The Morning Call

Lobster business in search of stability after Trump tumult

- By Patrick Whittle

PORTLAND, Maine — President Donald Trump positioned himself as a friend of New England’s lobstermen, but members of the industry said they are looking forward to something that has been lacking in the crustacean business: stability.

Trump’s trade war with China led to a rocky few years for the industry, which is based mostly in Maine. Trump, who campaigned hard in Maine and won an electoral vote in the state, touted economic aid and environmen­tal reforms intended to benefit the business. The Republican Party even had a Maine lobsterman speak at its national convention.

What the industry really needs is assurance that it will be able to sell lobsters to other countries without punitive tariffs, said Stephanie Nadeau, owner of The Lobster Company, an Arundel, Maine, dealer. She and others said they are hopeful that assurance will arrive under Democratic President-elect Joe Biden.

“You can’t plan. You can’t live in chaos,” she said. “The trade war, was it going to last a week, was it going to last a month, was it going to last four years? How do you operate around that?”

U.S. lobster exports to China, a major buyer of seafood, fell sharply after the Trump administra­tion escalated trade hostilitie­s. That led to heavy tariffs on U.S. lobsters, and exporters saw a drop of more than 80% in the first half of 2019.

Then, this summer, Trump directed the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e to provide lobster fishermen with financial assistance to make up for lost income from the Chinese tariffs. He also brokered a new deal with China, which agreed to start buying U.S. lobster again.

It was a whipsaw of a time for an industry that is already used to dealing with uncertaint­y because of issues such as the fluctuatin­g volume of catch, dangerous weather and the changing prices of bait and fuel.

Biden’s impending presidency represents a chance at steadiness, said John Sackton, a longtime industry analyst and founder of SeafoodNew­s.com.

“I think Biden, by taking people back to more normalcy and tackling the virus, could potentiall­y put things back to normal, which would be very

favorable for the U.S. industry,” he said. “Chaos is the enemy of the lobster industry.”

Trump’s administra­tion also boasted of environmen­tal policies that it said benefited lobstermen.

In June, Trump announced a rollback of protection­s at Northeast Canyons and Seamounts Marine National Monument, a 5,000-square-mile conservati­on area that he reopened to commercial fishing. He characteri­zed the area as important for Maine fishermen, but it’s closer to Rhode Island.

A bigger environmen­tal issue facing lobstermen is the threat of new protection­s designed to protect rare North Atlantic right whales. The whales are protected under the federal Endangered Species Act and are vulnerable to entangleme­nt in fishing gear.

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 ?? ROBERT F. BUKATY/AP ?? Dealer Stephanie Nadeau says the lobster industry needs assurance about selling their catches to foreign countries.
ROBERT F. BUKATY/AP Dealer Stephanie Nadeau says the lobster industry needs assurance about selling their catches to foreign countries.

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