
RSCPA revokes Huon salmon's accreditation after video showing live fish being dumped in Tasmania
The withdrawal follows an initial 14-day suspension after the Bob Brown Foundation published drone video that showed writhing live salmon being siphoned into a tub containing dead fish.
The fish were killed by a major disease outbreak at south-eastern Tasmanian fish farms earlier this month. In the video, the tub was then sealed.
Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email
Huon Aquaculture said it was 'extremely disappointed' about the RSCPA decision after a 'single incident of non-compliance' during an 'unprecedented, challenging period'.
The RSPCA's chief executive, Richard Mussell, said no Tasmanian salmon companies were certified as meeting the RSPCA-approved standard after the decision.
'While we acknowledge this was a single incident following many years of certification, the decision to withdraw a certification reflects how seriously we take incidents like this that compromise animal welfare,' he said.
'Fish, including those farmed for human consumption, are sentient beings and, like other animals, can experience pain and suffering. When they're farmed for food, the welfare of fish must be front of mind.'
The announcement adds to the pressure on the state's salmon industry after a month in which more than 1 million salmon died during an outbreak of an endemic bacterium, Piscirickettsia salmonis.
More than 5,500 tonnes of fish were dumped at landfill and rendering plants in February. Fatty chunks of fish have washed up on beaches in the Huon Valley and on Bruny Island in February and March, prompting public protests.
The industry is also at the centre of a political storm over Anthony Albanese's plan to rush through legislation next week to protect salmon farming in Macquarie harbour, on the state's west coast, from a legal challenge over its impact on the Maugean skate, an endangered fish species.
Mussell said salmon was one of the most intensively farmed animals and it was 'important that we can demonstrate the measures needed to ensure their welfare is considered'.
Huon's general manager of stakeholder and government relations, Hannah Gray, said the company acknowledged the seriousness of the 'extremely distressing' incident and that it had put steps in place to ensure contractors upheld 'high animal welfare standards'.
Sign up to Breaking News Australia
Get the most important news as it breaks
after newsletter promotion
She said Huon had been farming 'to a standard of animal welfare that no other Australian salmon farming company has been able to achieve' for the past seven years. 'We will continue to farm to this standard,' she said.
Bob Brown Foundation campaigner Alistair Allan said the RSPCA decision was 'the correct one' and that the drone video showed the 'grim reality of factory-farmed Tasmanian salmon'.
Allan said the incident showed Albanese's support of salmon farming was 'out of touch'. 'He needs to walk back his support of the industry,' he said.
The federal Coalition and the Australian Greens wrote to Albanese on Thursday asking to see the legislation to change national environmental law to protect the industry in Macquarie harbour that will go before parliament on Tuesday.
Albanese said 'people will see the legislation next week'. 'We'll be introducing it and we expect it to be carried,' he said.
It is expected the bill will be designed to abruptly end a long-running legal review by the environment minister, Tanya Plibersek, into whether an expansion of the salmon industry in the harbour in 2012 was properly approved.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Have you spotted this runaway wallaby?
A wallaby has been spotted running loose in the countryside on the Norfolk and Suffolk border, leading to a police appeal. The first sighting occurred on Monday in Ilketshall St Andrew, with a second report a day later in Wisset, about seven miles away. Suffolk Constabulary has urged anyone who sees the wallaby to contact them or the RSPCA. It is currently unclear if the wallaby is an escapee or part of Britain's wild wallaby population, as no local animal sanctuaries have reported it missing. Wild wallabies are not uncommon in the UK, with established colonies existing in Scotland and a large population on the Isle of Man.


The Independent
12 hours ago
- The Independent
Sightings of mystery wallaby on the loose on Norfolk-Suffolk border
A wallaby has been spotted running loose in countryside on the Norfolk and Suffolk border, triggering a police appeal. The first sighting of the animal, commonly associated with Australia, was on Monday in the village of Ilketshall St Andrew, with footage was showing it emerge from bushes before bounding across farmland. It was followed a day later by another report of the animal in Wisset, near Halesworth, about seven miles away from the earlier sighting. A spokesperson for Suffolk Constabulary told The Independent:"If spotted residents [are] asked to call [the] police or alternatively the RSPCA.' With no local animal sanctuaries yet to come forward to claim the wallaby as missing, it remains unclear whether the wallaby is an escapee, or one of Britain's wild wallabies. And locals have spoken of their surprise at the sightings. "He's getting around isn't he?" a worker at local pub The Huntsman and Hounds in Halesworth told The Independent, confirming that customers were aware of the wallaby being spotted. They added: "He's a long way from home." Wallabies in the UK are not uncommon, with wild colonies twiof red-necked wallabies living in Scotland and also on the Isle of Man, where over 800 are known to live and breed.


Wales Online
16 hours ago
- Wales Online
People heard squeaking near a stream and the answer was impossibly cute
People heard squeaking near a stream and the answer was impossibly cute Idris weighed less than a can of pop, could not open his eyes, and is the smallest otter ever rescued by the UK Wild Otter Trust Idris the tiny otter (Image: UK Wild Otter Trust) A tiny otter weighing less than a can of pop has survived against the odds after members of the public in a Welsh community heard him crying near a roadside. The Eurasian otter cub, weighing just 340g, was found near Bala in Gwynedd. People heard his high-pitched squeaks near a small stream with his mother nowhere to be found. It's thought she is likely to have been killed on a nearby road. At under seven weeks old the otter's eyes were still closed making his chances of survival without his mother extremely slim. Locals who found the otter made contact with the UK Wild Otter Trust and officers from the charity went to the scene to rescue him. For our free daily briefing on the biggest issues facing the nation sign up to the Wales Matters newsletter here . For the next few days Idris, as he has been named, was kept alive on milk until he was strong enough to make the journey to the charity's care. Under expert hands Idris was slowly weaned onto fish before being transferred to the charity's Specialist Otter Rehabilitation Centre in North Devon. There he met two young otters close to his age. One of them had wandered into the flamingo habitat at Colchester Zoo although nobody knows quite how he got there. 'These cases are incredibly rare,' said Dave Webb, founder and CEO of the UK Wild Otter Trust, which is run entirely by volunteers. "For an otter cub so young and so underweight to survive without its mother is remarkable. Idris has shown unbelievable strength and now he has the best chance of living wild again. Article continues below "Idris is the smallest cub we've rescued who has managed to survive so for all of us at the centre it's a real victory to see him out of the woods and thriving.' Over the coming months Idris will undergo a long rehabilitation process, the charity added. Idris the otter with his new friend, a teddy bear (Image: UK Wild Otter Trust) The Eurasian otter (Lutra lutra) is the only otter species native to the UK. It has been in the UK for millions of years and is a member of the Mustelid family, which also includes the badger, mink, weasels, stoats, martens, and polecats. They are found as far west as Ireland, as far east as China, as far south as North Africa, and as far north as the Arctic Circle. According to the RSPCA if baby otters have their eyes closed it's because they are too young to go above ground on their own. According to the UK Wild Otter Trust: "Otters are protected by law. It is illegal to hunt them, trap them or disturb them. The otter receives the highest protection possible as a European protected species – and its holts are protected too. Article continues below "Unfortunately, even though the species has made a distinct comeback and is now found often in our rivers, wild otters rarely live beyond four years of age. The oldest recorded otter reached around 19 years of age but this is exceptional. "Reports now state that otters inhabit every county in the UK – great news for the otter – but our river systems still require extensive habitat management to restore them to a healthy level that can sustain fish stocks and wildlife."