partners, China and the United States of
America, has introduced a note of uncertainty
into the global fish market. While a number
of heavily traded fish product items such as
tilapia and lobster have been included on the
list of tariffs of both countries, it is the wider
economic impact and general uncertainty that
have ultimately been the primary drivers of
a growth slowdown, not only in China and
the United States of America, but globally.
Available estimates for 2019 suggest that total
trade value contracted by about 2 percent in
both quantity and value compared with the
previous year. The outbreak of coronavirus
disease (COVID-19), ongoing at the time of
writing (March 2020), has already negatively
impacted trade among key exporters and
importers in 2020.
Figure 29
shows the top exporters and importers
of fish and fish products. In addition to being by
far the major fish producer, China has also been
the main exporter of fish and fish products since
2002, and since 2011 the third major importing
country in terms of value. China’s imports have
increased in recent years partly as a result of the
outsourcing of processing from other countries,
but also reflecting China’s growing domestic
consumption of species not produced locally.
According to the latest available estimates for
2019, China’s exports declined by 7 percent
compared with 2018 (USD 20 billion versus
USD 21.6 billion), possibly impacted by trade
disputes between China and the United States
of America.
Since 2004, Norway has been the second major
exporter, now followed by Viet Nam, which has
become the third major exporter since 2014.
Catches by the Norwegian fleet comprise large
volumes of small pelagics and groundfish species
such as cod, while Norway’s aquaculture sector
for salmonids (salmon, trout, etc.) is the largest in
the world. High cod and salmon prices worldwide
saw Norway’s seafood export industry achieve
record export revenues in recent years, peaking at
USD 12 billion in 2018 before slightly declining
(–0.1 percent) in 2019. Meanwhile, Viet Nam
has successfully maintained steady growth in
recent years, thanks mainly to strong trading
connections with a fast-growing Chinese market,
an expanding Pangas catfish (
Pangasius
spp.)
aquaculture sector in the Mekong Delta, and a
booming processing and re-export industry.
Since 2017, India has become the fourth major
exporter, boosted by a steep increase in farmed
shrimp production. However, after peaking
at USD 7.2 billion in 2017, the value of India’s
exports declined by 3 percent in 2018 and by
a further 1 percent in 2019 (USD 6.8 billion),
driven primarily by a decline in shrimp
prices. In Chile, aquaculture production of
Atlantic salmon, coho salmon and rainbow
trout has grown into a modern multibillion
dollar industry, second only to Norway in
global aquaculture production. Chile has
seen sustained export revenue growth on the
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