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Minister should continue proportionate quota sharing approach with northern shrimp, group says

<p>Shrimp fishing boats, part of the inshore fleet, at Port de Grave.</p>
<p>TC Media file photo</p>
Shrimp fishing boats — part of the inshore fleet — are seen at Port de Grave in this file photo.

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An anticipated decrease in northern shrimp quotas in key shrimp fishing areas off Newfoundland and Labrador this year should result in the same proportionate quota sharing approach established last year, says the Canadian Association of Prawn Producers (CAPP).

“We must be careful about the fishing pressure we place on these shrimp stocks,” CAPP executive director Bruce Chapman said in a news release.

“Nobody likes to see a reduction in their quota, but in an area where the Total Allowable Catch (TAC) needs to be reduced, it is important that all fishers share these reductions in proportion to their share of the fishing quotas.”

A major Northern Shrimp Advisory committee meeting is being held in Montreal today. At the gathering, DFO science advice was to be presented and discussed with industry stakeholders and indigenous groups. Recommendations for the TAC level for northern shrimp and any other management measures will be made in the days and weeks following the meeting.

CAPP says that In 2016, Minister of the Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) Dominic Leblanc replaced a long-standing northern shrimp allocation policy with a proportional quota sharing approach.

The release states that while the change delivered a financial blow to the traditional year-round shrimp harvesters, the minister’s rationale was that proportional or percentage shares of a given TAC would enable all shrimp fishing enterprises — and the people dependent on them — to build their plans around secure quota sharing arrangements. While the TAC may fluctuate, the license holders would at least know that their respective share of the TAC would be secure.

Details of the latest northern shrimp stock assessment were released last month by DFO with key Shrimp Fishing Area (SFA) 6 off the province's northeast coast looking pretty grim.

Fishable biomass is down 16 per cent and spawning stock biomass is down 19 per cent in SFA 6, thus leaving shrimp in that area in the critical zone of the precautionary approach framework employed by DFO science.

In 2017, the TAC in SFA 6 was reduced by a whooping 62.6 per cent to 10,400 tonnes after last year’s stock assessment revealed a 25 per cent drop in fishable biomass.

Chapman noted the shrimp resource is also declining in SFA4 (off northern Labrador) and in SFA2 (in the Hudson Strait/south-eastern Baffin Island area). Scientists indicate that these changes in shrimp abundance are driven primarily by fluctuating environmental and ecosystem factors.

The release noted that hundreds of year-round shrimp harvesters and their families in Newfoundland & Labrador depend on their 23 per cent share of the declining quota in SFA 6. While the small quota share is essential to maintaining the reduced number of year-round vessels during the early spring period, it would only keep the large fleet of seasonal harvesters fishing for a single day,

“We are all negatively affected by these reduced quotas, which are not able to support all of the fishing enterprises that are out there,” Chapman said.

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