Who cares who wins the Cup? We don't have one, until we do, I'd rather anyone else but Edmonton, Calgary, Toronto or Montreal win one before us. Hell, I'll take Winnipeg and Ottawa over teams that have won multiple Cups before. That said, I don't see Edmonton pulling out the complete reversal. McDavid probably breaks Gretzky's scoring record, but doesn't get his Cup while doing so. And yes, I do think it'll go 7. - DariusKnight
The "no cup in Canada in X years" narrative is so weird. Who gives a (frank)? The league is 80% american teams anyway.
It's misleading to blame open pens for the decline of wild salmon or claim they prevent their return. In Canada, only 1.5% of the global fish farm industry operates on the BC coasts, representing a small fraction compared to Norway, where over 50% of coastlines host fish farm pens. Norway is currently grappling with challenges related to pink salmon, which are increasingly seen as invasive. These complexities highlight the need for nuanced discussions about the environmental impacts of fish farming and its implications for wild salmon populations.
It's misleading to blame open pens for the decline of wild salmon or claim they prevent their return. In Canada, only 1.5% of the global fish farm industry operates on the BC coasts, representing a small fraction compared to Norway, where over 50% of coastlines host fish farm pens. Norway is currently grappling with challenges related to pink salmon, which are increasingly seen as invasive. These complexities highlight the need for nuanced discussions about the environmental impacts of fish farming and its implications for wild salmon populations.
Also, Let's go Panthers! - Bakwas
It's simple, keep Atlantic salmon in the Atlantic and Pacific salmon in the Pacific.
It's simple: keep Atlantic salmon in the Atlantic and Pacific salmon in the Pacific. - A_SteamingLombardi
Why though? What is the issue?
If done sustainably (closed pens and semi-closed pens), the aquaculture industry can create economic development opportunities for the future. Farmed salmon feeds 70% of the global population, and its carbon footprint is minuscule compared to that of beef and chicken.
If done sustainably (closed pens and semi-closed pens), the aquaculture industry can create economic development opportunities for the future. Farmed salmon feeds 70% of the global population, and its carbon footprint is minuscule compared to that of beef and chicken. - Bakwas
Fine, do it in closed pens, there's no escapement from closed pens. The industry is to cheap to use closed pens on land because they have to own or lease the land and pay for filter systems for the water. Carbon footprint isn't the problem it's disease that effects wild stocks.