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Is Hong Kong’s fishing industry being thrown a lifeline and will the farmers take the bait?

  • Farmers left furious by Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department’s plan to tighten licensing requirements
  • Some suspect officials want to kill industry through regulation to make land reclamation easier. Not so, say authorities

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Farmers (from left to right) Lee Muk-kam and Lee Kan, with Shek Kwong-yin, Sam Mun Tsai village representative, former fisheries lawmaker Wong Yung-kan, Ho Yi, and Ng Ngau-tai at the Sam Mun Tsai fish farm in Tai Po. Photo: K.Y. Cheng

In the winter of 2015, rare toxic algal blooms began spreading across Hong Kong waters.

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Lee Muk-kam’s floating fish farm in the sheltered bay off Tai Po’s Sam Mun Tsai was one of the mariculture zones hardest hit by the onslaught.

By spring of the following year, 8,000 Sabah groupers, which he had raised from fry, had been wiped out by the oxygen-depleting blooms, also known as “red tides”.

“That was almost a million dollars in losses,” he said, pointing to a lone grouper frolicking in one of his sea cages. “Only one survived and, surprisingly, it is still alive.”

Lee Muk-kam takes a dead fish out of the water at Sam Mun Tsai farm in Tai Po. Photo: K.Y. Cheng
Lee Muk-kam takes a dead fish out of the water at Sam Mun Tsai farm in Tai Po. Photo: K.Y. Cheng
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Like many fish farmers, Lee only received what he termed “minimal compensation” under the government’s emergency relief fund, hardly enough to cover his losses. Since the disaster, he has not dared to release any more fry.

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