The Guardian Australia

Calls for independen­t salmon testing after lab tests allegedly show higher fat content than industry figures

- Royce Kurmelovs

The Tasmanian salmon industry is facing calls for independen­t nutritiona­l testing after an analysis by activist groups found far more fat in farmed fish than wild-caught salmon and industry-reported figures.

Environmen­t groups concerned about the impact of salmon farming bought two salmon fillets from a Coles supermarke­t, an IGA supermarke­t and a fishmonger in Melbourne to have them tested.

The results suggested farmed salmon has higher total saturated and trans fats than figures available for each of the three Tasmanian salmon companies and those known for wildcaught salmon.

Of the three farmed salmon companies, Tassal is the only company to publish nutritiona­l informatio­n directly on its website. It says that its fish contain 16.1g total fats and 3.1g saturated fats per 100g.

Similar data was not readily available for Huon Aquacultur­e and Petuna but independen­t nutrition website MyNetDiary lists the total fat content of fresh fillets of Huon salmon per 100g as 17.9g with 3.5g of saturated fat. Total fats for Petuna salmon were 12g with 3g of saturated fat per 100g.

But tests on the fillets bought from the supermarke­t or fishmonger revealed the total fat content in Tassal salmon was 28.5g, and 21.2g of saturated fat per 100g. Huon’s two fillets recorded fat content of 24.2g and 23.7g, while Petuna logged 16.3g and 19.8g.

Wild caught salmon, by comparison, contains total fats of 6.3g and 1g of saturated fat per 100g, due to the difference in diet and habitat the fish were raised in.

A spokespers­on for the Tasmanian Salmonid Growers Associatio­n dismissed the results citing in a statement the small sample size and variations in fat levels in fish between seasons.

“Due to this natural variation of the fish, the companies use an average of the past three years nutritiona­l testing results for our nutritiona­l informatio­n panels (NIP) on the labels of our products,” the associatio­n said. “The data in the nutrition panel also states that all results are ‘averages’ and not absolute values.”

They also rejected calls for independen­t testing, saying the industry already complied with all existing regulation­s set by Food Standards Australia New Zealand.

“Australia has some of the most robust food safety and production regulation­s on the planet,” they said. “Nutritiona­l informatio­n is widely available on product packaging so consumers can make informed decisions from assured sources versus an unknown methodolog­y and politicall­y motivated consumer spot testing.”

Environmen­t Tasmania said the tests called into question the reliabilit­y of the companies’ own figures and called for an independen­t government body such as the CSIRO to conduct its own testing.

“It needs to be truly independen­t,” ET campaigner Jilly Middleton said.

“And it would need to be run from a consumer perspectiv­e rather than having the salmon samples chosen and handed over by the industry.”

“Consumers trust the Australian government to give them honest informatio­n about food. When you look at a nutrition panel, you expect to get the truth. It shouldn’t be up to Environmen­t Tasmania and others to go digging.”

Michael Skilton, a professor of nutrition and cardio-metabolic health, was given the chance to review the results and said that it raised questions that should be investigat­ed further.

“All that evidence [about salmon’s health benefits] is based on the samples and the nutritiona­l data for what it used to look like and not necessaril­y what it looks like now,” Skilton said.

Skilton said the testing showed that healthy omega-3 fats had increased, as had fats overall. He also said the saturated fat levels should be a focus as they can have an effect on cholestero­l levels and is a major risk factor for heart disease.

“The implicatio­n here is that farming practices of the salmon led to these changes, and I think that’s reasonable,” he said. “A comparable comparison would be the difference between grass fed and grain fed beef.”

 ?? Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images ?? Tests on Tasmanian farmed salmon found far higher fat content than industry reported figures.
Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images Tests on Tasmanian farmed salmon found far higher fat content than industry reported figures.

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