Pushback Continues Against Genetically Modified Salmon Being Raised at Indiana Farm
October 16, 2023 | 1 min to read
In Indiana, a remote farm is producing thousands of pounds of salmon annually through land-based aquaculture, although the genetically modified “AquAdvantage” salmon from AquaBounty Technologies Inc. faces backlash from environmental advocates. Critics, part of the Block Corporate Salmon campaign, argue that this “Frankenfish” could disrupt local ecosystems and threaten sustainable fishing practices, particularly for Indigenous communities.
As demand for seafood grows, including across the Hoosier state, a remote Indiana farm is harvesting thousands of pounds of salmon every year — on land. But the genetically modified fish teeming in the Albany tanks are continuing to draw pushback from environmental advocates who say the “Frankenfish” threaten local ecosystems and are not a sustainable food source.
Engineered by biotech company AquaBounty Technologies Inc., the “AquAdvantage” salmon is the first such altered animal to be cleared for human consumption in the United States.
The boycott against the salmon has largely come from activists with the Block Corporate Salmon campaign, which aims to protect wild salmon and preserve Indigenous rights to practice sustainable fishing.
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