Patrick A. McConney
Having adequate onshore facilities for post-harvest handling and storage is becoming increasingly important for large pelagic fisheries. This is especially because of concerns about quality assurance for both the domestic and export markets and to ensure that local post-harvest enterprises remain competitive with imports in an era of trade liberalization.
Reported onshore facilities vary from basic beach facilities, through simple docks and sheds, to full processing plants in harbours (Table 43). For the processing of fish, cleaning, gutting and some type of cooling are most common. For fishery workers in the harvest sector, there may be gear lockers and other amenities. Because some facilities deal only with other types of seafood at present, the number of facilities available for pelagics could potentially increase rapidly should the need arise. Pelagics such as tuna and swordfish are targeted mainly at export markets governed by international quality standards such as the EU and HACCP systems. Facilities catering to these landings tend to be of a higher standard.
TABLE 43
Known onshore facilities for post-harvest handling and storage
Country |
Onshore facilities (public and private) |
|
ANT |
Saint John's complex has no storage. Minimal ice |
|
BAR |
Fishing harbour with public processing plant, fish markets with and without jetties, beach sheds. Main processors are: Ocean Fisheries, Morgan's Fish House, Fish of Barbados, Sundale Trading, Lashley and Waithe (FishArt) |
|
BHA |
None. Various landing sites are docks |
|
BZE |
Simple facilities associated mainly with cooperatives, from Dangria south |
|
DMI |
Roseau Complex has all facilities: lockers, haul-out, harbour, net loft, vending, ice, water, storage, etc. No fish plant. Newton has ice taken by two boats |
|
GRN |
Public facilities at Saint George's, Gouyave, Grenville, Victoria/Duquesne and others. Grenada Commercial Fisheries Ltd cuts and packages and has retail outlet. Carib Seafood cuts, packages and transports fish. Alex Swan cuts, packages and sells to local retailers |
|
GUY |
Good facilities at landing sites for coastal fisheries and industrial fisheries where prawn, seabob and red snapper are handled. Processors are: B.E.V. Processors, Georgetown Seafoods and Trading Co. Ltd, Noble House Seafood, Pritipaul Singh Investments, Guyana Quality Shrimp and Fish Seafoods |
|
JAM |
Mainly private plants away from landing sites. Some are EU and HACCP certified. No facilities for small-scale fishery on north coast. Very few facilities for public use |
|
STK |
|
|
|
SK |
Dieppe Bay and Sandy Point have personal, domestic deep freezers owing to duty concessions. Abattoir in Basseterre |
|
NE |
Charlestown is main marketing facility. There are no private plants |
STL |
Saint Lucia Marketing Corp. is quasi-governmental company based at Castries Complex. There are three other companies: Saint Lucia Fishing Co., La Mortelle and company in Vieux Fort. These three have cold storage and process, freeze and pack for supermarkets |
|
STV |
Villa Mar has facilities, but does little with pelagics due to inadequate supply |
|
SUR |
Well developed for shrimp, seabob, groundfish and snapper, and can be adapted for pelagics |
|
TRI |
|
|
|
TR |
Processors take billfish and other by-catch from foreign vessels landing at NFC industrial processing facilities. These are treated as imports. There is no access to facilities for locally owned longliners |
|
TO |
About ten private processors, of which about five are operating and have sizeable onshore facilities |
Processing adds value to seafood. It allows access to different market niches, often offering higher prices and profits. Definitions of processing encompass minimal activities from washing and chilling to major transformations such as smoking or canning. In most of the countries, fish plants and supermarkets cut and package fish for domestic consumer sales. Fish such as yellowfin tuna are headed, gutted and chilled for immediate air export to overseas fresh-fish markets. In some cases, further processing would actually decrease the value reflected in the market price, because high-grade fresh fish fetch premium prices. Species of lesser value such as the smaller tunas are smoked or salted, mainly for domestic markets, although there has been some intraregional trade in these products.
