New England Region • Connecticut • Maine • Massachusetts • New Hampshire • Rhode Island Boats in a harbor, Stonington, Maine (photo credit: Capt. Albert Theberge [ret.]) National Overview    North Pacific    Pacific    Western Pacific    New England   Mid-Atlantic   South Atlantic   Gulf of Mexico New England Region Regional Summary MANAGEMENT CONTEXT eligible limited-access permit holders joined a sector. At The New England Region includes Connecticut, Maine, the same time, annual catch limits were implemented Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Rhode Island. Fed- for the first time and sharply reduced the available quo- eral fisheries in this region are managed by the New En- ta for fishermen. The key performance indicators of this gland Fishery Management Council (NEFMC) and NOAA program show that compared with the Baseline period Fisheries under nine fishery management plans (FMPs). (the 3-year period prior to implementation), the follow- Two of these FMPs, Monkfish and Spiny Dogfish, are ing metrics decreased: 2013 quotas, landings, number developed in conjunction with the Mid-Atlantic Fisheries of active vessels, and inflation-adjusted revenue for Management Council (MAFMC). The MAFMC is the lead catch share species. On the other hand, inflation-ad- Council for the Spiny Dogfish FMP; the NEFMC is the lead justed revenue per vessel increased during this period. for the Monkfish FMP. The Northeast General Category Atlantic Sea ScalNew England Regional FMPs 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Northeast multi-species Sea scallops Monkfish (with the MAFMC) Atlantic herring Small mesh multi-species Spiny dogfish (with the MAFMC) Red crab Northeast skate complex Atlantic salmon lop IFQ Program: This catch share program began in 2010 with two primary objectives: 1) control capacity and mortality in the general category scallop fishery; and 2) allow for better and more timely integration of sea scallop assessment results in management. The key performance indicators of this program show that 2013 inflation-adjusted revenue and revenue per vessel increased. However, landings, quota and the number of active vessels decreased compared with the Baseline period. POLICY UPDATES Twelve of the stocks or stock complexes covered in these In June 2015, NOAA Fisheries announced a lobster trap FMPs were listed as overfished in 2014: Atlantic cod (two transfer program that applies to Area 2 (Southern New stocks), Atlantic halibut, Atlantic salmon, Atlantic wolf- England waters primarily off Rhode Island and Southern fish, ocean pout, thorny skate, windowpane flounder, Massachusetts), the Outer Cape Cod Area, and Area 3 winter flounder, witch flounder and yellowtail flounder (offshore fishery from Maine to North Carolina). This (two stocks). Eight stocks or stock complexes are cur- program allows qualified vessels to buy and/or sell indi- rently subject to overfishing: Atlantic cod (two stocks), vidual traps up to a specified cap in these areas, giving windowpane flounder, witch flounder, yellowtail flounder lobster permit holders more flexibility. Federal lobster (two stocks), thorny skate and winter skate. Haddock permit holders from other areas may also “buy in” to was removed from the overfishing list in 2014. these areas by purchasing traps through this program. CATCH SHARE PROGRAMS Two catch share programs operate in the New England The new trap allocations will be effective for the start of the 2016 fishing year on May 2, 2016. Region: 1) Northeast Multi-species Sectors; and 2) North- COMMERCIAL FISHERIES east General Category Atlantic Sea Scallop Individual In 2014, commercial fishermen in New England land- Fishing Quota (IFQ) Program. Following is a description of ed 643 million pounds of finfish and shellfish, earn- these catch share programs and their performance. ing $1.2 billion in landings revenue. American lobster ($564 million) and sea scallop ($298 million) dominated Northeast Multi-species Sectors: This catch share landings revenue. These species commanded average program was developed between 2004 and 2006 and region-wide ex-vessel prices of $3.83 and $12.68 per included two pilot sectors that operated with an alloca- pound, respectively. Although making up 72 percent of tion of Georges Bank cod. The program was expanded landings revenue, they represented only 27 percent of in 2010 to 17 sectors, and approximately 55 percent of New England landings. 64 New England Region Regional Summary Economic Impacts nue was highest in Massachusetts ($105 million). In this report, the U.S. seafood industry includes the commercial harvest sector, seafood processors and deal- American lobster and sea scallop had the highest landings ers, seafood wholesalers and distributors, importers, and revenue in the New England Region in 2014, with $564 seafood retailers. 1 In 2014, the New England Region’s million and $298 million, respectively. Together they accounted for 72 percent of total landings revenue in 2014. in Massachusetts, $2.3 billion in sales impacts in Maine, Between 2005 and 2014, the landings revenue of Ameri- $1.6 billion in sales impacts in New Hampshire, $1.1 can lobster increased 38 percent (a 17% increase in real billion in sales impacts in Rhode Island, and $429 million terms), while landings revenue of sea scallop increased in sales impacts in Connecticut. Massachusetts gener- 19 percent (a 1% increase in real terms). In both nomi- ated the largest impacts across the three other impact nal and real terms (after adjusting for inflation), lobster categories, generating 98,000 jobs, $2 billion in income, revenues achieved a record high since reporting began in and $3.1 billion in value-added impacts. Maine generated 1950 due to continued record-high landings and higher the second highest economic impacts (41,000 jobs, $756 prices (up 23% in 2014 compared with 2013). The surge million income and $1.1 billion in value-added impacts). in lobster landings increases are largely driven by record high stock abundance and recruitment levels in the Gulf of Maine, which has made up roughly 85 percent of fishery Key New England Region Commercial Species • • • • • American lobster Atlantic herring Atlantic mackerel Bluefin tuna Cod and haddock • • • • • landings in recent years. In contrast, landings revenue Flounders Goosefish Quahog clam Sea scallop Squid of sea scallop decreased 19 percent from 2013 to 2014 despite the fact that its price increased 11%. Landings Fishermen in the New England Region landed 643 mil- The retail sector generated the greatest employment lion pounds of finfish and shellfish in 2014. This figure impacts by state, with 59,000 jobs in Massachusetts and was a 6 percent decrease from 2005 and a 1 percent 18,000 jobs in Maine. The harvest sector also generated increase from 2013. Finfish landings accounted for 59 18,000 jobs in Maine. More sales impacts were generat- percent of total landings in the New England Region ed by importers in Massachusetts than any other sector (378 million pounds) in 2014. From 2013 to 2014, fin- in any other state in the region at $4.3 billion. The great- fish landings increased 6 percent, while shellfish land- est value-added impacts were also generated by import- ings decreased 4 percent from 2013 levels. ers in Massachusetts ($1.3 billion). Atlantic herring had the highest annual landings (199 Landings Revenue million pounds) in the New England Region in 2014. Landings revenue in the New England Region totaled $1.2 From 2005 to 2014, landings of lobster (71%), Atlantic billion in 2014. This was a 24 percent increase (a 5% mackerel (57%), and quahogs (48%) increased signifi- increase in real terms after adjusting for inflation) from cantly. Species or species groups with large decreases in 2005 levels and a 3 percent increase from 2013. Landings landings during this period included goosefish (-58%), revenue was highest in Maine ($549 million), followed by cod and haddock (-50%), flounders (-50%), and sea Massachusetts ($525 million). Shellfish landings revenue scallop (-27%). The declines in cod and haddock land- totaled $1 billion in 2014, a 31 percent increase (an 11% ings were driven by a 77 percent reduction in the Gulf increase in real terms) from 2005 and a 5 percent in- of Maine cod quota from 2012 levels that was intended crease from 2013. Shellfish landings revenue was greatest to reduce harvest and protect spawning stock. These in Maine ($497 million) and Massachusetts ($420 million). measures were deemed necessary following the 2014 Finfish landings revenue totaled $196 million, a 2 percent stock assessment that found Gulf of Maine cod to be decrease (a 17% decrease in real terms) from 2005 to severely depleted at just 3 to 4 percent of a sustainable 2014 and a 4 percent decrease from 2013. Finfish reve- abundance level. Sea scallop landings declined over this 1 The NMFS Commercial Fishing Industry Input/Output Model was used to generate the impact estimates (see NMFS Commercial Fishing & Seafood Industry Input/Output Model, available at: www.st.nmfs.noaa.gov/documents/commercial_seafood_impacts_2007-2009.pdf). 