I think most of us will regard this as a very good development:
 
http://www.timescolonist.com/news/local/dumping-of-iron-into-sea-off-haida-gwaii-suspended-amid-acrimony-1.229839
 
  Dumping of iron into sea off Haida Gwaii suspended amid acrimony 
 
*Judith Lavoie* <http://www.timescolonist.com/authors?author=Judith Lavoie>/ 
Times Colonist 
May 23, 2013 

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  Controversial U.S businessman Russ George, who orchestrated a dump of 
more than 100 tonnes of iron sulfate into international waters off the 
coast of Haida Gwaii last year, has been fired by the Old Massett-based 
Haida Salmon Restoration Corp.

“We have parted ways,” Old Massett Village chief councillor Ken Rea said in 
an interview.

The unauthorized iron experiment, which was designed to increase salmon 
runs by creating an algae bloom for fish to feed on, led to international 
controversy and accusations of geoengineering.

The Haida Salmon Restoration Corp., which was funded to the tune of $2.5 
million through the Gwaii Trust Society and a village reserve fund, will 
undergo a strategic review, Rea said.

That means greater community input and restructuring the business “so that 
it … effectively responds to legitimate concerns raised by various 
stakeholders around the world,” he said.

“It starts with some bold steps — like parting ways with Russ George,” he 
said.

Old Massett economic development officer John Disney, who will serve as 
interim CEO, said he is confident in the technology but the right 
leadership and business plan are needed.

“We have a responsibility, not only to the shareholders but the citizens of 
Old Massett and Haida Gwaii to get it right,” he said.

However, in a twist, George denied in an email that he had been fired.

“The reports that I have been removed as a director of Haida Salmon 
Restoration Corp. are, unfortunately, inaccurate,” he wrote.

“The other board members of HSRC did not have any authority to remove me as 
a director.”

Ocean Pastures, a company owned by George, holds 48 per cent of HSRC shares 
and has the right to appoint two out of the four board members, he said.

“I shall remain a director of HSRC and look forward to moving the business 
plan of the company forward,” he said.

That will include commercialization of last year’s experiment, he said.

For Rea, the future does not include George.

The strategic review means that the second iron fertilization test, planned 
for June, will not take place, Rea said.

“I can’t say if it will be done again ever. I won’t know until we get the 
results of the strategic review,” he said.

Rea would not speculate whether the village has lost out financially.

“There’s value in the company and value in the data, and we intend to 
preserve that value,” he said.

The unauthorized test was heavily criticized by the Council of the Haida 
Nation and federal Environment Minister Peter Kent, who called it a 
“demonstration of rogue science.”

In March, Environment Canada officials seized scientific data, journals and 
files from the company’s Vancouver headquarters, and the corporation is now 
fighting to have them returned.

It is too early to say whether the algae bloom will mean better salmon 
survival, but anecdotally other marine species are doing well, Rea said.

George previously told Old Massett council that there was money to be made 
through the sale of carbon credits, although there is no proof it is a 
viable method of carbon capture.

It was the second time that George had proposed a carbon-credit scheme for 
Old Massett. The first plan, to cut down alders beside creeks and replace 
them with fast-growing evergreens, was scuttled by Fisheries and Oceans.

George has a history of trying to conduct iron fertilization experiments 
around the world, resulting in his ships being banned from ports by the 
Spanish and Ecuadorian governments.

*jlav...@timescolonist.com* <jlav...@timescolonist.com>

© Copyright 2013

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