HC Deb 28 January 1980 vol 977 cc493-8W
Mr. McQuarrie

asked the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food if, in view of the disquiet in the fishing industry due to imports of foreign fish into British ports which are sold at prices far below what can be obtained by British fishermen, he will take steps to reduce these imports by granting proper quotas to the British fishing industry, whose level of income has fallen while costs have continued to rise.

Mr. Buchanan-Smith

The weekly catch quotas are imposed for certain stocks to ensure the United Kingdom catch does not exceed a reasonable share of the recommended TAC. These quotas are set at levels which strike as fair a balance as possible between the sectors of the catching industry concerned. The

TOTAL IMPORTS OF FISH BY VARIETY
(Fresh, chilld and frozen)
January-June
1977 1978 1979
tonnes £1,000 tonnes £1,000 tonnes £1,000
Frozen fillets
Coated with batter or bread-crumbs 1,398 2,181 1,844 3,058 851 1,340
Cod 35,012 39,309 46,566 53,790 26,454 30,089
Haddock 4,000 4,579 6,856 7,937 4,263 5,221
Saithe 771 464 1,867 1,201 1,186 785
Plaice 1,221 1,487 1,275 1,719 637 884
Hake 4,852 2,846 3,570 2,126 2,276 1,172
Other 2,620 2,139 4,004 2,949 948 763
Other frozen fish
Cod 10,366 5,301 8,931 4,671 4,885 3,043
Haddock 753 414 791 392 613 399
Saithe 464 161 776 233 151 44
Plaice 574 295 967 442 443 251
Herring 1,604 681 6,167 2,839 3,056 1,546
Salmon 3,107 6,943 4,457 10,408 1,733 3,740
Mackerel 135 31 188 39 218 69
Hake 4,630 1,606 3,700 1,501 2,034 715
Other 7,017 5,639 9,533 7,137 4,650 3,463
Fresh (including chilled)
Cod 16,273 7,709 43,253 20,886 31,050 15,981
Haddock 1,060 489 5,349 2,788 5,313 2,878
Sathie 2,239 606 2,908 746 1,264 394
Plaice 12,106 5,338 15,961 8,626 8,418 4,471
Herring 963 314 2,877 1,158 1,293 503
Marckerel 621 67 822 127 1,422 158
Salmon 164 620 313 1,079 241 1,033
Trout 179 260 159 231 103 156
Other 7,578 5,432 9,976 6,831 7,480 3,861
Total, fresh, chilled and frozen 119,697 94,911 183,100 142,914 110,983 83,139

quota levels are not related to the level of imports.

Mr. McQuarrie

asked the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food if he will list all the imports of fish into the United Kingdom in the years 1977, 1978 and 1979; into which ports the fish were landed; from what country the fish was imported; and what price was obtained for each species landed.

Mr. Buchanan-Smith

The figures requested are given in the tables below. The main ports involved in this trade during the period January 1977 to June 1979 were:

Tyne London
Hull (inc. Tilbury)
Immingham Dover
Grimsby Southampton
Great Yarmouth Liverpool
Harwich Aberdeen

