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Summary — PCBs in farmed salmon
From Environmental Working Group, www.ewg.org
Seven of ten farmed salmon purchased at grocery stores in Washington DC,
San Francisco, and Portland, Oregon were contaminated with polychlorinated
biphenyls (PCBs) at levels that raise health concerns, according to independent
laboratory tests commissioned by Environmental Working Group.
These first-ever tests of farmed salmon from U.S. grocery stores show
that farmed salmon are likely the most PCB-contaminated protein source
in the U.S. food supply. On average farmed salmon have 16 times the dioxin-like
PCBs found in wild salmon, 4 times the levels in beef, and 3.4 times the
dioxin-like PCBs found in other seafood. The levels found in these tests
track previous studies of farmed salmon contamination by scientists from
Canada, Ireland, and the U.K. In total, these studies support the conclusion
that American consumers nationwide are exposed to elevated PCB levels
by eating farmed salmon.
PCBs are persistent, cancer-causing chemicals that were banned in the
United States in 1976 and are among the “dirty dozen” toxic chemicals
slated for global phase-out under the United Nations Convention on Persistent
Organic Pollutants, signed by President Bush on May 23, 2001. Because
of their persistence, PCBs continue to contaminate the environment and
the food supply.
A number of studies show that farmed salmon accumulate PCBs from the fishmeal
they are fed. The feed is often designed to have high amounts of fish
oil and is made largely from ground-up small fish. PCBs concentrate in
oils and fat, and previous tests of salmon feed have consistently found
PCB contamination.
If farmed salmon with the average PCB level found in this study were caught
in the wild, EPA advice would restrict consumption to no more than one
meal a month. But because farmed salmon are bought, not caught, their
consumption is not restricted in any way.
This is because the EPA sets health guidance levels for PCBs in wild-caught
salmon, and its standards, which were updated in 1999 to reflect the most
recent peer-reviewed science, are 500 times more protective than the PCB
limits applied by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to commercially-sold
fish. The FDA has not updated its PCB health limit for commercial seafood
since it was originally issued in 1984. In the intervening two decades
new scientific research has shown that the PCBs that build up in fish
and people are more potent cancer-causing agents than originally believed,
and that they present other health risks as well, in particular neurodevelopmental
risks to unborn children from maternal consumption of PCB-contaminated
fish.
When the FDA’s standard was developed, salmon was something of a rarity
in the U.S. diet. Today it is standard fare at home and in restaurants,
particularly among consumers who are health-conscious, well educated,
and relatively affluent. Last year salmon overtook “fish sticks” as the
third most popular seafood in the American diet (trailing only tuna and
shrimp). The increased consumption was made possible by the explosive
growth in salmon farming, an industrial system that produces the fish
in vast quantities at a price far lower than wild salmon.
Seven of the farmed salmon we tested came from factory-scale farms in
Canada, the U.S., and Iceland. Six of these seven were polluted with PCBs
at levels that would be safe to eat no more than once a month, according
to EPA health standards. About 23 million Americans eat salmon more than
once a month, the majority of it farmed salmon. One salmon imported from
Scotland contained PCBs at levels so high that EPA would restrict consumption
to no more than six meals a year, if the salmon were caught, not bought.
The farmed salmon industry claims that both farmed and wild salmon can
be eaten safely more than once a week. This claim relies on FDA’s outdated
contamination limit. In EWG’s testing program, nine of 10 farmed salmon
tested from five countries of origin failed EPA’s health-based limits
for weekly consumption (6000 parts per trillion), exceeding the standard
by an average of 4.5 times. A pilot study published by Canadian scientists
last year showed that farmed Canadian salmon contain ten times the PCBs
of wild Alaskan and Canadian salmon.
EWG’s analysis of seafood industry fish consumption data shows that one
quarter of all adult Americans (52 million people) eat salmon, and about
23 million of them eat salmon more often than once a month. Based on these
data we estimate that 800,000 people face an excess lifetime cancer risk
of more than one in 10,000 from eating farmed salmon, and 10.4 million
people face a cancer risk exceeding one in 100,000. The government's preferred
level of increased risk from contaminants like PCBs is no more than one
in one million, a threshold set to account for a regulatory system that
addresses chemicals or chemical classes individually and is unable to
set safe levels for the complex mixtures of hundreds of industrial chemicals
to which people are exposed.
Recommendations
Six of every ten salmon sold in stores and restaurants are raised in high-density
fish pens in the ocean, managed and marketed by the salmon farming industry.
These fish are eaten by a quarter of all adults in the U.S. and experts
predict that the exponential growth of the farmed salmon industry will
continue.
Farm-raised fish are here to stay. If raised correctly, these fish can
help meet global demand for high-quality protein and take some of the
pressure off of highly depleted populations of wild fish. But major reforms
to the industry are needed.
In addition to the well documented ecological problems with salmon farming,
there is now compelling evidence of near industry-wide contamination with
unacceptably high levels of PCBs.
To remedy this problem, we recommend that:
* Congress pass a funding increase for FDA to support testing of farmed
salmon and other protein sources for PCBs.
* The Food and Drug Administration move quickly to conduct a definitive
study of PCB contamination in farmed salmon, and make all results public.
This testing is critical, because FDA will be unable to update its regulation
on PCBs in farmed salmon until the agency conducts its own laboratory
studies.
* The FDA issue a PCB health advisory for seafood consumption in line
with current PCB health guidance issued by the EPA.
* Policy-makers do more to preserve salmon habitat in Alaska, where, preliminary
indications are, fish are naturally low in PCB contamination.
* The salmon farming industry monitor salmon feed for PCB contamination
and shift or refine feed sources to produce fish lower in PCBs and other
pollutants.
What you can do
To reduce your exposure to PCBs, trim fat from fish before cooking. Also,
choose broiling, baking, or grilling over frying, as these cooking methods
allow the PCB-laden fat to cook off the fish. When possible, choose wild
and canned Alaskan salmon instead of farmed, and eat farmed salmon no
more than once a month.
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