For many years, marketing and distribution have been cited as the weakest aspects of fishing industry development in the Caribbean. The pattern of local landing-site gluts was commonplace, with depressed ex-vessel prices and adjacent inland areas devoid of fish. In this survey, local marketing arrangements exhibited a variety of channels. From vessel directly to consumer is the preferred route in several places, but sales through middlemen, and to processing plants and hotels were also common (Table 45). Where landings were mainly for export, local sales depended on the availability of fish species and grades that were considered less profitable overseas. At smaller landing sites and in places where pelagic fishery is less commercialized, kinship may play an important role in marketing activities and contribute to retaining income in the household.
Arrangements for exporting seafood are becoming fairly consistent worldwide, as required by international trade practices. Fresh, chilled fish are exported by air to US markets from several of the islands. This is the most important overseas market at present. Due to the stricter EU criteria and procedures, several countries cannot export to Europe, even if this would be a commercially attractive proposition. Although some exports are undertaken by the harvest enterprises, it is more common for exports to go through processing companies or government marketing corporations.
TABLE 44
Types of processing for large pelagics
Country |
Types of processing |
|
ANT |
None |
|
BAR |
Heading, gutting and chilling for export. Frozen vacuum packs or over-wrap for domestic sales |
|
BHA |
None |
|
BZE |
None |
|
DMI |
Roseau Complex and some supermarkets do processing to steaks, vacuum packing and other packaging |
|
GRN |
Grenada Commercial Fisheries, Ltd does some salting |
|
GUY |
None. Sold fresh |
|
JAM |
None |
|
STK |
|
|
|
SK |
Cut up for consumer retail only |
|
NE |
Cut up for retail. Less demand for salt fish than before |
STL |
Saint Lucia Fishing Co., La Mortelle, and company in Vieux Fort process, freeze and pack for supermarkets |
|
STV |
Villa Mar does smoking, constrained by inadequate supply. Supermarkets cut and package Government encouraging cooperatives to process fish |
|
SUR |
Iced and shipped whole, fresh to USA |
|
TRI |
|
|
|
TR |
Some salting. Most oceanic pelagic species exported as chilled fish; however some post-harvest processing done. Usually involves processing to steaks and loins |
|
TO |
Cutting and vacuum packing for Tobago market,Trinidad and export. Salting and smoking of bonito and some dolphinfish for local market |
TABLE 45
Local marketing arrangements
Country |
Arrangements |
|
ANT |
Main processor (Baretto) takes catch from his boat and sells mainly to hotels. Recreational fishers sell locally and to main processor |
|
BAR |
Wide variety of arrangements, from direct sales to consumers through vendors and processors for local consumer and institutional sales. Route through vendors is thought to dominate in volume |
|
BHA |
Individuals sell to hotels and restaurants |
|
BZE |
Mackerels sold directly to consumers rather than through cooperatives |
|
DMI |
Sales to Roseau Complex, vendors, ex-vessel directly to
consumers, cooperatives. |
|
GRN |
Sales to vendor or processor (for hotels). Some direct sales to consumers at landing site |
|
GUY |
Sold to middlemen at landing site, then to vendors in markets. Much trucked to Georgetown |
|
JAM |
On north coast, fish sold directly to consumer and via middlemen to vendors and hotels. On south coast, some sold to consumers, but mostly to middlemen |
|
STK |
|
|
|
SK |
Fishers store fish and sell personally to network of buyers. After three days remainder may be sold generally in Basseterre. No hotel contracts. No trucking. Wife may be vendor |
|
NE |
Directly on beach or roadside sales. Some to Charlestown market or hotels by mobile family members. Little inland trucking |
STL |
Varies depending on landing site. At larger sites fishers sell mainly to complex. At other sites to middlemen, vendors and consumers. At smallest sites sell mainly to consumers. No marketing co-ops |
|
STV |
Longliners landing at Kingstown sell to one or two trading companies for export (headed and gutted, in ice) to USA; then smaller fish sold locally to vendors. Pirogues sell to vendors and “fish cars” (truckers). Latter mainly in use for beach seining of smaller tunas and juveniles. Hotels in Bequia, Canouan buy directly from longliners. Ryan (1999) provides details |
|
SUR |
None, focus on export market rather than local or regional markets |
|
TRI |
|
|
|
TR |
Artisanal fishers sell to consumers, middlemen and wholesalers. By-catch and smaller fish sold to local processors |
|
TO |
Mainly to processors, public on beach, hotels. Some to vendors. Processors sell to supermarkets |
The industrial fleet operated in Trinidad by Taiwanese concerns exports billfish, mostly marlins, to Barbados and to some other eastern Caribbean islands. For the fleet this is low value by-catch, but Barbados fish processors and importers have become highly dependent on it to supplement local landings, especially during the July to November decrease. There is great demand for this low-priced fish from the many small fish-fry businesses that have developed in recent years, with increasing popularity, to serve both locals and visitors.
