The New Fish, Simen Saetre
The New Fish, Simen Saetre
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The New Fish
The Truth about Farmed Salmon and the Consequences We Can No Longer Ignore

Author: Simen Saetre, Kjetil Ostli

Series: Patagonia

Narrator: Erik Madsen

Unabridged: 10 hr 6 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 07/11/2023


Synopsis

Eat more fish, the doctors say. But is the salmon you are consuming really healthy?

In the early 1970s, a group of scientists researched how to make more food for the growing population of the world. They looked to the sea. They sampled genes from salmon in 41 Norwegian and Swedish rivers and designed a new salmon that was fatter and faster growing. This was considered an amazing innovation and was the beginning of a new industry: salmon farming.
 
The industry spread from coastal Norway to Scotland, Canada, Australia, Ireland, Chile, Iceland, the Faroe Islands, and the United States. Business boomed, jobs were created, and a new type of food, the farmed salmon, spread around the globe. People everywhere bought and enjoyed the abundant fish: grilled, poached, roasted, and as sushi and sashimi. They were grateful for this delicious, affordable protein. 

But at what cost? 
 
We now know that there were unintended consequences: some of these new fish escaped, competing for sustenance with other fish in the sea. The new fish spread diseases, salmon louse swarmed, and wild salmon stocks dwindled.  

In a prizewinning five-year investigation, authors Simen Sætre and Kjetil Østli took an in-depth look at Norway’s role in the global salmon industry and, for the first time, produced a comprehensive evaluation of the detrimental effects of salmon farming. From lice to escapees, from concentrating the waste of sea pens in the fjords through which wild salmon swim to their natal streams to the fact that salmon farming causes a net reduction of protein reaped from the ocean, the results don’t look good. Recent victories, such as the banning of net-pen fish farms in the waters of Washington State, are an indication that we are awakening to the environmental price of engineered fish.

It is said that we will continue to make the same mistakes unless we understand them. The New Fish combines nature writing from Norwegian fjords, the coast of Canada, Icelandic landscapes and the far south of Chile with character-driven literary non-fiction and classic muckraking. The authors started with this question: What happens when you create a new animal and place it in the sea? This book will tell you the answer.

About The Author

Simen Sætre is an investigative reporter who has been published in many languages. He has written six books, on themes including the international chocolate industry, oil states, and a spy in the Norwegian army. His thought-provoking books have been acclaimed and nominated for prizes. Kjetil Østli is a journalist and author. He co-runs the online magazine Harvest, specializing in nature writing. He has received several prizes and awards for his reporting and his four books, and his début Cops and Robbers earned him the prestigious Brage Award.


Reviews

Goodreads review by David

The salmon you eat is all but certainly farmed, shot with dye so it comes out pink, and chock full of meds and poisons. There are almost no wild salmon to catch commercially any more, and a big part of it is precisely because of salmon farming. The industry is the pride of Norway, and has spread aro......more

Goodreads review by Jen

Took me a while to read because it is a heavy read. I am amazed by the authors’ commitment in writing this book about an industry which has successfully silenced so many researchers, journalists, veterinarians, and anyone opposed to salmon farming. Reminds readers how mass food production can dull o......more

Wow. Just WOW. Our food system is in crisis and we should all be paying far more attention to where our food comes from and how it’s been harvested. If you’ve ever balked at seafood prices or been curious what labels like “wild caught” really mean, this is an engrossing read. We need these fish farm......more

Goodreads review by Richard

We have all heard about the horrors of fish farming - the die offs, the toxins in the meat, the environmental damage. This book, focused mainly on big corporate salmon farming in Norway, gives all of the gory details. The message is overwhelmingly negative, except that the authors are not against fi......more