Global Times

Short pain seen for global salmon sector after Xinfadi case

- By Yin Yeping Page Editor: wangbozun@globaltime­s.com.cn

The global seafood industry will sustain a temporary blow after the latest coronaviru­s outbreak Beijing's Fengtai district, causing salmon sales to be suspended nationwide, analysts said.

The virus was detected on a chopping board used by a seller of imported salmon at Fengtai's Xinfadi market, which led to the shutdown of the market and other major seafood markets in the capital city on Saturday. As a precaution, many supermarke­ts and restaurant­s in China decided to take salmon off their shelves.

The outbreak is expected to affect salmon imports in China, since imported salmon accounts for 85 percent of the market in the country, with at least 100,000 tons imported annually.

“As the probe into the cause of the latest outbreak is underway, salmon business around the world will be affected,” Cui He, president of the China Aquatic Products Processing and Marketing Alliance (CAPPMA), told the Global Times Sunday.

China's top three salmon import sources are Chile, Norway and Faroe Islands, which together hold a 70-percent share. The rest comes from Canada, Australia and Scotland, the Global Times has learned.

“The impact of the Xinfadi outbreak will expand from wholesale markets to supermarke­ts and restaurant­s, so the whole food chain may feel the pain,” Cui said, although it's too early to gauge the impact.

Beijing's major supermarke­t chains including Chaoshifa market, Wumart and Carrefour all stopped selling salmon from Saturday. A manager at Chaoshifa market said that all of its salmon were imported and have been removed, the Beijing Daily reported. The latest outbreak cast a further shadow on the seafood industry, which was hit by the previous outbreak.

From February to May, the sales volume of salmon products fell 60 percent. Sales of king crab were down 80 percent and those of turbot declined 70 percent, according to the CAPPMA.

However, Cui said the impact would be temporary. “Compared with the peak of the COVID-19 outbreak months ago, this developmen­t is nothing for the industry. The prevention and control measures are more restrained, and the government and the industry have been quicker to respond,” Cui said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China