Our basis is sustainable aquaculture; the manner in which we operate should reflect a long-term perspective. The most important thing for
Cermaq in 2010 is therefore not the solid profits, where salmon prices contribute significantly, but our excellent operational performance. By presenting and explaining our results we want to contribute to knowledge based debate on important areas for national and global value creation, says CEO Geir Isaksen.
Examples of the results Cermaq have achieved are:
Zero escapes
Cermaq has a goal of zero escapes, a goal which was reached in 2010. It is vital for the company and for the industry to keep the number of escaped fish to a minimum, as escaped salmon can represent a strain to the wild salmon stocks. By year end 2010 the company had 46.4 million fish in the sea in Chile, Canada and Norway.
-I am very pleased and proud that we have reached our goal of zero escapes in 2010. This has been accomplished through a high level of preparedness in terms of technical equipment, maintenance and last but not least through training and a continuous attention throughout our organisation. Our results show that it is possible to prevent escapes from happening, underlines Geir Isaksen.
More efficient use of marine raw materials
As the world population grows our capability of producing healthy food in an efficient way becomes even more important. It is essential that the marine raw materials come from well managed fish stocks, but it is also important that the marine ingredients are used in an efficient manner in food production. Cermaq promotes better use of marine raw materials. In 2010 the use of trimmings and bi-products as raw material in fish feed increased to 21% of marine raw materials. There are still huge opportunities to increase the use of this kind of raw material in salmon feed.
Good fish health
The share of fish transferred to sea which dies of diseases before it can be harvested (mortality) is an important indicator to measure fish health. In Cermaq, mortality decreased with more than 32% from 2009 to 2010. At the same time the need for medication and treatment against disease and sea lice decreased. The use of antibiotics is down 76% from 2009. The use varies from 15 g API (active pharmaceutical ingredients)/tonne in Canada to no use at all in Norway. Need for treatment against sea lice was also down in 2010. Preventive measures, strict requirements to smolt quality, vaccination and avoiding stress are essential to secure fish health and animal welfare.
GRI B+ report
Cermaq’s sustainability report has been externally audited and approved as a GRI report (Global Reporting Initiative) at a B+ level. In addition to GRI indicators, Cermaq has chosen to report on several customised indicators addressing areas that are specific to our industry and material to our stakeholders. Amongst these are escapes, use of antibiotics, treatment against sea lice and the use of marine raw materials.