ABMInsider: Norwegian salmon farmer migrates to Nova Scotia

Published: Tue, 04/09/19

  APRIL 9, 2019
In our latest edition

Perseverance and a social conscience
Glenn Cooke had a plan. Call it a dream. Maybe a vision. He was going to start a company. It was going to be a success. Not just for him, but for his town. Glenn Cooke was 18 and he believed he already knew a thing or two about companies as well as about towns. For much of his growing up, he and his family had lived in a company town. Connors Brothers Ltd., the world-famous sardine producer, was the company. Blacks Harbour—a spit of a place with fewer than a thousand residents located in Charlotte County on the New Brunswick side of the Bay of Fundy between Saint John and the border with Maine—was its town. Read more
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five things to know about business in Atlantic Canada...
BC-based Cermaq announces plans to build salmon farms in NS
Norweigan salmon farmer Cermaq, a subsidiary of Japan’s Mitsubishi Corp. based in BC, has announced their proposal to lease sites in Nova Scotia for salmon farming. The company says they hope to obtain 20 salmon farm licenses along with two hatcheries and a processing plant and have listed four site options in the Chedabucto Bay region along the eastern shoreline and the St. Mary’s region south of Digby.
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