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ISLAMORADA — Down here in the so-called "Sportfishing
Capital of the World," there's a saying among anglers: Even during a
depression, a man has money for beer and fishing. Rising fuel costs and
general economic malaise, however, are putting that mantra to the test in
the Florida Keys and elsewhere where charter boat fishing brings in
millions of dollars. Across the country, boat captains are feeling the
pinch in recreational and commercial fishing. As of Tuesday, the
average cost for a gallon of diesel was near $4.80, according to AAA.
That's up from an average of about $2.90 a gallon a year ago. That means
boat captains are having to raise prices or add hefty fuel surcharges to
fees that before this season were already around $800 to $1,500 for a full
day. Some in the charter fishing industry estimate that business is off
anywhere from 20 to 90 percent because customers just can't afford the
added costs. "Some guys are just sitting on the docks waiting for business
and it ain't happening," said Steve Leopold, president of the Islamorada
Charter Boat Association. "There's people who come down and don't even ask
the price of my charters. Then there's people who ... say, 'Wow, can you
cut me a break?' I say, 'If you bring your own fuel.'" On a recent sunny
afternoon at Whale Harbor Marina in the Florida Keys, Chris Adams, 41, had
just returned from a half-day charter trip. "We probably would have spent
the whole day out but it would have been $400 more," Adams said. His
half-day trip this year cost $800, about what a full day on the water cost
last year. There's less money to spend on vacation, Adams said, when you
also factor in how much more it cost him just fill his own gas tank for
the drive. Adams has driven down from Connecticut for the past three
years, a round trip he said would cost him about $600 more this year than
it did last year. Pensacola Charter Boat Association President Paul Redman
said even the cost of bait has gone up because of higher fuel costs.
Redman said he charged customers $1,200 for a recent six-hour trip on the
water but $500 for fuel, $100 for bait and tackle, and $100 for his
deckhand meant his profit was a mere $300. Five years ago, it would have
topped $800. "It's just about not worth doing it anymore," Redman said.
The charter fishing fleet generated more than $1.1 billion in revenues
nationwide, including some related sales, in 2000, the latest figures
available, according to the National Marine Fisheries Service. Commercial
and charter fishing industry representatives from around the country plan
to meet with members of Congress on Wednesday in Washington, seeking some
kind of financial relief to help offset losses. Some regions are suffering
from a one-two punch of higher fuel prices and the closure or shortening
of seasons for popular fish species, said Bob Zales, president of the
National Association of Charter Boat Operators. In the Florida Panhandle
along the Gulf of Mexico, anglers come from across the country to fish for
red snapper. But combined federal and state limits have reduced the catch
allowed per charter boat and shortened the season. Zales said he estimates
that up to half the entire Gulf charter fishing fleet from Texas to
Florida could be out of business by December. On the West Coast, where the
federal government has closed all sport and commercial salmon fishing off
California and most of Oregon due to a population collapse, the result has
been "absolutely devastating," said Captain William Smith, who runs the
40-foot Riptide out of Half Moon Bay, Calif., just south of San Francisco.
Coupled with rising fuel costs, "I'm stupid to even stay in the business,"
Smith said. "But even if I was to try to sell my boat, nobody's buying.
"Profits?" he quipped. "I'm in the hole." Smith has diversified his
business, adding trips to scatter cremation ashes and for whale watching,
and has even had to pick up work as a handyman. The nation's commercial
fishing fleet is also taking a hit as many fisherman can't bring in enough
added catch to keep profits ahead of fuel costs, said Sean McKeon,
president of the North Carolina Fisheries Association. The commercial
fishing industry's catch was worth about $40 billion in 2006. McKeon said
that while Americans may not see less fish in their grocery stores, they
could begin seeing more imports, not to mention jobs lost in the industry
and the resulting economic impacts to communities. Adding to the problem
is that many boats in the commercial and charter sectors have been on the
water for decades and are not fuel efficient. A typical twin-engine
charter fishing boat uses about 10 gallons of diesel per hour. A pair of
newer, more fuel-efficient engines can cost more than $100,000. In the
commercial industry, trawlers, like shrimp boats that drag nets, typically
burn the most fuel. Captain Louis Stephenson, who operates an 85-foot
shrimp boat out of Galveston, Texas, said the average trawler burns up to
25 gallons of diesel an hour. Stephenson recently reduced his fuel
consumption by modifying his trawling device to produce less drag. He said
he now burns about 16 gallons an hour. Still, with fuel prices so high,
"My boat's tied up and it's not going anywhere this year," he said. "I
can't even break even so there's no sense in going out." The cost to
upgrade commercial boats with more fuel-efficient engines far exceeds what
the industry could make given the glut of imported shrimp and higher
diesel prices, Stephenson said. Charles Adams, a marine economics
specialist with the University of Florida, said that since early this
year, profits in the shrimp industry have dropped as much as 50 percent.
"It's gotten to the point now where many of the boats simply can't afford
to fuel up," he said. Associated Press writer Kevin Maurer in Carolina
Beach, N.C., contributed to this report. |
|
Economic Impacts in 2008 |
| |
2007 |
2008 |
Percent change
|
|
Diesel |
$ 3.19 |
$ 4.81 |
$1.62 or 50% increase |
|
Gasoline |
$2.10 (regular) |
$ 4.01 (regular) |
$1.91 or 98% increase |
|
TCW-3 Oil |
$19.25 |
$32.50 |
$13.25 or 68% increase |
|
Jack
Mackerel |
$ 0.99 |
$1.69 |
$0.70 or 70% increase |
|
Purina 45 Chum |
$19.99 |
$26.85 |
$6.85 or 34% increase |
|
Owner Hooks |
$ 22.00 (pack of
22) |
$30.00 (pack of 22) |
$8.00 or 36% increase |
|
Lead Weights |
$0.49 (pack of 5) |
$0.99 (pack of 5) |
$0.50 or 50% increase |
|
Fluorocarbon |
$13.99 |
$22.69 |
$8.70 or 62% increase |
|
Live Shrimp |
$2.50 dozen |
$4.25 dozen |
$2.00 or 80% increase |
|
ICE |
$0.99 |
$1.49 |
$0.51 or 51% increase |
|
Bottled
Water |
$3.99 |
$4.99 |
$1.00 or 25% increase |
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