FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE January 28, 2009
CONTACT: Ted Venker,
1-800-201-FISH
Study reveals
economic reality for Gulf grouper
CCA-funded study shows value of 100 percent
recreational allocation.
In an important development in the debate over the proper management
of gag and red grouper in the Gulf of Mexico, a newly released
economic study of the fishery finds that a 100 percent allocation to
the recreational sector would yield maximum economic value to
society.
Gulf grouper has been a hotly debated issue in the Gulf of Mexico
Fishery Management Council, which is meeting this week in
Mississippi to discuss grouper management among other issues. The
study’s economic findings should add a new twist to the management
of this intensely debated fishery.
“Most in the recreational community would not be surprised by these
results, but I think many federal managers have ignored this
reality,” said Frederic Miller, chairman of the Coastal Conservation
Association National Government Relations Committee. “This fishery
would yield more jobs and economic output from a 100 percent
recreational allocation.”
The study was conducted by Brad Gentner, who ran the recreational
economics data collection program for the National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS) for eight years before starting his own company,
Gentner Consulting Group. As a NMFS economist in the Division of
Economics and Social Analysis, he specialized in survey design,
recreational fisheries demand and welfare analysis, non-market
valuation, and economic impact modeling for recreational fisheries.
Gentner’s study used economics to analyze grouper allocations in the
Gulf of Mexico. Among other findings, his analysis revealed that
recreational gag grouper fishing generates $107 million in value
added, $60.8 million in income and supports 1,513 jobs while red
grouper fishing generates $35.2 million in value added, $20 million
in income and supports 501 jobs. Commercial gag grouper fishing
generates $16 million in valued added, $7.7 million in income and
supports 322 jobs while red grouper fishing generate $49 million in
valued added, $23.7 million in income and supports 988 jobs. The
majority of the economic impacts in the commercial sector in both
fisheries occur in the retail and restaurant sectors, and Gentner
concludes that those sectors would experience very few losses with a
100 percent recreational allocation.
“This study cannot be
ignored. More than ever allocation is a critical component of
virtually every fishery management system,” said Chester Brewer,
vice chairman of the CCA National Government Relations Committee.
“With this information in hand, it is outrageous that the Gulf
Council should establish an Individual Fishing Quota system for Gulf
grouper without first addressing the allocation issue.”
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