Icelandic aquaculture and wild catch production drops over last year

Published 2024년 6월 3일

Tridge summary

Icelandic aquaculture production decreased by 3.5% in 2023, with salmon accounting for 88% and arctic char 11% of the production. The export value of salmon products saw a 9% decrease from the previous year. In contrast, wild catch vessels landed 23% more in April 2024, with increased catch in most demersal species and pelagic catch also rising by 24% due to an increase in blue whiting catch. However, the total catch over the next 12 months was 21% lower due to the lack of capelin catch.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Icelandic aquaculture production was 50 thousand tonnes in 2023 which is a 3.5% decrease from the previous year. Salmon was about 88% of the production and arctic char 11%. The export value of salmon products was 40 billion ISK, 9% less than in 2022. Meanwhile, the Icelandic wild catch vessels landed 155 thousand tonnes in April 2024, 23% more than in April the year before. Increased catch was in most demersal species and pelagic catch increased by 24% due to an increase in catch of blue whiting. In the 12 ...
Source: Fish Focus

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