Welcome   Sponsored By
Subscribe | Register | Advertise | Newsletter | About us | Contact us
   


Photo courtesy from Alaska Fish News

Huge herring fisheries upcoming at Sitka, Kodiak, Togiak

Click on the flag for more information about United States UNITED STATES
Wednesday, March 22, 2023, 06:50 (GMT + 9)

AK herring goes to a single buyer. The bulk of the harvest is considered as bycatch.

The herring watch continues at Sitka Sound where aerial surveys have been ongoing for the past week.

State fishery managers are predicting another huge haul of herring at Sitka – 30,124 short tons (60.25 million pounds). That is based on a herring biomass that is projected to be “among the highest observed over the past five decades.”

The 2022 Sitka fishery, which ran from March 26 to April 10, had the largest quota ever at 45,164 tons (90.32 million pounds). Twenty-eight of the 47 permit-holders participated in the Sitka roe herring fishery, taking 56% of the allowed harvest which fetched around $300 per ton on average.

Herring fishery at Sitka Sound - Photo courtesy from Alaska Fish News

Up next on the herring circuit is Kodiak which opens on April 1 with a harvest level of 8,650 tons (17.3 million pounds). That compares to an all-time record take last year of 9,000 tons (18 million pounds). Only about 10 seiners have fished for herring at Kodiak in recent years.

That will be followed by Alaska’s largest herring fishery at Togiak in Bristol Bay. The action typically begins in May and the region has an allowable harvest of 57,419 tons (nearly 115 million pounds), topping last year’s record forecast of 65,107 tons (over 130 million pounds). Only about 15,000 tons (30 million pounds) of that were taken in 2022 by eight seiners who fetched $100 per ton.  

If all of the 2023 herring quotas were taken in the fisheries at Sitka, Kodiak and Togiak- which is unlikely – it would total nearly 192.4 million pounds.

Female herring skein is on the right; male herring with milt ripe for spawning. Photo courtesy from Alaska Fish News

Alaska’s herring still goes to a single buyer

Alaska’s herring fisheries are managed primarily for the skeins of female eggs, which the Japanese call kazunoko. In the late 1980s the value topped $55 million to fishermen. But in recent years, the statewide dockside value has plummeted to under $10 million.

The reason?  Changing tastes over the years by a single buyer – Japan.   

 “It’s maybe the most extreme example of how a major Alaska industry could be dependent on an extremely specialized foreign market. And it is a stark contrast to the diverse buyers of other Alaska species,” said Gunnar Knapp, a retired University of Alaska fisheries economist.

Males, de-egged female herring considered ‘bycatch’

In other parts of the world, herring are processed into many products, such as kippered (smoked), fillets, pickled and served fried, broiled, grilled and steamed. 

But in Alaska, where the fishery targets females, the males that are taken as “bycatch” and the de-egged female carcasses are ground up for oil or meal and sold to foreign fish farms, or simply discarded. A small portion is sold as bait. 

Alaska herring not destined for human consumption runs as high as 88% each year. For a potential 2023 harvest of nearly 192.4 million pounds that adds up to only about 23 million pounds for the ‘edible’ market.  

Alaska previously had a tax credit for processors to invest in equipment to produce other herring products besides the eggs but it resulted in little change. The credit expired in 2020 but Alaska legislators are hoping to reinstate it this year.

Author / Source: Laine Welch / Alaska Fish News


 

 

 

[email protected]
www.seafood.media

 


 Print


Click to know how to advertise in FIS
MORE NEWS
Pakistan
Jun 6, 07:00 (GMT + 9):
Pakistan to bring more seafood products through KKH to Chinese market
Norway
Jun 6, 07:00 (GMT + 9):
Goldman Sachs to buy Norwegian aquaculture support services firm Frøy
China
Jun 6, 07:00 (GMT + 9):
´Two Countries, Twin Parks´ project set during Seafood & Fisheries Expo in Fuzhou
United States
Jun 6, 07:00 (GMT + 9):
AquaBounty Announces a Pause to Ohio Farm Construction While It Evaluates Scope Alternatives
Norway
Jun 6, 07:00 (GMT + 9):
Strong export month for mackerel; decline for herring
China
Jun 6, 07:00 (GMT + 9):
Seafood & Fisheries Expo opens in SE China's Fuzhou
Norway
Jun 6, 01:00 (GMT + 9):
Norway exported seafood worth U$D 1.19 billion in May – saved by the weak krone
United States
Jun 6, 01:00 (GMT + 9):
NOAA Fisheries Selects Alaska to Begin Aquaculture Opportunity Area Identification
China
Jun 6, 00:50 (GMT + 9):
Statistics │ Import and Export │ Surimi and processed fish meat products │ Jan-Apr 2022-23
United States
Jun 6, 00:40 (GMT + 9):
Statistics│Export │Frozen products of Pacific whiting and Alaska pollock | 2021-23
United States
Jun 6, 00:40 (GMT + 9):
Weekly catches │ GOA/BSAI | Black cod / sablefish | 2022-23 week 20
China
Jun 6, 00:30 (GMT + 9):
Statistics │ Import and export │ Fish roe by country │ Jan-Apr 2022-23
Norway
Jun 5, 17:50 (GMT + 9):
The Norwegian Pelagic Fishing Course in Week 22
India
Jun 5, 06:50 (GMT + 9):
Aquaponics: Unlocking Sustainable Agriculture
United States
Jun 5, 05:00 (GMT + 9):
Aquaculture: UOG Sea Grant donates fish harvest



