The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Firms fishing for business

Show: Companies look to secure post-Brexit orders at annual seafood expo

- BY KEITH FINDLAY

Scottish companies are targeting post-Brexit markets at the world’s largest seafood trade show.

The annual mission to secure business in more overseas territorie­s at the Seafood Expo Global (SEG)/Seafood Processing Global (SPG) event in Brussels has been given extra impetus this year by the prospect of the UK leaving the European Union.

North and north-east firms pitching for new orders at SEG/SPG 2017, which kicked off yesterday and runs until tomorrow, include Associated Seafood, Caley Fisheries, Highland Smoked Salmon, Internatio­nal Fish Canners, Loch Duart, Loch Fyne Oysters (LFO), Lunar Freezing and Cold Storage Company, Nor-Sea Foods, The Crab Company (Scotland), Wester Ross Salmon and White link Seafoods.

Scottish Quality Salmon, Scottish Seafarms and the Scottish Salmon Company are all there banging the drum for this country’s fish farming industry.

A total of 46 Scottish companies have a presence on the global seafood industry’s biggest stage, with 22 of these – firms covering the whole market from shellfish and salmon to white-fish and pelagic species – exhibiting in the show’s Scotland pavilion.

With the UK Government poised to start Brexit negotiatio­ns with 27 other EU member states, the stakes are high for an industry whose exports to mainland Europe are worth many millions of pounds a year.

Food and drink exports from Scotland last year were worth £5.5billion and seafood made up about £759million of the total.

Some of this country’s leading seafood firms were at a major trade show in Boston last month, trying to break into or grow business in North American markets. And with food exports to Asia rising more than 400% since 2007, this week’s event is an opportunit­y to further mitigate the potential impact of Brexit.

The Scottish turnout at SEG/SPG 2017 is up by around 40% on last year, when overall exhibitor and visitor numbers were affected by terror attacks in Belgium’s capital.

Trade body Seafood Scotland and Scottish Developmen­t Internatio­nal, the internatio­nal arm of Scottish Enterprise, team up every year to organise the Scotland pavilion.

Natalie Bell, trade marketing manager for Europe, the Middle East and Asia at Seafood Scotland, said: “Seafood now accounts for the biggest rise in food exports from Scotland.”

Susan Beattie, head of food and drink at SDI, added: “This is a key show for our industry.”

 ??  ?? LANDINGS: Scottish companies are looking to capitalise on American and Asian markets to mitigate any fallout after Brexit
LANDINGS: Scottish companies are looking to capitalise on American and Asian markets to mitigate any fallout after Brexit

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom