Townsville Bulletin

Seafood flown from hubs to Asia Airlift offers cash lifeline

- MICHAEL THOMPSON KEAGAN ELDER

THE Coffee Dominion van is back in business after a seven-week hiatus.

Owner and operator Melanie Jackson will be serving coffee and other beverages at the South Townsville boat ramp facility today after resuming trade yesterday.

COVID-19 social distancing measures had forced Ms Jackson to shut up shop.

“It has been very tough, financiall­y … usually I operate at the Port of Townsville, which is still closed,” Ms Jackson said.

“A lot of other business I had, such as serving on the lawn at the casino, disappeare­d because of the coronaviru­s measures. I just have to be crafty and come up with some inventive ideas, so I just thought why not the South Townsville boat ramp?

“You never know if it’s going to be busy or quiet, but Sunday tends to be busy and Monday is a public holiday, so fingers crossed.”

Ms Jackson, who is also a volunteer at the Townsville Coast Guard, is applying to have her mobile unit trade at a permanent location, but in the meantime she is restarting by selling coffee at the boat ramp on Sundays and public holidays.

The Coffee Dominion mobile unit will be operating today at the South Townsville boat ramp from 7am to 10am.

FLYING Australian seafood to Asian markets has offered North Queensland fishers a glimmer of hope after many tied up as the coronaviru­s spread and shut down the export market.

Hundreds of mercy flights across the world will help keep commercial fishers and farmers in jobs under a $170 million Federal Government rescue plan.

Under the plan 40 tonnes of fresh fish, prawns, rock lobster, crabs plus beef and dairy – about $4 million worth of produce – will be collected from hubs in Brisbane, Sydney, Melbourne and Perth and flown to China, Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore and the United Arab Emirates.

It is expected about 200 flights will be made over the next six months.

L Lounds d F Fresh h S Seafood owner Col Lound ( pictured) was hopeful this would restart the North Queensland live coral trout, rock lobster and prawn trades.

“Any small export that goes over to China will be greatly received,” he said.

“All we need desperatel­y is those borders to open again.”

The live coral trout market is worth at least $30 million a year and heavily relies on the Chinese market.

Mr Lound said most of North Queensland’s fishing fleet remained at wharves, but said he hoped the coronaviru­s impact would ease by the second half of the year when China turned to our part of the world for prawns.

“We hope it turns around when they want our North Queensland tiger prawns and b banana prawns. Those two seasons are just starting now,” he said.

Queensland Seafood Industry Associatio­n chief executive officer Eric Perez said many jobs were at risk without government help.

“Demand has been really rubbery because people aren’t out at restaurant­s,’’ Mr Perez said.

The Government hopes the package, which includes waiving about $10 million in Australian Fisheries Management Authority levies, will help keep divers, deckhands and processors in work.

 ??  ?? FRESH APPROACH: Melanie Jackson at the Ross River boat ramp. Picture: EVAN MORGAN
FRESH APPROACH: Melanie Jackson at the Ross River boat ramp. Picture: EVAN MORGAN
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