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Fish and Seafood
Industry Overview
Canada's fish and seafood industry is
...naturally abundant
- Surrounded by the Arctic, Atlantic and Pacific Oceans and home to
the Great Lakes, Canada boasts the world's longest coastline (244,000
km), representing 25 per cent of all the coastline in the world. With
more than 755,000 square kilometres of fresh water, Canada has 16
per cent of the world's area of fresh water and four of the largest
lakes in the world.
- In total the capture fishery accounts for 76 percent of total fish
and seafood production in Canada. Together, lobster, crab and shrimp
comprise 67 percent of the landed value of all fish and shellfish
harvested in Canada.
- The Atlantic fishery accounts for 80 percent of total landings.
Value leaders include lobster, crab, shrimp and scallops. The Pacific
fishery accounts for 16 per cent of total landings. Value leaders
are salmon, clams, groundfish, and herring roe. The freshwater fishery
accounts for 4 per cent of total Canadian landings. Value leaders
include pickerel, yellow perch, whitefish, northern pike and lake
trout.
- Canada's aquaculture sector continues to increase in importance.
Key products are farmed salmon (Atlantic, coho and chinook), trout,
steelhead, Arctic char, blue mussels, oysters and manila clams. New
species like halibut and cod are on the way.
...economically important
- Canada has one of the world's most valuable commercial fishing industries,
worth more than CDN $5 billion a year and providing more than 130,000
jobs to Canadians. It is the economic mainstay of approximately 1,500
communities in rural and coastal Canada.
- Canada is the world's seventh-largest exporter of fish and seafood
products, with exports to more than 130 countries. In 2008, Canada's
fish and seafood exports were valued at $3.9 billion. Canada exports
an estimated 80 per cent, by value, of its fish and seafood production.
The United States is Canada's largest export market (representing
roughly 62 per cent of seafood trade) followed by The European Union
(15 per cent), Japan (8 per cent) and China (6 per cent). Canada's
fish and seafood imports have stayed at around $2 billion, resulting
in significant annual trade surpluses.
...sustainably managed
- Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO)
is the federal government department that regulates and manages the
Canadian fishery. Fisheries and Oceans Canada works to secure the
future of Canada's wild fisheries by initiating conservative management
practices that focus on sustainable development and responsible fishing. Visit DFO's Sustainable Fish and Seafood Portal for more information.
...independently inspected and controlled
- Canada has one of the world's most respected fish inspection and
control systems. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) (www.inspection.gc.ca)
sets the policies, requirements and inspection standards for fish
products, federally registered fish and seafood processing establishments,
importers, fishing vessels, and equipment used for handling, transporting
and storing fish. All establishments which process fish and seafood
for export or inter-provincial trade must be federally registered
and must develop and implement a HACCP-based Quality Management Program
(QMP) plan.
...officially certified for export
- The export certification program of the Canadian Food Inspection
Agency provides exporters with official documentation that Canadian
fish and seafood products sold on the international market will be
acceptable to importing countries. Buyers can be assured that seafood
from Canada will continue to meet the increasingly rigorous safety
and wholesomeness standards required by the world's major seafood
markets.
- Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada is responsible for marketing and
trade development (www.seafoodcanada.gc.ca).