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Occupational Safety and Health in New Salmon Farming Concepts

Abstract

Employees in fish farming have exposed work environments, and salmon farming is one of the most accident-prone industries in Norway. Currently, new production concepts are being introduced. Concepts for the seawater phase are becoming more diverse, expanding from mostly open netpens along the coast, to include new designs such as semi-closed and submerged units for coastal and offshore sites as well as production on land. Along with new technologies, working conditions are transformed. The objective of this article is to study occupational safety and health (OSH) in new salmon farming concepts. The new concepts involve technologies that reduce manual labor, shield or remove humans from high energies or hazards. When routine operations become remotely controlled, personnel are removed from hazards, but other risks related to monitoring tasks may increase. Also, larger operations still require personnel and involve hazards and increase uncertainty. At the new salmon farming concepts in general, risks can potentially increase, despite improved safety management: This study shows how large investments and new technologies can reduce some hazards, but also lead to new organizing and deskilling, that may shift the entire foundation for decision making and safety management.

Category

Academic chapter

Language

English

Author(s)

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Ocean / Aquaculture
  • SINTEF Ocean / Fisheries and New Biomarine Industry
  • Norwegian University of Science and Technology

Year

2025

Publisher

Research Publishing Services

Book

Stavanger ESREL SRA-E 2025 Proceedings: 35th European Safety and Reliability Conference and the 33rd Society for Risk Analysis Europe Conference, 15 - 19 June 2025, Norway

ISBN

9789819432813

Page(s)

1726 - 1733

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository