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Growing the Tongan Fisheries Sector.

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Title: Growing the Tongan Fisheries Sector.


1
Growing the Tongan Fisheries Sector.
  • Marc Wilson
  • Tonga Fisheries Project
  • An Australian Government funded Project

2
Fisheries in Tonga
  • Fisheries is important to the well-being of
    Tongans.
  • Is a primary source of food security and cash
    generation, particularly for remote island
    communities.
  • Makes a significant contribution to economic
    activity through its contribution to foreign
    earnings, supporting local infrastructure and
    service sectors, and in the domestic food retail
    sector.

3
Fisheries in Tonga
  • Can be broadly classified as either inshore or
    offshore.
  • Inshore fisheries can be thought of as being
    either reef or lagoon associated and are mostly
    exploited at artisanal and subsistence levels.
    But includes Aquarium Fish, Seaweed and Beeche de
    mer fisheries
  • by most reckoning are generally fully to
    overexploited.
  • Offshore fisheries can be further divided into
    pelagic (oceanic) - Tuna and demersal (bottom
    associated) fisheries DW Line Fishery.

4
This Presentation
  • This paper will attempt to present strategies
    that could be used to grow the sector and in so
    doing reflect on the success of otherwise of
    Tongas fisheries bureaucracy.
  • As the conference is focused on commercial
    fisheries the paper will not consider the small
    scale fisheries of Tonga.

5
How much do Tongas Commercial Fisheries Produce?
6
Are Tongas Commercial Fisheries of any
Importance?
7
Fisheries Management and Development in Tonga
  • Competent fisheries management requires several
    functions to be undertaken with efficiency and
    effectiveness.
  • Core to these is Monitoring, Control and
    Surveillance of fisheries.
  • Monitoring requires that production data and the
    effort used is accurately collected, collated and
    analyzed in a timely manner.
  • Control requires that fisheries are operated
    under clear regulations and or management plans
    and that these are enforced so as to ensure
    compliance.
  • Surveillance requires that activities associated
    with harvesting are kept under observations to
    facilitate Monitoring and Control.

8
Conducive Fisheries Business Environment
  • Why do we need this and what is actually
    required?
  • The private sector is seen as the driver of
    economic activity and if this activity is slowed
    or impeded then the economy likewise slows and
    doesnt develop.
  • The success of such an approach is evident in
    Samoa where over the past decade that Government
    and Public Service have adopted a strategy
    focused on providing a conducive environment for
    business.
  • There is also the very important distinction that
    such an approach be ongoing and in support of
    existing businesses not just the encouragement of
    new entrants.

9
Doing business in Tonga
  • Presents a number of challenges that relate
    specifically to its geographic location,
    geological structure, demography, culture and
    governance.
  • Mostly disadvantageous and add cost of doing
    business when compared to some industrialized and
    neighbouring nation states.
  • Conversely they may also provide a few
    comparative and or absolute advantages to Tonga.
  • Tonga needs to minimize the disadvantages and
    maximize its involvement in areas of absolute or
    comparative advantage such as Fisheries!

10
Need to establish Business Conducive Governance.
  • The World Bank defines governance as
  • the exercise of political authority and the use
    of institutional resources to manage society's
    problems and affairs.
  • Conducive governance means providing regulatory
    frameworks and processes that are consistent,
    transparent, accountable and efficient.
  • Lets consider these in relation to Fisheries.

11
Constraints Facing Sustainable Development of the
Fisheries Sector in the Kingdom of Tonga
  • Mellon, A. (1995) made the following points.
  • Little of the current workplan of the Ministry of
    Fisheries is predicated on the achievement of the
    objectives in the National Development Plan.
  • Constraints to effective development and
    management, include
  • open access to fisheries,
  • emphasis on large scale projects,
  • technical assistance to the sector is often not
    effective,
  • inhospitable business environment,
  • the civil service regulations inhibit productive
    use of resources,
  • lack of functional link between the Ministry and
    fishermen,

12
What about Management?
  • The Fisheries Act 1989 established Fisheries
    Management Plans as the means by which Tongas
    fisheries were to be managed.
  • In a Fisheries Sector Review undertaken in 1997
    the following findings were made
  • Active management intervention as envisaged by
    the Fisheries Act 1989 is largely absent.
  • In the eight years since the Fisheries Act became
    law, no fishery plans have been prepared and
    further
  • Although lack of information is sometimes cited
    as the reason for lack of management action, in
    many important and declining fisheries there has
    been significant research. There seem to be
    numerous cases of substantial research leading to
    management suggestions upon which little action
    has been taken.
  • With few exceptions enforcement of existing
    regulations is non existent

13
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14
Were there any consequences?
  • Preston and Lokani (1990) recommended several
    simple, easy-to-implement management measures for
    beche de mer, none of which were implemented
    until the fishery collapsed and the GoT declared
    a Moratorium in 1997.
  • Udagawa et al. (1996) give a history of advice on
    lobster management in Tonga and show 10 years of
    delay and negligence in implementing lobster
    management.
  • Recommendations for the management of the DW Line
    Fishery started in 1992 recommended interim
    action was to
  • monitor effort and catches - not done!
  • avoid promoting entry to the fishery and not
    done!
  • discourage any major increase in fishing effort
    not done!

