Close Menu
SportyVibes.live –

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Indiana Fever Turn Heads With Kelsey Mitchell Post on Thursday

    July 4, 2025

    Nobel laureate Narges Mohammadi warns Iran is increasingly repressing its own citizens

    July 4, 2025

    Euro 2025: Spain put down major marker by thrashing Portugal

    July 4, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Indiana Fever Turn Heads With Kelsey Mitchell Post on Thursday
    • Nobel laureate Narges Mohammadi warns Iran is increasingly repressing its own citizens
    • Euro 2025: Spain put down major marker by thrashing Portugal
    • NBA free agency, offseason winners and losers
    • Wimbledon 2025: Jack Draper beaten by Marin Cilic in second-round upset
    • Dan Hooker, Joe Pyfer interviews, UFC 317 reaction
    • Oscar Mayer Just Recalled More Than 360,000 Pounds of Turkey Bacon Over Listeria Risk
    • Chelsea: Glenavon confirm UK’s youngest senior player Chris Atherton has moved to Stamford Bridge
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
    SportyVibes.live –SportyVibes.live –
    • Home
    • News
    • Cricket
    • Combat
    • Fitness
    • Football
    • Basketball
    • Tennis
    • Gear
    • Highlights
    SportyVibes.live –
    Home»News»Chile’s Indigenous people say salmon threatens way of life : NPR
    News

    Chile’s Indigenous people say salmon threatens way of life : NPR

    Sports NewsBy Sports NewsJune 8, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    Chile's Indigenous people say salmon threatens way of life : NPR
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Reinaldo Caro unloads his catch from the shoreline of the Almirante Montt Gulf, Chilean Patagonia.

    John Bartlett for NPR


    hide caption

    toggle caption

    John Bartlett for NPR

    PUERTO NATALES, Chile — Out beyond Isla Focus, a bare island in the fjords an hour off the coast of Puerto Natales, southern Chile, the waves pick up and the Calipso rocks alarmingly from side to side.

    Reinaldo Caro is the swarthy captain of the tiny fishing vessel, and he has spotted something amid the pristine Patagonian woodland high above the shoreline: a single, white-bark tree.

    “There!” he exclaims suddenly, his thick eyebrows lifting as his face softens into a broad smile. “That’s where I was born.”

    “And then that’s what I’m fighting against,” he says, tracing a path down the hillside with a finger, fixing it on a pontoon floating directly below his birthplace.

    The town of Peine, near the Salt flats and one of the closest towns to the lithium mining operations. 13th of April, 2024. Antofagasta, Chile.

    It belongs to one of the many salmon farms that dot the fjords, although from the surface, there isn’t much to see. A control room sits alongside several floating walkways.

    The salmon farming industry operates along great swaths of Chile’s coastline, from the center of the country and down through Patagonia.

    And Caro, 78, decries the effect it has had on his ancestral home.

    He is one of the very last Kawésqar fishermen sailing these fjords, one of the seminomadic Indigenous peoples who navigated the channels for millennia in carved wooden canoes.

    Today, there are fewer than 1,000 Kawésqar left.

    “There are loads of these farms,” Caro says over the throb of the Calipso’s diesel engine.

    Reinaldo Caro surveys the shoreline of the Almirante Montt Gulf from the cabin of the Calipso on his way through the fjords toward the Kirke Channel.

    Reinaldo Caro surveys the shoreline of the Almirante Montt Gulf from the cabin of the Calipso on his way through the fjords toward the Kirke Channel.

    John Bartlett for NPR


    hide caption

    toggle caption

    John Bartlett for NPR

    With each pontoon that passes by, he reels off the name of the company which operates it and then the moniker he has for each tiny bay nearest to the farm.

    In some, he says, Kawésqar would cut down the trees to make their canoes. In others, huddles of cormorants gather on the black sand beaches, and sea lions bark from the rocks.

    “From up here it looks beautiful and pristine, like a mirror, but down there it’s a different story,” Caro explains. “The contamination is on the seabed — it comes from the feces and medication they give them.”

    Do you love seafood? Here's how to eat it responsibly

    “Maybe 30 or 35 years ago, this place was totally pristine. Now we’re up to our necks in it,” he says bitterly.

    In 2024, the United States, Japan and Brazil were the major markets for Chilean salmon, and more than half of the salmon available in U.S. supermarkets came from Chile.

    After copper, the backbone of the Chilean economy accounting for more than half of the gross domestic product, salmon products are, albeit distantly, the country’s second-largest export.

    Last year, $6.3 billion worth of salmon was sent abroad, according to the Chilean Salmon Council. One-quarter of the world’s salmon is farmed in Chile. Only Norway exports more.

    Yet the fish are not native to these waters, and fishermen like Caro say that they are damaging Chilean ecosystems.

    “I think it’s important to talk about how vulnerable these ecosystems are in general to change,” says marine biologist Claudio Carocca, who has written extensively about the effects of the salmon industry .

    “In this case, the changes affected by human activity range from installing pontoons with their steel, plastic, ropes and lights; to the nonnative fish species introduced, and the chemicals and food injected to help them grow,” he says.

