• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

World-First Bans On Octopus Farming Are Being Considered By Some US States

February 29, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

A groundbreaking bill to prohibit octopus farming could soon be passed in Washington state. If signed into law, it will be a world-first ban on the deeply controversial aquaculture practice that’s started to emerge. 

The bill, HB 1153, passed the Washington State House of Representatives earlier this month and passed the Senate with a 29-20 vote on February 27. It’s now waiting on the desk of the Governor, who has three weeks to sign the bill or bin it.  

Advertisement

“Octopus farming leads to suffering and sickness for one of the more intelligent and feeling animals in our oceans,” representative Strom Peterson who sponsored the bill said in a statement.

“It can lead to huge environmental and ecological effects as well. Octopus farming is harmful to the animals and the environment and is unnecessary. It’s time to move on,” said Peterson.

California and Hawai’i are also eyeing up similar legalization. This month, assembly member Steve Bennett introduced A.B. 3162, the California Oppose Cruelty to Octopuses (OCTO) Act, to prohibit octopus farming and ban the import of farmed octopus in California. Likewise, legislators in Hawai’i launched a similar bill called H.B. 2262.

This recent spurt of legalization comes in the wake of news that a Spanish seafood company, Nueva Pescanova, has set its sights on building an octopus farm in the Canary Islands. It’s currently waiting for final approval, but it would be the first commercial venture to rear and slaughter octopus on an industrial scale. If it gets the go-ahead, the farm has the hopes to produce around 3,000 tons of octopus each year, amounting to the slaughter of around one million animals.

Advertisement

However, the plan to build the huge facility has cooked up a fair amount of controversy among environmentalists and animal welfare supporters. 

Octopuses are undeniably smart animals with a unique complex nervous system, capable of advanced problem-solving and learning. It’s even been suggested that they are sentient creatures with individual personalities. 



Their evident intelligence raises some serious questions about whether it is ethically appropriate to exploit these animals for large-scale farming. Since 2019, numerous NGOs have expressed their deep concerns about the prospect of octopus farming becoming a new trend in the global food market.  

“Farming carnivorous species like octopuses is inherently unsustainable, an antithesis to the principles of environmental stewardship and animal welfare that should guide our actions. The ecological footprint of such practices stands in stark contrast to the sustainable and compassionate food systems we strive to build,” Giulia Malerbi, Global Policy Lead at Aquatic Life Institute, said in a statement to IFLScience.

Advertisement

The Aquatic Life Institute, a US-based nonprofit that specializes in aquatic animal welfare, is one of the groups leading the charge. Together with over 140 other organizations, the Aquatic Life Institute sent a joint letter to the Canary Islands government urging them to rethink the planning application from Nueva Pescanova.

The Aquatic Life Institute has also been instrumental in the progress of the new HB 1153 bill. In November 2023, they sent letters to legislators in Washington state, urging them to pass the bill through the House. Since the bill has now reached the final hurdle, the NGO is very excited and has high hopes it will be signed into law soon.

“This law is not merely a reflection of our commitment to the well-being of octopuses, beings of remarkable intelligence and complexity, but it is a bold statement against the direction in which our food systems are perilously headed,” Malerbi told IFLScience.

“It underscores an imperative shift away from exploitative practices and it sends a clear message that the path to a sustainable future is not through the commodification of complex, sentient beings,” she added.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Taliban say they have entered capital of holdout Afghan region
  2. Use Empathy To Connect And Engage Your Audience With This Tool
  3. New Algorithm Hunting For Dangerous Asteroids Spots Its First One During Test
  4. First-Ever Lab-Grown Testicles May Be Capable Of Producing Sperm

Source Link: World-First Bans On Octopus Farming Are Being Considered By Some US States

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Funky-Nosed “Pinocchio” Chameleons Get A Boost As They Turn Out To Be Multiple Species
  • The Leech Craze: The Medical Fad That Nearly Eradicated A Species
  • Unusual Rock Found By NASA’s Perseverance Rover Likely “Formed Elsewhere In The Solar System”
  • Where Does The “H” In Jesus H. Christ Come From? This Bible Scholar Explains All
  • How Could Woolly Mammoths Sense When A Storm Was Coming? By Listening With Their Feet
  • A Gulf Between Asia And Africa Is Being Torn Apart By 0.5 Millimeters Each Year
  • We Regret To Inform You If You Look Through An Owl’s Ears You Can See Its Eyes
  • Sailfin Dragons Look Like A Mythical Beast From A Prehistoric Age, But They’re Alive And Kicking
  • Mysterious Mantle Structures May Hold The Key To Why Earth Supports Life
  • Leaked Document Shows Elon Musk’s SpaceX Will Miss Moon Landing Deadline. Here’s What To Know
  • Gelada Mothers Fake Fertility To Save Their Babies From Infanticidal Males
  • Newly Discovered Wolf Snake Species Is Slender, Shiny Black, And It’s Named After Steve Irwin
  • First Ever Leopard Bones Found At Provincial Roman Amphitheatre, Suggesting Bloody Gladiatorial Battles
  • The Solar System Might Be Moving Faster Than Expected – Or There’s Something Off With The Universe
  • Why Do People Who Take The “Spirit Molecule” Describe Such Similar Experiences?
  • The Most Devastating Symptom Of Alzheimer’s Finally Has An Explanation – And, Maybe Soon, A Treatment
  • Kissing Has Survived The Path Of Evolution For 21 Million Years – Apes And Human Ancestors Were All At It
  • NASA To Share Its New Comet 3I/ATLAS Images In Livestream This Week – Here’s How To Watch
  • Did People Have Bigger Foreheads In The Past? The Grisly Truth Behind Those Old Paintings
  • After Three Years Of Searching, NASA Realized It Recorded Over The Apollo 11 Moon Landing Footage
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version