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Chinese owners vow to rebuild Eastern Passage lobster plant

The Chinese owners of a fire-ravaged lobster processing plant say they will repair and rebuild.

'We will carry on. We will be better and stronger, I'm sure,' says owner of business destroyed by fire

The owners of the Capital Seafood plant that was destroyed by fire Wednesday night say they're dedicated to continuing the building. (Paul Palmeter/CBC)

The Chinese owners of the Capital Seafoods plant in Eastern Passage, N.S., say they will repair and rebuild the lobster processing facility damaged in a spectacular fire Wednesday night.

"We will carry on. We will be better and stronger, I'm sure," company manager Jack Liu said Thursday.

The fire destroyed the company's lobster processing facility, he said, but did not affect the live shipment area, which will continue to operate.

Liu spoke to CBC News minutes after touching down at Halifax Stanfield InternationalAirport, en route to the plant to check out the damage first hand.

"First and foremost nobody was hurt. That's important," Liu said.

"Business-wisewe are going to carry on. Our commitment to the investment in Nova Scotia, our commitment to local community and to local fishermen has not changed a bit."

Flames were shooting out of the roof of the Capital Seafood fish processing plant by the time firefighters arrived Wednesday night. (Submitted photo)

Capital Seafoods is a subsidiary of Zoneco, aChinese seafood company. In October2014, the company formally announced it would takeover the plant in Eastern Passage and turn it into a year-round operation.

Capital was the first Chinese company to jump into the lobster business. Others have followed.

So far in 2016, Capital has shipped nearly three million pounds of live lobster to China from Nova Scotia, most of it through the Eastern Passage plant.

Tom Henneberry lost thousands of kilograms of bait for the upcoming fishing season when the plant caught fire. (Paul Palmeter/CBC)

Liu said the cause of the fire is still unknown and under investigation.

"The lobster tanks is not affected at all. Luckily, we can carry on our live operations," he said.

That's good news for the fishermen who sell to Capital Seafoods.

On the down side the fire destroyed large amounts of bait stored at the facility fortraps intended for the upcoming lobster season.

"Myself, I had 14,000, 15,000 pounds in there," lobster fisherman Tom Henneberry said."It's terrible. A week before the season, a lot of fishermen put bait in thereyesterday and the day before."

With files from Paul Palmeter