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BizAv: Smart BizSense for Clearwater

Smart BizSense for Clearwater

Written by Mike Reyno   
Several of Atlantic Canada’s major corporations have long understood the value of corporate aviation. 61-clearwaterAtlantic Canada is not the first region that most Canadians would think of as a centre of corporate aviation. But several of Atlantic Canada's major corporations have long understood the value of corporate aviation. Companies like Sobey Foods, which recently took delivery of a second Gulfstream 100, Irving Oil and french-fry king McCain Foods each operate two or more corporate aircraft. Clearwater Fine Foods Inc. is another Atlantic company that has realized the benefits of corporate aircraft when based in offthe- beaten-track Halifax. Few who live outside Atlantic Canada have heard of the seafood giant, but it's one of the region's fastest-growing companies. It also operates one of the newest corporate aircraft fleets, with a Raytheon King Air 350 and a Hawker 800XP.

Since Clearwater co-founder and president John Risley's humble beginnings in the seafood business 27 years ago when he peddled lobsters from the back of his pickup truck along the Bedford Highway outside Halifax, operations have spiralled upward for this Atlantic conglomerate. It is worth $510 million, with annual sales over $300 million worldwide. It is Canada's largest privately- owned fishery firm.The company has seven plants and five storage facilities throughout Atlantic Canada with other facilities in Louisville, Kentucky; Europe (London and Brussels); and Argentina. It has its own fleet of 25 fishing vessels, including two scallop boats in Argentina, and employs 2,000 people.