Quality assurance is of increasing importance to both domestic and export markets, but is critical for the latter. Several countries have made, or are in the process of making, significant improvements to their fish-quality legislation and monitoring or inspection systems in order to maintain or gain access to international markets. Attempts to meet the standards of the European Union have been particularly instrumental in catalysing these changes, even more than for the less stringent HACCP system introduced for seafood in 1995 by the United States. Most countries and processing plants today take HACCP as standard operating procedure, but several have not been as successful in meeting EU standards.
The competent authorities for seafood quality assurance and control differ by country. The agencies responsible for public health, veterinary services, fisheries and fish marketing are involved to different extents in different countries. The involvement of the veterinary authorities in some places is mainly a result of EU certification preferences. In several countries, the fisheries authority has only recently assumed a higher profile in fish quality control owing to the need for an integrated approach from fishing grounds to final consumption. This includes training or retraining of fishery workers and officers.
TABLE 46
Export arrangements
Country |
Arrangements |
|
ANT |
Exporting discontinued |
|
BAR |
Mainly fresh tuna to USA by three major fish processors and a few individual boat owners. Fisheries Division issues certificates of eligibility for swordfish and, as result of letters from ICCAT about excessive catches, collects data verifying flag of vessel landing swordfish for export. Majority of landings were transshipments from US vessels, but allocated to Barbados in trade statistics |
|
BHA |
No exports |
|
BZE |
No exports |
|
DMI |
No exports |
|
GRN |
All five processors export fresh fish mainly to USA |
|
GUY |
Fisheries Division issues export permits |
|
JAM |
(To be determined) |
|
STK |
|
|
|
SK |
No exports, but Nevis market takes dolphin |
|
NE |
No exports |
STL |
No exports lately by Saint Lucia Fish Marketing Corporation owing to high local demand |
|
STV |
Export to USA and intraregionally, e.g. to Dominica. A few trading boats used to take some pelagics (whitefish) to Martinique prior to EU trading restrictions |
|
SUR |
By air to Miami, where third partner in joint venture markets them. Fish go from vessel to plant, where quality samples are taken. Fish graded and packed in tuna "coffins" with gel packs for shipping |
|
TRI |
|
|
|
TR |
Range of coastal and oceanic pelagic exports. Fisheries Division issues certificates of eligibility for swordfish and collects export data from pack-out slips and other forms. Exporter list maintained |
|
TO |
National, regional and extraregional shipments from processors |
Value is added to seafood through processing, as described earlier. The purpose of adding value is typically to obtain a higher return on the product. Processing for some species (e.g. drying and salting) serves equally, or more, as a method of preservation for extended shelf life than of adding value. Profit may even be reduced compared to a less processed product.
Few countries had quantitative data available for value added to pelagic landings (Table 48). These data are not maintained by fisheries authorities on a regular basis and are not easy to find in the literature. This reflects the relative absence of economic fisheries data in general, especially for small-scale fisheries and in smaller countries. It may also reflect the extent to which post-harvest sector planning has received less attention from governments than the harvest sector. Fisheries authorities in several countries indicated that fish processors are approached directly for this information on an ad hoc or request basis.
