Sanctions could hit EU, US ability to pay for pollock fillets, but H&G sales to China going strong
Buyers in Europe and the US will be limited in their ability to pay Russian fishing companies after the latest sanctions, an executive with a major supplier told Undercurrent News
EJF claims Chinese trawlers granted licenses in Madagascar have history of illegal fishing
A fleet of Chinese vessels which was previously caught fishing illegally in West Africa has been approved for trawling by the Malagasy authorities, it wrote
Clean Seas’ sales boom 40% to pre-pandemic levels
Earnings also saw a significant rebound, breaking even as the firm was able to cut its cost of production 3%
Vietnam pangasius shortage begins to bite, expected to last until summer
Analysts in Vietnam expect raw material prices to keep rising for a month or two, and then stay firm for the summer; processors said to be concerned, with contracts to fulfill
NTS Q4 revenue hits $290m after acquisitions, but margins down
The farming and aquaculture service vessel group reported quarterly earnings of NOK 479m, up 178% year-on-year
2021 was ‘strong year’ for EU bass, bream production with up to 9% growth
2021 looks to have been 'a stronger year' in terms of EU farmed seabass and bream production, with a growth rate expected for the entire year of between 4% and 9%
Vietnam’s tuna export value up 108% in January on greater sales to US, EU
Vietnam's tuna exports saw a strong increase in January, amounting to $88m, up by 108% compared to the same month a year before
Editor’s choice: Russia sanctions would ‘devastate both sides’; PE puts US lobster firm up for sale
Neil Ramsden, EMEA editor of Undercurrent, brings you a roundup of the main stories from the previous week
Reuters: Alaska scientists worried about climate change limiting salmon industry
The state of Alaska has taken to sending emergency food shipments to communities affected by the loss of wild salmon due to marine heatwaves
Oregon harvesters ‘on high alert’ against wind farm zones
'The map is changing everything and putting everybody on high alert. This is just taking it up a notch' -- Tim Novotny, spokesman, Oregon Dungeness Crab Commission
