Fishing industry cautiously optimistic about potential haddock boom - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Fishing industry cautiously optimistic about potential haddock boom

Huge estimates for the number of haddock that survived after being hatched in 2013 have the fishing industry preparing for what could be a major boom.

The number of haddock believed to have survived their first year off N.S. is "extraordinary," says biologist

Scientists are predicting big things for haddock catches beginning this year. (CBC)

Exactly how many of the haddock that hatched in 2013 are still swimming off the coast of southern Nova Scotia is not certain, but researchersagreethe numbers are potentially massive.

Biologist Monica Finley recentlycompleted a population assessment for the southernScotianShelf and Bay ofFundy.

She estimates264 million haddockwere hatchedthere in 2013 and survived their first year, making it an "extraordinary" year-class.

"This 2013 year-class is five times higher than the next highest on record since 1985," saidFinley, who works at a Department of Fisheries and Oceans research facility in St. Andrews, N.B.

Her reportpredicts 100,000 metrictonnesof haddock will reach adulthood in 2017 and 2018.

Bring on the boom

On Georges Bank, the population is predicted to be even bigger,with Canadian and American scientists estimating the 2013 hatch at 1.3 billion fish.

This month, fish plants in southern Nova Scotia are starting to process their first catches of 2013 haddock, forerunners of what industry members hopeis a boomfor years to come.

"We're seeing signs of it now, but we would expect to see the fish at the larger, more commercially harvestable sizes in a couple of years," said Alain d'Entremont, chief operating officer at O'Neil Fisheries in Digby.

"We are taking a cautious path to that harvest."

Not counting before they'recaught

The DFO projections are based on a number of sources, including computer modelling,trawl surveys and some fishing data.

Big year-classes do not survive fully intact to reach commercial size, with industry estimates of 50 per centmortality.

"I'm an old-school guy," saidBeed'Entremont(no relation to Alain) of Acadian Fish Processors Ltd.inPubnico.

"I've heard big numbers before. I want to make sure it's there before I say anything."

Bee d'Entremont of Acadian Fish Processors Ltd. in Pubnico says big fish stocks mean more jobs.

That caution is reflected in quotas for 2017.

On the Canadian side of Georges Bank, the haddock quota is up a modest 6.7 per centto 20,500 metric tonnes. The 2017 quota next door for the southern Scotian Shelf and Bay of Fundyhas not been set yet, withthe season startingin April.

DFO scientists are recommending an increase to between 5,900 and 9,000 metric tonnesfrom the current 5,100.

Finleyprojected catch limits from 11,000 to 27,000 metric tonnes between 2017 and 2019.

'Going to create a lot of jobs'

The haddock fishery depends on big population pulses.

And that's whathappened over the past decade and a half:big year-classes in 2003 and 2010filled plants for years. Modelling for the 2014 haddock year-class on the Scotian Shelf is the second-highestrecorded since 1985.

No wonder even "old school" Bee d'Entremont has expectations.

"The year-class coming along in [the southern Scotian Shelf]is very interesting and hopeful for us, especially with our processing plants and workers. It's certainly going to create a lot of jobs."