As a measure of contribution to the economy, and often as an index of value to political decision-makers, employment statistics are important figures. However, employment in the post-harvest sector for pelagic fisheries has not been a statistic routinely maintained by fisheries authorities (Table 49). Knowledgeable officials made very rough estimates based on government marketing facilities and private processing plants. Respondents in Guyana could not separate out the proportion of the 6 000 processing plant workers that handle pelagics. In Suriname pelagics use only excess processing capacity. In Saint Vincent and the Grenadines there is an estimated post-harvest work force of about 2 000 people, but few of them could be easily categorized.
TABLE 47
Fish quality regulation/monitoring
Country |
Quality regulation or monitoring |
|
ANT |
Only for live lobster facilities, not pelagics at present |
|
BAR |
Draft legislation exists. Inspection by Markets Division. Issue of laboratory certification |
|
BHA |
Primarily geared towards other exported fish species |
|
BZE |
Belize Agricultural Health Authority regular inspections |
|
DMI |
No quality assurance or control at landing sites except Roseau Complex. Public health authority does not deal with fish. Imports monitored |
|
GRN |
1999 act covers all fish. Ministry of Health is competent authority. Four fishery officers designated as inspectors of processors, vessels and landing sites |
|
GUY |
No inspection for local consumption. Fisheries Division enjoys good collaboration with Veterinary Division of Health Department within Ministry of Health, responsible for inspection, and with Customs and Excise Department |
|
JAM |
Health Department responsible for general inspection of conditions at landing sites and processing areas. Under new act, Veterinary Division certifies fishery products for export (and is supposed to for local use as well) |
|
STK |
|
|
|
SK |
No quality monitoring by anyone. Poor handling evident |
|
NE |
Monitoring at Charlestown only, not on boats |
STL |
Not for local fish. STL Fisheries Marketing Company in process of becoming HACCP certified. Bureau of Standards intends to establish standards for fish products |
|
STV |
Mainly Kingstown, by public health inspectors for local catches. Public health authority competent locally. Provides health certificates for exports |
|
SUR |
Plants are HACCP managed and certified for exporting to EU under mandatory guidelines |
|
TRI |
|
|
|
TR |
Exporter determines grade and quality of fish prior to shipping product. Each fish weighed and graded prior to being packaged |
|
TO |
Processors implementing HACCP |
TABLE 48
Value-added estimates for the large pelagic fishery
Country |
Value added |
|
ANT |
Not available |
|
BAR |
Not available |
|
BHA |
None |
|
BZE |
None |
|
DMI |
Not available |
|
GRN |
Not available |
|
GUY |
None |
|
JAM |
Not available. Middlemen add value by distributing fish in rural areas of country |
|
STK |
|
|
|
SK |
Not available, but there are two price levels. Pelagic fish imported at EC$ 4/lb and sold at EC$ 9/lb. Local fish bought at EC$ 6/lb and sold at EC$ 9/lb |
|
NE |
None |
STL |
Not available |
|
STV |
No data on volumes processed. Not much value added apart from cutting and packaging. Small mark-up. Supermarkets charge consumers for cutting fish. Smoked fish used to be produced and sold at EC$ 15-20/lb |
|
SUR |
None |
|
TRI |
|
|
|
TR |
Not available |
|
TO |
Not available |
Jobs and divisions of labour also change over time. As consumers become more demanding of quality and convenience, more cleaners, scalers and skinners become regular fishery workers, rather than occasional help. This has happened in Barbados. Several countries noted that vendors and fish-plant processing line workers are mostly women.
In cases such as Barbados, where a large opportunistic work force enters the postharvest sector when catches are good, a range of values for employment linked to landings may be more useful. This is similar to the fluctuating numbers of fish cars that operate in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. Since few post-harvest workers depend solely on large pelagics, apportioning their employment in units such as person-days could be more meaningful than providing the total number of persons involved, no matter how minimal their work related to pelagics is.
