Sharechat Logo

Sanford seeks $25M boost from tuna expansion

By Phil Boeyen, ShareChat Business News Editor

Thursday 12th July 2001

Text too small?
Fishing company Sanford (NZSE: SAN) is spending $35 million on two new fishing vessels to widen its skipjack tuna catch in international waters.

The two large American ocean-going vessels carry a crew of 20 and are capable of staying at sea for weeks at a time, catching and freezing up to 1400 tonnes of fish products on board.

The company plans to use the boats to cast their nets further into the Pacific and says once they are fully operational they should add around $25 million to annual revenue.

MD, Eric Barratt, says each boat has its own helicopter and the latest in fish finding technology, designed to help track schools of skipjack and other tuna as they migrate through the western and central Pacific.

"The vessels will be operating in Pacific waters for more than nine months a year but will visit their New Zealand base during the summer months when the skipjack are at the southern most part of their migration.

Mr Barratt says the vessels will follow the skipjack fishery throughout the Pacific and will land their catch at one of the various tuna canneries, ranging from American Samoa, Fiji, the Marshall Islands and other areas at different times of the season.

The 75-metre long vessels have formed part of the American tuna boat fleet based in San Diego, California, in recent years.

One of the boats will sail from American Samoa on its first fishing trip under Sanford ownership later this week while the second boat will return to New Zealand for docking before sailing on its first fishing trip later in the year.

Mr Barratt says the purchase is a significant investment for Sanford and represents a major expansion of New Zealand's fishing interests into the important, international pacific tuna fishery.

"Our decision to enter these additional fisheries will allow our company to further expand our horizons internationally, not just in catching operations, but also in reaching more global markets."

"We are already liaising with a variety of foreign fishing agencies, seeking and finalising licensing arrangements within the fishing zones of various Pacific states."

Skipjack represents the largest proportion of world tuna catches. During the past international prices for the fish have varied from a low of US$400 to a high of US$1050 per tonne, while earlier this year prices were about US$850 per tonne.

  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:

Sanford names Volker Kuntzsch as CEO, replacing Barratt
Sanford faces three charges relating to illegal dumping of oil at sea
Sanford annual profit to miss forecast on lower skipjack tuna, toothfish and mussel harvest
Sanford annual profit falls 6.7% on mussel farm restructuring
Former Sanford engineer faces up to 26 years jail for obstruction
Sanford's Barratt 'disappointed' at US guilty verdict
US withdraws US24M 'proceeds of crime' claim against Sanford
US Justice Dept set to release Sanford fishing vessel in Pago Pago
Sanford full-year profit falls 11% as kiwi dollar's strength erodes returns in second half
Sanford annual profit falls as much as 12% on strong kiwi, lower tuna catch