logo
Maine lobstermen hauled smallest catch in 15 years

Maine lobstermen hauled smallest catch in 15 years

Yahoo28-02-2025

Feb. 28—Maine's commercial fishermen hauled in 86 million pounds of lobster in 2024 — the smallest catch in nearly 15 years, according to preliminary data released by the state Friday morning.
But the value of fishery increased by $46.4 million to $528.4 million last year.
And lobstermen earned an average $6.14 per pound, up from $4.97. It's the second highest price per pound of lobster in the history of Maine's fishery, runner up to the state's record year in 2021 ($6.71). For the last decade, the so-called dock prices have hovered around $4 per pound.
Lobstermen put about 285,000 fewer traps in Maine waters last summer, which could have contributed to lower landings. And lobstermen are grappling with research that shows Maine's lobster population is on the decline.
Surveys have indicated the population of young lobsters in the Gulf of Maine and Georges Banks areas declined by 39% in 2020 to 2022 compared to 2016 through 2018. Lobstermen and industry groups, however, believe the federal data is inaccurate and say it was collected over a small and abnormal timeframe that doesn't reflect the reality of population trends.
Lobstermen previously said they were fishing less in 2023, and in turn hauling less, because of the rising costs of doing business.
Patrice McCarron, executive director of the Maine Lobstermen's Association, said Friday that she chalks last year's drop up to "mother nature." She didn't think lobstermen fished less, like they did in 2023.
"(In 2024), the fishery was more reflective of what the older lobstermen witnessed 15 years ago," she said, adding that this kind of fluctuation is normal in the fishery.
Because of higher dock prices, Portland lobsterman Tom Werner said he didn't take any financial hits in 2024. He caught less lobster but made the same profit as 2023.
"The business is always up and down," he said.
Industry-wide, Maine fishermen hauled less fish, but the fisheries raked in $74.3 million more than 2023.
Behind lobstering, the softshell clam fishery was the second-most valuable last year, with a 5.71 million pound haul and $15.5 million value.
Meanwhile, the elver fishery, which had held the No. 2 spot since 2021, dropped to No. 5, with the catch's value decreasing by $7.31 million to a total of $12.2 million in 2024. Baby eels went for an average of $1,240 per pound last year, a decline of nearly 40% from $2,010 per pound in 2023.
The 2024 landings were announced at the annual Maine Fishermen's Forum, which began in Rockport on Thursday.
This story will be updated.
Copy the Story Link

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Liverpool already 'busy' getting better for next season
Liverpool already 'busy' getting better for next season

Yahoo

time26-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Liverpool already 'busy' getting better for next season

Liverpool are planning to strengthen after winning the Premier League title (Paul ELLIS) Liverpool chairman Tom Werner said he is already busy working on improving the team for next season despite romping to the Premier League title. The Reds will parade the Premier League trophy through Liverpool city centre on Monday with tens of thousands expected to line the streets. Advertisement But attention has already turned to defending the trophy with the 20-time English champions reportedly close to a triple swoop costing around £200 million ($271 million). Jeremie Frimpong is finalising his move from Bayer Leverkusen as a replacement for the departing Trent Alexander-Arnold. Florian Wirtz has also chosen Anfield as his preferred destination, according to German media, should he move on from Leverkusen. Wirtz, 22, could smash the Premier League transfer record of £115 million set by Chelsea's capture of Moises Caicedo. Bournemouth left-back Milos Kerkez is also reportedly keen on a £50 million move to Liverpool. Advertisement "It's already busy," said Werner. "We go again. It never gets old, winning. We owe it to all of our supporters to bring back a team even better next season." Arne Slot's success in his first season as manager was even more remarkable as he was given little money to work with in the transfer market 12 months ago. Federico Chiesa, who struggled to make an impact in his few first-team opportunities, remains the club's only signing of the Slot era. "It's extraordinary. We obviously had high hopes for this season but he has been an extraordinary coach," added Werner. Advertisement "I think there have been three coaches who have won the Premier League in their first season and Arne is one of them. He is just an extraordinary leader. "He's authentic, he's not trying to be anyone else. The team was an extraordinarily good team but he brought the best out of them." kca/pb

Liverpool hold talks over record Florian Wirtz deal in ‘busy' summer plans
Liverpool hold talks over record Florian Wirtz deal in ‘busy' summer plans

Yahoo

time26-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Liverpool hold talks over record Florian Wirtz deal in ‘busy' summer plans