65 National Overview    North Pacific    Pacific    Western Pacific    New England   Mid-Atlantic   South Atlantic   Gulf of Mexico seafood industry generated $8 billion in sales impacts New England Region Regional Summary 10-year period primarily due to a 35 percent reduction in largest increases. The 24 percent gain in lobster ex-vessel the catch limit that was implemented in 2012 to protect prices has been attributed to the lobsters shedding their young sea scallops and prevent localized overfishing. shells on a more predictable schedule (unlike 2012 when National Overview    North Pacific    Pacific    Western Pacific    New England   Mid-Atlantic   South Atlantic   Gulf of Mexico lobsters shed their shells early, leading to an excess of supply and depressed prices). This price increase is also Commercial Fisheries Facts attributable to dealer’s success in building markets to absorb the increased supply of the past 3 years effectively. Landings revenue • On average, from 2005 to 2014 the key species or species groups accounted for 84 percent of total revenue, generating $858 million annually in the New England Region. • American lobster had higher landings revenues than any other species or species group, averaging $387 million in landings revenue from 2005 to 2014. Landings • Key species or species groups contributed an average of 71 percent annually to total landings between 2005 to 2014, averaging 456 million pounds. • Atlantic herring contributed the most to landings in the region, averaging 190 million pounds from 2005 to 2014. Prices • Sea scallop had the highest average annual ex-vessel price per pound from 2005 to 2014 ($8.67). • Atlantic herring had the lowest average annual ex-vessel price per pound from 2005 to 2014 ($0.19). RECREATIONAL FISHERIES In 2014, almost 1.2 million recreational anglers took 6.7 million fishing trips in the New England Region. Residents of a New England coastal county made up 92 percent of these anglers. Of the total fishing trips taken, 48 percent were from the private boat sector and another 44 percent were from the shore sector. The most frequently caught species or species groups in New England included porgies (scup) and Atlantic mackerel. Key New England Recreational Species • • • • • Atlantic cod Atlantic mackerel Bluefin tuna Bluefish Little tunny • • • • • Scup Striped bass Summer flounder Winter flounder Tautog Economic Impacts and Expenditures The contribution of recreational fishing activities in the Species or species groups with large increases in New England Region2 are reported in terms of economic landings between 2013 and 2014 include squid (97%), impacts at the state level (employment, sales, income and bluefin tuna (86%), cod and haddock (68%), and At- value-added impacts) and expenditures on fishing trips lantic mackerel (43%). Cod and haddock landing gains and durable equipment at the regional level. Employment were driven strictly by haddock, which increased 143 impacts in Massachusetts were the highest in the region percent; 2014 cod landings increased 4 percent com- with approximately 14,264 full- and part-time jobs gener- pared with 2013 levels. ated by recreational fishing activities in the state. Rhode Island (4,439 jobs) and Connecticut (2,993 jobs) followed Prices in terms of employment impacts. The ex-vessel prices for New England’s key species and species groups in 2014 were higher than their 10-year av- In addition to jobs, the contribution of recreational fishing erage only for five of the key species (three of the species activities to the New England Region’s economy can be in real terms). From 2005 to 2014, prices for sea scallop, measured in terms of sales impacts and the contribution the most highly valued among New England’s key species/ of these activities to gross domestic product (value-added species group, had the largest ex-vessel price increase impacts). In 2014, sales impacts were the highest in Mas- (62%, 38% in real terms), followed by Atlantic herring sachusetts ($1.4 billion), followed by Rhode Island ($0.4 (56%, 27% in real terms), the lowest value species in the billion). Value added impacts were the highest in Massa- region. Compared with ex-vessel prices in 2013, Atlantic chusetts ($1 billion in value-added impacts), followed by mackerel (32%) and American lobster (24%) had the Rhode Island ($0.3 billion). 2 Trip expenditure estimates were generated from the 2011 National Marine Recreational Fishing Expenditure Survey. Durable good expenditure impacts were generated from the 2014 National Marine Recreational Fishing Expenditure Survey (see http://www.st.nmfs.noaa.gov/economics/fisheries/recreational/Marine-Angler-Durable-Expenditures/2014-durable-expenditures-survey). Economic impacts from recreational fishing activities were generated using the NMFS Recreational Economic Impact Model (see The Economic Contribution of Marine Angler Expenditures in the United States, 2011, available at http://www.st.nmfs.noaa.gov/economics/publications/marine-angler-expenditures/marine-angler-2011). 66 New England Region Regional Summary in the number of fish caught between 2005 and 2014 The total saltwater fishing trip and durable equipment were observed in little tunny (693%), wrasses (tautog) expenditures were $2.2 across the New England Region (201%) and winter flounder (80%). in 2014. Approximately 82 percent of these expenditures were related to durable equipment purchases. The largest Participation • An average of 1.4 million anglers fished in the New England Region annually from 2005 to 2014. • Coastal county residents made up 89 percent of total anglers in this region from 2005 to 2014. Fishing Trips • In the New England Region, an average of 7.6 million fishing trips were taken annually from 2005 to 2014. • Private or rental boat and shore-based fishing trips accounted for an annual average of 4 million and 3.2 million fishing trips, respectively, from 2005 to 2014. Harvest and Release • Striped bass was the most commonly caught key species or species group, averaging 6.3 million fish per year from 2005 to 2014, followed by porgies (scups) with 5.5 million fish. ($1.1 billion), followed by fishing tackle ($426.4 million), and other equipment ($156.2 million). Fishing trip-related expenditures by non-residents totaled $191.5 million, of which the greatest portion can be attributed to trips in the shore sector ($89.9 million). Residents of the New England Region spent $201.9 million on trip-related expenses, with the greatest of these expenses related to the private boat sector ($118.7 million). Participation There were 1.2 million recreational anglers who fished in the New England Region in 2014, a 22 percent decrease from 2005 (1.5 million anglers). These anglers were New England Region residents from either a coastal (1.1 million anglers) or non-coastal county (98,000 anglers). About 92 percent of total anglers in 2014 were residents of a coastal county. Coastal county angler participation in 2014 decreased 20 percent compared with 2005 (1.3 million MARINE ECONOMY anglers) and increased 4 percent between 2013 and 2014. Across all sectors of the economy in the New England Non-coastal county angler participation decreased 42 Region approximately 6 million full- and part-time work- percent from 2005 (169,000 anglers) and decreased 2 ers were employed by approximately 366,000 estab- percent from 2013 (100,000 anglers). lishments in 2013.3 Annual payroll totaled $326 billion. Total employee compensation in the New England Re- Fishing Trips gion totaled $487 billion and the combined gross state Recreational fishermen took 6.7 million fishing trips in product of all states totaled about $865 billion.4 the New England Region in 2014. This was a 28 percent decrease from 2005 and a 6 percent increase from 2013. The Commercial Fishing Location Quotient (CFLQ) Approximately 48 percent of the saltwater trips came in provides a measure of the proportional size of this the private boat sector. The other most popular mode of sector in a state’s economy relative to the size of the fishing was shore with 44 percent of trips in 2014. commercial fishing sector in the national economy.5 The CFLQ is calculated as the ratio of the percentage of Harvest and Release regional employment in the commercial fishing sector The New England Region’s species and species groups relative to the percentage of national employment in the caught most frequently in 2014 were porgies (scup) commercial fishing sector. The U.S. CFLQ is 1. If a state (6.4 million fish), Atlantic mackerel (4.7 million fish), CFLQ is less than 1, then less commercial fishing occurs and bluefish (3.6 million fish). Between 2005 and 2014, in this state than the national average. If a state CFLQ is five of the New England Region’s key species or species greater than 1, then more commercial fishing occurs in groups showed decreases in catch totals, with the largest this state than the national average. decreases occuring among striped bass (-70%), bluefin tuna (-60%) and Atlantic cod (-42%). Large increases Unless otherwise stated, data is from the U.S. Census Bureau, http://censtats.census.gov/ (accessed September 15, 2014). 4 U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, “Table 1.1.5 Gross Domestic Product” and “Table SA6N Compensation of Employees by NAICS Industry,” http:// www.bea.gov/iTable/index_nipa.cfm (accessed September 15, 2014). 5 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Location Quotient Calculator,” http://data.bls.gov/location_quotient/ (accessed September 15, 2014). 