:
I call the meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting number 69 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Fisheries and Oceans.
This meeting, of course, is taking place in a hybrid format, pursuant to the House order of June 23, 2022.
We will begin today's meeting in public to hear witness testimony. Afterwards, we will switch in camera for the second hour.
As a reminder to all, please address your comments through the chair. Screenshots or taking photos of your screen is not permitted.
In accordance with the committee's routine motion concerning connection tests for witnesses, I am informing the committee that all witnesses have completed the required connection tests in advance of the meeting.
From 3:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m., we're resuming our study of foreign ownership. Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) and a motion adopted on January 20, 2022, the committee is resuming its study of foreign ownership and corporate concentration of fishing licences and quota.
I would like to welcome our panel of witnesses. Appearing as an individual, we have Mr. Christensen, professor; representing Aero Trading Co. Ltd., we have Brad Mirau, president and chief executive officer, by video conference; and representing Skipper Otto Community Supported Fishery, we have Ms. Strobel, co-founder and chief executive officer.
Thank you for taking the time to appear today. You will each have up to five minutes for your opening statement.
We'll start with Mr. Christensen, please.
:
Mr. Chair and members, thank you for the opportunity to address the committee.
I am a Canadian citizen born in Denmark, where I worked for a decade for the Danish DFO. I spent 10 years with an international research organization, followed by 20 years as a professor at UBC. I'm a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada specializing in ecosystem-based management, notably the combination of ecological, social and economic trade-offs that so often are your headache in FOPO.
I have witnessed the result of a flawed objective for fisheries, which is maximizing economic yield and that fisheries should be managed to maximize profit. On the west coast, DFO has adopted such a policy to make fisheries efficient, leading to easier-to-manage big-scale fleets, to the detriment of local communities. In parallel, management has moved towards individual vessel quotas, which are often made tradeable in the name of efficiency. B.C. is unusual in that there is an almost complete absence of ownership restrictions.
The B.C. halibut fishery has been called the poster child for successful management, but my former Ph.D. student Danielle Edwards documented how processors now control the quota market through leasing and how harvesters now own less than 15% of the quota.
The quota system has enabled investors and corporations to buy more quota, instead of harvesters building new boats and providing livelihood. The system leads to corporate concentration and vertical integration. The price is paid by new generations entering the fishery and by their communities. Many who fish have no choice but to lease quota from a processor, which ties them to selling to that processor at the price offered. Harvesters cannot earn from the fishery to reinvest and maintain their boats. Earnings do not offer a path to quota ownership, nor a path to boat ownership for a crew.
Despite clear socio-economic objectives for fisheries in Canada, there's an almost complete lack of consideration for socio-economic objectives in west coast fisheries. I blame DFO, full stop—not just for the mistakes of the 1990s, but even more for continuing down that road.
The move from owner-operator to corporate dominance has been devastating for fishing communities. Owner-operator fisheries provide livelihood not just for those on board, but for the service industry in coastal communities. It's been argued that seasonal income from fisheries is too low to provide livelihood, but such income is crucial for maintaining coastal communities, where people often have a portfolio of income and do not rely on high income from any one seasonal fishery.
Community-based fisheries serve as magnets for tourism, providing local seafood, jobs and livelihood. That is not considered with policies that make fisheries efficient. Value does not come from exporting raw products or products that can compete with low-cost import, but from value-added processing and marketing. Local value chains provide jobs and income. It really is value-added.
Rural coastal communities are dying throughout B.C. That notably includes first nations losing livelihood and traditional knowledge about fishing. We need to consider fisheries as strategic assets if our rural coastal communities are to survive.
What needs to be done is clear. FOPO pointed the way four years ago in the “West Coast Fisheries” report: Make the owner-operator principle, where only active, independent harvesters are allowed to own licences and quota, a requirement on the west coast, just like it is on the east coast.
It's time to right the ship.
Thank you.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair and members of the committee, for inviting my testimony today.
My name is Sonia Strobel. I bring a few different perspectives to this study and to the impacts of foreign ownership and corporate concentration of fishing licences and quotas, and I'll try to focus my remarks in areas that haven't been covered by other witnesses already.
The first perspective I bring is that of a fishing family. I married into the fisheries in B.C. over 20 years ago and have witnessed the same struggles that you've heard from other harvesters. We couldn't afford to buy the licences in our family, so now every year my husband leases, and he faces the same uncertainty as thousands of other harvesters who lease licences.
