Sjókvíaeldi á laxi byggir á þjáningu og dauða eldisdýranna. Það er hluti af viðskptamódeli fyrirtækjanna.
The Guardian heldur áfram að fjalla af krafti um framferði um sjókvíaeldi á Íslandi og þátttöku Bjarkar gegn þessum skaðlega iðnaði.
Í umfjöllun Guardian segir m.a.:
In a message on her Instagram feed, Björk said she felt “blessed” that the Spanish songwriter had agreed to the collaboration and was donating her work to the “battle” against open-pen farms. …
Björk accused the Norwegian companies Mowi and SalMar of damaging “large areas of our fjords, marine life, animals and plants”. Mowi is the parent company of Arctic Fish, one of Iceland’s largest salmon-farming companies and is being investigated by police after the mass escape from pens in a fjord in September. SalMar owns the Icelandic company Arnarlax, which along with Arctic Fish, owns open pens affected by the sea-lice outbreak in November.
In October, Björk said artists were often the “canaries in the coalmine” of environmental emergencies because it was their job to be sensitive. The salmon farming companies, she said, were “a couple of wild guys who want to make money quick and sacrifice nature”.
In her social-media message, Björk said: “Industrial salmon farming in open enclosures is horrible for the environment. Farmed salmon go through immense suffering and cause serious damage to our planet.
“This is an extraordinarily cruel way of making food,” she said. “The fight against the open-fishing industry is part of the fight for the future of the planet.”
Björk has become increasingly vocal in the battle against salmon farming. In a column for Dagbladet, one of Norway’s largest newspapers, at the weekend, she accused the industry of having a high mortality rate “literally written into the business model”.
“The world is beginning to realise that salmon farming in open cages is based on terrible suffering and death,” she wrote.
Mowi and SalMar have been approached for comment.