15
Ministrys Aquaculture Programme
  • Review in 1997 concluded that-
  • It is now well past the time when the Ministry
    should put in place a firm plan for promoting
    aquaculture as an economic activity in Tonga, and
    develop the mechanisms to implement it. Without
    such plans and mechanisms, it is questionable
    whether a developing country like Tonga should
    really be spending 25 of its total fisheries
    budget - on research which is having little or no
    development impact, and
  • In Tonga, where fishery management is essentially
    non-existent, the benefits of such resource
    enhancement work is dubious.

16
So what has changed in 10 years?
  • Two new excellent pieces of contemporary
    fisheries legislation the Fisheries Management
    Act 2002 and the Aquaculture Management Act 2003
    these provide the platform to progress fisheries
    management and development in Tonga.
  • Contain inbuilt provisions requiring a
    participatory approach to provide accountability
    and transparency.
  • AusAID funded Tonga Fisheries Project assisted in
    the development of draft Fisheries Management
    Plans for all Tongas Commercial Fisheries.

17
In Ten years Not Much!
  • Active intervention as envisaged within the
    Fisheries Management Act 2002 is still largely
    absent and despite a significant increase in
    research resources little applicable analysis is
    undertaken
  • Draft management plans prepared in 2002, no
    management plans have been implemented for
    fisheries except for the Tuna Management Plan
    implemented by the late Akauola in 2000.
  • With few exceptions enforcement of existing
    regulations is non existent
  • 2007 still no implemented management plan for DW
    Line Fishery many believe the seamount fishery
    has collapsed.
  • The beche de mer fishery remains closed although
    the Project assisted in the drafting of a
    management plan over 2 years ago.
  • The Aquaculture programme continues to absorb
    major resources and still has no plan

18
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19
A stable regulatory framework in the fisheries
sector?
  • Fisheries Management Plans are the contemporary
    method. These plans are developed with full
    stakeholder input and are then adopted by
    Government as the legal framework for that
    fishery.
  • The plan is collaboratively reviewed periodically
    to change as new issues arise ie adaptive and
    responsive.
  • This means both the regulator and the industry
    have a clear understanding of how their fishery
    operates. The plans have clear management
    objectives and measurable performance criteria to
    ensure the objectives are being met.
  • When implemented it is a system that provides a
    conducive business environment through assured
    access and catch.

20
Why is this important?
  • The fisheries sector needs a core base of
    profitability from which capital can be built to
    further reinvest to develop the sector.
  • Tonga is capital poor and the lack of good
    business performance in the fisheries sector
    means the sector does not have access to normal
    commercial funding sources.
  • The lack of performance is substantially due to
    poor fisheries administration.
  • The point in presenting this situation is that
    much of what is now proposed to further develop
    the industry is contingent upon the establishment
    of a stable well administered fisheries sector
    conducive to worthwhile businesses.
  • Tonga cannot hope to attract the capital needed
    to further develop the sector given the current
    state of fisheries administration in Tonga.

21
Are Tongas Commercial Fisheries of any
Importance?
22
Tongas Economic Strategy
  • There is internationally a focus on the fragility
    of small island developing states due to their
    exposure to adverse environmental influences and
    small economies with little capacity to absorb
    adverse conditions.
  • A major strategy must therefore include the
    development of economic and environmental
    resilience.
  • In Tonga the Fisheries sector offers one of the
    few areas of renewable production that has a
    ready international market.
  • A robust strategy needs to be implemented to
    capture as much value for these products in
    Tonga.

23
Capturing the Value in Tonga
  • Tonga needs to get the product form and marketing
    as near to the end producer in order to capture
    the value in Tonga.
  • At present the transport of whole fish captures
    little of the value of the product.
  • Most of the value of Tongas fresh fish exports
    are captured by the airlines and the distribution
    chain in the destination market.

24
The Obstacles
  • Value capture requires both capital and stable
    supplies of product.
  • This will only eventuate if Fisheries Management
    is actually implemented in Tonga so as to ensure
    relatively stable and assured production and
    finally
  • that fisheries are managed so that sufficient
    profit is made to enable reinvestment and to
    attract development capital.

25
What is needed?
  • A very drastic change in the focus of the
    Department of Fisheries.
  • A responsive and proactive agency that
    administers fisheries to provide a conducive
    business environment and manages commercial
    fisheries for sustainability and profitability.
  • A goal oriented agency that partners with
    stakeholders to achieve national goals.
  • An approach as illustrated is outcome based and
    very focused on core business areas

26
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