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Angry Farmer Shows Why Fish Are Dying

xingguy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Source: The Independent

Angry farmer shows why fish are dying
June 25th, 2014 | by Trinity Chua

Screen-Shot-2014-06-25-at-12.54.04-pm1-650x250.png


Fish farmer Philip Lim, 53, wanted to prove a point: That fish caught in the plankton bloom last February did not die from a lack of oxygen but from the toxin released by the harmful algae in the water.

He took 500 fish to his farm at the East Johor Straits and put them in three separate areas; he aerated the first set, aerated and put copper sulphate (to kill bacteria) in the second and seawater in the last.

His instinct was spot on. Only a handful of those who had seawater survived. Lim was vindicated.

“When you aerate the water, you break the cell of the algae and that would release toxin. Then your fishes die. I try telling everyone about it but no one would listen,” he said with an air of resignation.

A spokesman for Agri-Food & Veterinary Authority (AVA) told The Independent Singapore the plankton bloom was due to “high temperatures and low tides resulting in a plankton bloom in the East Johor Straits.”

Yet a report by the Tropical Marine Science Institute at the National University of Singapore in 2009 confirmed the presence of harmful algae blooms in the Johor Straits even then.

The report said that “toxic bloom-forming species are a causative organism for shellfish poisoning… and they can cause significant damage in coastal areas.”

Lim has been telling AVA about the harmful algae in the East Johor Straits since the first plankton bloom in 2009 that saw the loss of 400,000 fishes.

He showed his makeshift system to detect the presence of harmful algae, which he said was ignored.

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[PHOTO: Lim, 53, in his speedboat as he visits other fish farmers.]

Five years and 160 tonnes of dead fish later, AVA went into damage control mode. They offered to pay 70 per cent of the cost to restock the fish farms.

But AVA also said to TODAY, no marine biotoxins were detected in the waters and that made Lim furious.

Four months have passed since then. Lim still speaks harshly of the AVA, like the water around his floating fish farm that threatens to throw us aboard every two minutes.

“Money [the grants and subsidies] cannot keep fishes alive in these waters.”

“I want the AVA to work with us. The ecosystem in this area is ruined. I suspect it is due to the reclamation work going on.”

“[AVA] needs to work with the fish farmers and restore the water here. No one knows for certain when is the next plankton bloom.

“AVA spends too much resources telling us fish farmers how to cut down cost and how to produce more fishes.

“But AVA does not have a sustainable plan to deal with the harmful algae. What is their plan when the next harmful algae bloom happens?

“If AVA doesn’t help us restore the water and monitor this plankton bloom, don’t talk about fish farming, don’t talk about sustainability, all the fishes will die.”

AVA’s spokesperson responded that, “there is no fool proof method or system which is able to forecast the occurrence of a plankton or algae bloom. However, we look out for signs and trigger points, such as unusual weather patterns and poor water exchange between the high and low tides.”

AVA has installed monitoring system at some coastal fish farms and according to their reports there is no plankton bloom since February.

IMG_76611-300x153.jpg

[PHOTO: Many of the fish farms at the East Johor Straits have been in operation for decades.]

In his early 20s, Lim was a commercial diver. He says his ‘kampong roots’ from his childhood in Kim Chuan village drew him back to fish farming.

10 years ago, he started his first fish farm.

Now everyone in the area knows Philip Lim. He is the Chairman of Singapore Marine Aquaculture Cooperative. His intent- to help fish farmers make a decent living, to keep the old, small-time fish farmers going.

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“We have unspoken rules among the fish farmers. We look out for one another, and we do not lock our doors.

It’s not easy being a fish farmer, he says. “The fishes in Malaysia will always be cheaper than ours, and the middleman is always pressing down the prices.”

But 40-odd fishing farms still float on these waters.

“There are fish farmers here who do not even own a house on land. They have lived their entire lives here. Some of them are already 80 years old.”

His friend, 57, who does not want to be named says, “I am catching crabs to sustain my farm. During the plankton bloom this year, I lost a ‘semi-detached house’ worth of profit in these waters.”

Another farmer who only wants to be known as Gregory, 64, says, “AVA need to take some responsibility, don’t just give us money. They need to analyse these waters and find a solution to the plankton bloom.”

