Sharechat Logo

NZ orange roughy exports accelerate as fish stocks improve

Thursday 12th February 2015

Text too small?

New Zealand orange roughy exports are accelerating as catch limits of the deepwater fish, once a poster child for bad fisheries management, increase amid confidence about improving stocks.

Exports of the slow growing fish, which can live for up to 130 years, rose 6.9 percent to a three year high of $36.5 million last year, according to Statistics NZ data. That compares with a high of $170.2 million in 1988 when the fishery was at its peak, and a low of $29 million in 2012 when catch limits were cut back.

Orange roughy exports are expanding again following a slump after three of the fisheries were closed and catch limits were pulled back to 7,000 tonnes during the 2012 and 2013 fishing years, which run from October through September, on concern about overfishing, from a peak of 61,000 tonnes in the 1988 fishing year. New technology to better measure orange roughy populations has shown two of the three closed fisheries can now support some commercial fishing, allowing the catch limit to rise to 8,700 tonnes in the current fishing year through September 2015.

"The stocks are looking very healthy now," said Alastair Macfarlane, a fishery consultant to industry body Seafood New Zealand. "Orange roughy catch limits have been starting to gradually increase in a number of fisheries and the outlook over the next five years is for continued capacity to cautiously increase catch limits."

Still, he said the fishery would never return to the huge volumes of the late 1980s when the stock was being "fished down" to a lower level.

New Zealand boasts the oldest and largest orange roughy fishery in the world on the Chatham Rise, to the east of the South Island, where bottom trawling for the species began in the late 1970s.

Since the 1988 peak in orange roughy exports, China has emerged as a major market for the fish.

In 1998, 90 percent of New Zealand's orange roughy exports were sent to the US and China wasn't listed among the 22 export destinations compiled by Statistics NZ. However, last year the US accounted for just 63 percent of orange roughy exports, and China overtook Australia as the second largest market for the fish, taking 21 percent of the exports.

Seafood was New Zealand's sixth largest commodity export last year, increasing 3.6 percent from the year earlier to $1.38 billion.

 

 

 

 

BusinessDesk.co.nz



  General Finance Advertising    

Comments from our readers

No comments yet

Add your comment:
Your name:
Your email:
Not displayed to the public
Comment:
Comments to Sharechat go through an approval process. Comments which are defamatory, abusive or in some way deemed inappropriate will not be approved. It is allowable to use some form of non-de-plume for your name, however we recommend real email addresses are used. Comments from free email addresses such as Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail, etc may not be approved.

Related News:

EBOS announces appointment of new Chief Financial Officer
AM Best affirms Tower Limited's A- (Excellent) FSR
MCK enters into conditional agreement for Whangarei land
April 26th Morning Report
SPG - Change to Executive Team
BGI - Forgiveness of $200,000 of secured indebtedness
General Capital Subsidiary General Finance Market Update
AFT,Massey Ventures,Gilles McIndoe to develop scar treatmen
April 24th Morning Report
Cheers to many fewer grape harvest spills