they examined the progress Canada has made towards translating sustainable aquaculture policy goals into measurable outcomes using the 11 potential environmental, social and economic sustainability indicators identified by the country’s Department of Fisheries and Oceans in 2012.
Their conclusion: Little progress has been made.
“Sustainability indicators should provide the public with concrete measures of government accountability on policy narratives and goals,” Milewski is quoted as saying. “In the absence of meaningful measures of sustainability, Canada’s declared aquaculture policy goals risk being reduced to mere political catchphrases.”