For many, leased licences come with conditions around whom they must sell to and for what price. They take on the lion's share of the risk setting up for the season, yet they have no agency over the market for their catch. Fishing is inherently uncertain but disproportionately so for small-scale, independent harvesters in B.C. Uncertainty around whether or not you'll even be able to fish is something that our friends and colleagues on the east coast inshore fleet never even have to think about. As you've heard from other witnesses, this is in no small part because of the extent of corporate concentration of licences designed to control both the access to the resource and the price.
Some will say that DFO's beneficial ownership survey will provide evidence that there are no monopolies in fishing in Canada, and the survey may indeed make it appear that way, but be careful what conclusions you draw, because the survey is studying the wrong thing. The reality is more nuanced than just who owns a licence or quota on paper. Corporations don't have to own all the quota to control it, and I can provide a general example of this if we have time during questions. Anyone working with the industry knows this but will be cautious about speaking publicly about it for fear of repercussions.
The point is that, in B.C., even many of the few remaining owner-operators aren't independent. They can't sell their catch to the highest bidder, and they have no agency over their enterprises.
My second perspective is as a seafood consumer. Before marrying into a fishing family, I rarely ate seafood, because it was next to impossible to get local seafood in my coastal community of Vancouver, even though I was watching the offload of some of the most abundant, well-managed seafood in some of the cleanest water in the world.
I later found out that, in Canada, we export about 90% of what we catch, and, at the same time, about 80% of the seafood Canadians consume is imported. The pandemic and subsequent supply chain shocks laid bare just how vulnerable our food system is. It's a simple fact that the average Canadian can scarcely access Canadian seafood, and the seafood they can buy often comes from fisheries with far worse environmental and human rights track records than Canadian seafood. Concentration of licences and quotas into fewer and fewer export-oriented hands is a big part of the problem.
Third, my perspective is as a small business owner. My husband and I started Skipper Otto Community Supported Fishery in 2008 to de-risk fishing for fishing families and to provide direct access to Canadian seafood for Canadians. Since then, we've grown from supplying the fish from one family—my father-in-law, Otto—to supplying the fish from 45 fishing families in B.C. and Nunavut and providing their catch directly to over 8,000 home cooks across the country, from Victoria to Ottawa.
There is significant, growing demand from both the supply side and the demand side of our business. Because of our lean, direct-to-consumer model, we pay fishing families more than they can get anywhere else. As a result, we have more demand from harvesters than we can meet and, because we provide the most fisher-direct, transparent food in Canada, there's huge demand from consumers across the country as well.
Ultimately, what this whole issue of foreign ownership and corporate consolidation comes down to is that the Government of Canada has privatized access to the commons. There's a good reason why we don't privatize, for example, our national parks. They're a common resource for all Canadians. I'm sure big companies could make a fine go of providing services in parks and charging admission, but we don't go for that, because it wouldn't equally benefit all Canadians.
Foreign ownership and corporate concentration of licences and quotas privatizes the commons. It takes away the power of the boots-on-the-deck fishing families, and it de-risks an inherently risky industry for the big players while placing the risk squarely on the shoulders of the little guy.
If we care about retaining the social, cultural and economic benefits of the fisheries in our indigenous, rural and coastal fishing communities, then the Government of Canada must tackle foreign ownership and corporate consolidation alongside a made-in-B.C. fleet separation and owner-operator policy.
Thank you for your time, Mr. Chair and members. I'll be pleased to answer questions.
:
Thank you for allowing me to speak today on foreign ownership and corporate concentration.
My name is Brad Mirau. I'm the president and CEO of Aero Trading, a fish-processing company in B.C. that was established in 1978. We have a plant in Vancouver and one on the north coast near Prince Rupert. I appreciate being able to speak on this, because we are a Canadian company that happens to be foreign-owned, and we also happen to own multiple fishing licences and quotas.
We operate primarily within the small and medium-sized fishing fleets. To give you some idea of the size of our company, we have dealings with as many as 300 independent Canadian fishermen in any given year. Over my 35-year career doing this, I have developed a level of expertise in licensing and quota transactions that has allowed me to help or advise individual fishermen and first nations organizations, as well as some of the industry advisory bodies.
I've seen the industry change immensely over these decades. I should point out that there are very few remaining processing facilities on the B.C. coast, and that many over the last three or four decades have ultimately failed or been consolidated into other existing companies. In Prince Rupert, for example, Aero Trading—we're in Port Edward, actually—is the only remaining full-fledged fish-processing facility that's left. Other people just operate off-loading facilities.
