It is a small hatchery in Villa Clara, with a production of only 816 kilograms for export.

14ymedio, Madrid, April 16, 2025 / In the midst of the unprecedented crisis gripping the country, any minimal achievement is cause for celebration in the state-run press. One example is the “trial” being conducted by the state-owned company Cahamar in Quemado de Güines, Villa Clara, with Vietnamese assistance, to produce lobster for export, a project publicized this week by local media.
A year and a half after the project started, the head of fishing operations at this basic economic unit, Rufino Rodríguez Sarduy, is pleased with the results achieved: “To date we have a survival rate of zero mortality, that is to say, our lobster is in very good vitality, one hundred percent.”
So far, they have sold, “in three phases,” a total of 816 kilograms of lobster for export, “with an average weight of 573 grams.” These numbers are laughable, considering the 136 tons of lobster the island harvested in 2024 and that the average expected weight for a Cuban lobster typically exceeds 700 grams. This is even more striking when compared to the 1980s, when the annual average was 11,565 tons. In the 1990s, the catch dropped to an average of 9,327 tons, and between 2000 and 2007 it fell to 6,262 tons annually. Since then, it has continued to decline.
Cahamar authorities hope to “continue working with partners in Vietnam” and increase breeding capacity by 20 cages.
Cahamar authorities, however, hope to “continue working with our partners in Vietnam” and increase breeding capacity by 20 cages, highlighting the importance of the sector to the national economy.
When the official press reported on the progress of this agreement, exactly one year ago, it referred to it as an “experimental project for lobster farming in floating cages,” with Vietnamese “technical advice” and the objective of “strengthening food security” and “generating exports.”
So, after six months, they had 1,500 developing specimens, distributed among six cages, gaining 120 grams per month, according to Rodríguez Sarduy himself at the time. If these figures were accurate, those lobsters would now weigh more than a kilogram, not nearly half that amount, as the official recently stated on provincial radio.
The trial, in any case, is part of the third phase of the specific agreement signed between Havana and Hanoi called Supporting Cuba in Aquaculture Phase, which has existed since 2009 and one of whose purposes is precisely the development of farms of the main cultivation species, not only lobster but also shrimp.
This expertise is sorely needed in the seafood sector, whose production has collapsed in recent years.
The arrival of experts from Vietnam—one of the island’s main benefactors —has yielded positive results in other production sectors, notably rice. The Vietnamese company Agri VMA was the first foreign company to obtain a land lease, specifically for 1,000 hectares in Palacios (Pinar del Río), with the intention of expanding to 5,000 hectares within three years. On this land, they are cultivating a much more productive rice variety than their Cuban counterparts, with yields exceeding 7.2 tons per hectare, compared to the 2 or 2.5 tons per hectare achieved by producers on the island .
This expertise is sorely needed in the seafood sector, whose production has plummeted in recent years . Shrimp production, which reached 6,900 tons in 2019, fell to just 1,100 tons in 2024, an 84% decrease. As for lobster, tail production dropped by 45% in five years (from 136 to 248.6 tons). The 2025 figures, which have not yet been released, are not expected to be any better.
The fire that ravaged the Industrial Fishing Company in La Coloma, Pinar del Río, last October foreshadows this, given that the plant is responsible for 45% of Cuba’s lobster catch and 80% of its bonito, both high-value products on the national market (in dollars) and the international market. Preliminary estimates from authorities indicated that 110 million pesos —more than $200,000 at today’s informal exchange rate—would be needed to repair the damage, “a good portion of which would be in foreign currency.”
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