A coastline altered by aquaculture : the sociocultural sustainability of fish farming in Arctic Norway

Aquaculture is the fastest growing food production sector in the world, and Norway is this sector’s largest producer of farmed salmon. More than one thousand fish farms are spread along the Norwegian coastline, producing more than one million tonnes of farmed fish per year. The industry is controver...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hessen, Katharina Karlsen
Other Authors: Wisborg, Poul, Singsaas, Marianne
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ås 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3018018
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spelling ftunivmob:oai:nmbu.brage.unit.no:11250/3018018 2023-05-15T15:00:54+02:00 A coastline altered by aquaculture : the sociocultural sustainability of fish farming in Arctic Norway Hessen, Katharina Karlsen Wisborg, Poul Singsaas, Marianne 2022 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3018018 eng eng Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ås https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3018018 Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internasjonal http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.no CC-BY-NC-ND Master thesis 2022 ftunivmob 2022-09-21T22:42:53Z Aquaculture is the fastest growing food production sector in the world, and Norway is this sector’s largest producer of farmed salmon. More than one thousand fish farms are spread along the Norwegian coastline, producing more than one million tonnes of farmed fish per year. The industry is controversial, due to its environmental impacts, its tendency to generate massive private profits, and its impacts on traditional coastal activities such as fisheries and recreation. In spite of this controversy, the Norwegian government has determined that the industry should aim for a quintupling in its production volume by 2050. In order to ensure that this growth is sustainable, an indicator-based system (the Traffic Light System) was put in place in 2017. This system uses salmon lice levels as the sole indicator of sustainability, and areas where lice levels are considered acceptable are incentivized to grow by several percentage points each year. Critics argue that this system does not address the myriad other environmental issues that the aquaculture industry struggles with, such as emissions, pollution, genetic impacts on wild species and animal welfare. Others argue that the industry has impacts beyond the environmental dimension, and that the economic and social dimensions of sustainability need to be addressed in the governance of the industry. This study examines the perceived social and cultural sustainability of the aquaculture industry in two Arctic Norwegian communities, and applies these qualitative findings to the creation of a framework to identify and measure sociocultural sustainability in aquaculture operations, using Sustainability Indicators. The framework consists of a barometer with principles and indicators for sociocultural sustainability, as well as a visual Telemarksforsking M-IES Master Thesis Arctic Open archive Norwegian University of Life Sciences: Brage NMBU Arctic Norway
institution Open Polar
collection Open archive Norwegian University of Life Sciences: Brage NMBU
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language English
description Aquaculture is the fastest growing food production sector in the world, and Norway is this sector’s largest producer of farmed salmon. More than one thousand fish farms are spread along the Norwegian coastline, producing more than one million tonnes of farmed fish per year. The industry is controversial, due to its environmental impacts, its tendency to generate massive private profits, and its impacts on traditional coastal activities such as fisheries and recreation. In spite of this controversy, the Norwegian government has determined that the industry should aim for a quintupling in its production volume by 2050. In order to ensure that this growth is sustainable, an indicator-based system (the Traffic Light System) was put in place in 2017. This system uses salmon lice levels as the sole indicator of sustainability, and areas where lice levels are considered acceptable are incentivized to grow by several percentage points each year. Critics argue that this system does not address the myriad other environmental issues that the aquaculture industry struggles with, such as emissions, pollution, genetic impacts on wild species and animal welfare. Others argue that the industry has impacts beyond the environmental dimension, and that the economic and social dimensions of sustainability need to be addressed in the governance of the industry. This study examines the perceived social and cultural sustainability of the aquaculture industry in two Arctic Norwegian communities, and applies these qualitative findings to the creation of a framework to identify and measure sociocultural sustainability in aquaculture operations, using Sustainability Indicators. The framework consists of a barometer with principles and indicators for sociocultural sustainability, as well as a visual Telemarksforsking M-IES
author2 Wisborg, Poul
Singsaas, Marianne
format Master Thesis
author Hessen, Katharina Karlsen
spellingShingle Hessen, Katharina Karlsen
A coastline altered by aquaculture : the sociocultural sustainability of fish farming in Arctic Norway
author_facet Hessen, Katharina Karlsen
author_sort Hessen, Katharina Karlsen
title A coastline altered by aquaculture : the sociocultural sustainability of fish farming in Arctic Norway
title_short A coastline altered by aquaculture : the sociocultural sustainability of fish farming in Arctic Norway
title_full A coastline altered by aquaculture : the sociocultural sustainability of fish farming in Arctic Norway
title_fullStr A coastline altered by aquaculture : the sociocultural sustainability of fish farming in Arctic Norway
title_full_unstemmed A coastline altered by aquaculture : the sociocultural sustainability of fish farming in Arctic Norway
title_sort coastline altered by aquaculture : the sociocultural sustainability of fish farming in arctic norway
publisher Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ås
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3018018
geographic Arctic
Norway
geographic_facet Arctic
Norway
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3018018
op_rights Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internasjonal
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.no
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC-ND
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