Fish Farmer

Health issues hit SSC growth hopes

- Above: Iain Forbes, sales director of Fusion Marine (left), and John Paul Walker, area manager (Hebrides) of Loch Duart

THE Scottish Salmon Company said biological challenges and mortalitie­s contribute­d to a drop in harvest volumes and a rise in operating costs in its final quarter of 2016.

Strong market prices resulted in year on year growth, with revenue reaching £110.0 million for the year, compared to £100.4 million in 2015, but the company reported an average EBIT/kg of £-0.17.

Revenues for the quarter were £27.2 million (Q4 2015: £23.9 million) on harvested volumes of 5,733 tonnes (Q4 2015: 6,059 tonnes).

Operating costs rose by 15 per cent, from £22.7 million to £26 million in the fourth quarter, said the SSC in its Q4 report.

Throughout Q4 the company focused on increasing capacity and improving operationa­l efficiency. Trials on its new harvest station in Ardyne, Argyll, were completed during the quarter and the facility became fully operationa­l in January, along with the company’s new well boat, the Ronja Supporter. Both of these investment­s will allow greater capacity and flexibilit­y and improve speed to market, said the SSC.

The 1,800-tonne well boat, leased from Solvtrans, is almost double the size of its sister ship, the Ronja Viking, which is used in the SSC’s farms in the Hebrides.

The SSC consolidat­ed a number of smaller farms in the north region into a single 3,400 tonne operating site, to improve efficienci­es and economies of scale.

Export sales accounted for 44 per cent of output, an increase of seven per cent.

CEO Craig Anderson said: ‘Taking into account the consequenc­es of the current biological challenges, we are now guiding harvest volumes of 25,000 tonnes volumes for 2017.’

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