WEEKEND REWIND: Seattle seafood company alters proposal to move salmon farm out of Port Angeles Harbor

PORT ANGELES — A seafood company has slightly altered its proposal to move its Atlantic salmon farm operation out of Port Angeles Harbor and into the Strait of Juan de Fuca.

In addition, all of the 11 permits required for the proposed new pens, located 1.7 miles north-northeast of Green Point, have been completed.

The company is awaiting responses from the local, state and federal agencies, Alan Cook, vice president of aquaculture for Icicle Seafoods Inc. of Seattle, told about 25 people at the Port Angeles Business Association meeting Tuesday.

“I used to talk about the Byzantine nature of the permitting process. I really had no idea,” Cook said of the process to install the first new salmon farm in more than 20 years.

Icicle Seafoods has operated fish pens in Port Angeles Harbor for nearly 30 years.

They raise genetically natural Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar, which are only distantly related to the six Pacific salmon species of the genus oncorhynchus.

A new proposed 4.1-acre pen is just east of a location selected in November, moved due to concerns expressed by the Puget Sound Pilots regarding ship transfer areas in the Strait.

Cook said the new location offers better water flow of up to 3 knots, which would keep the pens clear of fish waste and allow the expansion to 1.1 million salmon, using plastic pens in place of the current nets.

The plastic pens are used in the Atlantic, where the seas are considerably higher than the 18- to 19-foot waves that are a 100-year high for that portion of the Strait, in an area sheltered by Ediz Hook, he said.

It would be located far enough out in the Strait so that it would only be a line on the horizon from the bluffs, he said, but outside of shipping lanes.

In addition to the farmed salmon, which comprise about 15 percent of the company’s fish sales, Icicle Seafoods also sells wild-caught salmon, halibut and cod.

Proposed Navy pier

The company is concerned that the current fish pens, just south of Ediz Hook, would be too close to a pier proposed by the Navy at the Coast Guard station on Ediz Hook in Port Angeles, and the Navy wants to remove the structures currently used to access the fish pens, Cook said.

The Navy has proposed building the pier to accommodate as many as seven escort vessels that guard submarines traveling between Port Angeles Harbor and Naval Submarine Base Bangor in Hood Canal.

Congress has approved $20.6 million for the 2016 fiscal year for the project, which has an estimated cost of $27 million.

The Navy has proposed building the pier 2,000 feet east of the Puget Sound Pilots station just outside the field office entrance and 1,600 feet from the underwater riprap reef known as the rock pile, a popular scuba-diving attraction.

Close to fish pens

Cook said Icicle Seafood operators are worried the pier’s location would have the high-powered escort vessels passing within 50 feet of the net farm’s floating pens, which contain as many as 820,000 salmon.

He said powerful engines on those boats could create 6-knot flows across the pens. That could collapse the pens and allow thousands of Atlantic salmon into the environment, he said.

Any escape of fish would be reported to the state Fish and Wildlife Department, and a recapture would be attempted, he said.

Typically, escaped fish mill around the pens because it is the only home they know and are easily recaptured, but Cook said if they do get away, a fish derby would be opened for sport fishermen to catch all the Atlantic salmon they want.

Cook noted that an attempt to plant Atlantic salmon smolt in the Pacific Northwest in the 1970s failed because the fish are not adapted to survive in the conditions here.

Moving the operation would have other benefits, he said.

The fish waste would not build up in the harbor, and the pens would depart an area designated as being sensitive for native aquatic species.

The proposed new location is more ideal for raising salmon, Cook said.

He said the salmon currently in the pens are maturing and scheduled to be harvested in December, so ideally, the new pens would be stocked with new young salmon.

The Navy hopes to begin pounding pilings in December, so all fish in the existing pens would have to be harvested earlier in the fall because the noise from the pile driving would kill them, Cook said.

Comment on a draft environmental assessment for the Navy proposal was closed Jan. 28.

The final environmental assessment is expected to be released this summer.

________

Reporter Arwyn Rice can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5070, or at arice@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

Two dead after tree falls in Olympic National Forest

Two women died after a tree fell in Olympic National… Continue reading

Sue Long, left, Vicki Bennett and Frank Handler, all from Port Townsend, volunteer at the Martin Luther King Day of Service beach restoration on Monday at Fort Worden State Park. The activity took place on Knapp Circle near the Point Wilson Lighthouse. Sixty-four volunteers participated in the removal of non-native beach grasses. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Work party

Sue Long, left, Vicki Bennett and Frank Handler, all from Port Townsend,… Continue reading

Portion of bridge to be replaced

Tribe: Wooden truss at railroad park deteriorating

Kingsya Omega, left, and Ben Wilson settle into a hand-holding exercise. (Aliko Weste)
Process undermines ‘Black brute’ narrative

Port Townsend company’s second film shot in Hawaii

Jefferson PUD to replace water main in Coyle

Jefferson PUD commissioners awarded a $1.3 million construction contract… Continue reading

Scott Mauk.
Chimacum superintendent receives national award

Chimacum School District Superintendent Scott Mauk has received the National… Continue reading

Hood Canal Coordinating Council meeting canceled

The annual meeting of the Hood Canal Coordinating Council, scheduled… Continue reading

Bruce Murray, left, and Ralph Parsons hang a cloth exhibition in the rotunda of the old Clallam County Courthouse on Friday in Port Angeles. The North Olympic History Center exhibit tells the story of the post office past and present across Clallam County. The display will be open until early February, when it will be relocated to the Sequim City Hall followed by stops on the West End. The project was made possible due to a grant from the Clallam County Heritage Advisory Board. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Post office past and present

Bruce Murray, left, and Ralph Parsons hang a cloth exhibition in the… Continue reading

This agave grew from the size of a baseball in the 1990s to the height of Isobel Johnston’s roof in 2020. She saw it bloom in 2023. Following her death last year, Clallam County Fire District 3 commissioners, who purchased the property on Fifth Avenue in 2015, agreed to sell it to support the building of a new Carlsborg fire station. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group file)
Fire district to sell property known for its Sequim agave plant

Sale proceeds may support new Carlsborg station project

As part of Olympic Theatre Arts’ energy renovation upgrade project, new lighting has been installed, including on the Elaine and Robert Caldwell Main Stage that allows for new and improved effects. (Olympic Theatre Arts)
Olympic Theatre Arts remodels its building

New roof, LED lights, HVAC throughout

Weekly flight operations scheduled

Field carrier landing practice operations will be conducted for aircraft… Continue reading