From the 1850s onwards, industrial fishing in Boulogne was organized around a few shipowning families. By 1868, more than half of all
drifters were owned by 4 fishing companies:
Vidor, Huret-Dupuis, and Ancel-Joly. These pioneers developed the industry considerably, drawing inspiration from the English model. In 1894, Bouclet and then Vidor acquired the first steam-powered herring boats. As a result, steam-powered herring boats were no longer produced from 1905 onwards. At the beginning of the 20th century, Boulogne was France's leading port in terms of tonnage landed.
Herring made its fortune, with over 30,000 tonnes landed in 1921 (equivalent to fifty million francs at the time). These herring were netted in the English Channel/North Sea from July to the end of January by Boulonnais drifters, and also fished by trawlers sent to the Small's region, south-west of
Ireland and west of the
Bristol Channel, from July to December. To supply its
salting and curing plants all year round, the Boulogne herring industry nevertheless had to import herring from abroad (mainly Norway) to meet its needs (particularly from August to February, with, for example, in 1924, 185 tons of fresh herring in ice and 8,575 tons of salted herring imported between January 1 and August 31, 1924, for Boulogne and
Fécamp). In Boulogne, as elsewhere in Europe, small-scale fishing from the late 19th century onwards, followed by
industrial fishing, had to cope with the depletion of certain fish stocks as a result of
overfishing, and probably later exacerbated by global warming and pollution. After record Norwegian herring catches (in 1919, an exceptional year, 4,861,556 hectoliters of herring were landed and sold in Norway, worth 78,731,889 kroner), at the request of the “Syndicat des Armateurs boulonnais”, experts were sent to study Norwegian fishing techniques, and the possibility of Boulonnais herring fishermen going to Norway to fish on the Viking Bank (with drift nets or tidal nets). Today, optimizing the value of catches, diversifying the use of wild resources and developing aquaculture are among the themes addressed by the Aquimer national competitiveness cluster. In 2008, 47,000 tonnes of fish were landed (-5.7% on 2007), including 37,309 tonnes landed at port (valued at around 83 million euros) and 10,075 tonnes processed at sea by three Euronor freezer trawlers. This decrease can be explained in part by the decommissioning of one of Euronor's six fresh fishing boats, by the protection of spawning stocks (
cod quotas) and by the “biological stoppages” of part of the fleet in summer and winter 2008. However, at the end of 2008, the European Fisheries Ministers granted a 30% increase in cod catches in the North Sea and Eastern Channel, where trawlers from Boulonnais are active, and fishermen are allowed to keep dead fish that are undersized or not authorized for fishing, but in exchange fishermen must limit their days at sea (from 180 to 150 days). In 2010, almost 45,000 tonnes of fish were counted, including 35,964 tonnes landed at the port and 8,934 tonnes frozen at sea (Euronor). In November 2008, the regional council announced the creation of a fishing mission with “an audit for the Port of Boulogne's fishing platform strategy for the next 10 to 15 years”. In 2009, a “Capécure-Bis” was set up on 14 ha (out of a total of 40) of the former
Comilog industrial wasteland (the plant was closed in December 2003). These installations have been delayed by 6 months due to the extra time needed to
clean up the Comilog site. Between 2000 and 2013, the fishing port will benefit from a €35 million modernization program. In both cases,
High Environmental Quality criteria are announced, as well as a
green corridor on the activity zone. In 2015, the Port of Boulogne remained France's leading fishing port (in terms of tonnage landed) ahead of
Lorient, despite a significant decline (50,965 tons in 2001, 43,952 tons in 2006, 36,096 tons in 2012 In 2020, the Port of Boulogne was France's leading fishing port, with a tonnage of 27,859 tonnes.
