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Today in Canada > News > After weeks of strife, both sides come to deal on snow crab pricing schedule
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After weeks of strife, both sides come to deal on snow crab pricing schedule

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Last updated: 2026/04/16 at 5:09 PM
Press Room Published April 16, 2026
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After weeks of strife, both sides come to deal on snow crab pricing schedule
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The Fish, Food & Allied Workers union (FFAW) and Association of Seafood Producers (ASP) have agreed to a snow crab pricing schedule after a two-week long dispute.

Harvesters will be paid $6 per pound up to and including April 18. That price will be adjusted to $5.75 per pound starting April 19, and then will be set in relation to market quotes from the food market intelligence company Urner Barry.

This season’s minimum price for snow crab was originally set at $5.30 per pound by the Standing Fish Price Setting Panel, which is tasked with setting a price when the two sides can’t come to a deal. The union did not make a submission to the panel and the ASP’s offer was chosen.

Under the new deal, harvesters will be paid upfront rather than having to wait for a post-season settlement adjustment. 

Weekly prices will be posted to the FFAW website, according to a press release sent out Thursday. 

In that release, the FFAW called it “an uneasy agreement to resolve the current dispute and allow the snow crab fishery to move forward.”

The agreement comes just shy of a week after Newfoundland and Labrador’s Supreme Court granted an injunction against the FFAW over allegations it was stopping its members from fishing.

Separately, the ASP launched a lawsuit against two FFAW leaders over allegations they engaged in an “unlawful conspiracy” to prevent crab harvesters from fishing.

“ASP and FFAW are clear that threats and violence have no place in today’s fishery and respect each harvester’s individual choice to fish, and the choice of each processor and buyer’s decision to buy,” the ASP said in its Thursday press release.

Download our free CBC News app to sign up for push alerts for CBC Newfoundland and Labrador. Sign up for our daily headlines newsletter here. Click here to visit our landing page.

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