    The Chilean Salmon Council, which represents the largest salmon farming companies in the country, declined NPR’s request for comment on the issues raised by the local community. The council’s website says salmon farming has the potential to provide “a healthy and sustainable source of protein” for growing global demand for quality foods. “We believe this can be achieved responsibly, caring for the environment and ensuring the highest environmental, social and animal welfare standards,” it says. The website also says the industry has worked to reduce the use antimicrobials.

    I Want To Eat Fish Responsibly. But The Seafood Guides Are So Confusing!

    Conditions in Chile are seen as ideal for salmon farming, with the first attempts to introduce salmon dating as far back as the 19th century.

    In 1969, an agreement between Japan and Chile’s national fishing agency saw Pacific salmon formally introduced, bringing Dutch and Japanese companies into the country.

    The national fishing service was then formed in 1976 under the dictatorship of Gen. Augusto Pinochet, and production skyrocketed from the mid-1980s.

    A salmon usually reaches its commercial size and weight at 4 years old, but in a farm this is cut to 10 to 14 months.

    Leticia Caro, Reinaldo's daughter, stands outside the rear cabin of the Calipso.

    Leticia Caro, Reinaldo’s daughter, stands outside the rear cabin of the Calipso.

    John Bartlett for NPR


    hide caption

    toggle caption

    John Bartlett for NPR

    Reinaldo Caro’s daughter, Leticia Caro, grew up sailing these fjords with her father, who has always worked at sea.

    She was 6 years old when she came out fishing with her father for the first time, where she’d help clean the fish and disentangle the nets.

    “I think that things can be done differently, because salmon farming will never be sustainable,” she says.

    “If the industry hadn’t moved into our home, the Kawésqar would probably still be living on these shores the way we always did. It’s vital that after thousands of years in these channels, the balance is maintained.”

    Chile’s salmon industry has long been criticized for polluting the fjords and coastline, triggering record algal blooms, regular escapes that threaten native wildlife, as well as a heavy use of antimicrobials.

    Kristine Tompkins (1950), founder of Tompkins Conservation, hikes up to the Cross of the Seas located in the southernmost point of the American continent. Patagonia, Chile, on Saturday, November 2, 2024. Tamara Merino for NPR.

    Salmon farms pump more than 350 metric tons of antibiotics into the sea each year. Given these quantities, the nongovernmental watchdog group Seafood Watch recommends that people avoid eating Chilean salmon unless it’s purchased from a certified, sustainable business.

    However, legislation is in its final stage on its passage through Chilean congress that would deem salmon farming and the Kawésqar people’s traditional way of life in the area “totally incompatible,” halting the expansion of the industry.

    Politicians are also debating whether to freeze or limit concessions on new farms in the southernmost waters.

     Reinaldo Caro hauls in his nets with a catch of sea bass in the Almirante Montt Gulf.

    Reinaldo Caro hauls in his nets with a catch of sea bass in the Almirante Montt Gulf.

    John Bartlett for NPR


    hide caption

    toggle caption

    John Bartlett for NPR

    “They should go,” says Carocca. “But it’s not so simple — lots of people depend on the industry for work. What we need to ask ourselves is what is left when the farms move on? What will those people do?”

    “Because we have already seen nearly 50 years of a model which doesn’t work, based on an exotic species which isn’t from here, and which requires so much to be added to the water for it to work.”

    “It generates billions of dollars, but how many billions is all this destruction worth?”

    Chiles Indigenous life NPR People salmon threatens
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleNeco Williams out of Belgium World Cup qualifier as Wales call up Dylan Lawlor
    Next Article Sokoto’s Buhari Umar named 2024 top public administrator
    Sports News
    • Website

    Related Posts

    News

    Nobel laureate Narges Mohammadi warns Iran is increasingly repressing its own citizens

    July 4, 2025
    News

    Most growth in ICE detention population immigrants with no criminal convictions : NPR

    July 4, 2025
    News

    Football world mourns Diogo Jota following deadly car crash | Football

    July 4, 2025
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Lisa Nandy removes herself from final decision on leader of football regulator | Lisa Nandy

    June 2, 202548 Views

    Beat writer doubts that the Lakers can land Walker Kessler

    June 12, 202521 Views

    Mubi, A Streamer For Cinephiles, Is Now Officially Indispensable

    June 2, 202510 Views
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews
    Football

    Robertson returns as County stick with manager Cowie

    Sports NewsJune 2, 2025
    Highlights

    Spanish GP: Max Verstappen admits George Russell crash ‘shouldn’t have happened’

    Sports NewsJune 2, 2025
    Highlights

    Max Verstappen-George Russell collision: F1 world champion admits move ‘was not right’

    Sports NewsJune 2, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest tech news from FooBar about tech, design and biz.

    Most Popular

    Warriors add sharpshooter in second round of new NBA mock from Yahoo

    June 2, 20250 Views

    Erin Blanchfield rips Maycee Barber after UFC Fight Night cancellation: ‘She needs to fix her life’

    June 2, 20250 Views

    Eagles have $55 million in dead money salary cap

    June 2, 20250 Views
    Our Picks

    Indiana Fever Turn Heads With Kelsey Mitchell Post on Thursday

    July 4, 2025

    Nobel laureate Narges Mohammadi warns Iran is increasingly repressing its own citizens

    July 4, 2025

    Euro 2025: Spain put down major marker by thrashing Portugal

    July 4, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • About Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Get In Touch
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Condtition
    © 2025 sportyvibes. Designed by Pro.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.