Lenguaje
FEATURED EVENTS
  
TOP STORIES
When artificial is beneficial
European Union Much to the fishers’ dismay, cod populations in the Baltic Sea have been decreasing since the 1990s. The reasons are many, including habitat degradation. The same decade also saw the start of a ...
The naval industry opposes the incorporation of three 'used squid jiggers'
Argentina The Argamar company requested authorization to import three vessels built in 2014. The DNU for the modernization of the fishing fleet allows the incorporation of used jiggers less than 20 years old, b...
The plant-based grows 3.6% in Spain. It is the fourth largest market in Europe
Spain The Spanish plant-based food retail market is the fourth largest in Europe and sales continue to grow. Specifically, between 2020 and 2022, turnover has grown by 8.9% to reach 447.4 million euros (USD...
Aquaponics: Unlocking Sustainable Agriculture
India Aquaponics utilizes symbiotic relationships between fish and plants, conserves water, and reduces the need for synthetic fertilizers, promising a resilient and environmentally friendly future for agri...
 

Maruha Nichiro Corporation
Nichirei Corporation - Headquarters
Pesquera El Golfo S.A.
Ventisqueros - Productos del Mar Ventisqueros S.A
Wärtsilä Corporation - Wartsila Group Headquarters
ITOCHU Corporation - Headquarters
BAADER - Nordischer Maschinenbau Rud. Baader GmbH+Co.KG (Head Office)
Inmarsat plc - Global Headquarters
Marks & Spencer
Tesco PLC (Supermarket) - Headquarters
Sea Harvest Corporation (PTY) Ltd. - Group Headquarters
I&J - Irvin & Johnson Holding Company (Pty) Ltd.
AquaChile S.A. - Group Headquarters
Pesquera San Jose S.A.
Nutreco N.V. - Head Office
CNFC China National Fisheries Corporation - Group Headquarters
W. van der Zwan & Zn. B.V.
SMMI - Sunderland Marine Mutual Insurance Co., Ltd. - Headquarters
Icicle Seafoods, Inc
Starkist Seafood Co. - Headquearters
Trident Seafoods Corp.
American Seafoods Group LLC - Head Office
Marel - Group Headquarters
SalMar ASA - Group Headquarters
Sajo Industries Co., Ltd
Hansung Enterprise Co.,Ltd.
BIM - Irish Sea Fisheries Board (An Bord Iascaigh Mhara)
CEFAS - Centre for Environment, Fisheries & Aquaculture Science
COPEINCA ASA - Corporacion Pesquera Inca S.A.C.
Chun Cheng Fishery Enterprise Pte Ltd.
VASEP - Vietnam Association of Seafood Exporters & Producers
Gomes da Costa
Furuno Electric Co., Ltd. (Headquarters)
NISSUI - Nippon Suisan Kaisha, Ltd. - Group Headquarters
FAO - Food and Agriculture Organization - Fisheries and Aquaculture Department (Headquarter)
Hagoromo Foods Co., Ltd.
Koden Electronics Co., Ltd. (Headquarters)
A.P. Møller - Maersk A/S - Headquarters
BVQI - Bureau Veritas Quality International (Head Office)
UPS - United Parcel Service, Inc. - Headquarters
Brim ehf (formerly HB Grandi Ltd) - Headquarters
Hamburg Süd Group - (Headquearters)
Armadora Pereira S.A. - Grupo Pereira Headquarters
Costa Meeresspezialitäten GmbH & Co. KG
NOAA - National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Headquarters)
Mowi ASA (formerly Marine Harvest ASA) - Headquarters
Marubeni Europe Plc -UK-
Findus Ltd
Icom Inc. (Headquarter)
WWF Centroamerica
Oceana Group Limited
The David and Lucile Packard Foundation
Ajinomoto Co., Inc. - Headquarters
Friosur S.A. - Headquarters
Cargill, Incorporated - Global Headquarters
Benihana Inc.
Leardini Pescados Ltda
CJ Corporation  - Group Headquarters
Greenpeace International - The Netherlands | Headquarters
David Suzuki Foundation
Fisheries and Oceans Canada -Communications Branch-
Mitsui & Co.,Ltd - Headquarters
NOREBO Group (former Ocean Trawlers Group)
Natori Co., Ltd.
Carrefour Supermarket - Headquarters
FedEx Corporation - Headquarters
Cooke Inc. - Group Headquarters
AKBM - Aker BioMarine ASA
Seafood Choices Alliance -Headquarter-
Austevoll Seafood ASA
Walmart | Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (Supermarket) - Headquarters
New Japan Radio Co.Ltd (JRC) -Head Office-
Gulfstream JSC
Marine Stewardship Council - MSC Worldwide Headquarters
Royal Dutch Shell plc (Headquarter)
Genki Sushi Co.,Ltd -Headquarter-
Iceland Pelagic ehf
AXA Assistance Argentina S.A.
Caterpillar Inc. - Headquarters
Tiger Brands Limited
SeaChoice
National Geographic Society
AmazonFresh, LLC - AmazonFresh

Copyright 1995 - 2023 Seafood Media Group Ltd.| All Rights Reserved.   DISCLAIMER