Fish Farmer

Iceland salmon farmer ends year on positive note

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THE Icelandic salmon farmer Arnarlax, which lost stock worth £2.5 million in severe storms in February, has posted significan­tly increased harvests and profits for the final quarter of 2019.

The company, in which Norway’s SalMar has a majority stake, made an operationa­l EBIT of NOK 27 million.

This was up from NOK 21.9 million in the previous quarter and a big improvemen­t on the

NOK 10 million loss in the same quarter in 2018. It also achieved a 46 per cent increase in its harvest throughout 2019.

The Arnarlax report said: ‘We ended 2019 with yet another positive quarter, driven by good biological performanc­e and better capacity utilisatio­n at the harvesting plant.

‘For the year as a whole, the company achieved a 46 per cent increase in the volume harvested and posted an EBIT per kg of NOK 10.21 compared with an EBIT per kg of minus NOK-11.82 in 2018.

‘At the same time, there is still room for improvemen­t throughout the value chain, particular­ly with respect to distributi­on costs.’

Arnarlax said it expects a higher harvested volume but also higher costs in the first quarter of this year, ‘due to the harvesting out of the 2018 generation following increased mortality in a demanding period caused by winter storms at the start of the year’.

The Sales and Processing segment made an operating profit of NOK 7.5 million in Q4 2019, down from NOK 79.4 million 12 months earlier.

Arnarlax is Iceland’s largest producer of farmed salmon.

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