GRENADA-Grenada is hoping to avert a pending ban on fish exports to the United States.

ST. GEORGE’S, Grenada, CMC – The Grenadian government, on Wednesday, said it is now in a position to submit the additional information being requested by United States authorities as the country moves to avert a ban on the export of fish to the North American country by January next year. Marine Affairs Minister Lennox Andrews […] The post GRENADA-Grenada is hoping to avert a pending ban on fish exports to the United States. appeared first on Caribbean Times.

GRENADA-Grenada is hoping to avert a pending ban on fish exports to the United States.

ST. GEORGE’S, Grenada, CMC – The Grenadian government, on Wednesday, said it is now in a position to submit the additional information being requested by United States authorities as the country moves to avert a ban on the export of fish to the North American country by January next year.

Marine Affairs Minister Lennox Andrews told legislators during the debate to amend the Fisheries Act and establish regulations that will make the island compliant with the US Marine Mammal Protection Act. The government is hoping for a reversal of the US position.

“We are now in a position to submit the additional information for NOAA’s (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) reconsideration and reversal of this determination by January 1, 2026,” Andrews told the Lower House of Parliament.

In August this year, NOAA’s Fisheries, through a notice in the Federal Register, announced that Grenada was one of 12 countries that would be banned from exporting fish and fish products to the United States due to not having a comparability finding from NOAA Fisheries, which requires a country to prove its fishing regulations and practices are equivalent to those of the United States.

The announcement of the ban prompted the Grenadian government to establish a Task Force comprising top fisheries personnel and legal counsel to ensure that all relevant assessments, reviews, and recommendations are completed by November 21, with a view to averting the ban.

Andrews told Parliament that the Task Force members had completed their task, and that the presentation of the amended Bill to Parliament for legislative approval was part of the recommendations.

“The passing of this Bill today, Mr Speaker, is extremely primordial in our effort to avert… the decision coming to place early in the new year. The ministry would have done its work; we are at the point where there is a likelihood that the decision can be averted,” he said, while indicating that the recent shutdown of the US Federal government had affected the process because the government was unable to make direct contact with NOAA.

“I understand now, America is open for business and we are working with our Ambassador in Washington, Tarlie Francis, to have that direct contact with NOAA, so we can not just present in writing but present physically in person with NOAA, (but) all of these additional information that we have to avert the likelihood of that decision taking place,” said Andrews.

The legislation has since been approved without objection and will go before the Senate on Friday.

Grenada’s fisheries sector has varied revenue, with average exports valued at approximately US$3.02 million between 2018 and 2022. In 2021, exports were valued at US$4.5 million, and the sector accounts for 6,000 direct and indirect jobs.

The post GRENADA-Grenada is hoping to avert a pending ban on fish exports to the United States. appeared first on Caribbean Times.