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    Customs & Trade

    Meet Gulf shrimpers rooting on Trump's tariffs in Texas fishing town

    April 11, 2025

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    Palacios (US), Apr 11 (AP) While American consumers and markets wonder and worry about President Donald Trump's on-again, off-again tariffs, there's one group cheering him as they hope he'll prop up their sinking business: Gulf coast shrimpers.

    American shrimpers have been hammered in recent years by cheap imports flooding the US market and restaurants, driving down prices to the point that profits are razor thin or shrimpers are losing money and struggling to stay afloat.

    Tariffs, they hope, could level the playing field and help their businesses not just survive but thrive.

    “It's been tough the last several years that we've tried to fight through this," said Reed Bowers, owner of Bowers Shrimp Farm in Palacios, Texas. Tough times meant difficult choices for many. "Cutting people off, laying people off, or reduce hours or reduce wages ... whatever we can do to survive." Foreign competition Since 2021, the price of imported shrimp has dropped by more than USD 1.5 billion, according to the Southern Shrimpers Alliance trade association, causing the US shrimp industry to lose nearly 50 per cent of its market value.

    The shrimpers alliance complains that the overseas industry has benefitted from billions of dollars invested in shrimp aquaculture, cheap or even forced labour, use of antibiotics banned in the US, and few or no environment regulations.

    More than 90 per cent of shrimp consumed in the US is imported, according to the alliance.

    “I'm not a believer in free trade. I'm a believer fair trade,” Bowers said. "So if you're gonna sell into the United States, I think it's very important to get the same rules and regulations that I have to have as a farmer here in the United States.” Craig Wallis, owner of W and W Dock and Ice, has been in the business since 1975 and noted that back then shrimpers would run their trawlers 12 months a year.

    Not anymore. That's no longer affordable as Gulf shrimpers compete with cheaper product coming in from South America, China and India.

    Wallis says he's only able to run his shrimp boats about half the year, yet “the bills keep coming every month”.

    "We don't get any subsidies here. We don't need any help from the government. What we get for our product is what we have to make it on,” he said.

    Wallis, who noted he voted for Trump, has watched the back-and-forth on tariffs in recent weeks.

    “I don't know where the tariffs are going to be settled at," he said, “but it's definitely going to help." The rising costs of tariffs But Trump's tariffs will also force shrimpers to balance the higher costs of equipment, such as trawl cables, webbing, chains and shackles. Some of those items have recently been increasing in price, Wallis said.

    "We got be careful that there's a good balance,” he said.

    If the American shrimping industry collapses, Wallis sees a future where foreign trawlers are operating in the Gulf of Mexico, which Trump renamed the “Gulf of America”.

    “I'm hanging on to have something when I retire,” said Wallis, who is 72. “If it keeps going like it is, it's taken away from my retirement that I've worked for all my life.” Buying local Phan Tran's family used to be shrimpers but quit the boats around 25 years ago to open Tran's Family Restaurant, a place they literally built themselves.

    “It was just my dad, me and one welder,” Tran said.

    Tran said he doesn't want to serve imported shrimp to his customers. He doesn't know what shortcuts foreign shrimper firms take.

    “The taste, the size, you could tell the texture of the shrimp, everything. ... Domestic shrimp versus imported shrimp, you could tell the difference,” Tran said, adding he'll be buying straight from the day's catch at the dock, “as long as we have the restaurant business”.

    Tariffs will help keep the market fair for local shrimpers, Tran said.

    “We used to have a sign on our window here that says, friends don't let friends eat imported shrimp,'" Tran said. “And a few people got a little offended by it, so we had to take it off. (But) that's a true statement that we stand by here.” Bowers, the shrimp farm owner, hopes seafood tariffs have a positive ripple effect across the industry for American producers.

    “I think the price of imported seafood is gonna come up," he said. “And as that price comes up, it'll make our seafood, our shrimp, more affordable for everybody else.” (AP) PY PY

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