We own a variety of licences and quotas that I feel are integral to our being able to maintain the operation of our processing plants year-round, and we've made these necessary investments not just in licences, but in equipment. We've also always provided financial assistance to some of our fishermen in order for them to be able to buy licences or upgrade their vessels, as traditional banking arrangements are not always available to them.
The “licence bank” we have created, as it's called, or a “licence pool”, benefits all of our stakeholders, including fishermen, and we think it's a sustainable model, which we are very proud of. In fact, many of our retiring fishermen leave their licences in this pool for us to manage for the other fishermen who still fish for us.
At the plant we operate in the north, where most of our acquiring happens, we also off-load for competitors, many first nations fishermen and the first nations partners we have in the various communities.
I think over the last two or three decades of the industry, the decline of the salmon and herring fisheries sped up the consolidation of processing companies, which is why there is some corporate concentration in these two licence categories, especially herring and salmon. But I think there are some narratives—which I've heard—that also exist around our industry that all fisheries have excessive corporate concentration, and I do not believe this to be the case. I'm happy that studies like the beneficial licence ownership survey are at least starting to get some true aspect of who owns what.
I'm not going to take the position that there shouldn't be any changes to the status quo, but I would hope that while considering any change we use good data and evidence and meaningful consultation with all the affected parties, so that any changes won't continue to harm the various participant groups in the Pacific region.
The main thing I'd like to say is that the licensing system in B.C. has become so complicated and so interconnected—so much more complicated than most people think—that any changes will most certainly require lots of planning and will have significant impacts on many.
I don't profess to know what the threshold for corporate concentration is, but if you look at some of the licence categories, I don't believe there is more than 5% or 10% corporate concentration in a lot of these fisheries. The landscape of licence ownership is changing rapidly. Through PICFI, the first nations community is now becoming one of the larger licence owners in many licence categories. It's important to realize that a lot of these first nations groups are operating through normal, legal companies and have joint ventures with companies such as ours and individual fishermen, so any changes made to the licensing system would have impacts on all parties, including first nations fisheries.
I would be cautious about changes before we know all the impacts, and I would love to be a part of those discussions, because I think I have a lot of information to offer.
Thank you.
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It's uncomfortable to elaborate on repercussions that harvesters face, that our harvesters, the 45 families that fish for Skipper Otto, have experienced.
The industry is very much controlled by some big companies that control a lot of quota, licences, off-load facilities, ice plants and things of this nature. Those kinds of services can be declined to harvesters. Even if they are technically independent owner-operators, they aren't necessarily operating in an independent way. I can give you an example if you'd like to hear how quota works in terms of independents.
I'll give you a very, very common example. Fishing families may have inherited some quota from their parents, for example 5,000 pounds of quota. That's not enough quota to make a living for the year, so they have to lease some additional quota from somewhere else in order to make a living for the year. They will usually go to a company that owns quota, a company that they need to lease from. The company will lease it to them under the condition that they sell back their fish, that 10,000 pounds, for example, at the price that the company sets, but they must also sell the 5,000 pounds of quota that they own to that company in order to get that additional 10,000 pounds.
This is why I say that the beneficial ownership survey might provide some misleading evidence, because many of the independent families that do own quota aren't operating in an independent way. It's really just smart business. I'm not finger-pointing at businesses that do this. They are operating legally within the framework that's been set up by the government. Naturally, the smartest business move for them in that framework would be to own the minimum amount of quota that they need to own in order to control the rest. That's what we're experiencing, and the survey won't demonstrate that.
Thank you to our witnesses for being here.
Ms. Strobel, on vertical integration, you can understand that, if you're putting a lot of money into a processing facility, you obviously want to have the material coming in that you can process. If that's not really such a bad notion, is the issue or the question then the sharing of the wealth among the harvester, the processor, and the wholesaler/retailer? Is that really what's out of whack? Do we really need to put the effort into unscrambling the egg, to use that analogy, or would it be a lot simpler to prescribe what percentage of the total value each person gets as a share?
Thank you to the witnesses. It's always very useful to hear from them.
My first question is for Ms. Strobel.
Earlier, you shed new light on the issue by talking about the reality on the ground, which is more complicated than just who owns permits or quotas on paper, and that companies don't have to own all the quotas to control the industry; anyone who works in it knows that. You said that if you had the opportunity, you would provide clarification.
