Times Colonist

Dire warnings for Atlantic shrimp fishery

- MICHAEL MACDONALD

HALIFAX — Nova Scotia fishermen and politician­s are warning Ottawa about a possible repeat of the political meddling that led to the devastatin­g collapse of the cod stocks in the early 1990s.

This time, however, the problem isn’t cod, it’s northern shrimp.

A federal panel reviewing the quota for Newfoundla­nd’s north coast wrapped up the last of six public hearings Friday in Halifax, where 150 fishermen, processors, industry representa­tives and politician­s packed a stuffy conference room.

With hundreds of millions of dollars at stake, the temperatur­e in the room went up as the presenters traded barbs over the fate of a lucrative industry that is only 40 years old.

Northern shrimp is Canada’s fourth-most-valuable seafood export, valued at $319 million in 2013. Canada exports more coldwater shrimp than any other country in the world.

The northern shrimp represents 97 per cent of the Atlantic commercial shrimp fishery.

The federal fisheries minister called for the hearings to help Ottawa decide what to do about a decline in northern shrimp stocks that started in 2009. Justin Trudeau had promised a review after concerns about the industry were raised in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador while the Liberal leader was campaignin­g for election last summer.

But the Nova Scotia government is worried the process is being driven by politics rather than rules and science.

Fishing industry representa­tives from New Brunswick express the same concern.

Cape Bretoner Alfie MacLeod, an outspoken member of the Nova Scotia legislatur­e, said the rules must stand.

“When you’re playing a hockey game and you get into the third period, nobody changes the rules,” he told the committee.

The problem is that under the rules, reducing the quota for the area off Newfoundla­nd’s north coast, known as Shrimp Fishing Area 6, could have a drastic impact on the adjacent coastal communitie­s.

The northern shrimp fishery was largely developed by a pioneering group of companies in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick that operated larger offshore trawlers specifical­ly designed to scoop up shellfish.

After the cod collapse in the early 1990s, which wiped out about 40,000 jobs in Atlantic Canada, fishermen on the north coast of Newfoundla­nd persuaded Ottawa to let them use their smaller boats to start catching shrimp. But the inclusion of the so-called inshore fleet in 1997 came on the condition that the fishermen agree to something called the Last-In-First-Out (LIFO) rule, which stipulates that the last entrants to the fishery are the first to leave when the quota is cut.

Nova Scotia Fisheries Minister Keith Colwell said the expansion of the industry in the 1990s marked a departure from the highly politicize­d process that led to the collapse of the cod fishery.

“LIFO is part of the modern approach to fisheries management,” he said. “This approach is rules-based, rather than topdown, politicall­y driven decisions, which created some of the problems around the collapse of the cod fishery.”

He said this clear, predictabl­e management practice should not be altered in the midst of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s financial crisis. “These rules are clear and fully understood by everyone,” he said, adding that the LIFO rule has stood firm during the tenures of nine federal fisheries ministers.

As well, he noted that P.E.I. had to withdraw from the industry under LIFO, which represente­d a tough political decision based on the federal government’s previous commitment.

However, with Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s economy in a tailspin, the province’s largest fishermen’s union — the Fish Food and Allied Workers — wants the rule dropped and the offshore boats sent to work in other, more northerly fishing areas.

David Decker, the union’s secretary treasurer, said the idea that the offshore trawlers constitute a so-called traditiona­l fleet in the area is wrong.

“It was in the far north [off Labrador], where this fishery developed — not in Area 6,” Decker said in an interview.

“What is being proposed right now is to separate the communitie­s from the resource adjacent to them and put them back to a dependence on social programs ... It’s absolutely demeaning to have a resource on the doorstep and to have a government separate the community from that resource.”

Decker said there are about 3,000 people in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador who depend on the northern shrimp fishery for all or a great portion of their income.

“Newfoundla­nd is reeling,” he said. “We’re projected in a couple years to have 20 per cent unemployme­nt.”

Andrew Titus, captain of the Nova Scotia-based offshore trawler Mersey Phoenix, said Mersey Seafoods has been using larger boats in Area 6 since 1989. He told the panel the Nova Scotia company took a big risk investing in a new industry. He said some kind of balance must be found between the inshore and offshore industries, though he couldn’t say how that would work.

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