SALMON
Salmon to be farmed in giant offshore platforms
Norway's third-largest salmon farming company SalMar plans to start rearing fish out to sea using constructions based on oil platforms, each of which could house eight times as many salmon as conventional cages.
Published: 5 March 2014 09:27 CET
A design illustration for SalMar's semi-submersible offshore pen. Illustration: Salmar
The company has hired Gunnar Myrebøe, who oversaw the design of the offshore rig for the Snøhvit gas field, to develop the semi-submersible platform.
The 5,600 tonne, 670-metre-high steel construction, will enclose a 245 square metre pen for the salmon, space for 600 tonnes of feed, and accommodation for up to four people.
"We've been working on this for almost two years. What we are now going to present is groundbreaking. It is a revolution," Gustav Witzøe (60), the company's founder and main shareholder, told Norway's Dagens Næringsliv newspaper.
By farming further out to sea, the company aims to reduce problems with salmon lice, and protect wild salmon from infections.
The installation will be kept in place with eight anchors, and will be able to withstand waves nine metres high, three times as large as the waves existing salmon cages can handle.
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