I'm giving you that opportunity now.
Yes, the example I provided around quota ownership was the example I wanted to bring here. Again, if a family owns some quota, it isn't necessarily enough for them to make a living, so they're often scrambling to lease additional quota to make a living for that year. That's often on the condition that they sell the fish from their own quota to the same company for whatever price they sell.
This has happened to us at Skipper Otto quite often, where someone will approach us and say, “I have quota. I would like to sell my fish to you, but I can't because you don't own quota that you can lease me to make up the rest of my year, and when I lease it from another company, I have to sell my quota to that company at their price.” It takes away that independence from the fishing family.
That's one common example I wanted to share.
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It feels very depressing, doesn't it? It feels very discouraging. I agree. I see fishing families like mine disappearing.
My son Oliver is here today watching as well. He wants to stay fishing, and it's very difficult for him to stay in the industry. We see that all up and down the coast. It's very hard for young people to get into fishing, to stay in their communities. It is very discouraging. We see a lot of harvesters becoming labourers. Harvesters are drawn to fishing because we are entrepreneurs, because we like to set up our operations, do things right, do things our way.
I see people nodding. Those who come from coastal communities understand that, but when we lose control of access to the resource and lose the ability to fight for the best price, then we are no longer entrepreneurs. We are merely labourers. We're losing a way of life in our fishing communities because of this.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I'm used to being on the agriculture committee, and I am going to try my best not to feel like a fish out of water here at the fisheries committee.
Voices: Oh, oh!
Mr. Alistair MacGregor: I am proud to call Vancouver Island home. It's a beautiful coastline, and I am here filling in for my lovely colleague, .
Ms. Strobel, I appreciated that you outlined that example in your opening remarks and in subsequent questions. You did state in your opening comments that, like many fishing families, you can't afford to purchase the licences and, like many other families, unfortunately have to lease. You gave the example of how a family may own 5,000 pounds through quota, which is not enough to support them through the year, and they have to lease an additional 5,000 pounds. Through that system, corporations can exert control over both licences and saying that they're going to buy you out at x amount.
Can you give us a sense of what the earnings differential is? Has that been quantified for what fishing families are missing out on through the leasing system versus if they had enough money to actually afford enough quota to support themselves through the year?
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I don't have quantifiable numbers. I wish I did. I wish I could have it on a chart that I could easily show. I can say that for the fishing families I know who persist in the fishery through multiple generations and who are able to make a living from fishing and to do well and put their kids through university and things like that, they own their quota.
When we look at the example of 75% or more of the landed value going to the quota owner, 25% is coming back to the harvesting family. Out of that, they have to pay for the boat and the licence, the fuel, their operations and their crew. We're hearing from harvesters who simply don't fish. Maybe they have a quota in their family and they just don't fish it because it would be money-losing, as Villy just explained.
The difference is stark between families that own quota and those that don't. This is the kind of study that I'm disappointed to find DFO not putting efforts into understanding. Again, this is why I say that the beneficial ownership survey is barking up the wrong tree. We're not getting to the core of the question, because we're not asking the right question.
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They vary. Some of our harvesters lease quota from their nation, so the nation will have an agreement with them about what percentage of the catch goes to them or what dollar amount. My husband leased from a family friend. They just negotiated between them because the family friend still owned the licence.
There are many different versions, but it is very common that when.... Again, this is why fleet separation is so important, because when the processor owns the licence, of course they're controlling the access to the resource and they're controlling the price that's being set. There is a conflict there.
When you're leasing it from a band that isn't buying the fish back or you're leasing from another family that isn't trying to buy the fish, they're not setting the price of the fish and you still have the independence to sell that fish to whoever the highest bidder may be for you as a harvester.
When your quota comes from the company that owns it and you must sell back to them at that price, to me that's a conflict, and that's the source of a lot of the problem for many fishing families.
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Yes. Fisheries for Communities is a network of harvesters, researchers, academics and NGOs—small businesses as well—that are advocating for a policy reform in the Pacific region that would ensure more of the value of the fishery stays in the hands of coastal communities.
I'm very proud of that network. This is the third time that we've had a gathering and have brought in folks from around Canada but also from around the world, from other jurisdictions. They've come and told us how owner-operator policy and fleet separation exist in Alaska or in Europe, for example, in those parts of the world.