Gregory’s solution is to isolate his fishes in large canvases away from the seawater. He took the AVA grant after the February’s disaster. It’s better than nothing, he says.

But Lim has stayed away from the grants.

I asks him why, “If I take AVA’s grant, I would not have been allowed to speak to you.
 

Rogue Trader

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Is AVA under Vivian?

Looks like that asshole hasn't stopped the bad habit of wasting our tax monies on pointless sports events and grants.
 

eatshitndie

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
marine biological research, understanding, and knowledge of sinkie authorities such as ava are atrocious and a basket case. sg is surrounded by seas, yet ava is staffed by morons, and they hardly have any experts, in fact none, on marine agriculture. :rolleyes:
 

winnipegjets

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Vivian is not doing his job ...instead he is focusing on doing the WP in and take chiat hong trips.

And we are paying him more than $1 million to do that!
 

Jah_rastafar_I

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
You expect AVA a govt organization to actually admit that they made a mistake and a mere peasant was correct?

Try searching for the pink flying elephant.
 

Thick Face Black Heart

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
AVA not doing its job and a fish farmer took up the slack. Even went all the way out to prove his theory.

Seriously what has become of the govt/civil service?

Dengue hot spots in Hougang and you blame the opposition when > 50% of the area is actually under PAP ward due to gerrymandering. WTF is ENV doing and why is there no fogging and more stringent checks.

Can we please vote this minister out
 

winnipegjets

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
AVA not doing its job and a fish farmer took up the slack. Even went all the way out to prove his theory.

Seriously what has become of the govt/civil service?

Dengue hot spots in Hougang and you blame the opposition when > 50% of the area is actually under PAP ward due to gerrymandering. WTF is ENV doing and why is there no fogging and more stringent checks.

Can we please vote this minister out

If the PM is competent, the minister would have been kicked out last year. The minister couldn't even do the Opposition in and he fumbled totally with his 'evidence'. And this minister was a doctor! I wonder how many of his former patients have been misdiagnosed or given the wrong medication. Time for them to sue him.
 

Tuayapeh

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
Ask Sham and Vivian to go and punch above their fucking weight lot....


can't even handle the Johor Sultan .....wanna talk big and strut around like a fucking asshole dwarf in the international stage
 

makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
http://www.ava.gov.sg/AboutAVA/BoardManagement/

Management Team


Ms Tan Poh Hong
Chief Executive Officer
Agri-Food
& Veterinary Authority

Dr Chew Siang
Thai
Director-General & Deputy CEO
Regulatory Programmes &
Operations

Mr Lee Kwong Weng
Deputy
CEO
Corporate & Technology

Corporate
& Technology


Dr Tan Lee Kim,
Kim
Group Director, Planning & Organisational Excellence Group
Dr Philip Chew Hong
Group Director,
Technology & Industry Development Group

Mrs Tan-Low Lai Kim
Group Director,
Food Supply Resilience Group

Ms Melin Lim
Ag Group Director,
Corporate Resource Management Group

Dr Choo Li Nah
Group Director,
Communications & Corporate Relations Group

Regulatory Programmes &
Operations

Dr Astrid
Yeo

Group Director, Regulatory Administration Group; Covering Group
Director, Food Establishment Regulation Group

Dr
Yap Him Hoo
Group Director, Quarantine & Inspection Group

Dr Wong Hon Mun
Group Director,
Agri Establishment Regulation Group

Dr Paul Chiew
Group Director,
Laboratories Group
 

makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
http://www.news.gov.sg/public/sgpc/...?AuthKey=7272ebf5-6073-0541-81a0-917057a9e639

SENIOR APPOINTMENT CHANGES AT THE AGRI-FOOD & VETERINARY AUTHORITY OF SINGAPORE
<!-- SG Gov Logo -->
image
<!-- SG Gov Logo -->
<!-- Image -->
  • Dr Chua Sin Bin
  • Dr%20Chua%20Sin%20Bin.JPG

  • Ms Tan Poh Hong
  • Ms%20Tan%20Poh%20Hong.JPG

  • Dr Chew Siang Thai
  • Dr%20Chew%20Siang%20Thai.JPG
<!-- Image --> <!-- Video --> <!-- Video --> <!-- Audio --> <!-- Audio --> <!-- Map --> <!-- Map -->
<!-- Content --> The Ministry of National Development (MND) announces today the following changes in the senior appointments at the Agri-Food & Veterinary Authority of Singapore (AVA):