3 67 National Overview    North Pacific    Pacific    Western Pacific    New England   Mid-Atlantic   South Atlantic   Gulf of Mexico Recreational Fishing Facts expenditures on durable goods were for boat expenses New England Region Regional Summary CFLQ values were available only for two of the five sector was located in Massachusetts (114). The number states in the New England region, Maine and Rhode of employees increased 5 percent to 1,327. Annual payroll Island. Both states show a higher concentration of increased 12 percent to about $36 million in 2013 (a 14% fishing-related industries than the national economy as decrease in real terms). National Overview    North Pacific    Pacific    Western Pacific    New England   Mid-Atlantic   South Atlantic   Gulf of Mexico a whole. In 2013, the CFLQ for Maine was the highest in the region at 18.29. Maine’s CFLQ suggests that Transport, Support and Marine Operations the level of employment in commercial fishing-related The size of the Transport, Support and Marine Operations industries in this state is approximately 18.29 times sectors in the New England region is difficult to assess higher than the level of employment in these industries because so much of the state-level data is suppressed nationwide. The 2013 CFLQ in Rhode Island was second for confidentiality purposes. It is clear, however, that highest in the region at 3.2. these sectors play an important role in the regional economy. For example, there were 493 establishments Seafood Sales and Processing classified as marinas, employing 3,343 workers and From 2005 to 2013 , the number of non-employer firms spending $168 million on payroll in 2013 across all five (businesses that have no paid employees and are sub- states in the region. In addition, the Ship and Boat Build- ject to federal income tax) engaged in seafood product ing Sector consisted of 167 establishments employing preparation and packaging in the New England Region 1,231 workers and contributing $58 million in payroll in increased 6 percent to 103 firms. The greatest number Massachusetts and Rhode Island alone. of these nonemployer firms were located in Maine (36). Annual receipts decreased 4 percent to about $10 million in 2013 (a 26% decrease in real terms). Employer establishments engaged in seafood product preparation and packaging decreased 19 percent from 2005 to 2013, to 79 firms. The biggest number of New England Region employer firms in this sector was located in Massachusetts (40). The number of employees decreased 42 percent to 2,356. Annual payroll decreased 27 percent to about $113 million in 2013 (a 44% decrease in real terms). From 2005 to 2013, employer establishments in the wholesale seafood sales sector decreased 10 percent to 349. The largest number of wholesaling establishments was located in Maine (150). The number of employees increased 17 percent to 3,723. Annual payroll increased 48 percent to about $172 million in 2013 (a 14% increase in real terms). The number of non-employer firms in the retail seafood sector in the New England Region decreased 2 percent to 157 firms in 2013, relative to 2005. The greatest number of these non-employer firms was located in Massachusetts (51). Annual receipts decreased 29 percent to about $14 million in 2013 (a 46% decrease in real terms). Employer establishments engaged in seafood retail decreased 5 percent from 2005 to 2013, to 234 firms. The biggest number of New England Region employer firms in this 68 Tables New England Region National Overview    North Pacific    Pacific    Western Pacific    New England   Mid-Atlantic   South Atlantic   Gulf of Mexico New England Region Commercial Fisheries 2014 Economic Impacts of the New England Seafood Industry (thousands of dollars) With Imports Without Imports Landings Value Value #Jobs Sales Income #Jobs Sales Income Revenue Added Added Connecticut 14,145 2,763 429,184 90,981 151,035 851 49,989 17,133 23,886 Maine 548,943 41,314 2,303,292 755,955 1,094,928 39,198 1,993,580 689,391 985,557 Massachusetts 525,124 97,761 7,954,047 2,045,415 3,132,490 59,347 2,210,111 811,881 1,107,546 New Hampshire 26,833 11,217 1,582,868 359,000 578,673 2,338 129,290 47,844 65,427 Rhode Island 86,211 10,174 1,096,821 273,316 428,503 5,370 305,502 110,683 154,995 Total Landings Revenue & Landings 2005 2006 Total Revenue 970,516 1,132,841 Finfish & Other 200,751 329,541 Shellfish 769,765 803,300 Key Species American lobster Atlantic herring Atlantic mackerel Bluefin tuna Cod & haddock Flounders Goosefish Quahog clam Sea scallop Squid 408,719 20,085 2,923 3,864 39,824 42,339 34,408 6,707 250,762 20,206 Total Landings & Landings 2005 Total Landings 684,292 Finfish & Other 461,038 Shellfish 223,254 Key Species American lobster Atlantic herring Atlantic mackerel Bluefin tuna Cod & haddock Flounders Goosefish Quahog clam Sea scallop Squid 86,224 212,389 8,223 837 30,500 30,290 34,873 1,088 32,038 26,748 395,289 NA 14,491 1,715 31,856 37,757 26,603 28,356 264,226 25,850 Revenue 2007 895,381 178,614 716,768 of Key Species/Species Groups (thousands of dollars)1 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 808,816 787,206 960,090 1,103,010 1,192,900 1,163,328 1,201,257 190,211 176,889 190,224 212,523 243,964 204,722 196,224 618,605 610,317 769,867 890,487 948,937 958,606 1,005,032 359,783 18,770 6,000 2,077 39,326 33,650 21,209 30,026 237,299 17,711 317,909 20,507 5,265 2,993 47,166 30,501 19,945 8,901 203,124 19,848 305,195 24,459 7,892 4,448 38,745 27,282 14,321 9,002 209,168 16,696 397,768 20,692 3,459 8,470 49,710 27,680 14,064 9,713 265,493 14,788 of Key Species/Species Groups (thousands of 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 748,637 584,849 602,950 648,988 580,145 496,743 371,353 396,942 422,726 334,641 251,894 213,496 206,009 226,263 245,503 94,347 240,626 99,752 274 19,785 19,530 26,146 6,195 41,229 43,652 79,435 158,077 50,760 300 24,856 16,089 19,968 4,630 35,390 26,421 86,229 167,709 38,359 447 33,122 15,411 17,757 1,468 28,867 28,615 99,199 210,786 39,398 772 32,470 16,229 14,256 1,628 31,604 28,014 417,931 24,759 295 9,258 48,775 30,837 19,792 8,314 352,632 22,887 425,562 28,545 3,480 8,394 29,972 35,138 19,693 9,276 389,501 18,187 458,779 31,388 1,738 3,649 16,350 32,054 13,576 9,383 366,007 15,547 563,616 28,130 3,173 6,114 20,805 31,353 14,095 10,147 297,523 21,407 pounds) 2011 612,952 357,753 255,199 2012 665,778 381,476 284,302 2013 634,766 357,666 277,100 2014 643,138 378,303 264,836 125,167 174,338 913 1,085 30,108 17,902 14,700 1,513 35,285 27,907 148,906 190,532 9,680 915 14,800 18,340 16,422 1,570 39,209 16,153 149,116 203,763 9,049 523 9,072 16,295 14,321 1,594 32,103 14,575 147,179 198,807 12,942 971 15,199 15,179 14,547 1,607 23,468 28,779 2011 3.34 0.14 0.32 8.54 1.62 1.72 1.35 5.50 9.99 0.82 2012 2.86 0.15 0.36 9.18 2.03 1.92 1.20 5.91 9.93 1.13 2013 3.08 0.15 0.19 6.98 1.80 1.97 0.95 5.89 11.4 1.07 2014 3.83 0.14 0.25 6.29 1.37 2.07 0.97 6.31 12.68 0.74 116,024 140,789 16,904 1,201 39,261 14,526 12,378 1,790 32,884 21,722 Average Annual Price of Key Species/Species Groups (dollars per pound) 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 American lobster 4.74 4.19 4.53 3.69 3.08 3.43 Atlantic herring 0.09 0.68 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.15 Atlantic mackerel 0.36 0.15 0.12 0.14 0.20 0.20 Bluefin tuna 4.62 6.26 6.93 6.69 5.76 7.05 Cod & haddock 1.31 1.61 1.58 1.42 1.19 1.27 Flounders 1.40 1.93 2.09 1.98 1.68 1.91 Goosefish 0.99 1.02 1.06 1.12 1.00 1.14 Quahog clam 6.16 4.58 6.49 6.06 5.53 5.43 Sea scallop 7.83 6.41 6.71 7.04 6.62 8.07 Squid 0.76 0.59 0.67 0.69 0.60 0.68 1 NA = these data are confidential and therefore not disclosable. 70 New England Region Recreational Fisheries 2014 Economic Impacts of the New England Recreational Fishing Expenditures (thousands of dollars, trips) Trips #Jobs Sales Income Value Added Connecticut 1,364 2,993 289,927 137,757 215,821 Maine 539 1,051 84,955 35,676 55,515 Massachusetts 3,397 14,264 1,391,996 688,503 996,280 New Hampshire 252 563 52,693 25,375 35,185 Rhode Island 1,099 4,439 421,355 199,243 300,928 Durable Goods Expenditures 426,408 156,233 1,109,629 149,153 2,418 1,843,841 2,237,199 Recreational Anglers by Residential Area (thousands of anglers)1 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Coastal 1,348 1,408 1,408 1,389 1,222 1,317 Non-Coastal 169 188 205 187 165 168 Out-of-State NA NA NA NA NA NA Total Anglers 1,517 1,596 1,613 1,576 1,387 1,485 2011 1,156 132 NA 1,288 2012 1,172 145 NA 1,317 2013 1,043 100 NA 1,143 2014 1,080 98 NA 1,178 Recreational Fishing Effort by Mode (thousands of angler trips) 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 For-Hire 418 457 518 511 463 Private 5,060 4,651 4,820 4,893 3,375 Shore 3,719 4,107 3,951 3,735 3,322 Total Trips 9,197 9,215 9,289 9,139 7,160 2011 367 3,161 2,531 6,059 2012 345 3,132 2,687 6,164 2013 516 3,458 2,312 6,286 2014 486 3,225 2,940 6,651 Harvest (H) & Release (R) of Key Species/Species Groups (thousands of fish)2 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 H 485 203 305 384 390 509 532 Atlantic cod R 1,108 722 964 954 833 1,071 915 2012 336 2013 392 2014 264 471 641 667 2010 321 3,967 2,925 7,213 Atlantic mackerel H 2,940 4,180 1,885 3,357 2,463 3,472 5,336 3,277 3,707 3,263 R 62 559 116 453 344 381 536 484 279 1,421 Bluefin tuna H 12 3 11 9 8 1 2 10 0 8 R 8 7 10 1 5 0 5 4 0 0 H 1,200 1,647 1,512 1,460 673 1,184 658 1,502 1,685 873 R 3,013 3,639 2,906 2,995 1,436 1,846 1,931 1,950 1,957 2,754 Little tunny H 0 1 5 0 1 2 0 10 1 9 R 55 26 65 16 17 20 44 103 14 427 Porgies (scup) H 1,595 1,426 3,048 1,944 1,498 2,411 2,287 2,952 3,790 3,172 R 2,194 2,638 2,802 4,048 3,277 3,586 2,376 3,530 3,084 3,263 Striped bass H 700 593 597 602 548 527 458 531 701 495 R 9,943 14,094 8,367 7,714 4,164 2,769 2,040 1,780 3,801 2,649 Summer flounder H 589 642 426 584 167 198 267 242 429 418 R 1,419 2,850 1,044 2,112 908 818 1,252 937 1,457 1,393 Winter flounder H 43 50 52 180 113 104 100 55 43 97 R 42 46 44 70 102 86 60 28 24 56 Wrasses (tautog) H 269 362 569 304 197 358 79 323 291 459 R 594 638 1,426 515 396 562 384 909 935 2,135 Bluefish 1 2 NA = data are not available because out-of-state resident information is collected for individual states but does not specify whether an angler resides in a region. In this table, ‘0’ = 0-999 thousand fish and ‘1’ = 1,000-1,499 thousand fish. 71 National Overview    North Pacific    Pacific    Western Pacific    New England   Mid-Atlantic   South Atlantic   Gulf of Mexico 2014 Angler Trip & Durable Goods Expenditures (thousands of dollars) Fishing Mode Trip Expenditures Equipment Non-Residents Residents Fishing Tackle For-Hire 70,202 34,229 Other Equipment Private Boat 31,426 118,676 Boat Expenses Shore 89,881 48,945 Vehicle Expenses Total 191,507 201,851 Second Home Expenses Total Durable Expenditures Total State Trip and Durable Goods Expenditures Tables Connecticut National Overview    North Pacific    Pacific    Western Pacific    New England   