The Mercury News

Lobster fishers have slow year as challenges mount

Production fell 11% in 2022 from previous year

- By Patrick Whittle

Fishers of Maine lobster, one of the most lucrative seafood species in the U.S., had a smaller haul during a year in which the industry battled surging fuel and bait prices, rebukes from key retailers and the looming possibilit­y of new fishing restrictio­ns.

Maine lobster has exploded in value in recent years in part due to growing internatio­nal demand from countries such as China. The industry brought about 98 million pounds of lobster to the docks worth about $389 million in 2022, Maine regulators said Friday. That was more than 11% less than

the previous year, in which they harvested more than 110 million pounds of lobster worth more than $740 million.

The value of lobsters also fell to a little less than $4 per pound at the docks, the

lowest since 2017, a year after setting a record of more than $6.70 in 2021.

The industry has experience­d growth in recent years, as fishermen have caught more than 96 million pounds of lobster per year for 13 years in a row after never previously reaching that mark. But it is also wrangling with threats such as proposed rules to protect rare North Atlantic right whales, which are vulnerable to entangleme­nt in gear.

Last year was a “real steady season,” for the most part, but the high price of doing business and a diminished price per pound for lobsters were challenges, said John Tripp, a fisherman from St. George.

“It's getting pretty costly to do what we do,” Tripp said.

The lower price to fishermen last year did not necessaril­y translate to lower prices for consumers, as lobsters remain a premium seafood product. Fishermen are typically paid $4 to $5 per pound for their catch, while retailers often charge consumers more than twice that.

The potential threats to the industry include the warming of the Gulf of Maine, which is a key fishing area off New England. The gulf experience­d its second-warmest year on record last year, scientists have said.

“Maine's lobstermen

were facing tremendous uncertaint­y about their future last year over pending federal whale regulation­s, compounded by the high costs for bait and fuel,” said Maine Gov. Janet Mills, a Democrat. “Yet they still brought to shore nearly 100 million pounds of quality Maine lobster, which reflects this industry's resilience when confronted with a difficult and dynamic economic environmen­t.”

The lobster fishing business has also lost some customers in the wake of sustainabi­lity organizati­ons suspending their certificat­ions of the industry over concerns about threats to whales. Retailers including Whole Foods said they would halt sales of Maine lobster after the groups, Maine Stewardshi­p Council and Seafood Watch, pulled the certificat­ions.

Some scientists and conservati­onists have called on government regulators to treat the threat to whales more urgently. The whales are also vulnerable to collisions with large ships.

“With fewer than 350 individual­s remaining, and their numbers in decline, North Atlantic right whales are at risk of extinction,” wrote a group of conservati­onists including Peter Corkeron, a former

National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion scientist, in a February issue of the journal Science.

The vast majority of U.S. lobster come to the docks in Maine, though some also come ashore in Massachuse­tts, New Hampshire and further south. Canadian fishermen also catch millions of pounds of the same species off the eastern provinces of the country.

 ?? PHOTOS BY: ROBERT F. BUKATY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? Max Oliver moves a lobster to the banding table near Spruce Head, Maine, in 2021. The industry experience­d growth in recent years, as fishers caught more than 96million pounds of lobster per year for 13years in a row.
PHOTOS BY: ROBERT F. BUKATY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES Max Oliver moves a lobster to the banding table near Spruce Head, Maine, in 2021. The industry experience­d growth in recent years, as fishers caught more than 96million pounds of lobster per year for 13years in a row.
 ?? ?? Maine lobster has exploded in value in recent years in part due to growing internatio­nal demand.
Maine lobster has exploded in value in recent years in part due to growing internatio­nal demand.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States