· Dr Chua Sin Bin, currently the CEO of AVA, will retire on 20 May 2009;

· Ms Tan Poh Hong, currently Deputy CEO (Estates & Corporate) of HDB, will be CEO of AVA on 21 May 2009, upon Dr Chua’s retirement;

· Dr Chew Siang Thai, currently the Deputy CEO of AVA and Director, Food & Veterinary Administration, will concurrently be appointed as the Director-General of AVA on 21 May 2009.

2 As CEO of AVA, Dr Chua has adopted an effective risk management approach to food safety, as well as increased the diversification of Singapore’s food sources. He has built up a comprehensive inspection system and pioneered the development of state-of-the-art laboratory facilities as a critical risk management component. Dr Chua has also successfully integrated the food safety control system, by merging the Food Control Division from the former Ministry of Environment (ENV) with AVA.

3 AVA Chairman Mr Koh Soo Keong said, “I would like to express AVA’s deep appreciation to Sin Bin for his dedication and leadership in developing AVA into a professional organization that has won the trust and confidence of Singaporeans and well respected by the international community. On behalf of the board, I wish Sin Bin the very best for the future. Let me also warmly welcome Ms Tan Poh Hong as AVA’s new CEO, and I am confident she will bring AVA to greater heights.”

4 MND expresses its appreciation to Dr Chua for his dedication and leadership at the Authority, and welcomes Ms Tan Poh Hong and Dr Chew Siang Thai to their new portfolios.

5 Brief write-ups of Dr Chua, Ms Tan and Dr Chew are given at the Annex.

Issued by : Ministry of National Development (MND) and
Agri-Food & Veterinary Authority of Singapore (AVA)

Date : 10 March 2009


Annex
(Images attached in order)
DR CHUA SIN BIN

Dr Chua Sin Bin, 62, was the CEO and Director-General of the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority (AVA) and the Chief Veterinary Officer of Singapore from August 2005 till his retirement in May 2009. He was a Colombo Plan scholar who graduated with an Honours degree in veterinary medicine from the University of Queensland in 1970.

2 Dr Chua joined the then Primary Production Department as a veterinary officer in 1971 and had held various key positions before becoming AVA’s CEO in 2005. Dr Chua is the key architect of Singapore’s science-based food safety programme as well as the two modern laboratory facilities, the Veterinary Public Health Centre and the Animal and Plant Health Centre. He was awarded the Public Administration Medal (Gold) in 2004 for his significant contributions in keeping Singapore free from exotic animal diseases, particularly zoonoses and serious foodborne illnesses. Dr Chua was also conferred as a Fellow of the Singapore Institute of Food Science and Technology in 2005.

3 Dr Chua is married with one son.

MS TAN POH HONG


Ms Tan Poh Hong, 50, obtained a 2nd class Honours degree with a major in Estate Management from the National University of Singapore in 1981. She later obtained a Master of Business Administration with Distinction from New York University in 1988. :kma:

2 Ms Tan began her career in HDB in 1981 as an Estates Officer.
She held the position of Head (Public Affairs) from 1993 and led the Corporate Development Department from 1996, before being appointed Deputy CEO (Estates & Corporate) in 2004. Ms Tan currently oversees the HDB’s Estates Group, which ensured that public housing policies are reviewed in tandem with the evolving needs of the various population strata and the Corporate Group which ensures effective support of HDB’s public services

3 Ms Tan is married with two sons.


DR CHEW SIANG THAI

Dr Chew Siang Thai, 50, graduated with a Doctor of Veterinary Medicine degree from Universiti Pertanian Malaysia in 1983. He was awarded a post-graduate Scholarship and obtained a Master of Science in Veterinary Public Health from the Texas A & M University in 1991.

2 Dr Chew joined AVA as a Senior Primary Production Officer in 1983. Dr Chew was closely involved in the key areas of Food Safety and Veterinary Public Health, including as Head of the Veterinary Public Health Laboratory. He was seconded to the Ministry of National Development as Director, Infrastructure Division from 2003 to 2005. Thereafter, he was appointed as Director, Food & Veterinary Administration Department in Jan 2005 and Deputy CEO in Sep 2005. Dr Chew was conferred the Public Administration Medal (Silver) in 2006.

