The dramatic growth of the salmon
farming industry has transformed traditional fishing communities in
southern Chile.
Courtesy of Andy Gerhart, E-IPER/Stanford University
Chile's once-fledgling salmon aquaculture industry is now the
second largest in the world. Since 1990, the industry has grown 24-fold and now annually
exports more than half-a-million tons of fish worth billions of
dollars, according to the Chilean government.
But that massive economic growth has had equally massive
environmental and social effects, say researchers. Today, the coast
of southern Chile, where the aquaculture industry is based, has
been altered by the introduction of exotic species of salmon, high
levels of pollution, and the spread of parasites and diseases among
the fish. And the influx of large, corporate-run salmon farms has
transformed traditional fishing communities and drastically altered
the livelihoods of independent fishermen.
With the Chilean aquaculture industry targeting another two-fold
increase by 2010, its impact will only grow, says Zephyr Frank, an associate professor of history
at Stanford University. In 2008, Stanford's Woods Institute for the
Environment awarded Frank and his colleagues an Environmental
Venture Projects (EVP) grant to map and analyze the transformation
of southern Chile before and after the advent of salmon
farming.
"Salmon aquaculture is changing life in Chile in a physical way
but also in a larger social context," Frank said. "We're trying to
assess whether large-scale aquaculture has exacerbated inequality
in the country."
Interdisciplinary Research
The EVP study arose from a collaboration with Woods Institute
Senior Fellow Roz Naylor, a professor of environmental Earth
system science at Stanford and director of the Stanford Program on
Food Security and the Environment; and Andy Gerhart, a graduate student with Stanford's
Emmett
Interdisciplinary Program in Environment and Resources.
Frank said that the project fits well with the interdisciplinary
focus of the EVP program. "We thought it would be an exciting case
study where we could combine our interests in social science,
biology, and history," he said. "It's looking at how people
experience environmental change."
The initial goal of the project was to do a limited, targeted
study of salmon farming in Chiloé, a province in southern
Chile. "It was less of a historical, social analysis and more of an
economic, environmental analysis," Frank said. "Andy developed the
historical-social side more and fleshed the project out as a
holistic study."
In summer 2009, the research team collaborated with local
enumerators, who conducted a random survey of more than 800
households in Chiloé. In addition to quantitative ecological
and demographic data, including questions about income and health,
the survey focused on social and cultural changes, such as the
creation of new communities as people migrate to southern Chile to
work in the aquaculture industry, and changing gender roles as more
women enter the workforce.
Frank hopes to use the results of the survey to detect patterns
in attitudes about the environment and the salmon farming industry.
"We were wondering if people perceived salmon aquaculture in
contradictory ways," he said.
Survey Trends
The team is just beginning to analyze the survey data, but
already some trends are emerging. "Right off the bat, what most
stands out are significant differences in opinion from one
community to another," Frank said. "Specific place seems to
matter."
The data suggest that there could be something particular to the
culture or norms of individual communities that affects how they
perceive the salmon industry, Frank added, and he wants to explore
what those differences are. "That's exciting, and it's something I
can sink my teeth into," he said.
The next step in the project is to develop deeper, more probing
survey questions and then gather in-depth oral testimonies from
people in the region. Ultimately, the team will combine these
survey results with plots of qualitative environmental and
demographic data to produce a picture of the complex relationship
among salmon aquaculture, the environment, and social practices.
Understanding how the industry has transformed Chilean society
today will offer a glimpse into how that transformation may
continue in the future, Frank explained.
Eventually, he intends to make the research available to local
governments and NGOs, with the hope of contributing to a more
informed policy discussion and a more sustainable aquaculture
industry. "There are going to be lots of different voices," Frank
said. "But by putting good- quality, reasonably complex research
out there, it cannot help but enhance any policy debates."
And with aquaculture now accounting for half of all fish
consumed worldwide, according to a recent study co-authored by Naylor, the global
community as a whole is fundamentally changing how it interacts
with the ocean, Frank said. Therefore, understanding the effects of
aquaculture is more important than ever, he added, noting that the
model he and his colleagues develop for Chile may become an
important resource for examining the impact of fish farming
worldwide.
Alexei Koseff is a writer-intern at the Woods Institute for the
Environment at Stanford University.