IMPORTS OF FISH BY COUNTRY
YEAR: 1977
Country Frozen fillets Fresh chilled and other frozen
tonnes £1,000 tonnes £1,000
EEC
Belgium-Luxembourg 96 91 3,180 1,586
Denmark 2,840 3,947 8,099 5,007
France 722 737 6,671 2,556
West Germany 2,002 2,029 2,006 1,039
Irish Republic 283 252 4,567 4,747
Netherlands 1,056 1,082 21,153 11,203
Italy 28 32 531 303
Total 7,027 8,170 46,207 26,441
EFTA
Iceland 5,176 5,357 1,316 779
Norway 29,240 33,133 4,682 2,954
Other 56 47 1,294 382
Total 34,472 38,537 7,292 4,115
Other countries
Faroe Islands 2,234 2,523 887 422
Canada 664 333 2,066 2,302
Republic of South Africa (including South West Africa) 229 146 2,693 854
Japan 63 50 669 1,156
Poland 90 32 870 327
USA 25 21 2,000 2,905
Other 5,060 3,193 7,149 3,384
Total 8,365 6,298 16,334 11,350
All countries total 49,864 53,005 69,833 41,906
IMPORTS OF FISH BY COUNTRY
YEAR: 1978
Country Frozen fillets Other frozen fish Fresh and chilled
tonnes £1,000 tonnes £1,000 tonnes £1,000
EEC
Belgium-Luxembourg 106 120 51 97 7,628 4,303
Denmark 4,621 6,473 2,712 2,416 11,949 6,603
France 530 522 743 439 6,032 2,231
West Germany 3,377 3,616 1,884 986 2,602 1,169
Irish Republic 207 194 866 2,056 6,655 4,187
Netherlands 758 847 1,025 1,385 29,567 15,843
Italy 16 13 672 400 28 29
Total 9,615 11,785 7,953 7,779 64,461 34,365
EFTA
Faroe Islands 2,614 3,153 522 345 964 454
Iceland 10,156 11,214 3,676 2,110 12,210 5,612
Norway 37,227 42,584 4,545 3,001 2,802 1,151
Other 55 59 1,300 332 177 42
Total 50,052 57,010 10,044 5,788 16,153 7,259
Other countries
Canada 2,881 1,925 6,032 4,213 785 441
Republic of South Africa (including South West Africa) 119 72 1,425 420
Japan 8 10 333 420 * 5
Poland 853 171
USA 43 43 3,021 5,626 27 49
Other 3,254 1,935 5,849 3,194 192 353
Total 6,305 3,985 17,513 14,095 1,004 848
All countries total 65,972 72,780 35,510 27,662 81,618 42,472
* indicates less than 500kg.

IMPORTS OF FISH BY COUNTRY
YEAR: JANUARY-JUNE 1979
Country Frozen fillets Other frozen fish Fresh and chilled
tonnes £1,000 tonnes £1,000 tonnes £1,000
EEC
Belgium-Luxembourg * * 30 39 3,936 2,266
Denmark 3,363 4,170 2,335 2,103 11,625 5,278
France 1,490 1,485 238 171 3,618 1,423
West Germany 1,568 1,717 833 426 988 430
Irish Republic 97 85 506 291 4,658 2,831
Netherlands 539 668 841 602 18,396 10,250
Italy 2 2 187 139 90 82
Total 7,059 8,127 4,970 3,771 43,311 22,560
EFTA
Iceland 5,985 6,777 1,959 1,031 9,354 4,481
Norway 18,914 21,755 2,489 1,654 2,796 1,732
Other 14 18 234 200 88 35
Total 24,913 28,550 4,682 2,885 12,238 6,248
Other countries
Faroe Islands 1,226 1,648 183 101 503 228
Canada 1,179 778 2,868 2,506 100 40
Republic of South Africa (including South West Africa) 38 30 909 302
Japan 9 8 159 204 1 16
Poland 337 120 282 64
USA 1,250 2,202 30 37
Other 2,154 1,093 2,425 1,359 119 242
Total 4,463 3,577 8,131 6,794 1,035 627
All countries total 36,615 40,254 17,783 13,450 56,584 29,435
* Indicates less than 500kg or £500.
IMPORTS OF FISH: AVERAGE PRICE £/TONNE
January-June
1977 1978 1979
Frozen fish (other than fillets)
Cod 511 523 623
Haddock 550 496 651
Saithe 347 300 291
Plaice 514 457 567
Herring 425 460 506
Salmon 2,235 2,335 2,158
Mackerel 230 207 317
Hake 347 406 352
Fresh (including chilled)
Cod 474 483 515
Haddock 461 521 542
Saithe 271 257 312
Plaice 441 540 531
Herring 326 403 389
Mackerel 108 155 111
Salmon 3,780 3,447 4,286
Trout 1,453 1,453 1,515

Mr. McQuarrie

asked the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food if he will bring forward proposals to reduce the level of fish imports, in view of the rising operating costs and declining revenue affecting the United Kingdom fishing fleet.

Mr. Buchanan-Smith

We are in close contact with representatives of the fishing industry about many matters affecting the

price of fish and the profitability of the industry including the level of imports. We shall be continuing these discussions in the light of further observations which industry representatives have undertaken to give us.