Tenacious Belgium immigrant pioneered Canada’s mussel industry in the 1970s
CHARLOTTETOWN — When Joe Van Den Bremt first floated the idea of producing cultured mussels on P.E.I. in the 1970s, the local fishermen laughed at him.
“They were all telling me, ‘We use that stuff for fertilizer,'” he said in 2017. “‘Nobody is going to eat those dumb things.'”
Today, almost half of North America’s succulent supply of blue mussels comes from the Island, generating more than $45 million annually in export value — second only to the province’s lobster industry. Across Canada, about 80 per cent of the mussels sold in restaurants and grocery stores are grown in the Island’s tidal rivers.
Van Den Bremt, a Belgian immigrant who arrived in Canada in 1954, was remembered Friday as a tenacious, innovative man who was determined to give back to his adopted country. He died earlier this month at the age of 89.