(L-R) SalmonChile's Cesar Barros with head of the Ministry of Economy, Juan Andres Fontaine. Both welcomed the changes to the LGPA. (Photo: Economia)
New fisheries and aquaculture law enacted
CHILE
Friday, April 09, 2010, 22:30 (GMT + 9)
The head of the Ministry of Economy, Juan Andres Fontaine, explained the reaches of the main modifications to the
General Fisheries and Aquaculture Law (LGPA), published this Thursday 8 April in the Official Reporter.
The changes contemplated in the new norm will improve the territorial ordinance of salmon farming and the sanitary measures adopted will be stricter throughout the entire productive process, like during periods of rest and sowing.
The changes “are good news, because it goes a long way to reactivate such a relevant and depressed sector, so that a new salmon industry is born, healthier and more vigorous than before,” the minister pointed out.
"As a government, we are aware that this is a step forward, but there is still much to improve to reach the standards that we want for this industry,” Fontaine said.
In terms of the 17 measures that will be incorporated, he explained that “they are regulations that regulate sanitary aspects, as well as the constitution of ‘neighbourhoods.’”
Meanwhile, the president of the Salmon Industry Association of Chile AG (SalmonChile), Cesar Barros, said that the law’s enactment "is an important landmark, nevertheless, it is only a first step towards building the new salmon farming."
Law N° 20,434 will put forth a new form of concessions grouping that will be coordinated from the Fisheries Subsecretariat and in turn fortify prevention and control by part of the National Fisheries Service (SERNAPESCA).
In other news, the Foreign Commerce of the Society for Manufacturing Advancement (SOFOFA) released a report that reveals that Chilean industrial production fell 0.3 per cent in February with respect to the same month of 2009, and that sector sales declined 1.3 per cent.
Internal sales diminished 0.6 per cent in February 2010, whereas the drop in production during that month was mainly due to the effects of the infectious salmon anaemia (ISA) virus in the salmon industry.
A fall in fishmeal production was also observed.
Chilean salmon farming companies will have to invest more than USD 1 billion between 2011 and 2014 to fulfil the new environmental and sanitary requirements set forth in
the LGPA, passed last month.
Some USD 600 million would have to be allocated to working capital, and the rest, USD 400 million, to the development of new infrastructure to increase security and control levels that prevent contagion among fish, El Mercurio reports.
Related article:
- Aquaculture law requirements to demand USD 1 bln plus
By Analia Murias
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www.seafood.media
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