34,195 results
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2008-794.10
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Seafood CRC: retail transformation - identifying opportunities for creating consumer focused Australian salmon value added products

Australian Salmon represents one of the last sustainable, relatively untapped wild catch fisheries in Australia with capture and harvest techniques not having changed significantly for many decades. Fish quality is quite variable and harvest practices are not optimised. As a result, consumer...
ORGANISATION:
ChemCentre (WA)
Blank
PROJECT NUMBER • 2008-704
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

SCRC: Seafood CRC: Review of available software tools that can be used to support selective breeding programs in the Seafood CRC

The Australian Seafood Cooperative Research Center is developing a Theme Business Plan to support and coordinate a cooperative approach to aquaculture genetics research in the CRC. One of the needs identified in the development of this plan is the provision of tools and technologies to facilitate...
ORGANISATION:
SARDI Food Safety and Innovation
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 2005-083
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Review and assessment of the impacts of the proposed broad areas of interest (BAOI) for MPA development in the SE region

On the 14 December 2005 the Australian Government announced detailed proposals for the establishment of an extensive network of Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) in the South-east Region of Australia. The 14 candidate MPAs would cover more than 170,000 square kilometres of Commonwealth waters off...
ORGANISATION:
University of Tasmania (UTAS)

Evaluation of factors influencing prices of domestic seafoods

Project number: 1995-118
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $177,983.00
Principal Investigator: Perry Smith
Organisation: Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry (DAFF) ABARES
Project start/end date: 30 Oct 1995 - 1 Apr 1999
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. To evaluate the importance of handling and quality attributes to prices paid at auction on the Sydney Fish Market auction for selected species
2. To establish proce flexibilities for major South East Fishery species on the Sydney Fish Market

Final report

ISBN: 0642 26631 X
Authors: Perry Smith Greg Griffiths and Nick Ruello
Final Report • 1998-06-30 • 2.83 MB
1995-118-DLD.pdf

Summary

Australian fisheries are managed by governments to ensure that commercial fishing is undertaken in a sustainable and economically efficient manner. Fisheries management decisions influence the level of catch from a fishery, either directly through setting the total allowable catches that the industry may take or indirectly through restrictions on the number of operators and the equipment they may use. It is therefore important that the impacts of fisheries management decisions can be evaluated in the light of their impact on the fishing industry and on the public.

The relationships between the volume of fish landed and the prices that oper­ators receive are central to considerations of economic efficiency. The commercial value of fisheries is determined by the volume, the species and size composition of catches and the values placed on them at commercial markets. To establish the benefits and costs of fisheries management options, such as reducing the catch in a fishery or changing the composition of catches through introducing gear restrictions, it is desirable to know how industry revenue will be affected by the change.

The objective in the first part of this study is to establish the relationships between prices received by operators and the volume supplied to the market. The analysis is conducted for product landed from the south east fishery, which is a major source of fresh fish for domestic consumption. The fishery is managed under an individual tradable quota system, based on setting of total allowable catches to restrict the commercial harvest. The analysis covered the quota species of the south east fishery which were sold on the Sydney market.

If relationships exist between the quantity of fish produced from the fishery and the prices received by fishing operators, industry revenue will be affected by market factors. For example, if prices received by fishing operators are responsive to changes in volume sold then the impact on revenue of a reduc­tion in total catches will be partly offset by higher prices. Where prices are determined by the catch in the fishery then the economically optimal catch will be lower than the optimal catch where prices are determined indepen­dently, such as by overseas markets.

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