Mid-Atlantic   South Atlantic   Gulf of Mexico Connecticut Commercial Fisheries 2014 Economic Impacts of the Connecticut Seafood Industry (thousands of dollars) With Imports Without Imports Value #Jobs Sales Income #Jobs Sales Income Added Total Impacts 2,763 429,184 90,981 151,035 851 49,989 17,133 Commercial Harvesters 425 25,083 6,880 10,600 425 25,083 6,880 Seafood Processors 116 11,979 4,575 5,914 53 5,429 2,073 & Dealers Importers 1,169 321,504 51,527 98,008 Seafood Wholesalers 173 27,531 9,011 12,108 17 2,636 863 & Distributors Retail 879 43,087 18,988 24,405 357 16,840 7,317 Total Landings Revenue & Landings Revenue of Key Species/Species Groups (thousands of dollars)1 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Total Revenue 37,570 36,892 42,053 17,206 15,007 17,626 20,032 21,132 14,632 Finfish & Other 5,097 3,732 3,421 3,987 3,172 5,284 4,863 5,529 5,172 Shellfish 32,474 33,161 38,632 13,219 11,835 12,342 15,170 15,603 9,460 Key Species American lobster Eastern oyster Flounders Goosefish Hake Quahog clam Scups or Porgies Sea scallop Snails (conchs) Squid, loligo 3,821 NA 1,170 658 2,432 NA 263 9,761 233 1,224 4,031 2,206 1,027 346 1,628 18,135 302 7,229 533 954 3,222 5,142 881 512 1,232 20,531 311 8,605 312 744 2,102 NA 802 551 1,619 NA 383 10,032 35 546 1,763 NA 736 591 1,149 NA 196 8,952 NA 260 1,894 NA 889 564 1,417 NA 272 9,458 NA 473 943 NA 1,027 976 1,705 NA 408 13,007 NA 694 American lobster Eastern oyster Flounders Goosefish Hake Quahog clam Scups or Porgies Sea scallop Snails (conchs) Squid, loligo 714 NA 582 524 3,735 NA 328 1,272 50 1,537 793 77 458 496 2,632 2,665 298 1,104 101 1,157 569 193 345 460 1,839 3,067 256 1,313 117 811 426 NA 283 424 2,465 NA 282 1,407 47 523 412 NA 308 546 2,194 NA 204 1,386 NA 256 Average Annual Price of Key Species/Species Groups (dollars per 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 American lobster 5.35 5.08 5.67 4.93 4.27 Eastern oyster NA 28.61 26.64 NA NA Flounders 2.01 2.25 2.55 2.84 2.39 Goosefish 1.26 0.7 1.11 1.3 1.08 Hake 0.65 0.62 0.67 0.66 0.52 Quahog clam NA 6.8 6.69 NA NA Scups or Porgies 0.8 1.01 1.22 1.36 0.96 Sea scallop 7.67 6.55 6.55 7.13 6.46 Snails (conchs) 4.66 5.28 2.66 0.75 NA Squid, loligo 0.8 0.82 0.92 1.04 1.01 1 NA = these data are confidential and therefore not disclosable. 74 2,680 1,159 9,446 2014 14,145 4,478 9,667 1,057 NA 996 1,040 1,468 NA 837 12,005 NA 1,861 577 NA 1,086 1,022 1,416 NA 705 7,219 NA 1,257 609 NA 1,009 510 1,692 NA 573 7,219 NA 1,354 2012 8,940 5,823 3,117 2013 7,957 5,926 2,030 2014 7,523 5,277 2,246 199 NA 420 630 2,199 NA 644 1,318 NA 498 248 NA 350 765 2,032 NA 907 1,231 NA 1,518 127 NA 426 967 1,821 NA 1,195 640 NA 1,098 127 NA 313 493 2,207 NA 811 609 NA 1,318 pound)1 2010 2011 4.29 4.74 NA NA 2.68 2.44 1.58 1.55 0.66 0.78 NA NA 0.84 0.63 7.51 9.87 NA NA 1.29 1.39 2012 4.26 NA 2.85 1.36 0.72 NA 0.92 9.75 NA 1.23 2013 4.53 NA 2.55 1.06 0.78 NA 0.59 11.29 NA 1.15 2014 4.78 NA 3.23 1.04 0.77 NA 0.71 11.85 NA 1.03 Total Landings & Landings of Key Species/Species Groups (thousands of pounds)1 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Total Landings 13,628 11,750 10,050 7,131 6,568 6,698 7,403 Finfish & Other 6,548 5,807 3,931 4,552 4,248 4,485 5,282 Shellfish 7,080 5,943 6,119 2,578 2,320 2,213 2,121 Key Species Value Added 23,886 10,600 442 NA 332 358 2,151 NA 324 1,260 NA 366 Connecticut Recreational Fisheries 2014 Economic Impacts of Connecticut Recreational Fishing Expenditures (thousands of dollars) Trip Impacts by Fishing Mode Sales Income 180 202 69 2,542 2,993 17,294 23,309 6,176 243,148 289,927 7,611 10,318 2,748 117,080 137,757 2014 Angler Trip & Durable Goods Expenditures (thousands of dollars) Fishing Mode Trip Expenditures Equipment Non-Residents Residents Fishing Tackle For-Hire 3,211 6,472 Other Equipment Private Boat 2,918 22,065 Boat Expenses Shore 491 5,233 Vehicle Expenses Total 6,620 33,771 Second Home Expenses Total Durable Expenditures Value Added 10,003 16,364 4,196 185,258 215,821 Durable Goods Expenditures 53,085 14,291 156,489 11,359 0 235,225 Total State Trip and Durable Goods Expenditures 275,616 Recreational Anglers by Residential Area (thousands of anglers)1 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Coastal 323 336 302 381 438 402 Non-Coastal NA NA NA NA NA NA Out-of-State 77 44 61 123 93 112 Total Anglers 400 380 363 504 531 514 2011 420 NA 98 518 2012 397 NA 67 464 2013 198 NA 43 241 2014 209 NA 64 273 Recreational Fishing Effort by Mode (thousands of angler trips) 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 For-Hire 35 50 64 74 43 41 Private 1,174 868 1,097 1,292 711 871 Shore 485 571 559 609 665 614 Total Trips 1,694 1,489 1,720 1,975 1,419 1,526 2011 46 863 399 1,308 2012 26 825 475 1,326 2013 64 830 316 1,210 2014 62 865 437 1,364 Harvest (H) & Release (R) of Key Species/Species Groups (thousands of fish)2 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 H 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Atlantic cod R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2012 1 2013 0 2014 0 0 0 0 Bluefish H 247 507 450 623 262 591 307 480 894 299 R 576 1,167 888 1,144 295 715 997 679 726 426 Hickory shad H 54 63 35 0 0 1 16 39 8 73 R 32 144 4 5 0 0 0 0 1 67 Little tunny H 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 R 0 0 1 0 9 8 14 57 0 13 Porgies (scup) H 508 532 925 549 289 1,088 933 868 930 561 R 753 740 1,006 974 1,204 1,192 539 1,049 1,212 1,402 Striped bass H 141 115 119 108 61 93 63 65 143 87 R 1,762 987 985 3,105 1,161 671 612 265 778 304 Summer flounder H 157 138 112 146 45 35 47 63 270 120 R 779 1,111 297 991 428 373 345 306 867 638 White perch H 0 0 0 7 60 0 0 10 0 14 R 0 15 18 52 72 0 0 48 2 7 Winter flounder H 4 0 0 0 12 14 19 9 0 1 R 0 21 15 0 7 12 0 7 4 1 Wrasses (tautog) H 36 201 353 167 86 116 26 194 105 290 R 149 108 745 250 112 257 36 599 455 1,590 1 2 NA = data are not available because out-of-state resident information is collected for individual states but does not specify whether an angler resides in a region. In this table, ‘0’ = 0-999 thousand fish and ‘1’ = 1,000-1,499 thousand fish. 75 National Overview    North Pacific    Pacific    Western Pacific    New England   Mid-Atlantic   South Atlantic   Gulf of Mexico Total Durable Expenditures Total State Economic Impacts For-Hire Private Boat Shore #Jobs Connecticut Marine Economy National Overview    North Pacific    Pacific    Western Pacific    New England   Mid-Atlantic   South Atlantic   Gulf of Mexico Connecticut’s State Economy (% of national total)1,2 2005 2013 %Change #Establishments #Employees Annual Payroll ($ billions) 93,561 (1.2%) 88,498 (1.2%) -5.7 1,529,827 (1.3%) 1,473,605 (1.2%) -3.8 75.61 (1.7%) 85.90 (1.5%) 12.0 Employee Compensation ($ billions) Gross State Product ($ billions) 111.25 (1.6%) 129.12 (1.5%) 13.8 208.15 (1.6%) 246.90 (1.5%) 15.7 Seafood Sales & Processing - Non-Employer Firms (thousands of dollars)1,2 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 Firms 7 11 ds 18 17 Seafood product prep. & packaging Receipts 551 3,206 ds 2,375 2,550 Firms 24 15 26 25 23 Seafood sales, retail Receipts 3,313 2,915 4,436 3,247 2,142 Seafood Sales & Processing - Employer Establishments (thousands 2005 2006 2007 2008 Establishments 3 4 3 3 Seafood product Employees 113 119 0 59 prep. & packaging Payroll 3,656 4,242 0 1,040 Establishments 17 19 20 24 Seafood sales, Employees 0 0 183 185 wholesale Payroll 0 0 8,347 8,551 Establishments 39 35 36 35 Seafood sales, Employees 187 196 177 203 retail Payroll 5,028 4,937 5,252 5,248 Commercial Fishing Location Quotient3 ds ds NA 2010 17 1,518 25 2,473 2011 14 1,066 21 2,165 2012 13 882 21 1,388 2013 25 3,058 20 1,543 of dollars)1,2 2009 2010 2 2 0 0 0 0 25 23 212 216 8,842 9,219 36 39 205 204 5,551 5,563 2011 2 0 0 24 212 9,224 37 171 4,824 2012 1 0 0 16 187 8,237 37 233 6,349 2013 1 0 0 17 178 7,920 36 218 6,344 2012 10 256 32,789 14 297 37,711 1 ds ds 130 1,257 60,803 0 NA NA 2 ds ds 4 ds 1,414 8 ds ds 2013 9 ds ds 11 184 28,513 0 NA NA 130 1,265 63,211 1 ds ds 2 ds ds 5 ds ds 7 ds ds Transport, Support & Marine Operations - Employer Establishments (thousands of dollars)1,2 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Establishments 5 4 4 5 5 6 5 Coastal & Great Employees ds ds ds ds ds ds 95 Lakes freight transportation Payroll ds ds ds ds ds 8,148 7,856 Establishments 11 14 14 12 12 10 11 Deep sea freight Employees 310 235 228 243 222 225 225 transportation Payroll 36,766 47,845 48,110 46,595 45,045 29,407 41,302 Establishments 2 1 2 1 1 1 1 Deep sea passenger Employees ds ds ds ds ds ds ds transportation Payroll ds ds ds ds ds ds ds Establishments 117 119 124 125 126 129 128 Marinas Employees 994 1,024 1,224 1,352 1,261 1,284 1,283 Payroll 42,754 44,829 50,809 60,016 58,065 58,877 59,851 Establishments 3 3 5 4 3 3 3 Marine cargo Employees ds ds ds ds ds ds ds handling Payroll ds ds 5,925 ds ds ds ds Establishments 8 9 6 6 6 6 5 Navigational services to Employees 45 69 ds ds 5 ds 5 shipping Payroll 1,768 2,423 432 338 696 242 898 Establishments 4 4 4 8 8 6 5 Port & harbor Employees ds ds ds 179 166 122 34 operations Payroll ds ds ds 6,136 5,787 2,162 848 Establishments 17 17 22 15 13 12 11 Ship & boat Employees ds ds ds ds ds ds ds building Payroll ds ds ds ds ds ds ds ds = these data are suppressed. NA = not applicable. The U.S. Commercial Fishing Location Quotient (CFLQ) is 1. A CFLQ greater than 1 indicates that more commercial fishing occurs in this state than the national average. A CFLQ less than 1 indicates that less commercial fishing occurs in this state than the national average. 