Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumAn Army of Ocean Farmers: On the Frontlines of the Blue-Green Economic Revolution
Friday, Feb 26, 2016, 6:00 am
An Army of Ocean Farmers: On the Frontlines of the Blue-Green Economic Revolution
By Bren Smith
Im a fisherman who dropped out of high school in 1986 at the age of 14. Over my lifetime, Ive spent many nights in jail. Im an epileptic. Im asthmatic. I dont even know how to swim. This is my story. Its a story of ecological redemption.
I was born and raised in Petty Harbour, Newfoundland, a little fishing village with 14 salt-box houses painted in greens, blues and reds so that fishermen could find their way home in the fog. At age 14 I left school and headed out to sea. I fished the Georges Banks and the Grand Banks for tuna and lobster, then headed to the Bering Sea, where I fished cod and crab. The trouble was I was working at the height of the industrialization of food. We were tearing up entire ecosystems with our trawls, chasing fish further and further out to sea into illegal waters. I personally have thrown tens of thousands of pounds of by-catch back into the sea.
It wasnt just that we were pillaging. Most of my fish was going to McDonalds for their fish sandwiches. There I was, still a kid, working one of the most unsustainable forms of food production on the planet, producing some of the most unhealthy food on the planet. But God how I loved that job! The humility of being in 40-foot seas, the sense of solidarity that comes with being in the belly of a boat with thirteen other people working 30-hour shifts, and a sense of meaning and pride in helping to feed my country. I miss those days so, so much.
But then in the early 1990s the cod stocks crashed back home: thousands of fishermen thrown out of work, boats beached, canneries shuttered. This situation created a split in the industry: the captains of industry, who wanted to fish the last fish, were thinking 10 years down the road, but there was a younger generation of us thinking 50 years out. We wanted to make our living on the ocean. I want to die on my boat one daythats my measure of success.
So we all went on a search for sustainability. I ended up in Northern Canada on an aquaculture farm. At that point aquaculture was supposed to be the great solution to overfishing, but when I got there I found more of the same, only using new technologies to pollute local waterways with pesticides and pumping fish full of antibiotics. We used to say that what we were growing was neither fish nor food. We were running the equivalent of Iowa pig farms at sea.
More:
http://inthesetimes.com/rural-america/entry/18915/bren-smith-3D-ocean-farming-and-the-blue-green-economic-revolution
GliderGuider
(21,088 posts)In the face of the accelerating planetary calamity, we each have to do the rightest things we can envision. Bren Smith has a truly great vision. Thanks for posting this!