Houston Chronicle

Pandemic has bitten U.S. seafood industry

- By Patrick Whittle

PORTLAND, Maine — The coronaviru­s pandemic has hurt the U.S. seafood industry because of a precipitou­s fall in imports and exports and a drop in catches of some species.

Those are the findings of a group of scientists who sought to quantify the damage of the pandemic on the U.S. seafood business, which has also suffered in part because of its reliance on restaurant sales. Consumer demand for seafood at restaurant­s dropped more than 70 percent during the early months of the pandemic, according to the scientists, who published their findings recently in the scientific journal Fish and Fisheries.

Imports fell about 37 percent and exports about 43 percent over the first nine months of the year when compared with 2019, the study said. The economic effect has been felt most severely in states that rely heavily on the seafood sector, such as Maine, Alaska and Louisiana, said Easton White, a University of Vermont biologist and the study’s lead author.

It hasn’t all been doom and gloom for the industry, as seafood delivery and home cooking have helped businesses weather the pandemic, White said. The industry will be in a better position to rebound after the pandemic if domestic consumers take more of an interest in fresh seafood, he said.

“Shifting to these local markets is something that could be really helpful for recovery purposes,” White said. “The way forward is to focus on shortening the supply

chain a little bit.”

The study found that Alaska’s catch of halibut, a high-value fish, declined 40 percent, compared with the previous year through June. Statistics for many U.S. fisheries won’t be available until next year, but those findings dovetail with what many fishermen are seeing on the water.

Maine’s catch of monkfish has dried up because of the lack of access to foreign markets such as Korea, said Ben Martens, executive director of the Maine Coast Fishermen’s Associatio­n.

“The prices just went so low, they couldn’t build a business doing that this year,” Martens said.

The study confirms what members of the seafood industry have been hearing for months, said Kyle Foley, senior program manager for the seafood program at the Gulf of Maine Research Institute. Foley, who was not involved in the study, said the findings make clear that the seafood industry needs more help from the federal government.

The government allocated $300 million in the coronaviru­s relief bill to the seafood industry in May. The government announced $16 billion for farmers and ranchers that same month.

“It helps to make the case for why there’s a need for more re

lief, which I think is our industry’s biggest concern across the supply chain in seafood,” Foley said.

The study concludes that “only time will tell the full extent of COVID-19 on U.S. fishing and seafood industries.”

Gavin Gibbons, a spokesman for the National Fisheries Institute in McLean, Va., said the short-term findings reflect the difficulti­es the industry has experience­d this year.

“The closure of restaurant dining has had a disproport­ionate effect on seafood, and a pivot to retail has not made up for all of the lost sales,” Gibbons said.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? A worker weighs and sorts pollock at the Portland Fish Exchange in Maine. U.S. seafood exports fell about 43 percent over the first nine months of the year compared with 2019, a study says.
Associated Press file photo A worker weighs and sorts pollock at the Portland Fish Exchange in Maine. U.S. seafood exports fell about 43 percent over the first nine months of the year compared with 2019, a study says.

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