Imports squeezing out US Catfish industry
The rising volume of imports from China and other Aisan nations, coupled with increasing production costs, is putting pressure on US catfish farmers
Update: (5/29/2012)
The rising volume of imports from
China and other Aisan nations,
coupled with increasing production costs, is putting pressure on US catfish
farmers.
“The industry has been contracting,” David Harvey,
agricultural economist for the US Food and Drug Administration told IntraFish.
Statistics show that catfish feed purchases have been consistently declining
for the past five years, he said.
The high cost of feed and imports of cheaper catfish and
similar species from
Asia are making it
difficult for catfish farmers to stay competitive, Lowery Aquafarms owner Joey
Lowery told IntraFish.
Imports of catfish have grown dramatically in the last eight
or nine years, he said.
Over the past year, the National Marine Fisheries Service
Office of International Trade reports that Catfish varieties shipped from
China to the
United States have increased
dramatically as well.
As of January, imports of the catfish species ictalurus from
China
had risen from 585,536 kilograms last year to 857,877 kilograms this year,
while imports of pangasius had increased from 968,769 kilograms to 1,499,765
kilograms.
Feed is largely soybean-based, and that helps explain why
prices for feed are higher, said Lowrey.
At $13.80 a bushel as of April 30, prices for soybeans were
up $0.70 over the previous year. That is more than double the $5.61 price per
bushel between 1990 and 1992, according to the US Department of Agriculture.
“Some of these guys got into catfish as a way to make money
years ago, and now they’re looking at it as ‘I could just grow soybeans on my
land,” Garvey said.
The high cost of feed is compounded by the consistently
lower labor costs in
China,
Lowery said.
“I’ve been in the business 26 years, and I would say feed
costs have doubled,” Lowery said.
Lower standards in
China make it easier for Chinese
producers to keep costs down, which gives them an unfair advantage over US
producers, Lowery said.
“From a trade standpoint and from a production standpoint, just
about any way you look at it, we’re not on a level playing field. Only two
percent of seafood is inspected coming into the country. Less than 1 percent is
inspected for chemicals,” Lowery said.
If the price of feed starts to decrease, US farmers will have
a better chance to compete, Herarvey said.
(Intrafish - May 22, 2012)