3 Dr Chew is married with one daughter.
<!-- Content --> Contacts
<!-- Contact --> <!-- contact -->
Name He Xingying
Tel3106 7199
Other
Email [email protected]

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</tbody>
 

Seee3

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Singapore used to be the centre for ornamental fish and orchid. Anyone who has real interest in this area knows that it's bs. Taiwanese fish farmer, with no formal education was carrying out genetic manipulation to produce new breeds of discus while local chaps were still using crossing breeding. A few years back, local fish farmers must buy sea bass fries from Thailand as they were unable to hatch the eggs. Ava came in to help and they finally succeeded. The problem is, why other less developed countries already knew how to do it so long ago but we only discovered the know how so much later? Taiwanese was the first to concoct food for abalone which enable them to be the pioneer in abalone farming. We have nothing new to claim be our own.

I think the greatest evil lies in the attitude of the people. It is interest and passion that drive fish farmers in other countries to break new barriers and succeed, not pure desire for more money. Local chaps are only interested in profit. So they try to copy. However, life stock is a subject that cannot be easily duplicated because of differing environmental conditions. What works in another country may not work here. Only with good grasps of the fundamentals can one develop a system that suits the local conditions. Unfortunately, going back to basics is not in our blood. Since young we were exposed to ways and means for quick fit, quick money... Nobody cares about fundamentals. QH farm is a good example. Instead of being experts in fish breeding, most only knows how to import and re-export. When they see others making big money breeding arowana, they joined in and suffered losses instead.

The problem with the experts in AVA is too much education and too little hands on, coupled with over confident, thinking that they know more than the farmers, just because they have higher educational qualifications. Until the attitude is changed where passion becomes the driving force and the mindset change to relook at fundamentals instead of jumping readily to textbook solution, we shall remain as a country with good infrastructure for others to set up factories here and F off when things turn back. In the end we will have nothing that we can be proud off to call our own.
 

numero uno

Alfrescian
Loyal
Vivian is not doing his job ...instead he is focusing on doing the WP in and take chiat hong trips.

And we are paying him more than $1 million to do that!

this is karma in action for criticising about JB reclamation works and environment effect. AVA and Vivian sleeping on the job. no need high tech experiments to find the cause. common sense would tell you that after massive reclamation works on ubin and tekong and eastern part of changi, the water turned brackosh and greenish due to algae overgrowth. fish dies in the millions. those who fish there or canoe there for past 10 years know what i am talking about. now cow beh cow bu about JB reclamation on westren side when it is their own land for what???
lucky for me I did not invest in kelongs as some of these screw uped kelong owners knew about the polluted waters years ago and tried to sell off their kelongs for a few hundred tousands under guise of early retirement. ALL bullsh!tters. never trust these guys. anyway kelongs in Kukup are selling for only a few thoudands and water there mcuh better.
 

numero uno

Alfrescian
Loyal
Singapore used to be the centre for ornamental fish and orchid. Anyone who has real interest in this area knows that it's bs. Taiwanese fish farmer, with no formal education was carrying out genetic manipulation to produce new breeds of discus while local chaps were still using crossing breeding. A few years back, local fish farmers must buy sea bass fries from Thailand as they were unable to hatch the eggs. Ava came in to help and they finally succeeded. The problem is, why other less developed countries already knew how to do it so long ago but we only discovered the know how so much later? Taiwanese was the first to concoct food for abalone which enable them to be the pioneer in abalone farming. We have nothing new to claim be our own.

I think the greatest evil lies in the attitude of the people. It is interest and passion that drive fish farmers in other countries to break new barriers and succeed, not pure desire for more money. Local chaps are only interested in profit. So they try to copy. However, life stock is a subject that cannot be easily duplicated because of differing environmental conditions. What works in another country may not work here. Only with good grasps of the fundamentals can one develop a system that suits the local conditions. Unfortunately, going back to basics is not in our blood. Since young we were exposed to ways and means for quick fit, quick money... Nobody cares about fundamentals. QH farm is a good example. Instead of being experts in fish breeding, most only knows how to import and re-export. When they see others making big money breeding arowana, they joined in and suffered losses instead.

