Nathan Strout

Nathan Strout

Associate Editor

Nathan Strout is a Portland, Maine-based associate editor of SeafoodSource. Previously, Nathan covered the U.S. military’s space activities and emerging technologies at C4ISRNET and Defense News, where he won awards for his reporting on the U.S. Space Force’s missile warning capabilities. Nathan got his start in journalism writing about several communities in Midcoast Maine for a local daily paper, The Times Record.

Published on
May 17, 2023

NOAA Fisheries wants to improve its electronic monitoring of clam harvesting with artificial intelligence, and it hopes to begin collecting imagery to develop the technology this August.

The Northeast Fisheries Science Center is looking for a contractor to install video cameras on a commercial clamming vessel, the ESS Pursuit, develop a machine learning algorithm that can automatically process that video, and produce a large library of images

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Published on
May 16, 2023

An appeals court ruling in favor of Gulf of Mexico charter boats earlier this year could play a big role as the U.S. Supreme Court determines the limits of NOAA Fisheries’ rulemaking authority.

Earlier this month, the U.S. Supreme Court announced that it will take up a challenge to federal regulations brought by New Jersey fishermen, who sued the government to stop a 2020 New England Fishery Management Council (NEFMC) rule that would force

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Published on
May 15, 2023

Creative Salmon is using Innovasea’s BiomassPro technology to provide real-time biomass estimations for its salmon farming operations.

Tofino, British Columbia, Canada-based Creative Salmon farms organic king salmon around Vancouver Island, British Columbia. The selection follows a six-month pilot program, which showed Innovasea’s solution was 99.7 percent accurate when compared against actual harvest data.

“BiomassPro has

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Published on
May 12, 2023

A U.S. federal court has ordered Irvington, Alabama, U.S.A.-based Irvington Seafood to stop distributing seafood following more than a decade of sanitation violations.

Under the court’s order, the company is required to “destroy all raw ingredients and food products currently in their possession.”

Before restarting food processing operations, the Alabama-based company will have to notify the U.S. Food and Drug Administration

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Published on
May 11, 2023

The U.S. Department of Agriculture wants to purchase up to 470,000 pounds of catfish and 1.2 million pounds of Alaska pollock for use in domestic food distribution programs.

The Alaska pollock will be used for the USDA's National School Lunch Program. The department is looking for both frozen Alaska pollock fillets and fish sticks, with bids due 17 May. The USDA will announce the contract awards by midnight on 23 May. 

USDA did not specify

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Published on
May 11, 2023

Fishing groups and the U.S. state of Alaska are lashing out after a U.S. federal judge effectively shut down the king salmon troll fishery in Southeast Alaska in response to a lawsuit filed by the Wild Fish Conservancy (WFC).

In a lengthy statement, the Seafood Producers Cooperative expressed “disappointment and frustration” with the outcome.

“SPC and our fishermen will survive this debacle, as we have survived many others in

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Published on
May 9, 2023

The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) intends to purchase USD 119.5 million (EUR 109 million) worth of Alaskan sockeye salmon and Pacific groundfish for federal food assistance programs, according to Alaska’s congressional delegation.

“USDA’s purchase of Alaska seafood is great news for our fishing industry and all who depend on federal food assistance,” U.S. Senator Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) said in a statement.

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Published on
May 8, 2023

Aarhus, Denmark-based aquaculture feed manufacturer BioMar reported revenue of DKK 3.7 billion (USD 54 million, EUR 49.7 million) for the first quarter of 2023, a 21 percent year-over-year increase. 

“I am very satisfied with the overall performance of BioMar. Despite some challenging market conditions in both the salmon and the shrimp industry, we are continuing consolidating our position,” BioMar CEO Carlos Diaz said in a

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Published on
May 5, 2023

Around 30 percent of Americold’s 243 facilities were impacted by a cyberattack on the company’s IT systems in the last week of April, although the cold storage and transportation provider’s substantial inventory was not damaged by the incident.

“It is important to note that none of our safety procedures or structural capabilities within the impacted facilities, such as power and utilities, refrigeration systems, and blast

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Published on
May 4, 2023

Lawmakers in the U.S. state of Louisiana have asked the U.S. International Trade Commission to extend antidumping duties on imported warmwater shrimp, suggesting that a failure to do so would be devastating to domestic shrimp producers.

In letters sent separately to the commission, U.S. Senator Bill Cassidy and U.S. Representative Garret Graves, both Republicans, asked the government to continue imposing duties on shrimp imported from China,

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