Account Options

  1. Sign in
The old Google Groups will be going away soon, but your browser is incompatible with the new version.
Google Groups Home
« Groups Home
Fish factor: Alaska salmon steady against farmed market
There are currently too many topics in this group that display first. To make this topic appear first, remove this option from another topic.
There was an error processing your request. Please try again.
flag
  1 message - Collapse all  -  Translate all to Translated (View all originals)
The group you are posting to is a Usenet group. Messages posted to this group will make your email address visible to anyone on the Internet.
Your reply message has not been sent.
Your post will appear after it is approved by moderators
 
From:
To:
Cc:
Followup To:
Add Cc | Add Followup-to | Edit Subject
Subject:
Validation:
For verification purposes please type the characters you see in the picture below or the numbers you hear by clicking the accessibility icon. Listen and type the numbers you hear
 
Gus Rassam  
View profile  
 More options Oct 26 2012, 10:20 am
From: "Gus Rassam" <gras...@fisheries.org>
Date: Fri, 26 Oct 2012 10:20:02 -0400
Local: Fri, Oct 26 2012 10:20 am
Subject: Fish factor: Alaska salmon steady against farmed market

Fish factor: Alaska salmon steady against farmed market

By Laine Welch | Capital City Weekly; www.capitalcityweekly.com

Alaska salmon sales had lots of ups and downs this summer, but held their
own overall in a tough market awash with farmed fish.

The wild salmon catch goes to market in many forms such as canned, fresh or
frozen, fillets and roe. The state Revenue Department/Tax Division provides
quartile reports on first wholesale prices for all of Alaska's salmon forms
by species and region. Its report covering May - August shows lots of wild
salmon fillets were tossed on the grill this summer, and people were willing
to pay more for them.

Alaska processors produced more than 13 million pounds of salmon fillets
during the summer season. Prices for king fillets averaged $11.45 per pound,
a 70-cent increase over last year. Fresh sockeye salmon fillets averaged
$7.60 per pound, and $7.24 per pound for coho fillets - an increase of 66
cents for both. Only chum fillets fell at wholesale to $3.25 a pound, down
52 cents from last summer.

Salmon roe prices, especially for pinks and chums, showed big jumps this
summer. Pink salmon roe at $9.28 per pound was a 53 percent increase over
last season; chum roe increased from $12.17 to $15 per pound.

Nearly two million pounds of sockeye roe ($6.31 per pound compared to $5.31
per pound) came from Bristol Bay, valued at more than $12 million. Prince
William Sound led the pack for pink salmon roe at one million pounds, worth
more than $11 million. Southeast Alaska scooped the most chum roe - 1.2
million pounds, valued at nearly $21 million.

On the down side: most of Alaska's salmon catch is sold in headed/gutted
form, either fresh or frozen. Those wholesale prices were down nearly across
the board. Here's a sampler with 2011 prices in parentheses:

Fresh H&G sockeye - $.367 ($3.77); pink salmon - $1.31 ($1.43);

Chum - $1.67 ($2.10). The fresh king salmon wholesale price averaged $7.49
per pound, an increase of 82 cents per pound; cohos increased two cents to
$3.42 per pound.

Frozen H&G sockeye - $2.81 ($3.17); king salmon - $3.16 ($4.10); pinks -
$1.23 ($1.45); coho - $2.58 ($2.66); chum - $1.40 ($1.87).

Alaska's preliminary salmon catch for 2012 totaled just less than 124
million fish.

http://www.tax.alaska.gov/programs/documentviewer/viewer.aspx?681r

King crab market clipped - Crabbers agreed to an advance price of $7.25 per
pound for red king crab shortly after they dropped pots last week in Bristol
Bay waters.

"This represents approximately 90 percent of the expected final price given
current market conditions. Of course, market conditions are subject to
change," said Jake Jacobsen, director of the Inter-Cooperative Exchange,
which represents a majority of the Bering Sea crab fleet.

Nearly eight million pounds of red king crab will come from Bristol Bay
waters this season, about the same as last year. Prices topped $10 a pound
to fishermen after sales in 2011, the market has shifted quite a bit this
year.

"After the record run up in prices last year when they were over $20 a pound
(shipped to Japan or Seattle for brine/bulk crab) a lot of buyers backed
away," said John Sackton, a crab market expert and editor of Seafood.com.
"There also were reports prior to the season that U.S. companies still had
some crab from last season that was unsold."

Japan is the price setter this year, and demand for king crab there is down.
Buyers have floated first wholesale prices in the $14-$18 per pound range,
Sackton said, down about 25 percent from last season.

Another downward press on prices is coming again from king crab poachers in
the Russian fishery. Sackton said the numbers between catch quotas and crab
deliveries to Japan and elsewhere simply don't add up.

"Trade figures show that in 2005-2006 the global trade in king crab was
literally four to five times as much as the legal landings," Sackton said.
"They have gone down but are still about twice as high. There is no question
that this fishery still has a large component in the Far East that is being
taken illegally."

Big fish on the Rock - More than 200 fishery scientists and professionals
are gathering in Kodiak this week to both teach and learn about current
research and other goings on in Alaska. The state chapter of the American
Fisheries Society will welcome the Kodiak community to share in the
educational extravaganza. The American Fisheries Society, founded in 1870,
is the world's oldest and largest fisheries science society, with more than
9,000 members worldwide.

The theme of the Kodiak event covers ecosystems, fisheries and food
sustainability in a changing world. Other topics include seafood processing,
marketing, invasive species and subsistence. The Coast Guard also will
provide courses on aircraft stranding and crashing, and land and raft
survival.

The AFS meetings take place at the downtown Harbor Convention Center. There
is a charge for some sessions; limited scholarships are available. Contact
Kodiak Marine Advisory Agent Julie Matweyou at 486-1514. Find the
agendhttp://www.afs-alaska.org

Fish watch - The Bering Sea pollock fishery is wrapping up for the year with
a catch approaching two billion pounds. Fishing was good by most accounts,
but the fleet had to travel far to get it - 500 miles out near the Russian
fishing border. The state's biggest herring fishery at Togiak has gotten
even bigger. Fishery managers forecast a haul of 30,056 tons of herring in
the spring sac roe fishery. That compares to a quota this year of 21,622
tons.

-------------------------------------------

Check out the latest AFS books at www.afsbooks.org

Join AFS or renew for 2013 at
<http://www.fisheries.org/afs/membership.html>
www.fisheries.org/afs/membership.html


 
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
End of messages
« Back to Discussions « Newer topic     Older topic »