1 2 3 76 Tables Maine National Overview    North Pacific    Pacific    Western Pacific    New England   Mid-Atlantic   South Atlantic   Gulf of Mexico Maine Commercial Fisheries 2014 Economic Impacts of the Maine Seafood Industry (thousands of With Imports Value #Jobs Sales Income Added Total Impacts 41,314 2,303,292 755,955 1,094,928 Commercial Harvesters 18,452 1,053,447 288,754 471,743 Seafood Processors 3,141 218,238 87,620 111,958 & Dealers Importers 876 241,044 38,632 73,481 Seafood Wholesalers 1,296 123,009 44,125 57,417 & Distributors Retail 17,548 667,555 296,825 380,329 dollars) Without Imports Sales Income 39,198 1,993,580 18,452 1,053,447 689,391 288,754 Value Added 985,557 471,743 #Jobs 2,809 195,179 78,362 100,129 - - - - 1,100 104,416 37,455 48,739 16,836 640,538 284,819 364,946 Total Landings Revenue & Landings Revenue of Key Species/Species Groups (thousands of dollars) 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Total Revenue 392,122 391,293 344,022 308,233 292,315 380,435 411,983 450,926 476,423 548,943 Finfish & Other 47,141 38,552 36,833 36,695 30,367 30,196 43,816 77,546 72,551 51,819 Shellfish 344,982 352,742 307,189 271,538 261,948 350,240 368,168 373,380 403,872 497,125 Key Species American lobster 317,948 305,443 280,634 245,146 237,519 318,304 334,577 341,861 370,207 459,600 Atlantic herring 56 10,729 9,173 8,396 7,867 8,643 14,404 14,490 15,514 16,333 Bloodworms 6,039 5,177 6,051 5,913 6,196 5,893 5,847 5,191 5,644 6,094 Blue mussel 2,625 2,716 1,934 1,627 2,203 2,071 1,969 1,919 2,341 2,153 Cod & haddock 5,177 3,982 3,728 5,257 1,752 1,528 1,666 1,362 976 1,272 Goosefish 6,232 3,238 2,402 1,478 526 393 578 1,059 773 566 Ocean quahog clam 3,607 3,919 3,194 2,195 1,821 1,721 2,117 1,737 1,378 1,238 Pollock 3,106 2,309 2,160 2,321 2,047 1,503 1,929 2,527 2,562 2,878 Sea urchins 5,142 4,741 4,367 5,410 5,866 5,490 5,113 5,024 5,781 5,325 Softshell clam 14,081 26,940 12,574 12,826 11,686 12,960 15,852 15,655 18,102 20,247 Total Landings & Landings of Key Species/Species Groups (thousands of pounds) 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Total Landings 214,514 216,657 186,324 186,696 188,388 200,876 249,496 263,421 266,413 260,358 Finfish & Other 121,278 117,637 93,742 94,641 82,505 79,375 122,944 121,322 119,490 127,912 Shellfish 93,236 99,020 92,582 92,056 105,883 121,501 126,552 142,099 146,923 132,447 Key Species American lobster Atlantic herring Bloodworms Blue mussel Cod & haddock Goosefish Ocean quahog clam Pollock Sea urchins Softshell clam 68,730 558 456 3,357 4,045 7,130 1,001 5,260 3,517 1,857 75,346 97,843 462 3,435 2,448 3,669 1,214 3,678 3,372 3,918 63,959 74,817 549 2,643 2,345 2,376 1,011 4,245 2,761 1,948 69,863 67,731 537 2,289 2,455 1,178 669 4,064 2,900 1,998 81,179 64,606 574 2,760 1,401 603 556 3,040 3,487 1,902 96,246 104,923 127,237 127,756 124,366 57,557 97,116 92,506 98,859 104,242 534 526 457 470 448 2,582 2,810 2,399 2,282 2,270 876 842 549 418 688 404 533 1,075 874 633 549 645 698 557 438 1,640 2,325 2,666 2,227 2,319 2,592 2,407 1,904 1,988 1,981 2,077 2,365 2,257 2,297 2,085 Average Annual Price of Key Species/Species Groups (dollars per pound) 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 American lobster 5.45 4.63 4.88 3.83 3.17 3.54 Atlantic herring 0.12 0.13 0.14 0.14 0.13 0.16 Bloodworms 15.59 12.79 12.26 12.01 11.68 11.80 Blue mussel 0.92 0.90 0.81 0.78 0.86 0.86 Cod & haddock 1.51 1.86 1.77 2.34 1.35 1.87 Goosefish 1.03 1.01 1.12 1.37 0.94 1.04 Ocean quahog clam 4.24 3.69 3.52 3.58 3.54 3.35 Pollock 0.70 0.72 0.57 0.62 0.73 0.98 Sea urchins 1.72 1.61 1.76 2.04 1.82 2.27 Softshell clam 8.93 7.85 7.18 7.00 6.65 6.68 78 2011 3.34 0.16 11.66 0.73 2.07 1.14 3.44 0.87 2.23 7.02 2012 2.77 0.16 11.69 0.82 2.56 1.01 2.56 0.98 2.72 7.14 2013 2.94 0.16 12.18 1.04 2.37 0.90 2.51 1.17 2.95 8.00 2014 3.70 0.16 13.59 0.95 1.85 0.89 2.82 1.24 2.69 9.71 Maine Recreational Fisheries 2014 Economic Impacts of Maine Recreational Fishing Expenditures (thousands of dollars) Trip Impacts by Fishing Mode Sales Income 113 50 219 669 1,051 9,801 4,617 19,179 51,358 84,955 3,936 1,731 6,756 23,253 35,676 2014 Angler Trip & Durable Goods Expenditures (thousands of dollars) Fishing Mode Trip Expenditures Equipment Non-Residents Residents Fishing Tackle For-Hire 5,304 1,044 Other Equipment Private Boat 1,136 3,619 Boat Expenses Shore 13,482 1,667 Vehicle Expenses Total 19,921 6,330 Second Home Expenses Total Durable Expenditures Total State Trip and Durable Goods Expenditures Value Added 5,459 2,824 11,028 36,204 55,515 Durable Goods Expenditures 17,302 6,073 27,937 272 0 51,584 77,835 Recreational Anglers by Residential Area (thousands of anglers) 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Coastal 190 182 174 121 117 122 Non-Coastal 20 22 13 9 12 9 Out-of-State 173 285 260 180 324 159 Total Anglers 383 489 447 310 453 290 2011 85 7 107 199 2012 116 6 126 248 2013 102 4 129 235 2014 79 5 129 213 Recreational Fishing Effort by Mode (thousands of angler trips) 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 For-Hire 40 31 33 25 26 Private 519 548 460 408 334 Shore 524 497 531 421 544 Total Trips 1,083 1,076 1,024 854 904 2011 22 265 240 527 2012 20 212 405 637 2013 29 313 254 596 2014 24 188 327 539 Harvest (H) & Release (R) of Key Species/Species Groups (thousands of fish)1 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 H 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 American Shad R 0 7 4 5 18 9 5 2012 0 2013 0 2014 1 18 1 0 22 2010 23 327 366 716 Atlantic cod H 29 14 19 41 45 15 40 26 61 R 35 49 72 50 36 45 100 80 75 50 Atlantic mackerel H 607 450 806 837 1,110 1,093 1,544 1,028 704 706 R 29 104 80 265 194 178 304 163 59 1,166 Blue shark H 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 R 0 0 0 0 1 0 9 2 13 10 Bluefin tuna H 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bluefish Haddock Pollock R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 H 38 8 50 30 3 14 0 4 19 0 R 49 50 74 55 26 9 8 126 22 0 H 6 9 12 20 10 4 12 4 6 3 R 2 4 11 2 1 4 4 8 46 55 H 28 67 51 67 62 58 57 50 140 136 R 32 23 24 135 34 105 135 89 296 177 Striped bass H 83 75 53 59 62 18 18 11 23 21 R 2,985 4,001 1,116 465 264 193 143 214 423 277 Winter flounder H 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 R 0 1 0 1 5 0 0 0 1 3 1 In this table, ‘0’ = 0-999 thousand fish and ‘1’ = 1,000-1,499 thousand fish. 79 National Overview    North Pacific    Pacific    Western Pacific    New England   Mid-Atlantic   South Atlantic   Gulf of Mexico Total Durable Expenditures Total State Economic Impacts For-Hire Private Boat Shore #Jobs Maine Marine Economy National Overview    North Pacific    Pacific    Western Pacific    New England   Mid-Atlantic   South Atlantic   Gulf of Mexico Maine’s State Economy (% of national total) 2005 2013 %Change #Establishments #Employees Annual Payroll ($ billions) 41,933 (0.6%) 40,257 (0.5%) -4.2 497,387 (0.4%) 487,313 (0.4%) -2.1 15.87 (0.4%) 18.74 (0.3%) 15.3 Employee Compensation ($ billions) Gross State Product ($ billions) 26.51 (0.4%) 31.36 (0.4%) 15.5 46.05 (0.4%) 54.61 (0.3%) 15.7 Seafood Sales & Processing - Non-Employer Firms (thousands of dollars) 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 Firms 52 54 65 64 63 Seafood product prep. & packaging Receipts 5,082 6,463 7,177 4,261 6,605 Firms 51 45 55 46 48 Seafood sales, retail Receipts 7,331 7,115 5,905 4,035 4,882 Commercial Fishing Location Quotient1 11.59 18.29 57.8 2010 59 4,480 47 5,835 2011 51 3,077 48 4,608 2012 51 3,294 46 4,492 2013 36 2,757 49 4,200 Seafood Sales & Processing - Employer Establishments (thousands of dollars) 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Establishments 27 27 27 29 25 27 Seafood product Employees 614 616 536 490 545 594 prep. & packaging Payroll 12,349 12,304 9,351 9,288 10,427 12,851 Establishments 177 167 170 168 164 164 Seafood sales, Employees 1,152 996 1,015 1,210 1,126 1,153 wholesale Payroll 30,513 32,192 32,005 36,185 37,687 39,915 Establishments 49 55 50 45 49 51 Seafood sales, Employees 184 179 181 148 152 176 retail Payroll 4,678 4,753 4,635 4,148 4,481 5,126 2011 28 500 10,353 152 1,109 38,412 51 177 5,108 2012 29 492 12,011 136 1,047 40,734 48 215 6,902 2013 28 376 11,797 150 1,340 46,782 51 243 7,618 2012 3 ds ds 0 NA NA 0 NA NA 80 428 17,102 1 ds ds 13 65 4,730 6 ds ds 76 ds ds 2013 3 ds ds 0 NA NA 0 NA NA 79 403 17,476 2 ds ds 14 86 5,660 3 2 130 79 ds ds Transport, Support & Marine Operations - Employer Establishments (thousands of dollars)2,3 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Establishments 3 3 3 5 4 4 4 Coastal & Great Employees ds ds ds ds 22 28 ds Lakes freight transportation Payroll ds ds ds 1,058 1,037 1,067 1,105 Establishments 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 Deep sea freight Employees ds ds NA ds ds ds NA transportation Payroll ds ds NA ds ds ds NA Establishments 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 Deep sea passenger Employees ds ds ds ds ds ds ds transportation Payroll ds ds ds ds ds ds ds Establishments 84 84 86 87 89 86 84 Marinas Employees 411 417 464 411 376 395 349 Payroll 14,215 15,353 18,600 15,206 14,654 14,699 15,426 Establishments 3 3 3 3 3 2 2 Marine cargo Employees ds ds ds ds ds ds ds handling Payroll ds ds ds ds ds ds ds Establishments 16 12 15 15 14 13 13 Navigational services to Employees 88 93 105 138 93 68 63 shipping Payroll 5,890 6,260 6,737 6,148 5,369 4,928 4,776 Establishments 1 1 2 2 1 1 1 Port & harbor Employees ds ds ds ds ds ds ds operations Payroll ds ds ds ds ds ds ds Establishments 92 89 94 90 82 75 76 Ship & boat Employees ds 6,808 6,751 6,930 ds ds ds building Payroll ds 320,288 345,036 354,899 ds ds ds 1 The U.S. Commercial Fishing Location Quotient (CFLQ) is 1. A CFLQ greater than 1 indicates that more commercial fishing occurs in this state than the national average. A CFLQ less than 1 indicates that less commercial fishing occurs in this state than the national average. 2 ds = these data are suppressed. 3 NA = not applicable. 