GeneralJune 20, 2026 · 3:10 PM3 min read

    In 1992, Canada's cod moratorium put 30,000 Newfoundlanders out of work; 32 years later, crab and shrimp have replaced cod and doubled the catch's value

    On July 2, 1992, Canada’s federal government shut down the northern cod fishery off Newfoundland’s coast, the fish that had anchored the island’s economy and culture for nearly 500 years. It was a closure that came virtually overnight, and some 30,000 people lost their jobs in one fell swoop. Accord

    By Toi World Desk

    In 1992, Canada's cod moratorium put 30,000 Newfoundlanders out of work; 32 years later, crab and shrimp have replaced cod and doubled the catch's value

    On July 2, 1992, Canada’s federal government shut down the northern cod fishery off Newfoundland’s coast, the fish that had anchored the island’s economy and culture for nearly 500 years.

    It was a closure that came virtually overnight, and some 30,000 people lost their jobs in one fell swoop.

    According to Tyler D.

    Eddy, a fisheries scientist at Memorial University whose 2026 study, ‘The changing landscape of Newfoundland fisheries after the cod collapse,’ tracked Newfoundland's ports and catches through 2023, that one announcement reshaped the island's economy and its coastal towns for the next three decades.A fishery built on one fish for 500 yearsIn a way, the history of Newfoundland is the history of the cod fishery.

    Eddy’s research highlights this: thousands of little “outport” settlements sprang up around the island, precisely because cod swam close enough to shore that small boats could get out to it, connected mostly by sea.

    When the moratorium hit, it didn’t just take away a paycheck; it undermined the whole reason so many of those communities existed in the first place.

    Crab and shrimp filled the gap cod left behindFishers turned to what was still swimming in the area, and that turned out to be snow crab and northern shrimp.

    According to Alannah Wudrick and her colleagues at Memorial University, in their 2024 ecosystem study, Rapid ecosystem change after the cod collapse in Newfoundland & Labrador, shellfish became the dominant biomass in the region from the early 2000s to the mid-2010s as the fishery shifted away from cod.

    Researcher Charles Mather, who studied the shift in a 2013 paper in Applied Geography, described it as a total transformation of how the province made its living from the sea.The money held steady, the workforce didn'tThis is the part that makes this more than just a "fish replaced fish" story.

    You’d think an industry that lost its signature product would cut back everywhere.

    But Eddy discovered that the total dollar value of Newfoundland’s fishery remained fairly stable between 1998 and 2023, with shellfish comprising the largest share of that value throughout.

    Instead, everything else around it fell.

    During that same 25-year span, working fishing ports, vessels, and fishers all declined by over 70 percent.

    Total catch volume was down 25 percent, and the number of species caught at each port was down a quarter.

    Fewer harbors, fewer boats, fewer people, but about the same paycheck for the industry as a whole.

    That's consolidation, not recovery, and it quietly picked the coastal towns that kept their docks busy and the ones that drained.

    Cod is legal again, but it isn't really backCanada actually lifted its commercial moratorium on northern cod in 2024, allowing a limited catch for the first time in more than 30 years, a detail that Wudrick's team also notes.

    But the comeback is more tentative than it sounds.

    The small forage fish cod most depend on, capelin, was cut to about two-thirds of its biomass from the mid-1980s to the mid-2010s and kept declining thereafter, so a full rebound is unlikely anytime soon.

    The researchers also found that harp seals, a major predator of cod, seem to be further slowing recovery.Why this matters on the US side of the AtlanticThis is not only a Canadian story.

    In 2024, about 65 percent of its seafood exports, valued at about $890 million, were exported to the United States.

    That 32-year transition accounts for a large part of the crab legs and shrimp cocktail on American tables.

    It’s also a view of what can happen to any coastal economy that depends too heavily on one species: jobs can disappear overnight, money can shift elsewhere, and a place can be left with fewer docks, fewer boats, and fewer people calling themselves fishers than it did before.Catch the latest world news and top headlines.

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    Source: Times Of India · General
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