Good morning.
My name is Trevor Decker. I'm part owner and director of the TriNav Group of Companies. We're involved with marine brokerage and fishing licences, vessels. We're involved with fish harvesters in Nova Scotia, brokering crab for those guys in the water. We publish a navigator magazine. We have other companies that are involved with the fishing industry throughout Atlantic Canada.
I'd like to speak on three areas, one being competition, two being marketing, and three being financing.
When it comes to competition, as I see it, competition ends at the wharf. When the fishermen land their product there is one buyer for the product, and that's where it stands. The price is negotiated and nobody else from outside is coming in. To allow outside buyers won't solve the problem, but it would ensure that competition exists.
We have many diversified fishing operations throughout Newfoundland and Labrador, therefore the loss of product to outside buyers will be very minimal due to the fact that many people who'll come in will probably only be looking at one resource, and that will be crab. As people have already said, many fishermen in Newfoundland depend on turbot, shrimp, capelin, mackerel, herring, and so on.
What has happened in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and P.E.I. is that they have commissioned buyers who channel product to buyers from outside that particular province. Therefore the price has a tendency to stay. We see this, we've been involved with this, and I'll explain a little more as I go on.
Looking at the marketing of our product with respect to the quality of crab, there is no incentive for RSW vessels that have invested in Newfoundland. Extras are paid in other provinces. New Brunswick has a tendency to pay more for crab that are landed with RSW vessels. Newfoundland does not, as earlier on Clarence Andrews referenced the problems he has seen.
The area 19 model we are involved with concerning the crab fishermen in Cape Breton, we market product in the water. We broker the product. We take a percentage of the fishermen's product and we sell it not necessarily to the highest bidder but to the best qualifier, somebody who has a good financial background, somebody who can offer the fishermen what the fishermen are looking for. This is an association of fishermen in the Cape Breton region that markets their area 19 crab, which is known to be top quality.
If we want to look at the general promotion of snow crab overall in Atlantic Canada and if we compare that to the Alaskan king crab, Maine lobster, and even look at Newfoundland tourism, the marketing that is there with respect to the tourism industry is phenomenal. Wherever you go, you see it. When it comes to Alaskan king crab, there are things they have done; Deadliest Catch gives that more limelight than anything else you look at. Now, Maine lobster: Maine lobster is known to be the best.
This is all through the marketing campaigns that have existed.
There is something I want to throw on the table that I'd like everybody to look at: an Atlantic Canadian crab council.
The last point I want to focus on is financing. Rationalization is happening. Fishermen do need extra product, but we need to have proper bank security and fishermen need to have better terms.
Fishermen have bought out other fishermen for years. This is not something new. It's been passed down from an older generation to a younger generation, but with a lot less money. But I'm into the business. People buy and sell on a daily basis, and the selling is done voluntarily. People come in. They offer. Someone puts something up for sale. The market comes forward and they offer on a licence or quota, whatever it may be.
Nobody has been forced to do anything. However, this is the way things happen offshore. Things are happening more like this inshore. Fishermen need to have the ability to get adequate financing.
The minister has the right, as we see in New Brunswick with the percentage cut...the value of that licence has dropped tremendously. So if people want to invest in the fishing industry, the government needs to be involved with respect to at least guaranteeing the financer that the product, the quota in which they finance, has not lost 50% of its value overnight.
Fishing enterprises are businesses and should have the right to grow or consolidate, or do what anybody else would have to do in the industry. But there are more restrictions existing within the industry that we need to see relaxed. I've seen it over and over and over, the CCRA rule with respect to fishermen wanting to buy licences with the corporations. Yet they're taxed individually, so this is another area of concern. That's on the minister's desk right now, and has been for probably a year and a half. The industry voted in favour of the companies owning a fishing licence, and that hasn't been signed off on.
There are other issues that I'd like to bring forward, and probably as we speak today I can, but I'll end it at that.
Thank you very much.