Salmon Catch, Renewed Demand Buoys Alaska Marine Lines’ 2021 Season

Alaska Marine Lines photo
Alaska Marine Lines photo.

Robust harvests of Alaska’s sockeye salmon, plus renewed restaurant demand and changes in consumer buying habits, have apparently added up to a very good 2021 season for Alaska Marine Lines, part of the Lynden Inc. companies.

The Bristol Bay sockeye salmon had a record 66.1 million catch, with a catch of some 40-plus million red salmon, according to AML seafood sales manager Tyler Maurer.

All Lynden companies stayed busy keeping up with the volume of fish this year, prompted by larger returns, restaurants reopening after pandemic closures and new consumer buying habits, he said.

Lynden Air Cargo annually flies fresh fish from Naknek, Emmonak, Cold Bay, Sand Point and Dillingham to Anchorage. Lynden Logistics then provides support for transloading to AML, Alaska West Express and Lynden Transport and ships seafood with other air carriers worldwide. LTI Inc. trucks provide surface delivery support in Seattle and transport throughout the continental U.S.

On average, AML moves 7,000 containers of fresh fish annually from Alaska fisheries to Seattle, but this year the company moved over 11,000 containers. AML was still working in mid-November to transport more frozen and canned product out of Alaska for a few weeks to come, Maurer said.

Equipment reliability is extremely important when moving a temperature-controlled, high-value commodity like fish, so reefer technicians take on an even more important role during fish seasons.

“With Copper River kings selling at $80 per pound to retailers in the Lower 48 states, to start the season, we must have everything in place and running well to deliver the fish in pristine condition,” Maurer said. “We are sometimes pushed to the limit in the summer months, but we all get the job done safely. It’s a Lynden-wide group effort, and we all lean on each other to get the job done, including our partners at Western Towboat, Bering Marine and Dunlap Towing.”