80 Tables Massachusetts National Overview    North Pacific    Pacific    Western Pacific    New England   Mid-Atlantic   South Atlantic   Gulf of Mexico Massachusetts Commercial Fisheries 2014 Economic Impacts of the Massachusetts Seafood Industry (thousands of dollars) With Imports Without Value #Jobs Sales Income #Jobs Sales Added Total Impacts 97,761 7,954,047 2,045,415 3,132,490 59,347 2,210,111 Commercial Harvesters 12,327 961,081 303,624 446,524 12,327 961,081 Seafood Processors 7,871 1,010,662 385,325 500,989 1,698 218,072 & Dealers Importers 15,688 4,315,461 691,635 1,315,541 Seafood Wholesalers 3,198 503,131 164,415 223,086 1,074 169,044 & Distributors Retail 58,676 1,163,712 500,416 646,349 44,247 861,915 Imports 811,881 303,624 Value Added 1,107,546 446,524 83,142 108,099 - - 55,241 74,953 369,875 477,969 Income Total Landings Revenue & Landings Revenue of Key Species/Species Groups (thousands of dollars)1 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Total Revenue 427,332 586,320 420,004 399,822 400,473 478,691 571,583 616,466 565,739 Finfish & Other 117,003 252,456 109,370 121,913 114,361 126,582 132,765 126,638 94,572 Shellfish Key Species 310,330 333,863 2014 525,124 105,399 310,634 277,909 286,112 352,109 438,818 489,828 471,167 419,726 American lobster 49,563 55,901 51,258 45,418 42,731 50,330 53,302 53,357 61,662 68,369 Atlantic herring 69 NA 8,265 11,342 15,062 10,251 8,802 11,529 10,750 9,490 Atlantic mackerel NA 10,320 4,736 4,265 4,528 1,487 137 654 1,223 2,503 Clams, all other 19,010 14,045 15,680 15,255 16,745 17,966 19,154 37,294 28,311 26,272 Cod & haddock 31,954 25,397 32,043 38,696 33,684 45,210 43,397 26,123 14,083 18,558 Eastern oyster 2,738 4,864 4,559 5,496 6,432 8,225 9,066 12,071 13,896 19,559 Flounders 28,815 24,569 22,095 20,924 19,645 19,975 22,025 25,054 20,612 19,113 Goosefish 21,485 17,712 14,380 14,035 9,902 9,922 13,431 13,596 8,870 10,030 Ocean quahog clam NA 8,297 10,100 9,575 10,710 8,981 7,995 NA 10,229 9,814 Sea scallop 226,949 234,796 218,292 189,891 197,280 252,253 330,944 364,864 334,205 272,002 Total Landings & Landings of Key Species/Species Groups (thousands of pounds)1 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Total Landings 337,304 396,910 304,774 326,632 356,105 283,025 264,991 296,037 Finfish & Other 267,311 304,970 227,566 256,000 279,330 201,161 180,134 193,949 Shellfish 69,993 91,940 77,208 70,633 76,775 81,864 84,857 102,088 Key Species American lobster Atlantic herring Atlantic mackerel Clams, all other Cod & haddock Eastern oyster Flounders Goosefish Ocean quahog clam Sea scallop 9,880 12,100 700 119,547 NA 89,535 19,881 7,071 24,539 15,833 105 87 22,115 13,170 21,849 17,495 NA 16,830 29,045 36,666 10,145 73,268 46,240 4,135 20,298 123 10,977 13,597 20,158 32,540 10,600 11,782 94,266 133,531 35,406 30,199 4,376 6,552 28,537 28,515 138 159 11,609 12,405 12,680 10,015 18,126 18,691 27,011 29,782 12,760 71,922 12,156 10,242 36,461 215 11,158 8,887 15,646 31,156 Average Annual Price of Key Species/Species Groups (dollars per pound)1 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 American lobster 5.02 4.62 5.05 4.28 3.63 3.94 Atlantic herring 0.10 1.25 0.11 0.12 0.11 0.14 Atlantic mackerel NA 0.12 0.10 0.12 0.15 0.12 Clams, all other 0.96 1.99 3.79 3.49 2.56 1.75 Cod & haddock 1.30 1.60 1.58 1.36 1.18 1.24 Eastern oyster 26.09 56.10 37.00 39.77 40.36 38.30 Flounders 1.30 1.87 2.01 1.80 1.58 1.79 Goosefish 0.98 1.01 1.06 1.11 0.99 1.12 Ocean quahog clam NA 0.49 0.50 0.53 0.57 0.57 Sea scallop 7.81 6.40 6.71 7.03 6.62 8.10 1 NA = these data are confidential and therefore not disclosable. 82 2013 262,256 164,379 97,877 2014 274,187 183,645 90,542 13,373 66,970 515 13,352 27,164 231 13,692 10,143 12,479 33,092 14,485 81,781 4,131 35,053 13,164 310 14,247 11,583 NA 36,725 15,260 74,992 7,279 22,495 8,123 329 11,517 9,498 14,476 29,287 15,321 78,048 10,859 20,704 14,040 467 10,324 10,528 13,422 21,388 2011 3.99 0.13 0.27 1.43 1.60 39.25 1.61 1.32 0.64 10.00 2012 3.68 0.14 0.16 1.06 1.98 38.96 1.76 1.17 NA 9.93 2013 4.04 0.14 0.17 1.26 1.73 42.28 1.79 0.93 0.71 11.41 2014 4.46 0.12 0.23 1.27 1.32 41.92 1.85 0.95 0.73 12.72 Massachusetts Recreational Fisheries 2014 Economic Impacts of Massachusetts Recreational Fishing Expenditures (thousands of dollars) Income 975 108,633 822 94,960 1,319 141,008 11,148 1,047,395 53,594 42,961 59,423 532,525 Value Added 69,226 63,177 91,145 772,732 Trip Impacts by Fishing Mode Total Durable Expenditures For-Hire Private Boat Shore Total State Economic Impacts 14,264 1,391,996 688,503 996,280 2014 Angler Trip & Durable Goods Expenditures (thousands of dollars) Fishing Mode Trip Expenditures Equipment Non-Residents Residents Fishing Tackle For-Hire 44,891 20,788 Other Equipment Private Boat 19,728 77,468 Boat Expenses Shore 70,423 38,212 Vehicle Expenses Total 135,042 136,469 Second Home Expenses Total Durable Expenditures Total State Trip and Durable Goods Expenditures Durable Goods Expenditures 253,036 103,991 683,894 113,868 1,452 1,156,240 1,427,751 Recreational Anglers by Residential Area (thousands of anglers) 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Coastal 585 623 664 655 489 586 Non-Coastal 135 151 179 170 144 152 Out-of-State 391 484 465 469 421 433 Total Anglers 1,111 1,258 1,308 1,294 1,054 1,171 2011 490 115 293 898 2012 502 130 309 941 2013 546 77 275 898 2014 582 82 532 1,196 Recreational Fishing Effort by Mode 2005 2006 For-Hire 236 231 Private 2,336 2,411 Shore 1,739 1,938 Total Trips 4,311 4,580 2011 189 1,319 1,305 2,813 2012 204 1,471 1,151 2,826 2013 259 1,621 1,058 2,938 2014 243 1,568 1,586 3,397 Harvest (H) & Release (R) of Key Species/Species Groups (thousands of fish)1 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 H 30 13 4 7 4 1 5 Atlantic bonito R 9 38 12 9 1 3 0 2012 5 2013 0 2014 17 232 260 213 412 360 0 1 8 229 216 185 Atlantic cod R 932 423 658 671 581 884 542 240 411 479 Atlantic mackerel H 1,926 3,603 951 2,024 471 2,083 1,649 1,133 2,273 1,926 Haddock 119 2010 154 2,148 1,186 3,488 H Bluefish 387 (thousands of angler trips) 2007 2008 2009 233 255 240 2,440 2,338 1,760 1,947 1,929 1,451 4,620 4,522 3,451 R 17 423 27 152 68 185 43 160 177 225 H 549 652 683 519 344 474 225 336 448 437 R 1,813 1,843 1,240 1,302 953 1,029 598 714 580 2,213 H 247 121 293 233 155 144 52 90 104 114 R 62 63 56 158 36 33 12 68 310 403 Porgies (scup) H 657 424 1,770 762 1,069 925 786 1,587 2,042 1,635 R 751 1,096 1,183 1,688 1,741 1,858 1,174 1,805 1,257 1,283 Striped bass H 341 314 316 378 345 340 256 379 298 278 R 3,989 7,810 5,331 3,649 2,282 1,671 972 990 1,690 1,827 Summer flounder H 267 239 138 233 50 45 58 76 32 113 R 358 610 135 273 96 215 183 250 63 337 Winter flounder H 38 43 41 169 87 86 69 46 43 92 R 41 21 19 62 84 68 58 18 16 46 Wrasses (tautog) H 72 80 91 34 25 45 33 25 58 101 R 126 332 414 78 96 118 210 96 231 423 1 In this table, ‘0’ = 0-999 thousand fish and ‘1’ = 1,000-1,499 thousand fish. 83 National Overview    North Pacific    Pacific    Western Pacific    New England   Mid-Atlantic   South Atlantic   Gulf of Mexico Sales #Jobs Massachusetts Marine Economy National Overview    North Pacific    Pacific    Western Pacific    New England   Mid-Atlantic   South Atlantic   Gulf of Mexico Massachusett’s State Economy (% of national total)1,2 2005 2013 %Change #Establishments #Employees Annual Payroll ($ billions) 175,291 (2.3%) 172,533 (2.3%) -1.6 2,996,347 (2.6%) 3,062,689 (2.6%) 2.2 140.58 (3.1%) 178.30 (3.2%) 21.2 Employee Compensation ($ billions) Gross State Product ($ billions) 199.47 (2.8%) 257.95 (2.9%) 22.7 344.14 (2.6%) 441.47 (2.6%) 22.0 Seafood Sales & Processing - Non-Employer Firms (thousands of dollars) 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 Firms 28 36 24 26 22 Seafood product prep. & packaging Receipts 2,266 2,525 908 1,250 1,943 Firms 59 62 57 64 64 Seafood sales, retail Receipts 5,528 4,905 4,421 7,982 7,686 2010 27 2,082 61 6,287 2011 36 2,433 66 7,640 Commercial Fishing Location Quotient3 9.54 ds NA 2012 25 1,699 65 5,213 2013 28 1,857 51 3,842 Seafood Sales & Processing - Employer Establishments (thousands of dollars) 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Establishments 50 47 52 44 44 44 44 39 40 Seafood product Employees 2,671 2,607 2,684 2,355 2,396 2,159 2,214 1,638 1,755 prep. & packaging Payroll 115,704 120,912 113,580 109,747 119,282 107,635 112,399 74,541 87,153 Establishments 151 139 160 141 144 149 141 140 142 Seafood sales, Employees 1,836 1,706 1,803 1,442 1,542 1,591 2,013 1,841 1,910 wholesale Payroll 76,070 77,106 81,863 68,898 70,864 83,467 94,105 100,801 104,637 Establishments 116 115 126 118 115 112 106 114 114 Seafood sales, Employees 677 692 737 549 542 584 576 576 708 retail Payroll 17,725 18,165 19,267 15,017 15,261 16,495 16,037 15,776 18,304 Transport, Support & Marine Operations - Employer Establishments (thousands of dollars)1,2 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Establishments 10 12 14 14 12 12 10 Coastal & Great Employees ds 623 283 169 166 ds ds Lakes freight transportation Payroll ds 38,421 18,620 11,701 10,011 ds ds Establishments 10 11 12 8 10 8 7 Deep sea freight Employees ds 509 ds 361 ds 313 381 transportation Payroll ds 38,982 ds 38,908 35,473 36,069 38,797 Establishments 4 4 1 0 1 0 0 Deep sea passenger Employees ds ds ds NA ds NA NA transportation Payroll ds ds ds NA ds NA NA Establishments 139 141 173 175 177 175 176 Marinas Employees 973 1,064 1,154 1,138 1,188 1,150 1,125 Payroll 43,103 45,894 51,705 53,694 56,663 57,002 58,251 Establishments 5 4 5 3 2 2 2 Marine cargo Employees ds ds 69 ds ds ds ds handling Payroll ds ds 2,867 2,271 ds ds ds Establishments 6 11 9 8 11 9 9 Navigational services to Employees ds ds 65 75 71 150 139 shipping Payroll ds ds 4,540 4,355 4,342 9,413 6,980 Establishments 3 4 3 4 4 8 6 Port & harbor Employees ds ds 69 63 66 86 95 operations Payroll ds ds 647 1,289 1,323 2,662 3,035 Establishments 50 47 49 43 38 37 37 Ship & boat Employees 588 ds 588 603 579 535 445 building Payroll 20,050 ds 26,445 28,402 20,685 20,196 22,066 2012 14 ds 3,266 9 ds ds 0 NA NA 172 977 48,657 4 ds ds 8 120 5,965 5 35 1,519 40 446 23,195 2013 8 22 1,352 8 ds ds 0 NA NA 178 1,054 55,053 3 ds ds 11 94 6,578 3 ds ds 41 463 23,615 ds = these data are suppressed. NA = not applicable. The U.S. Commercial Fishing Location Quotient (CFLQ) is 1. A CFLQ greater than 1 indicates that more commercial fishing occurs in this state than the national average. A CFLQ less than 1 indicates that less commercial fishing occurs in this state than the national average. 