For large pelagics, the post-harvest sector is less developed and specialized than the harvest sector, with the exception of some exported species, e.g. yellowfin tuna and swordfish, in the main fishing countries. Few post-harvest facilities cater mainly to pelagics, but most are suitable for handling them, at least for the domestic and perhaps regional markets. However, upgrades of physical facilities and quality-assurance procedures are necessary in most places if export is to be emphasized and Caribbean seafood is to be globally competitive. The significant success of very small, individual fishing operations in Grenada, resulting in sizeable exports of high-quality fish, could be a model for other countries if the resource is available in abundance and in proximity to fishing centres.
Further processing of the lesser-valued pelagics for local or regional markets could be explored to increase value added without much increase in catches. Value added for exported fish is less important, since market preference is for fresh, chilled fish, but lack of efficient handling and air transport can be constraints. Innovative value added through local, sometimes tourism-linked cultural enterprises, such as at Oistins, Gouyave and Gros Islet, could be extended to other locations but should not be overdone, as part of their charm is the novelty of their settings. In these places, seafood and local entertainment make an appealing cultural mix. It is uncertain whether links to tourism regarding restaurant and hotel supply are fully exploited, but these could be viable first alternatives for countries having seasonal gluts that may coincide with the peak tourist season.
TABLE 49
Number of persons employed in post-harvest handling and processing of pelagic fish
Country |
Facility |
Min. total employed |
Market vendors |
Cleaners or scalers |
Plant workers |
|
ANT |
Barretto private processing plant |
4 |
|
|
|
|
BAR |
Private and public facilities |
375 |
200-500 |
50 |
125 |
|
BHA |
None |
None |
|
|
|
|
BZE |
None |
Not available |
|
|
|
|
DMI |
Roseau Complex; a few in co-ops |
19 |
12-15 |
|
7 |
|
GRN |
Private and public facilities |
170 |
70 |
40 |
60 |
|
GUY |
Private, co-op and public facilities |
Not available |
|
|
|
|
JAM |
Private, co-op and public facilities |
Not available |
|
|
|
|
STK |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
SK |
Public facilities |
Not available |
|
|
|
|
NE |
Charlestown |
3 |
|
|
|
STL |
Mainly Dennery, Castries and Vieux Fort |
20 |
20 |
|
|
|
STV |
Private, co-op and public facilities |
88 |
19 unregistered, 19 registered and less than 10 in rural areas |
40 |
|
|
SUR |
Private and public facilities |
15 in handling and processing |
|
|
|
|
TRI |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
TR |
Private and public facilities |
Not available |
|
|
|
|
TO |
Private and public facilities |
400-500 |
|
|
250 |
If by-catch becomes a large proportion of the intraregional fish trade upon which small entrepreneurs depend, the issue of by-catch from resident, foreign industrial fleets could become an important one. Policies on by-catch may become necessary, including guidelines on percentages to be landed rather than discarded at sea. This emphasizes the need to monitor restrictions in international agreements on by-catch to ensure that the foundation for small businesses remains stable.
Regarding international markets, better market intelligence on export markets and the cost of meeting the criteria for entry seem warranted. Some argue that the cost of meeting EU standards exceeds the value of benefits and that these standards are not always appropriate or essential for small post-harvest operations in producing a healthy product. Systematic benefit/cost analyses could assist governments and private investors in deciding how best to approach the indisputable need for quality assurance. Estimates of value added are other analyses urgently needed if arguments on the importance of pelagic fisheries are to be substantiated. This could be especially important in prompting pro-fishery and pro-management political decisions. The opportunistic flexibility in post-harvest employment is good in terms of labour-force mobility, but it also implies that large numbers of untrained or partly trained people may enter the subsector unnoticed or unmonitored. As this could compromise quality assurance, more attention needs to be paid to the implications of post-harvest sector mobility for human resource development.
In summary, while the post-harvest sector in a few countries is almost as efficient as one can expect for small-scale exporting, more attention has to be paid in all countries to the various means of improving quality assurance and to the development of innovative marketing in order to add value and ensure competitiveness.