The Liverpool chairman, Tom Werner, has confirmed the club's busy summer has already begun with the Premier League champions in talks over the record transfer of Florian Wirtz and close to wrapping up a deal for his Bayer Leverkusen teammate Jeremie Frimpong. Liverpool are favourites to sign the £126m-rated Wirtz after he turned down a move to Bayern Munich and Manchester City pulled out of the running. The Anfield club have started negotiations over a fee with Leverkusen, who want £126m for the Germany international. That would comfortably eclipse Liverpool's current record transfer, the £85m that brought Darwin Núñez from Benfica in 2022, but the club hope to structure a deal that would see Leverkusen accept a lower initial fee plus achievable add-ons. Related: Erik ten Hag returns to management as new Bayer Leverkusen head coach Fenway Sports Group, Liverpool's owners, spent modestly during Arne Slot's successful debut season, signing only Federico Chiesa from Juventus in a deal that could rise to £12m and the Valencia goalkeeper Giorgi Mamardashvili for £29m. The club are now in a position to spend heavily on the right player and there is hope inside Anfield that both Wirtz and Frimpong, who has a £30m release clause, could be secured early in the summer transfer window. Werner, when asked if he expected a busy transfer window for the new champions, replied: 'It's already busy.' The chairman also said he expected Slot's squad to be even stronger for the start of their title defence. 'We go again. It never gets old, winning,' said Werner. 'We owe it to all of our supporters to bring back a team even better next season.' Wirtz, who can play across the front line, is one of the most coveted players in Europe and is understood to be impressed by Liverpool's plans. Frimpong has already passed a Liverpool medical and the arrival of the right-back, a close friend of Wirtz, should be confirmed when the window officially opens. The Bournemouth left-back Milos Kerkez is another target for Liverpool. Slot said it would be ideal to have new signings in place early, with pre-season scheduled to begin on 8 July. The Liverpool head coach said on Sunday: 'This club doesn't start [on transfers] after today or from today onwards. There is so much hard work already done behind the scenes this season to find out which targets we have and try to sign them. I have all the confidence that if we have addressed the right player, we try to sign that player but let's see when that is going to happen and if that's going to happen, because I'm very happy with the squad we already have.' Virgil van Dijk, meanwhile, has revealed it was his idea to be presented with the Premier League trophy on Sunday by the former Liverpool captain and defender Alan Hansen. The 69-year-old was seriously ill last summer and received a rapturous reception when parading the trophy in front of the Kop alongside Van Dijk. The Liverpool captain said: 'I was very determined to make sure that he was going to be the one who handed the trophy to me. Yes I did [suggest it]. I am happy it worked out. I am also happy that Mark and Jo [McVeigh] from the Owen McVeigh Foundation, who I've worked with quite a lot over the last years, were able to also join in. 'Alan Hansen is one of the greatest centre-backs this club has ever seen. I'd met him before and had a little chat. He was ill last year. I'm glad he's looking well now. I was really happy for him that he also had his moment in front of the Kop because he totally deserved it.'

'Everybody's just restless:' Maine's iconic lobster fishery braces for trade wars, upheaval
'Everybody's just restless:' Maine's iconic lobster fishery braces for trade wars, upheaval

Boston Globe

time14-05-2025

  • Boston Globe

'Everybody's just restless:' Maine's iconic lobster fishery braces for trade wars, upheaval

