British Columbia

Up to 21,000 Atlantic salmon escape after B.C. fish-farm fire damages net pen

Fish farm company Mowi, formerly known as Marine Harvest, says divers are investigating the damage resulting from a fire at its salmon farm at Robertson Island.

Environmental and Indigenous groups say escape presents ecological and environmental risks to wild salmon

More than 20,000 farmed Atlantic salmon escaped from a fish farm near Port Hardy after a fire Friday night. (CBC)

A fire at a fish farm near Port Hardy, B.C., at Queen Charlotte Strait has resulted in the escape of more than 20,000 farmed Atlantic salmon.

Fish farm company Mowi, formerly known as Marine Harvest, says in a statement divers are investigating the damage resulting from a fire at its salmon farm at Robertson Island.

Mowi says it has notified federal regulators and area First Nations about the fire and the subsequent escape of the estimated 21,000 Atlantic salmon from the damaged net pen.

Mowi says the damaged net pen will be towed to land and an investigation will be undertaken to determine the cause of the fire, which is believed to have occurred Friday night.

Area environmental and Indigenous groups say in a statement Atlantic salmon are not native to Pacific waters and the escape presents ecological and environmental risks to wild salmon stocks.

The federal Liberal government pledged during the fall election campaign to transition B.C.'s open-net pen salmon farms to closed containment systems by 2025.