National Fisherman July 2021

Page 10

ON DECK

Northern Lights VIEWS FROM ALASKA

The covid trail By Dan Lesh

he nation’s largest seafood producing state kept working through the pandemic, but under difficult and constantly changing conditions. For at least nine months, retail seafood sales were up 20-30 percent above pre-pandemic levels. Those increases tell the story of high demand, but also of the hard work and sacrifice that kept boats fishing, processing lines operating, and shippers keeping products moving. To better understand how covid-19 is affecting the industry, the Alaska Seafood Marketing Institute commissioned McKinley Research Group (formerly known as McDowell Group) to produce a series of surveys and briefing papers. Mitigation and Response Costs Alaska’s winter/spring Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands fisheries were already underway when covid hit in early 2020, limiting initial impacts in those massive fisheries. Heading into the peak summer salmon season, processors and harvesters scrambled to set up new protocols and spent heavily to protect workers and

T

communities. Sporadic outbreaks occurred, but fisheries that were once in question were widely heralded as successful. Our research indicates that Alaska seafood processors spent roughly $70 million in 2020 to mitigate the spread of the virus through quarantines, chartered travel and other measures. Seafood harvesters who responded to a separate ASMI survey reported spending an average of $9,350 per vessel on covid mitigation in 2020, while 82 percent said they expect covid-19 costs to be the same or higher in 2021. Uncertainty also resulted in fewer fishermen on the water. Crew license sales data from the Alaska Department of Fish and Game show a 31 percent drop in commercial crew license sales from 2019. Unfortunately, covid-19 cases exploded across the country at the end of 2020, just before the start of the 2021 winter/ spring fisheries. Despite extensive precautions, including prework quarantines, chartered travel and regular testing, several of Alaska’s largest seafood processors experienced outbreaks. Rapid responses and expanded vaccine distribution contained and mitigated the spread of the outbreaks. However, because of the high costs of bringing thousands of workers for these winter fisheries, as well as the response costs associated with outbreaks and mitigation measures that will continue throughout the year, the mitigation price tag for processors in 2021 is expected to exceed $100 million.

DURAMAX MARINE TECHNOLOGY ®

Engineered To Work As Hard As You Do. DryMax® Maintenance Free Shaft Seal System

The Original Johnson® Cutless® Sleeve and Flange Bearings

DuraBlue® Composite Rudder Bushings, Thrust Washers & Wear Plates

Custom Engineered Heat Exchange Systems

Duramax Marine® is an ISO 9001:2015 Certified Company

Quality Products Made in America 8 National Fisherman \ July 2021

www.DuramaxMarine.com www.nationalfisherman.com


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.