Aquaculture for all

Sea Farms’ chief leaves SAIC board

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With £40 million in investment to oversee during 2022, Scottish Sea Farms Managing Director Jim Gallagher has stepped down from the board of the Sustainable Aquaculture Innovation Centre (SAIC).

SAIC chair, David Gregory; Jim Gallagher; and Heather Jones, CEO of SAIC

As well as this key strategic investment to roll out, Gallagher is also awaiting the outcome of the Competition and Markets Authority’s decision on Scottish Sea Farms’ acquisition of the Shetland salmo farming business Grieg Seafood UK - which is due to be made on 15 December.

Gallagher’s involvement in SAIC dates back almost 10 years, when he was part of a multi-stakeholder advisory group tasked with scoping out the benefits of introducing an Innovation Centre dedicated to Scottish aquaculture.

When the Scottish Government later announced, in 2014, £11.1 million of public funding to bring such a centre into being, Gallagher was appointed as one the founding members of the SAIC board, going on to serve two terms.

Speaking of his decision to step down, Gallagher said: “It has been a tremendous honour to be a part of the SAIC board for so many years. I have believed strongly in the concept since day one – and I haven’t been disappointed.

“Scottish aquaculture is without doubt better connected, more collaborative and operating increasingly sustainably thanks to the ongoing work of SAIC and its Independent Scientific Panel to bring together the country’s producers and academics to address some of the sector’s most pressing challenges and opportunities.

“However, the opportunities immediately ahead of Scottish Sea Farms have the potential to be equally transformative in terms of the company’s own growth and development, and I am keen to give those my undivided focus and attention.”

SAIC Chief Executive Officer Heather Jones added: “Jim’s energy, absolute focus and leadership in Scottish aquaculture have been invaluable to SAIC. Since SAIC’s creation, he has helped shape our priority innovation areas, ensuring our research has closely reflected the sector’s needs. We also acknowledge with thanks the way that Scottish Sea Farms has engaged with SAIC by co-funding projects, sending staff on SAIC innovation programmes, and co-sponsoring the Women in Scottish Aquaculture initiative.”

For Gallagher, stepping down from the SAIC Board in no way means stepping away from the work of the Innovation Centre itself. To date, Scottish Sea Farms has collaborated in nine SAIC co-funded projects, ranging from improved sea lice control to increased understanding of gill health issues, contributing over £2.2 million of the combined £6.8 million project costs – a high level of support that Gallagher is keen to see continue.

As he explained: “SAIC has an instrumental role to play in helping the sector to grow in the most sustainable way and Scottish Sea Farms fully intends to remain a part of that.

“From finfish and shellfish to feed and infrastructure, the appetite to accelerate the pace of change is huge, with producers and manufacturers prepared to put their hands in their pockets and academia keen to put their scientific specialisms to practical use.

“However, for the Innovation Centre concept to really deliver on its potential, and for Scotland to fully capitalise, SAIC also needs the ongoing support of the Scottish Government: from cutting back on the layers of bureaucracy and decision-making that can hamper innovation, to committing to increased funding over the longer-term.

“The contribution aquaculture can make to a greener, healthier and more prosperous Scotland is huge, if given the right conditions to deliver.”

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