I was disappointed that we didn't have a lot of attendance from DFO, although we did have attendance from members of this committee. I was very proud to see that MPs attended the full two-day conference, listened and provided feedback. We didn't have feedback from DFO itself. I was hoping that they would be there to listen to more of that, because we worked so hard to bring voices from around the world, to bring solutions and to bring different ideas.
Yes, I did mention that for the shrimp trawl fishery in B.C., there is a very low, arbitrary bycatch level. Because of that low bycatch level, there's also a requirement of 100% observers in these fisheries. Only the big boats can afford that. This is an impediment where you have a policy that favours the large-scale fisheries at the cost of the small-scale fisheries.
To illustrate how arbitrary that level is, I mentioned that the bycatch level is less than 0.01% of the eulachon stock. The DFO shrimp survey has, in 12 of the last 20 years, caught more than what the entire industry is allowed to catch. Four tonnes was the bycatch, and they caught up to 15 tonnes, so this level is without reason, without any scientific background.
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Sure. I said before that fishing is inherently risky. We export most of our seafood in Canada, so we are at the mercy of global markets, of currency exchange rates, of the wild ecosystem in terms of what's provided. So it is risky.
The current system is designed so that those who have deeper pockets are de-risked more than those who are less advantaged. I think that's the fault of the policy. It's not the fault of those with deeper pockets. They're operating legally within the framework that's been set up by this government, but the government has established a framework that benefits those who have deeper pockets.
I think we need to look very hard at the social, economic and cultural outcomes that we desire from the fishery and then make changes to share that risk. This is why the 2019 report was so aptly named “Sharing Risks and Benefits”.
I agree with Mr. Christensen that if we implemented those 20 recommendations, we would be so much farther along. It kind of boggles the mind that we're here still having the same conversation five years later.
Thank you to all three witnesses for appearing. I'm sorry that I was late arriving from the House of Commons and missed Dr. Christensen's speech, but I'm catching up on the notes in between things.
Dr. Christensen, maybe I'll start with you. Maybe you can help to clarify. Forgive me if there is some repetition.
You discussed DFO's over-concentration on conservation, yet at the same time you point out that the DFO legacy, I guess, is that of going for more efficiency and therefore more corporate control. How do those two reconcile? To me, they don't seem quite compatible.
What makes us successful, and what I am the most proud of with our licence ownership, is that I am not doing it for a direct rate of return or to control my fishermen. I help my fishermen buy licences, and what I get out of it in return is a very loyal fleet, loyal staff and loyal customers.
I don't have fishing agreements with people. I don't have any turnover of fishermen—hardly at all. I have long-term fishermen, long-term staff and long-term customers. It's very simple, actually. If you treat people fairly, they will treat you fairly back and that's the long-term success of my company.
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My priority would be fleet separation. If this committee would recommend to the government and to the to implement a fleet separation and owner-operator provision in British Columbia, I think this would be a very important step toward stemming the tide of the disappearance of harvesters and the loss of money in our coastal communities.
To me, it's such a simple example on the east coast, in the inshore fleet. I know you will hear testimony next week from Richard Williams, who will provide a very compelling comparative analysis between the financial benefits on the east coast versus the west coast.
I simply don't understand why we would not be protecting harvesters in British Columbia in the same way that we protect them on the east coast. I think this is very important. There are lots of other things that we can and must address, but I think we must start here if we're going to have anything left of the small-scale fleet in B.C.
:
Thank you very much, Chair.
Dr. Christensen, your briefing notes say, “The move from owner-operator to corporate dominance has been devastating for rural fishing communities.... Communities matter. Rural coastal communities are dying throughout BC, and that notably includes First Nation communities losing livelihood and their traditional knowledge about fishing.”
My riding of Cowichan—Malahat—Langford has both the southwest coast and the east coast of Vancouver Island. That kind of statement resonates with me, because I know exactly the types of small communities you're talking about.
You yourself grew up in a fishing community. In the final minute and a half that I have, can you talk a bit about what it's like when the local community itself is employed in the fishery and it receives the profit? How are the livelihoods of the community supported?
:
Thank you, Mr. MacGregor. We're caught up against time to shut down the first hour of testimony.
I want to say a big thank you, of course, to the witnesses—Mr. Christensen, Mr. Mirau and Ms. Strobel—for sharing their knowledge with us here today. Hopefully it will play a big part in our final report when we get to actually doing it.
We're going to suspend for a few minutes while we go in camera.
Again, I'd like to thank the witnesses for coming and for sharing their thoughts.
[Proceedings continue in camera]