Nova Scotia lobster industry surprised, elated by suspension of Chinese tariff
HALIFAX — Key players in Nova Scotia’s lucrative seafood industry are applauding Ottawa’s successful bid to persuade China to temporarily drop a painful 25 per cent tariff on Canadian lobster and crab.
Stewart Lamont, managing director of Tangier Lobster Company, said Friday the tariff is responsible for at least a 30 per cent decline in sales of live lobster to China since it was imposed in March.
“From an industry perspective, that additional tariff has been massively impactful in a negative way,” Lamont said in an interview. “Add the cost of freight and a (Chinese value-added tax) that brought prices up by a total of 41 per cent, it was too expensive for (Chinese) buyers.”
Tangier Lobster’s sales to three Chinese clients used to represent 10 per cent of the company’s business, but that figure dropped to two per cent during the past calendar year, said Lamont, who has been selling lobster to clients in Europe, the Middle East and Asia for the past 40 years.