Quantity of fish caught in the port of Boulogne-sur-Mer (in tonnes) Colors= id:lightgrey value:gray(0.9) id:darkgrey value:gray(0.7) id:sfondo value:rgb(1,1,1) id:barra value:rgb(0.7,0.9,0.7) ImageSize = width:800 height:350 PlotArea = left:50 bottom:30 top:30 right:50 DateFormat = x.y Period =from:0 till:150000 TimeAxis = orientation:vertical AlignBars = justify ScaleMajor = gridcolor:darkgrey increment:10000 start:0 ScaleMinor = gridcolor:lightgrey increment:2000 start:0 BackgroundColors = canvas:sfondo BarData= bar:1960 text:1960 bar:1961 bar:1962 bar:1963 bar:1964 bar:1965 text:1965 bar:1966 bar:1967 bar:1968 bar:1969 bar:1970 text:1970 bar:1971 bar:1972 bar:1973 bar:1974 bar:1975 text:1975 bar:1976 bar:1977 bar:1978 bar:1979 bar:1980 text:1980 bar:1981 bar:1982 bar:1983 bar:1984 bar:1985 text:1985 bar:1986 bar:1987 bar:1988 bar:1989 bar:1990 text:1990 bar:1991 bar:1992 bar:1993 bar:1994 bar:1995 text:1995 bar:1996 bar:1997 bar:1998 bar:1999 bar:2000 text:2000 bar:2001 bar:2002 bar:2003 bar:2004 bar:2005 text:2005 bar:2006 bar:2007 bar:2008 bar:2009 bar:2010 text:2010 bar:2011 bar:2012 bar:2013 bar:2014 bar:2015 PlotData= color:barra width:10 align:left bar:1960 from:0 till: 121200 bar:1961 from:0 till: 117600 bar:1962 from:0 till: 110500 bar:1963 from:0 till: 118300 bar:1964 from:0 till: 138300 bar:1965 from:0 till: 142100 bar:1966 from:0 till: 146200 bar:1967 from:0 till: 126700 bar:1968 from:0 till: 120000 bar:1969 from:0 till: 126400 bar:1970 from:0 till: 130000 bar:1971 from:0 till: 132400 bar:1972 from:0 till: 137100 bar:1973 from:0 till: 142394 bar:1974 from:0 till: 122061 bar:1975 from:0 till: 115200 bar:1976 from:0 till: 121900 bar:1977 from:0 till: 109300 bar:1978 from:0 till: 111700 bar:1979 from:0 till: 111000 bar:1980 from:0 till: 114000 bar:1981 from:0 till: 113800 bar:1982 from:0 till: 115200 bar:1983 from:0 till: 110700 bar:1984 from:0 till: 96200 bar:1985 from:0 till: 85000 bar:1986 from:0 till: 82600 bar:1987 from:0 till: 80000 bar:1988 from:0 till: 75000 bar:1989 from:0 till: 72100 bar:1990 from:0 till: 67600 bar:1991 from:0 till: 63000 bar:1992 from:0 till: 60000 bar:1993 from:0 till: 68000 bar:1994 from:0 till: 64000 bar:1995 from:0 till: 62000 bar:1996 from:0 till: 56000 bar:1997 from:0 till: 56000 bar:1998 from:0 till: 52000 bar:1999 from:0 till: 50000 bar:2000 from:0 till: 55000 bar:2001 from:0 till: 50965 bar:2002 from:0 till: 50700 bar:2003 from:0 till: 50495 bar:2004 from:0 till: 42920 bar:2005 from:0 till: 35504 bar:2006 from:0 till: 43952 bar:2007 from:0 till: 40491 bar:2008 from:0 till: 37521 bar:2009 from:0 till: 36313 bar:2010 from:0 till: 35964 bar:2011 from:0 till: 35519 bar:2012 from:0 till: 36096 bar:2013 from:0 till: 33003 bar:2014 from:0 till: 34135 bar:2015 from:0 till: 35850 TextData= fontsize:S pos:(50,10) text: According to the
portboulognecalais website, in 2023 the fishing port of Boulogne-sur-Mer had 89.1 millions of euros in value terms (up 2%), it has even reached its highest level for 20 years for the second year running. Fish volumes are up by 8% compared with 2022, and have passed the symbolic 30,000 tonnes threshold (30,437 t), returning to their pre-Brexit level. The drop in catches of certain species such as sole, mackerel and whiting has been offset by ever greater volumes of cephalopods (squid and cuttlefish), red mullet and scallops, whose stocks are in excellent condition. The port of Boulogne-sur-Mer remains the leading French fishing port in terms of tonnage and value. == Cross-Channel port ==