The problem with the experts in AVA is too much education and too little hands on, coupled with over confident, thinking that they know more than the farmers, just because they have higher educational qualifications. Until the attitude is changed where passion becomes the driving force and the mindset change to relook at fundamentals instead of jumping readily to textbook solution, we shall remain as a country with good infrastructure for others to set up factories here and F off when things turn back. In the end we will have nothing that we can be proud off to call our own.

agreed wholeheartedly with you. a nation of copy cats , cheaterrs, and full of crooks that talk big only. thats why sinkieland would never be great or become world class . just like some stupipd MIW who said b 2010 we would enter World cup soccer and be amongst the best. that woody guy said it in 1990s and till now I am still laughing at the motehr of all talk c@ck statements. casionoes just made it worse. everybody looking for shortcuts and like to talk big.
 

Seee3

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
this is karma in action for criticising about JB reclamation works and environment effect. AVA and Vivian sleeping on the job. no need high tech experiments to find the cause. common sense would tell you that after massive reclamation works on ubin and tekong and eastern part of changi, the water turned brackosh and greenish due to algae overgrowth. fish dies in the millions. those who fish there or canoe there for past 10 years know what i am talking about. now cow beh cow bu about JB reclamation on westren side when it is their own land for what???
lucky for me I did not invest in kelongs as some of these screw uped kelong owners knew about the polluted waters years ago and tried to sell off their kelongs for a few hundred tousands under guise of early retirement. ALL bullsh!tters. never trust these guys. anyway kelongs in Kukup are selling for only a few thoudands and water there mcuh better.
I share your view that reclamations have destroyed the sea lives and having a Kelong in our water is a big no. The only part of the sea that is still ok is probably off St John island. There is this guy who went into lobster farming with AVA there. After many years of hard work, he has succeeded. However, having understood how unpredictable and cruel nature can be, I last heard that he is selling it. Whoever bought it because the profit looks good will be in for a rude shock. Unless the new owner is able to relearn everything from scratch, otherwise, what the first guy can do, the new person may not be able replicate. He would also need the generosity of the previous owner to reveal all the finer details. Certain things in this trade cannot be documented in black and white. It is like cooking, where ingredients must be added and mixed in the right proportion, at the right time and for the correct duration. Most of these decisions need keen visual observation. It can't be achieved without passion which local guys do not have. All we have are farmers like the ex-saf guy who set up a big orchid farm, fully automated. The farm only plant the lowest grade of orchid plants which are hardy and needed little maintenance. Not much different from growing grass.
 

Rogue Trader

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
The problem with the experts in AVA is too much education and too little hands on, coupled with over confident, thinking that they know more than the farmers, just because they have higher educational qualifications. Until the attitude is changed where passion becomes the driving force and the mindset change to relook at fundamentals instead of jumping readily to textbook solution, we shall remain as a country with good infrastructure for others to set up factories here and F off when things turn back. In the end we will have nothing that we can be proud off to call our own.

One of my family friends is the owner of one of the biggest and most successful breeders here (not QH). Another major problem the industry faces is the short land lease terms for these poor guys. How to plan ahead when your farm may be moved in 12 months?
 

Narong Wongwan

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
One of my family friends is the owner of one of the biggest and most successful breeders here (not QH). Another major problem the industry faces is the short land lease terms for these poor guys. How to plan ahead when your farm may be moved in 12 months?

Since QH is mentioned.....word has it they are in deep shit due to some bad investments.
Chief fish closet gay Kenny is going around borrowing money.
Do not buy their shares.
 

Seee3

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
One of my family friends is the owner of one of the biggest and most successful breeders here (not QH). Another major problem the industry faces is the short land lease terms for these poor guys. How to plan ahead when your farm may be moved in 12 months?
Yes there are many other good breeders and definitely not QH. Mentioned them because it is the only listed breeder with lots of wayang. The short lease is ridiculous. Those poor breeders at old Tampines road were evicted more than 10 years ago and the land has been left vacant. Only recently do we see some activities on the vacant plot. They waste money digging and building new ponds at Pasir Ris and praying that the lease will be renewed at each expiry date.

Care to let me know the lactation of the breeder that you mentioned? Is it at LCK?
 
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