The Netherlands leads European squid production with a significant share of 36.26 Euros, exhibiting a notable annual increase of 17.22% in 2023. Conversely, Spain occupies the second position with 24.96 Euros, despite a decline of 9.17% the same year. Portugal follows with 12.36 Euros, showing a healthy growth of 11.75%. Greece and Italy experienced declines at 1.54% and 19.67%, respectively. Smaller contributors include Croatia, Slovenia, Cyprus, Malta, Sweden, and Denmark, with varying growth rates. Over the last five years, the industry has seen diverse shifts with significant year-on-year variations and CAGR insights remaining pivotal to strategic outlooks.
Future trends to watch include potential shifts due to climate change affecting marine habitats, technological advancements in capture methods, changing regulatory environments, and increasing demand for sustainable seafood. These factors could lead to alterations in country shares and overall European squid production.
Top countries in Whole Fresh European Squid Production in Capture Fisheries Share by Country (Euros)
| # | 10 Countries | Percent | Last Year | YoY | 5-years CAGR | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1 Netherlands | 36.26 | 2023 | -13.45% | +17.22% | View data |
| 2 | 2 Spain | 24.96 | 2023 | -4.48% | -9.17% | View data |
| 3 | 3 Portugal | 12.36 | 2023 | -4.21% | +11.75% | View data |
| 4 | 4 Greece | 11.45 | 2023 | -1.5% | -1.54% | View data |
| 5 | 5 Italy | 11.12 | 2023 | -16.47% | -19.67% | View data |
| 6 | 6 Croatia | 1.69 | 2023 | -36.52% | +5.01% | View data |
| 7 | 7 Slovenia | 0.28 | 2023 | +0.77% | +3.58% | View data |
| 8 | 8 Cyprus | 0.25 | 2023 | +19.99% | +11.29% | View data |
| 9 | 9 Malta | 0.24 | 2021 | View data | ||
| 10 | 10 Sweden | 0.013 | 2023 | +144.8% | +33.27% | View data |