Pollock Fleet Gets Small Boost for 2014

Monday, December 16 2013

Slightly more walleye pollock will be up for harvest in the Bering Sea in 2014.

At a meeting in Anchorage last week, the North Pacific Fishery Management Council voted to bump up the catch limit to 1.267 million metric tons. That’s an increase of about 20,000 tons.

But many people in fishing industry told the council they should be allowed to take even more.

Donna Parker was one of them. She’s with the Arctic Storm Management Group, a pollock fishing company.

Parker said the Bering Sea pollock fleet found an immense amount of fish in the sea this year – so much that they went slightly over their catch limit.

"It’s not always going to be like this, and in fact, not too long ago, we lost a half a million metric tons because the pollock stock had declined," she said. "Well, now it’s back up. It’s incredible. Please let us have access to it."

About three years ago, the pollock stock took a major hit. The fish didn’t seem to be reproducing as much, and many fishermen were struggling to fill their quotas. Setting a safe harvest limit at that time was a challenge for the North Pacific council.

Now, stock assessments show that Bering Sea pollock seem to have recovered.

But there are plenty of other kinds of fish that get harvested out there, like yellowfin sole and northern rock sole.

And according to federal law, the total groundfish catch in the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands can’t exceed 2 million metric tons. So, in order to bump up the pollock limit, the council had to reduce the harvest for other groundfish.

Glenn Reed is from the Pacific Seafood Processors Association. He said that industry members had a tough time negotiating among themselves about the species they could cut back on.

Reid said the council -- which is made of industry stakeholders and resource managers -- struggled with it too.

"It’s not just us who argue over very small amounts. It also happens around the table up there," he said. "So I think it’s clear that little bits do mean a lot, and they mean a lot to different participants in these fisheries. That’s why it’s so hard to come up with a number."

Council member Craig Cross, of Aleutian Spray Fisheries, proposed the final harvest limits.

All 11 members of the board -- mostly industry stakeholders and natural resource managers -- voted to approve the plan.


Unalaska Pollock Guy on Tuesday, December 17 2013:

A little more in depth reporting is needed here. KUCB audiences would be interested in knowing the relative benefits to the community for the desires of these competing sectors. Pollock is the mainstay of Unalaska/Dutch Harbor and provides lots of local employment. Yellowfin and rock sole do not. KUCB should investigate and report.


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