Amid uncertain NAFTA future, lobster industry looks to other markets - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Amid uncertain NAFTA future, lobster industry looks to other markets

As the U.S. threatens to withdraw from the trade deal, other agreements have meant lower tariffs for Canadian exporters.

As the U.S. threatens to withdraw from the trade deal, other agreements have meant lower tariffs

Amid Donald Trump's repeated threats to rip up NAFTA, Canadian exporters are looking to other markets. (Joel Page/Reuters)

U.S. President Donald Trump is known to bea steak kind of guy.But his threat to throw out the North American Free Trade Agreementis lending a whole new meaning to "surf and turf" foratleast one lobster-processing plant in southwesternNova Scotia.

"Yes, we all watch the negotiations. Yes, we're all concerned about what will happen," said Robert MacDonald, president and general manager ofGidney Fisheries in Centreville, N.S.

The U.S. is the largest consumer of lobsterfrom the Maritimes, accounting for close to three-quarters of the roughly $2 billion this country exported in 2016, according to the Department of Fisheries and Oceans.

Butwith the future of the free trade deal up in the air, MacDonald said his industryis facing some uncertainty.

Robert MacDonald is the president and general manager of Gidney Fisheries, located in Centreville, N.S. (Tom Murphy/CBC)

"There's stability in having an agreement in place and the knowledge that you know your products are going to be priced appropriately," he said.

The U.S. will remain an important market for Nova Scotia lobsterno matter what happens at the ongoing trade talks.

Trade delegations from Canada, the U.S. and Mexico are wrapping up a week of meetings Friday, though the next formal round of negotiations is set for Montreal in early 2018.

Turning to tech

MacDonald'scompany processes 15,000 lobsters a day that need to find a market. So heand others like himaren't waiting to find out how the talks go.

"Perhaps it may want to bring you to refocus your efforts on international markets,not to be so dependent on a single entity or market," he said.

Gidney Fisheries processes as many as 15,000 lobsters a day. (CBC)

That's exactly what Gidney Fisheries is doing. To help find and grow new markets, the company is turning to technology not commonly found in the fish-processingbusiness: high-pressure processing.

The large, gunmetal greymachine used includes a special chamberthat looks a little like a torpedo.

Live lobsters are placed in the chamber, where 87,000 pounds per square inch of pressure instantly killthe crustaceans. At the same time, the pressure constrictsthe lobster meat and pushes it free of the shell.

The lobsters that have undergone high-pressure processingare then manually shucked,resulting in meat that easily comes out in a raw, pristineand almost gelatinous state.

Gidney Fisheries is using high-pressure processing to extract raw lobster meat from the shell, a higher-profit product that's landing on plates around the world, from Paris to Shanghai. (Tom Murphy/CBC)

"We add no ingredients or preservatives. The product is vacuum-sealed and then flash-frozen with C02. It's completely raw and lets the chefs cook it to the texture they prefer," saidMacDonald.

This value-added,higher-profit product is landing on more dinner plates at five-star restaurants around the world.

Emerging markets

It's trade agreements that are helping Gidney Fisheries land those sales.

The Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement, Canada's new trade deal with the European Union, has already slashed tariffs on live lobsters by eightper cent. Tariffs will soon drop on frozen lobster, too. As a result, Gidney Fisheries expects to see a bump in sales.

The U.S., meanwhile, doesn't have such a deal with Europe.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau picks up a lobster during a meeting with Jack Ma, CEO of Alibaba Group, in Hangzhou, China in 2016. China has become the No. 2 importer of Maritime lobster. (Reuters)

MacDonaldsaid he's in favour of trade agreements, especially when it means opening up more markets for his company.

"We saw a significant bump in our exports to Korea last year when the final tariffs came off of our live lobsters that's been sustained business for us," he said. "That was a result of a well-negotiated trade agreement."

China is another burgeoning market for Maritime lobsters. It has quickly become the No. 2 importer of Canadian lobster,MacDonaldsaid.

He said he'd love to see a free trade deal with that country someday, something currently in the "exploratory discussions" phase.

But for MacDonald, the lesson remainssimple:in an era of uncertainty over the future of NAFTA, it's best to diversify.