London-based seafood writer and communications consultant Jason Holland has been a contributing editor to SeafoodSource.com since January 2010. Jason has more than 25 years of experience as a B2B journalist and editor – a career that has taken him all over the world. He believes he found his true professional calling in 2004 when he started documenting the many facets of the international seafood industry and he’s particularly proud of the strong, collaborative relationships he has formed at all stages of the supply chain.
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With food prices continuing to rise and a tough Christmas holiday period ahead, many U.K. consumers will be managing their budgets more tightly than at the start of the cost-of-living crisis, according to an analysis commissioned by grocery retail app Ubamarket.
The cost-of-living crisis is expected to have an increasingly significant impact on retailers and consumers in the U.K. market, with British Retail Consortium (BRC) advising that in the
… Read MoreGreece and Romania have become the latest countries to adopt European Maritime, Fisheries and Aquaculture Fund (EMFAF) programs and will receive EUR 364 million (USD 383.3 million) and EUR 162.4 million (USD 171 million) respectively in E.U. funding over the next six years.
The total financial allocation for the Greek program 2021-2017 is EUR 519.6 million (USD 547.2 million), while Romania is apportioned EUR 232 million (USD 244.3 million).
The
… Read MoreSpain is to receive EUR 1.12 billion (USD 1.2 billion) from the European Maritime, Fisheries, and Aquaculture Fund (EMFAF) 2021-2027, and Croatia EUR 243.6 million (USD 252.7 million), the European Commission has confirmed.
The total financial allocation for the Spanish program is EUR 1.57 billion (USD 1.6 billion), while Croatia’s is EUR 348 million (USD 361.1 million). The EMFAF replaced the European Maritime Fisheries Fund in 2021, and
… Read MoreNorway has received approval for an increased 2023 quota for "mackerel sturgeon" – better known as bluefin tuna – with its total quota for the species rising 23 percent to 368 metric tons (MT).
Norway may transfer 15 MT of unfished quota from 2022 to 2023, which means that Norwegian fishermen can fish up to 383 MT iof Atlantic bluefin tuna in 2023 …
Photo courtesy of Guido
… Read MoreGermany and Bulgaria are the latest countries to adopt European Maritime, Fisheries, and Aquaculture Fund (EMFAF) programs and will receive EUR 212 million (USD 217.8 million) and EUR 85 million (USD 87.3 million), respectively, in E.U. funding over the next six years.
The E.U.'s total financial allocation for the German program is EUR 302.6 million (USD 310.9 million), while Bulgaria’s is EUR 121 million (USD 124.3 million).
According to
… Read MoreBergen, Norway-headquartered Grieg Seafood has put its offshore project Blu Farm on hold in response to the Norwegian government’s proposed rent resource tax for salmon farming.
With an investment framework of NOK 750 million (USD 73.7 million, EUR 71.7 million), Grieg was planning to build the offshore farm in the Rogaland area, having earned approval for it from the Norwegian government in 2017
… Read MoreThe U.K. government has come under fire from UK Fisheries CEO Jane Sandell for letting down English fishers in its bilateral agreement with Norway covering 2023 fishing opportunities.
UK Fisheries operates the freezer trawler Kirkella and the fresh fish trawler Farnella.out of the port of Hull, U.K., fishing for cod and haddock. Since Brexit, UK Fisheries has been calling for the return of a larger quota. In 2019, it fished almost
… Read MoreThe United Kingdom’s fishing industry will benefit from increased fishing opportunities worth nearly GBP 5 million (USD 5.9 million, EUR 5.8 million) in 2023 after reaching an agreement with Norway to secure access to key stocks, according to the U.K. Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs (Defra).
The U.K. and Norway negotiate access to each other’s waters, quota exchanges, and control and
… Read MoreThe U.K. government has made an additional GBP 30 million (USD 35.6 million, EUR 34.7 million) in funding available for infrastructure projects that modernize the nation’s seafood sector.
The U.K. government previously allocated GBP 20 million (USD 23.7 million, EUR 23.1 million) in funding to expand processing facilities for popular species like Scottish salmon, mackerel, and herring. The U.K. government announced on 25 November that a
… Read MoreThe Faroese government confirmed that the Faroe Islands and Russia have concluded consultations on the two parties’ fisheries cooperation for 2023.
The new deal factors in next year’s reduced total allowable catch (TAC) for cod in the Barents Sea, with both taking lower quotas.
“As a major stakeholder in the management of some of the world’s largest fish stocks in the Northeast Atlantic, the Faroese government promotes
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