This is no doubt the PWSAC hatcheries have created a sizable fishery where there was only a marginal one.
“Five hatcheries in Prince William Sound (PWS), Alaska release more than 500 million juvenile pink salmon each year, constituting one of the largest salmon hatchery programs in the world,” University of Washington fisheries scientist Ray Hillborn and now retired state fisheries biologist Doug Eggers observed way back in 2000.
Prior to 1980, the entire statewide harvest rarely topped 100 million.
“Annual (statewide) commercial harvest levels in excess of 100 million salmon had only happened in six years (1918, 1934, 1936 to 1938, and 1941); only 6 percent of
the years prior to 1980,” according to the official state history of commercial fisheries.
For the Sound, the hatchery program has been a phenomenal success. As the 20th century was drawing to an end, fisheries biologist Alex Werthemier and colleagues “concluded that pink salmon hatcheries in PWS provide a net gain of up to 25.3 million fish per year. They also noted that under certain worst case conditions there might be up to a 4.5 million annual wild stock yield loss due to hatchery releases. However, even under these conditions there still was a 20.8 million net gain in available pink salmon for fishery harvest in the region.”
As hatchery returns to the Sound continued to climb into the new millennium, however, questions arose both as to what millions of hatchery strays might be doing to the genetics of wild fish within PWS and what competition from the sheer volume of young pink salmon leaving the Sound might mean for other species of salmon.
Scientists looking for lingering damage from the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill in the Sound last year stumbled on evidence that the hatchery production was depressing returns of sockeye salmon to the Copper River.
That study coupled with declining, average returns of sockeye to Cook Inlet and a peer-reviewed study suggesting pink salmon exert “competitive dominance” over other species led the Kenai River Sportfishing Association and other conservation groups to request the Alaska Board of Fisheries block further expansion of hatchery operations in the Sound and start a review of current farming operations.
Pressured by commercial fishing interests, the Board refused to do so, but the admission of Bill Templin, the state’s head fishery scientist, that ADF&G has no clue as to what is going on with salmon interactions offshore left some Board members uncomfortable. They said they want to re-visit the issue.
The comm fish lobby
Commercial fishing interests have long controlled the politics of salmon in the 49th state, but the hatchery issue has left them feeling vulnerable.
Alaska long ago banned fishing farming in the common form of pen-reared salmon, but both the state and commercial interests invested heavily in salmon ranching since the late 1970s.
The North Pacific Anadromous Fish Commission (NPAFC) report for 2017 pegged the U.S., led by Alaska, as the world leader in hatchery-salmon ranching with Japan a close second and Russia significantly behind in third.
Sound fishermen, their incomes now linked to hatcheries, have put on a full-court press to both underline the economic value of this aquaculture in the 49th state and to try to minimize those who’ve raised questions as to whether hatchery fish are suppressing wild fish numbers.
No sooner was the McDowell Report completed than they ran it to Alaska Fish Radio, a blog financed by commercial fishing interests.
The reality is that fishery scientists have been raising concerns about ever-increasing stocking levels in the Pacific for two decades. Bill Heard, a hatchery advocate, was questioning hatchery expansion in 1998.
“But little attention has been directed toward this issue in the ocean….Given biological concerns about ocean carrying capacity and socio-economic issues associated with record runs, should NPAFC member countries consider cooperative quotas to limit production of salmon around the North Pacific Rim? If implemented, each country could determine what portion of its quota would be derived from wild and hatchery production.”
Nothing came of the idea, and most of the research on ocean-carrying capacity in the years since has been directed at climate change. McDowell’s PSWAC report clearly outlines the profit motives that hamper cooperation on developing country quotas.
Vital profits
For about 220 salmon seiners in the Sound, the McDowell report says, “earnings over (the 2012 – 2017) period totaled $1.6 million, or an annual average of $265,000. Harvest of
PWSAC fish contributed about $682,000 – annual average of $114,000 – to this total.”
Commercial gillnetters, who focus more on sockeye, Chinook, coho and chum salmon, didn’t do as well as the seiners on gross, but the McDowell report claims PSWAC hatcheries put an average of $45,000 per year in the pockets gillnetters.
Given that seiners usually have a crew of three to five, and gillnetters are usually run by only a couple of people, and sometimes only the skipper, the latter might actually have done better on net than the former.
But the big money is in processing. A handful of processors each year buy, on average, just over $59 million worth of salmon from some 750 commercial fishermen with limited entry permits to fish PWS, according to McDowell; the processors then generate about $146 million on the sale of those fish.
Or, as the report puts it, “processors added $434 million in value to PWSAC-produced salmon over the 2012-2017 period. This value-added (or gross margin) is total value ($730 million) minus the cost of purchasing the fish ($296 million).
That doesn’t necessarily mean processors are getting rich. Salmon processing in Alaska is a labor-intensive, seasonal business with high overhead. Buildings and equipment must be maintained even in the long, off-season when there are no fish to process, and just finding people willing to work the “slime line” in the plants has become a problem in recent years.
As a result, the McDowell report says, “most PWSAC pink salmon is processed into frozen headed and gutted (H&G) form and shipped to a reprocessing facility. A declining portion of pink salmon are canned. In 2012 about half of all Alaska pink salmon were canned; in 2017 this proportion had declined to about a quarter.”
Most of the reprocessed salmon go through China, and many are then shipped back to the U.S. for sale. In Safeway’s frozen food section today, you can buy “wild Pacific” chum salmon filets labeled as a “Product of China” because that is where the finally processing takes place.
Those fish could have come from Alaska, Japan or China, but it is common in other supermarkets to find frozen filets labeled as an Alaska caught “Product of China.”
A tough business
The Alaska-Chinese partnership is now, however, facing problems because of a U.S.-China trade war put tariffs on some fish and threatened tariffs on other.
Up until then, the relationship appeared to be working well.
Cheap Chinese processing helped keep Alaska’s ever shrinking number of processing operations in business and they, in turn, help keep commercial fishermen working. A 2017 McDowell report on ‘The Economic Value of Alaska’s Seafood Industry” reported “169 shore-based plants, 73 catcher-processors, and more than a dozen floating processors in 2016. “
The National Marine Fisheries serviced reported “Alaska had 660 (processing) facilities in 1989.” Over the years, fish processing plants in Alaska have come and gone and finally, in modern times, consolidated in or around a few communities – Kodiak, Dutch Harbor, Naknek, False Pass, Dillingham, Sitka, Cordova, Petersburg, Ketchikan, Sand Point and a few others.
The days of remote salmon canneries in Alaska have largely ended. An early history of the salmon canneries of in Southeast Alaska prepared for then-territories first Alaska Fisheries Board reported the “mortality… has been high. During the years, 1878-1949, covered by the following history, 134 canneries were built; 65 burned and were not rebuilt; five plants burned and were rebuilt; ten were moved to other sites; some operations were consolidated. There were 37 operating plants in Southeastern Alaska in 1949.”
Processors would argue they’re not in much better shape now. The continuing mortality in the state’s Panhandle is indicative of the broader statewide trend. Pelican Seafoods in the community of the same name on the outer coast of Chichagof Island shutdown in 2008. The Hoonah Packing Company Cannery to the east on the island has been converted into part of the Icy Strait Point cruiseship stop.
PWS processors in 2010 asked the private, non-profit hatcheries in the Sound to seriously boost hatchery production to help them out.
“We would like production to increase to 70 million in both even and odd years over the next five years, which would bring hatchery production to roughly 50 percent of that total.”
The goal was not met, and hatchery backers now worry that pressure might be mounting to push production down instead of creeping it up. And that, they argue, could sink a cornerstone of the region’s economy.