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Kyleakin fish feed plant pier revamp will help remove lorries from the roads





Ian Blackford MP (right) and Mick Watts, Mowi’s project director and Global Engineer at the pier opening.
Ian Blackford MP (right) and Mick Watts, Mowi’s project director and Global Engineer at the pier opening.

THE opening of a revamped pier at a fish feed plant with employees from Ross-shire will help take lorries off the roads by facilitating transport by sea.

The new pier facilities at Kyleakin Feed Plant were officially opened this week by Ross MP Ian Blackford.

The newly refurbished and extended pier means both ingredients and the final feed product can be transported by sea.

Its opening also marks a major milestone in the journey towards final completion of the feed plant which is currently undergoing testing as part of its commissioning phase.

Mowi Scotland, formerly Marine Harvest Scotland, originally announced plans to build a feed plant at the Altanavaig quarry site at Kyleakin in 2016.

Planning permission was granted in early 2017.

Fifty-five people now work on the site, with more than 60 per cent recruited from the local area.

Mick Watts, Mowi's project director and Global Engineer has overseen the project from its inception. he said: "We've been delighted at the warm reception we've received from the community and would like to thank them for their patience over the last few years.

"It's also been great to build such a strong team here on site and we're particularly pleased we have been able to provide employment for so many local people.

"This is a big step forward for us as the pier facilities are an integral part of the company's investment on this site. We're also hopeful the plant will be finished in the coming months."

Mr Blackford said: "We should never underestimate the importance of the salmon farming industry to this part of the world. We are passionate about creating opportunities for young people and their families to live here and the salmon industry is playing an important role in that. Food and drink are an important part of Scotland's economy going forward and salmon is now our largest food export."

The plant will produce fish feed to supply Mowi's salmon farms across the western Highlands and Islands of Scotland, as well as Ireland, Norway and the Faroe Islands.

It will provide for a range of salmon diets including organic feed for Ireland and Scotland, as well as specialist brood stock and freshwater feeds. The plant has the capacity to produce 170,000 tonnes of feed pellets a year.

Demand for Scottish salmon continues to increase and salmon is among Scotland and the UK's largest food exports. Mowi's Scottish farmed salmon is sold in 29 countries across the world.

The main markets for Mowi salmon are the UK, France, USA, Poland and China.

Mowi Scotland uses liquified natural gas which produces much lower carbon emissions than other fossil fuels. The LNG store at the site is the largest in Scotland.

The pier is used for the delivery of fuel and ingredients for the feed, as well as for the collection of the feed pellets for distribution to Mowi salmon farms.

It is 147 metres long from the quayside and 20 m wide, 50 m long at the north facing end and 45m long at the North quay face. It can accommodate up to four vessels at any one time on the four working areas. The water depth allows vessels up to 7000 dead weight tonnes to berth.

The development of the feed plant at Kyleakin is part of Mowi's overall strategy to control the entire process from feed to fork in order to, it says, safeguard the quality of the product, improve efficiency and stabilise costs.


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