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		Report finds that America is catching and eating a little less fish
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		 [November 19, 2024]  By 
		PATRICK WHITTLE 
		PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — The volume and value of America's commercial 
		fishing industry both fell according to newly released federal figures, 
		though members of the industry said the decline was to be expected 
		following a recent spike in supply.
 The catch at U.S. ports in the 50 states fell 2.6% to 8.4 billion pounds 
		in 2022, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric 
		Administration's “Fisheries of the United States” report, which the 
		agency released this month. The same report said the catch was worth 
		$5.9 billion at the docks in 2022, the most recent year with available 
		statistics, and that was a drop of 11%.
 
 America also ate a little bit less seafood in 2022, as per capita 
		consumption fell about 3% to 19.8 pounds in 2022, the report said. 
		However, 2021 was a historically high year for seafood consumption, and 
		the supply of available seafood surged, said Gavin Gibbons, chief 
		strategy officer with the National Fisheries Institute in Reston, 
		Virginia.
 
		 
		A dip following a record year was not unexpected, Gibbons said Monday. 
		He said there are other encouraging trends, such as that the top ten 
		most consumed species make up 79% of total consumption.
 “This illustrates that U.S. consumers are continuing to diversify their 
		palate. For many years those 10 choices made up closer to 90% of total 
		consumption,” Gibbons said.
 
		The fisheries report comes out every year and is intended as a snapshot 
		of the size and scope of the U.S. fishing industry. The report also 
		stated that imports and exports of edible seafood both increased, while 
		the U.S. seafood trade deficit increased 6% to more than $24.2 billion. 
		The country's top seafood trading partners for exports include Canada, 
		China and Japan.
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            Scallop meat is shucked at sea, Dec. 17, 2011, off Harpswell, Maine. 
			(AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty, File) 
            
			
			 The amount of seafood brought to the 
			docks in the U.S. decreased in all parts of the country with the 
			exception of the Gulf of Mexico, the report stated. However, the 
			total catch and value were both higher than the figures for 2020, 
			when the industry was disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic, federal 
			data show. The value of U.S. fisheries was also in line with the 
			years previous to the pandemic, data show.
 The port with the highest volume of catch was Dutch Harbor, Alaska, 
			for the 25th consecutive year, the report said. However, the port 
			with the highest valued catch in the nation was New Bedford, 
			Massachusetts, for the 22nd consecutive year, the report said.
 
 “Sea scallops have historically made up the majority of the value 
			landed in New Bedford,” the report said.
 
 The seafood species with the highest value in the country were 
			salmon, lobster, crabs, Alaska pollock and sea scallops, the report 
			said. The top imported products were shrimp, salmon, lobster and 
			crabs, and shrimp remained the most valuable import, it said.
 
			
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