As President Trump wages an unprecedented protectionist campaign to impose or tease steep tariffs on nearly every trading partner, an industry that thrives on the free flow of global trade — and disposable cash in Americans' wallets — could suffer disproportionately. 'I'm extremely worried,' said Dave Cousens, a former president of the Maine Lobstermen's Association who has fished for lobster off midcoast Maine for 50 years. 'I think there's going to be a lot of people who don't survive.' Advertisement The anxiety begins on the north side of the Gulf of Maine, in Canada, which Trump has antagonized through tariffs and saber-rattling taunts of '51st State.' Canada is a lynchpin of the industry's supply chain, with lobsters caught by Maine boats crossing the international border up to four times for processing. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Then there's the fact that Maine's fishery is sustained by tens of millions of dollars of lobster purchased every year by China, the European Union, and other places that are facing fresh US tariffs and mulling retaliatory tariffs in turn. With fears of a trade war-fueled recession or economic downturn looming, the domestic market may prove no buffer. The quintessential luxury purchase, lobster would likely rank among the first splurges for Americans to cut out when tightening their belts. Advertisement The pain is already hitting, said Cousens. The price for spring season hard-shell lobster, which is shipped live across the world, is dropping to a point where many lobstermen are struggling or failing to break even. With Chinese and Canadian markets closing off to Maine lobster, and a souring economic mood domestically, 'no one wants to buy lobster right now,' he said. Looming over the current situation is the confounding uncertainty of what's to come. Trade deals with dozens of countries are reportedly in the works, yet their timelines are unclear. Some tariffs are on, then off again, such as the truce Trump just struck with China on Monday, leaving markets to fluctuate according to the president's whims. As the peak of Maine's lobster season inches closer, the industry and its advocates are frustrated by their inability to plan for what comes next. 'Everybody's just restless,' said George Edwards, a Maine native and official with the International Association of Machinists, which represents the workers of the Maine Lobstering Union Local 207. 'We're not sure what the tariffs are going to do. Every day it changes.' That restlessness radiates outward to, for example, Brooks Trap Mill, a family business that has been making and selling lobster traps and supplies in Maine for 70 years. 'As far as tariffs go, we just don't know what to expect,' said chief executive, Mark Brooks. 'It really makes it tough to plan for the future.' In Washington, where Maine's congressional delegation has long advocated for the lobster fishery, lawmakers are riding the same roller coaster. 'It's just a nightmare. It really is,' said US Representative Chellie Pingree, the Democrat from Maine's 1st District, which spans the coastline from Kittery to Camden. 'There's a lot of fragility in the market.' Advertisement White House spokesman Kush Desai said a 'top priority of President Trump's America First agenda is making sure that US seafood producers, including Maine's lobstermen, can compete fairly in global markets.' He added the administration is cutting regulations and 'pushing back against unfair trade practices" to 'level the playing field for American businesses and workers.' In addition to the 5,600 independent lobstermen who make up the heart of the fishery, as many as 35,000 total jobs are supported by the lobster business in Maine, according to a Colby College analysis. Overall, lobster fuels more than $1 billion in economic activity in the state every year, according to the Maine Lobster Marketing Collaborative. Recent years have seen emerging challenges for the fishery. During the Biden administration, lobstermen fought against federal regulation meant to protect endangered right whales because they worried it would be ruinous. They succeeded, but looking ahead, there's the threat of rapidly warming seas, which has pushed lobsters north in the Gulf of Maine and could drive them further still into Canada — which would decimate the Maine fishery as it has in Connecticut. Trade-related disruptions aren't new, either. In his first term, Trump put tariffs on a variety of Chinese imports, resulting in retaliatory measures from Beijing. The impact for the US lobster industry was stark. The year before the tariffs hit, the United States exported $183 million worth of lobster to China; the year after, that haul was nearly halved, to $93 million. Trump's initial proposed 25 percent tariffs on Canadian imports sparked panic in Maine, because of how much this integrated supply chain straddles the border. Much of Maine's lobster catch is processed at Canadian facilities and then sent back across the Gulf of Maine, so a 25 percent tariff, levied more than once, would have been ruinous. In 2024, Maine exported $250 million in seafood to Canada, by far its biggest buyer. Advertisement Trump has mostly walked back those tariffs and may focus on renegotiating the trade deal among the United States, Canada, and Mexico he brokered in his first term. But even without tariffs in place, many Canadians are boycotting US goods to protest Trump's talk of annexation and cancelling trips to states they used to frequently visit, such as Maine. With respect to trade with Canada, the lobster industry is hardly out of the woods, given how frequently Trump changes his mind, said Eric Miller, a Washington consultant who advises American and Canadian businesses. Trump 'may well decide to take a different tack on' trade with Canada, he said. The situation with China, the largest single buyer of Maine lobster outside Canada, has been even more turbulent. Trump's massive escalation in April set the proposed US tariff on Chinese imports at a staggering 145 percent, with China retaliating with an 84 percent levy. On Monday, the two sides announced a 90-day pause, with Chinese tariffs on US goods landing at 10 percent, for now. 'If we were to have substantial tariffs with China during our busy season, it would be a nightmare,' warned Pingree. 'It would make Maine lobsters kind of un-saleable.' Maine lobstermen might get lucky if those tariffs remained consistent, while China's existing high tariffs on Canadian lobster might benefit the US position. Still, American producers will likely look to other markets, such as the European Union, but the dynamic across the Atlantic is tense, too, with aggressive moves so far on both sides. Advertisement 'If you have a situation where the trade war with Europe reaches catastrophic proportions again, that will be really, really challenging for the industry,' Miller said. An added challenge is how tariffs could increase overhead for lobstermen. A typical lobster operation might need to replace a few hundred traps per season, at a cost of roughly $150 each. Brooks Trap Mill assembles its traps in the United States but sources some of its steel from abroad, which is now subject to a universal 25 percent tariff. Any price increases could substantially eat into already thin margins for lobstermen and trap makers alike. The impact of this upheaval could be uneven within the fishery, said Nick Battista, chief policy officer at the Island Institute, which advocates for Maine's coastal industries and environment. Some lobstermen are going to be 'relatively well situated to handle bumps and downturns in the fishery,' he said. 'There's also a number of people who invested in boats and fishing businesses, who are significantly leveraged in terms of debt they've taken on . . . that's where we'll start seeing challenges, cracks, in the industry in the coming years.' While financial markets have rebounded since the thaw in US-China trade tensions, analysts and industry leaders still fear a recession is imminent — and even just the prospect of one could cool discretionary spending. That's bad news for the lobstermen, said Miller. 'Where that translates is, people focus on core consumption and less on buying lobster rolls,' he said. 'That's just the reality of it.' Advertisement Worried tougher times are ahead, Cousens, the midcoast lobsterman, wondered why the administration was pursuing these policies at all. 'It's stupid, self-inflicted [expletive] if you ask me,' he said. 'There's no need for it.' Sam Brodey can be reached at

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store