1 2 3 84 Tables New Hampshire National Overview    North Pacific    Pacific    Western Pacific    New England   Mid-Atlantic   South Atlantic   Gulf of Mexico New Hampshire Commercial Fisheries 2014 Economic Impacts of the New Hampshire Seafood Industry (thousands of dollars) With Imports Without Imports Value #Jobs Sales Income #Jobs Sales Income Added Total Impacts 11,217 1,582,868 359,000 578,673 2,338 129,290 47,844 Commercial Harvesters 807 47,062 13,301 20,656 807 47,062 13,301 Seafood Processors 1,219 131,333 51,606 66,542 185 19,952 7,840 & Dealers Importers 4,104 1,128,980 180,941 344,163 Seafood Wholesalers 747 94,713 33,387 43,936 72 9,109 3,211 & Distributors Retail 4,339 180,781 79,765 103,375 1,274 53,167 23,492 30,436 Total Landings Revenue & Landings Revenue of Key Species/Species Groups (thousands of dollars)1 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Total Revenue 22,084 18,970 17,021 17,471 17,754 20,599 23,483 23,241 20,163 Finfish & Other 6,840 5,122 4,151 4,824 5,569 5,122 6,147 5,579 2,908 Shellfish 15,244 13,848 12,870 12,647 12,186 15,477 17,336 17,662 17,256 2014 26,833 2,938 23,895 Key Species American lobster Atlantic cod Atlantic herring Goosefish Haddock Hake Pollock Sea scallop Shrimp Spiny dogfish 14,377 1,913 NA 1,484 136 279 1,138 527 340 NA 12,582 1,732 3 783 128 165 1,502 126 NA 76 12,517 1,972 147 375 123 244 902 30 NA NA 12,267 2,311 134 290 89 167 1,093 16 NA 419 11,919 2,587 271 280 68 215 1,283 4 NA 557 14,836 2,187 375 212 29 237 839 3 NA 293 16,343 2,500 208 207 35 445 1,355 26 NA 451 American lobster Atlantic cod Atlantic herring Goosefish Haddock Hake Pollock Sea scallop Shrimp Spiny dogfish 2,556 1,293 NA 1,226 99 372 1,997 76 567 NA 2,357 1,024 22 621 73 157 2,566 21 NA 242 2,469 1,168 936 325 61 313 2,025 4 NA NA 2,567 1,479 1,198 250 53 222 2,456 2 NA 1,370 2,985 1,984 3,120 250 45 423 2,017 1 NA 2,073 3,648 1,227 2,830 172 18 322 1,042 NA NA 1,214 Average Annual Price of Key Species/Species Groups (dollars per pound)1 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 American lobster 5.62 5.34 5.07 4.78 3.99 4.07 Atlantic cod 1.48 1.69 1.69 1.56 1.30 1.78 Atlantic herring NA 0.12 0.16 0.11 0.09 0.13 Goosefish 1.21 1.26 1.15 1.16 1.12 1.23 Haddock 1.38 1.76 2.01 1.70 1.52 1.57 Hake 0.75 1.05 0.78 0.75 0.51 0.74 Pollock 0.57 0.59 0.45 0.45 0.64 0.81 Sea scallop 6.89 5.92 8.26 7.68 7.22 8.84 Shrimp 0.60 NA NA NA NA NA Spiny dogfish NA 0.32 NA 0.31 0.27 0.24 1 NA = these data are confidential and therefore not disclosable. 86 10,109 4,226 17,169 1,750 349 153 95 474 1,224 143 NA 420 16,601 546 216 186 22 374 1,135 287 NA 96 23,251 572 NA NA 18 NA 860 350 NA NA 2012 12,148 7,546 4,603 2013 8,254 3,995 4,259 2014 9,691 4,311 5,380 3,919 1,286 1,514 153 19 587 1,732 3 NA 1,646 4,229 726 2,391 126 45 1,135 1,049 12 NA 1,789 3,818 230 1,579 162 10 393 983 25 NA 515 4,939 264 NA NA 10 NA 629 27 NA NA 2011 4.17 1.94 0.14 1.36 1.91 0.76 0.78 10.35 NA 0.27 2012 4.06 2.41 0.15 1.21 2.13 0.42 1.17 11.68 NA 0.23 2013 4.35 2.38 0.14 1.15 2.16 0.95 1.15 11.54 NA 0.19 2014 4.71 2.17 NA NA 1.74 NA 1.37 12.85 NA NA Total Landings & Landings of Key Species/Species Groups (thousands of pounds)1 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Total Landings 21,281 10,295 8,430 10,464 13,886 11,809 12,315 Finfish & Other 18,081 7,463 5,174 7,180 10,093 7,026 7,144 Shellfish 3,200 2,832 3,256 3,284 3,793 4,783 5,171 Key Species Value Added 65,427 20,656 New Hampshire Recreational Fisheries 2014 Economic Impacts of New Hampshire Recreational Fishing Expenditures (thousands of dollars) #Jobs Sales Income Value Trip Impacts by Fishing Mode For-Hire 219 21,860 10,242 Private Boat 44 4,592 2,107 Shore 10 948 389 Total Durable Expenditures 290 25,293 12,637 Total State Economic Impacts 563 52,693 25,375 Durable Goods Expenditures 11,589 3,553 13,780 1,352 0 30,274 49,653 Recreational Anglers by Residential Area (thousands of anglers) 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 Coastal 105 90 97 63 67 Non-Coastal 14 15 13 8 9 Out-of-State 84 82 63 46 58 Total Anglers 203 187 173 117 134 2010 46 7 33 86 2011 56 10 30 96 2012 58 9 54 121 2013 68 19 66 153 2014 50 11 58 119 Recreational Fishing Effort by Mode (thousands of angler trips) 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 For-Hire 53 92 114 90 98 Private 238 182 233 139 147 Shore 214 227 155 103 155 Total Trips 505 501 502 332 400 2010 62 90 92 244 2011 71 178 48 297 2012 55 163 81 299 2013 116 107 89 312 2014 105 113 34 252 Harvest (H) & Release (R) of Key Species/Species Groups (thousands of fish)1 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 H 68 66 53 81 128 80 128 Atlantic cod R 138 248 234 232 209 130 259 2012 64 2013 115 2014 45 150 155 133 128 496 882 295 2,143 1,116 708 628 32 9 36 82 18 189 160 14 30 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 Atlantic mackerel H 407 115 R 16 Bluefin tuna H 0 R 0 Bluefish Bottomfish, unidentified Haddock Pollock H 21 9 34 6 0 2 2 9 0 1 R 49 24 18 3 2 0 1 4 0 1 H 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 H 102 167 97 90 100 48 76 74 71 76 R 38 109 43 18 28 11 20 114 257 425 H 60 77 70 52 39 52 100 65 119 101 R 35 46 17 20 49 75 105 147 238 154 Striped bass H 25 13 7 6 9 6 32 14 18 6 R 573 461 257 78 58 51 98 64 84 78 Winter flounder H 1 7 10 10 10 2 12 0 0 4 R 1 3 7 6 5 5 2 1 3 5 1 In this table, ‘0’ = 0-999 thousand fish and ‘1’ = 1,000-1,499 thousand fish. 87 National Overview    North Pacific    Pacific    Western Pacific    New England   Mid-Atlantic   South Atlantic   Gulf of Mexico 2014 Angler Trip & Durable Goods Expenditures (thousands of dollars) Fishing Mode Trip Expenditures Equipment Non-Residents Residents Fishing Tackle For-Hire 9,080 4,540 Other Equipment Private Boat 348 4,622 Boat Expenses Shore 534 257 Vehicle Expenses Total 9,961 9,418 Second Home Expenses Total Durable Expenditures Total State Trip and Durable Goods Expenditures Added 13,184 3,066 604 18,331 35,185 New Hampshire Marine Economy National Overview    North Pacific    Pacific    Western Pacific    New England   Mid-Atlantic   South Atlantic   Gulf of Mexico New Hampshire’s State Economy (% of national total)1,2 2005 2013 %Change #Establishments #Employees Annual Payroll ($ billions) 39,224 (0.5%) 37,185 (0.5%) -5.5 562,398 (0.5%) 551,793 (0.5%) -1.9 21.03 (0.5%) 24.91 (0.4%) 15.6 Employee Compensation ($ billions) Gross State Product ($ billions) 31.97 (0.5%) 38.93 (0.4%) 17.9 56.12 (0.4%) 68.70 (0.4%) 18.3 Seafood Sales & Processing - Non-Employer Firms (thousands of dollars)1 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 Firms 4 4 5 ds ds Seafood product prep. & packaging Receipts 842 1,087 927 ds ds Firms 11 10 11 17 14 Seafood sales, retail Receipts 1,330 1,496 1,540 1,894 1,870 Seafood Sales & Processing - Employer Establishments (thousands 2005 2006 2007 2008 Establishments 10 10 7 7 Seafood product Employees 418 0 0 0 prep. & packaging Payroll 16,275 0 0 0 Establishments 10 9 8 8 Seafood sales, Employees 0 0 92 101 wholesale Payroll 0 0 3,360 4,142 Establishments 12 15 15 14 Seafood sales, Employees 79 78 93 83 retail Payroll 2,053 2,201 2,077 2,011 Commercial Fishing Location Quotient3 ds ds NA 2010 3 687 11 1,502 2011 7 856 11 2,152 2012 7 1,166 12 2,096 2013 6 1,239 15 1,861 of dollars) 2009 2010 8 8 115 292 3,234 10,971 8 8 88 80 4,268 4,171 14 12 95 102 2,299 2,296 2011 8 231 12,010 7 84 4,123 16 88 1,934 2012 8 229 12,181 8 99 5,738 9 48 870 2013 7 225 13,751 9 113 4,562 9 45 966 2012 1 ds ds 1 ds ds 0 NA NA 31 131 6,927 0 NA NA 3 ds ds 2 ds ds 7 ds ds 2013 0 NA NA 1 ds ds 0 NA NA 35 155 8,031 0 NA NA 3 ds ds 2 ds ds 7 ds ds Transport, Support & Marine Operations - Employer Establishments (thousands of dollars)1,2 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Establishments 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 Coastal & Great Employees ds ds ds NA NA NA NA Lakes freight transportation Payroll ds ds ds NA NA NA NA Establishments 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 Deep sea freight Employees ds ds ds ds ds ds ds transportation Payroll ds ds ds ds ds ds ds Establishments 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Deep sea passenger Employees NA NA NA NA NA NA NA transportation Payroll NA NA NA NA NA NA NA Establishments 38 35 35 37 37 35 34 Marinas Employees 194 ds 171 173 146 135 139 Payroll 8,871 ds 7,774 8,114 7,022 6,920 7,090 Establishments 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 Marine cargo Employees NA NA ds NA NA NA NA handling Payroll NA NA ds NA NA NA NA Establishments 4 4 2 2 2 2 2 Navigational services to Employees ds ds ds ds ds ds ds shipping Payroll ds ds ds ds ds ds ds Establishments 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Port & harbor Employees NA NA NA NA NA NA NA operations Payroll NA NA NA NA NA NA NA Establishments 6 6 8 9 8 7 7 Ship & boat Employees ds ds ds ds ds ds ds building Payroll ds ds ds ds ds ds ds ds = these data are suppressed. NA = not applicable. The U.S. Commercial Fishing Location Quotient (CFLQ) is 1. A CFLQ greater than 1 indicates that more commercial fishing occurs in this state than the national average. A CFLQ less than 1 indicates that less commercial fishing occurs in this state than the national average. 