North Atlantic Salmon Fund (NASF). Helping restore Atlantic salmon to their natural abundance: Will Obama help Russia and Salmon? A Letter from NASF Will Obama help Russia and Salmon? A Letter from NASF ================================================================================ Editor on 10/12/2009 15:28:00 NORTH ATLANTIC SALMON FUND, Skipholti 35, 105 Reykjavík, Iceland Ambassador Barry B White, Embassy of the United States Henrik Ibsens Gate 48 0244 Oslo Fax: +47 22 44 04 36 Reykjavik, December 9, 2009 Dear Ambassador White, We understand that tomorrow President Obama will have a meeting with Prime Minister Stoltenberg in Oslo. We know that Mr. Stoltenberg has been encouraged to talk about regional developments in the Barents Sea, the Law of the Sea Treaty and to seek access to the US market for farmed Norwegian salmon. If Mr. Stoltenberg is allowed to get what he wants the Norwegian authorities will use it to increase the very damaging activities that they already encourage and support. For the record, Norway’s refusal to honour its international obligations has actively stood in the way of sustainability and biodiversity in the Barents Sea. The government has broken the rules of the UN law of the Sea. Norway has failed to cooperate with Russia in the Barents Sea region. In supporting a commercial fishery that is damaging the wild salmon stocks of Russia and Finland, she is ignoring international scientific advice. Norway´s salmon farming policy is increasingly reckless and unsustainable, not just in Norway but in Scotland, Ireland, Chile, Canada and the US. It is creating plagues of sea lice in all these countries and the chemicals used in trying to overcome the damage that is being done raise concern of human health impacts when people eat the fish the farms produce. Furthermore, Norway still promotes and operates interceptory mixed stock fisheries for Atlantic salmon. This has prevented us and our US based partners – the Atlantic Salmon Federation (US) and the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, Washington D.C. , from pursuing the official US policy to end all such interceptory fisheries. This is crucial to the restoration of salmon salmon stocks in the US east coast rivers. Norway and Scotland are the main culprits standing in the way of international unity in this respect. Norway has signally failed to perform its duty to the environment. Far from relaxing the present curbs on Norway’s behaviour we would encourage you to make the rules even stronger. Yours sincerely, Orri Vigfusson, chairman North Atlantic Salmon Fund c.c. Paul Volcker, New York