EMEA editor Neil Ramsden brings you a roundup of the main stories from the previous week
Last week, Undercurrent News reported live from the 2024 Groundfish Forum in Copenhagen, Denmark. Although members of the media are not permitted to attend the event, Undercurrent's team brought readers updates based on conversations with key market players over the forum, which you can recap in full here.
This week, we'll be at the Global Seafood Alliance's Responsible Seafood Summit in Scotland, UK, and the IFFO Annual Conference in Lisbon, Portugal, so keep an eye out for more live blogs on the way.
Also well-read last week was the news that biologists in the US state of Alaska said commercial crab species are stable enough to support modest harvests, though they cautioned that most stocks are rebuilding in an uncertain era as ocean conditions change.
And in big deal news, Trident Seafoods reached an agreement to sell its Kodiak, Alaska, fish processing plant to another Northwest US giant, the Pacific Seafood Group.
For the rest of last week's biggest stories, click the headlines below.
- Alabama seafood dealer pleads guilty to buying, selling illegally harvested red drum, sea trout
- Global wild whitefish supply projected to drop 100,000t in 2025
- US snow crab prices rocket up as Canadian supply evaporates
- High dock prices expected as fall lobster fishery kicks off in Canada's Bay of Fundy
- Ocean Choice to start fishing northern cod following Canadian court ruling
- Deflation in China means market can't support raised Ecuadorian shrimp prices
- Second lawsuit filed in battle over US imports of Chilean seabass
- Week 42 shrimp price roundup: Indian prices flat for now, Vietnam, China decline
- Pollock price woes see Coastal Villages burn cash to serve Alaska Native communities
- Russia now plans to pass 160,000t pollock surimi output in 2029, not year before
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