1 2 3 88 Tables Rhode Island National Overview    North Pacific    Pacific    Western Pacific    New England   Mid-Atlantic   South Atlantic   Gulf of Mexico Rhode Island Commercial Fisheries 2014 Economic Impacts of the Rhode Island Seafood Industry (thousands of dollars) With Imports Without Imports Value #Jobs Sales Income #Jobs Sales Income Added Total Impacts 10,174 1,096,821 273,316 428,503 5,370 305,502 110,683 Commercial Harvesters 2,402 148,791 45,084 70,192 2,402 148,791 45,084 Seafood Processors 515 53,555 20,753 26,968 336 34,998 13,562 & Dealers Importers 2,348 645,992 103,532 196,927 Seafood Wholesalers 523 62,480 22,138 29,129 137 16,327 5,785 & Distributors Retail 4,386 186,004 81,808 105,287 2,495 105,386 46,253 Total Landings Revenue & Landings Revenue of Key Species/Species Groups (thousands of dollars) 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Total Revenue 91,408 99,365 72,282 66,085 61,657 62,739 75,929 81,136 86,371 Finfish & Other 24,672 29,680 24,839 22,792 23,421 23,040 24,934 28,671 29,519 Shellfish 66,736 69,685 47,443 43,293 38,236 39,698 50,995 52,464 56,852 Key Species All other flounders American lobster Atlantic herring Atlantic mackerel Goosefish Quahog clam Scups or porgies Sea scallop Squid Summer flounder 2012 85,232 52,837 32,396 2013 89,886 63,875 26,011 2014 91,379 57,158 34,221 615 2,754 8,729 162 3,242 666 6,335 690 25,996 2,824 663 2,706 13,839 5,497 2,873 903 6,309 944 11,689 2,409 1,367 2,156 28,330 714 2,818 818 7,346 1,646 12,609 2,193 1,857 2,425 16,505 539 2,892 768 6,932 842 24,936 2,055 2011 1.31 4.64 0.15 0.62 1.42 5.89 0.52 9.90 0.78 2.27 2012 1.54 4.48 0.16 0.51 1.34 5.72 0.62 9.73 1.09 2.88 2013 1.55 4.51 0.17 0.47 0.97 6.15 0.50 11.32 1.05 3.08 2014 1.45 4.86 0.14 0.57 1.03 6.67 0.59 12.22 0.71 3.55 1,144 2,772 4,504 2,385 3,225 556 2,151 310 26,417 1,473 1,027 2,840 9,528 9,057 2,841 511 3,619 356 26,452 1,794 593 12,404 1,423 1,886 2,973 3,293 2,833 2,156 12,590 5,534 2014 86,211 31,591 54,620 Total Landings & Landings of Key Species/Species Groups (thousands of pounds) 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Total Landings 97,565 113,025 75,271 72,027 84,041 77,738 78,747 Finfish & Other 47,820 60,867 40,940 34,570 46,549 42,595 42,250 Shellfish 49,745 52,158 34,331 37,458 37,492 35,143 36,498 1,871 2,293 7,537 4,242 3,209 610 3,932 1,357 23,718 1,516 1,455 11,264 1,260 3,301 3,022 2,849 2,640 2,342 15,249 4,502 59,568 2,696 11,788 2,304 309 2,990 5,122 4,100 10,286 17,715 7,295 1,850 3,752 23,150 10,143 3,864 385 3,643 3,283 39,617 2,123 2,171 12,976 631 882 3,590 3,273 2,324 2,170 17,687 4,485 7,612 2,124 9,732 4,907 339 2,725 5,033 3,666 18,639 13,208 6,751 1,315 4,344 11,605 8,075 4,143 642 3,424 1,612 22,135 2,925 3,585 12,151 982 1,182 3,540 4,010 2,767 8,963 15,339 4,346 - 1,024 12,119 2,174 2,804 3,844 5,169 3,904 9,191 12,744 6,937 All other flounders American lobster Atlantic herring Atlantic mackerel Goosefish Quahog clam Scups or porgies Sea scallop Squid Summer flounder 3,503 17,333 2,947 4,138 4,525 3,529 2,927 20,822 22,601 5,093 17,624 806 12,765 1,343 100 4,600 3,920 3,312 6,834 20,380 6,408 Key Species 1,734 23,009 1,075 2,888 4,549 3,438 2,319 13,268 16,973 5,866 Value Added 154,995 70,192 358 2,929 8,479 4,356 2,556 599 4,299 267 19,799 2,289 Average Annual Price of Key Species/Species Groups (dollars per pound) 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 All other flounders 1.32 1.89 1.92 1.90 1.42 1.66 American lobster 5.30 4.62 5.30 4.68 3.97 4.24 Atlantic herring 0.09 0.13 0.13 0.14 0.13 0.17 Atlantic mackerel 0.36 0.41 0.28 0.37 0.36 0.43 Goosefish 1.10 1.17 1.10 1.11 1.06 1.16 Quahog clam 5.35 9.16 6.57 5.88 5.58 5.50 Scups or porgies 0.68 0.80 0.70 1.08 0.73 0.66 Sea scallop 8.23 6.34 6.61 7.00 6.58 8.07 Squid 0.77 0.57 0.65 0.67 0.58 0.64 Summer flounder 2.01 2.40 2.87 3.04 2.51 2.42 90 Rhode Island Recreational Fisheries 2014 Economic Impacts of Rhode Island Recreational Fishing Expenditures (thousands of dollars) Trip Impacts by Fishing Mode Sales 140 173 80 4,046 4,439 14,507 17,470 7,990 381,388 421,355 For-Hire Private Boat Shore 2014 Angler Trip & Durable Goods Expenditures (thousands of dollars) Fishing Mode Trip Expenditures Equipment Non-Residents Residents Fishing Tackle For-Hire 7,716 1,385 Other Equipment Private Boat 7,296 10,902 Boat Expenses Shore 4,951 3,576 Vehicle Expenses Total 19,963 15,863 Second Home Expenses Total Durable Expenditures Total State Trip and Durable Goods Expenditures Income Value Added 6,835 7,334 3,402 181,672 199,243 8,873 10,846 5,014 276,195 300,928 Durable Goods Expenditures 91,396 28,325 227,529 22,302 966 370,518 406,344 Recreational Anglers by Residential Area (thousands of anglers)1 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Coastal 145 177 171 169 111 161 Non-Coastal NA NA NA NA NA NA Out-of-State 241 291 229 297 209 225 Total Anglers 386 468 400 466 320 386 2011 105 NA 190 295 2012 99 NA 169 268 2013 129 NA 255 384 2014 160 NA 304 464 Recreational Fishing Effort by Mode (thousands of angler trips) 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 For-Hire 54 53 74 67 56 Private 793 642 590 716 423 Shore 757 874 759 673 507 Total Trips 1,604 1,569 1,423 1,456 986 2011 39 536 539 1,114 2012 40 461 575 1,076 2013 48 587 595 1,230 2014 52 491 556 1,099 Harvest (H) & Release (R) of Key Species/Species Groups (thousands of fish)2 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 H 1 0 5 0 0 0 0 Atlantic bonito R 0 0 4 1 0 0 0 2012 0 2013 4 2014 1 0 5 6 12 2010 41 531 667 1,239 Atlantic cod H 1 4 1 2 4 2 4 16 0 R 3 2 0 1 7 12 14 1 0 5 Black seabass H 86 41 44 52 36 161 50 102 75 214 R 64 161 117 128 133 212 221 767 678 859 H 345 471 295 282 64 103 124 673 324 136 R 526 555 686 491 160 93 327 427 629 114 Porgies (scup) H 430 470 353 633 140 398 568 497 818 976 R 690 802 613 1,386 332 536 663 675 615 578 Striped bass H 110 76 102 51 71 70 89 62 219 103 R 634 835 678 417 399 183 215 247 826 163 Summer flounder H 165 264 176 204 72 118 162 103 127 185 R 280 1,129 612 848 383 230 724 381 527 417 Winter flounder H 0 0 1 1 4 2 0 0 0 0 R 0 0 3 1 1 1 0 2 0 1 Wrasses (tautog) H 161 81 125 103 86 197 20 104 128 68 R 319 198 267 187 188 187 138 214 249 122 Yellowfin tuna H 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 1 R 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bluefish 1 2 NA = not applicable because all Rhode Island residents are considered coastal county residents. In this table, ‘0’ = 0-999 thousand fish and ‘1’ = 1,000-1,499 thousand fish. 91 National Overview    North Pacific    Pacific    Western Pacific    New England   Mid-Atlantic   South Atlantic   Gulf of Mexico Total Durable Expenditures Total State Economic Impacts #Jobs Rhode Island Marine Economy National Overview    North Pacific    Pacific    Western Pacific    New England   Mid-Atlantic   South Atlantic   Gulf of Mexico Rhode Island’s State Economy (% of national total) 2005 2013 %Change #Establishments #Employees Annual Payroll ($ billions) 30,331 (0.4%) 28,026 (0.4%) -8.2 442,291 (0.4%) 408,489 (0.3%) -8.3 15.76 (0.4%) 17.78 (0.3%) 11.4 Employee Compensation ($ billions) Gross State Product ($ billions) 24.99 (0.4%) 29.48 (0.3%) 15.2 45.25 (0.3%) 53.30 (0.3%) 15.1 Seafood Sales & Processing - Non-Employer Firms (thousands of dollars)2 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 Firms 6 8 8 7 9 Seafood product prep. & packaging Receipts 2,024 1,662 2,291 1,376 1,045 Firms 16 24 23 19 16 Seafood sales, retail Receipts 2,215 3,266 3,536 2,748 2,821 Seafood Sales & Processing - Employer Establishments (thousands 2005 2006 2007 2008 Establishments 7 7 6 8 Seafood product Employees 270 231 196 270 prep. & packaging Payroll 5,549 6,137 6,876 6,354 Establishments 32 36 35 29 Seafood sales, Employees 206 188 224 226 wholesale Payroll 9,851 10,209 11,447 10,505 Establishments 31 28 27 23 Seafood sales, Employees 140 0 109 94 retail Payroll 2,447 0 2,207 2,027 Commercial Fishing Location Quotient1 3.7 3.2 -13.5 2010 6 907 17 2,769 2011 9 1,168 25 3,033 2012 10 1,441 20 2,536 2013 8 1,393 22 2,501 of dollars)2 2009 2010 7 5 275 193 5,821 6,096 34 32 202 204 9,534 9,815 24 26 127 113 2,398 2,309 2011 4 178 5,544 34 230 10,264 23 109 2,232 2012 3 0 0 32 278 13,064 24 111 2,388 2013 3 0 0 31 182 8,412 24 113 2,610 2012 1 ds ds 2 ds ds 1 ds ds 67 424 20,811 4 ds ds 7 ds 3,272 5 ds ds 37 717 32,070 2013 1 ds ds 1 ds ds 2 ds ds 71 466 24,214 4 ds ds 7 ds ds 2 ds ds 33 768 34,483 Transport, Support & Marine Operations - Employer Establishments (thousands of dollars)2,3 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Establishments 1 1 1 2 1 1 2 Coastal & Great Employees ds ds ds ds ds ds ds Lakes freight transportation Payroll ds ds ds ds ds ds ds Establishments 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 Deep sea freight Employees ds ds ds ds ds ds ds transportation Payroll ds ds ds ds ds ds ds Establishments 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 Deep sea passenger Employees NA NA ds ds ds ds ds transportation Payroll NA NA ds ds ds ds ds Establishments 66 63 68 73 70 72 71 Marinas Employees 408 457 463 476 459 428 460 Payroll 15,843 18,748 22,029 23,204 21,372 22,227 22,618 Establishments 1 2 2 5 5 5 5 Marine cargo Employees ds ds ds ds ds ds ds handling Payroll ds ds ds ds ds ds ds Establishments 8 7 7 8 8 8 8 Navigational services to Employees ds ds ds ds ds ds 107 shipping Payroll ds ds ds 5,904 3,728 3,955 4,002 Establishments 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 Port & harbor Employees ds ds ds ds ds ds ds operations Payroll ds ds ds ds ds ds ds Establishments 36 38 37 39 33 29 30 Ship & boat Employees ds 1,325 1,374 1,342 1,085 954 916 building Payroll ds 52,682 55,788 54,225 41,246 40,004 33,316 1 The U.S. Commercial Fishing Location Quotient (CFLQ) is 1. A CFLQ greater than 1 indicates that more commercial fishing occurs in this state than the national average. A CFLQ less than 1 indicates that less commercial fishing occurs in this state than the national average. 2 ds = these data are suppressed. 3 NA = not applicable. 92