Title: Coastal Fisheries Management challenges
1Coastal Fisheries Management challenges
2Presentation Overview
- Coastal Fisheries management
- Major drivers
- Challenges
- Threats
- Current approach
- Key impacts of current approach
- New Song for Change
- Composition of the new Song
- Role of CROP Agencies
- Reporting and evaluation of the new Song
3Coastal fisheries management
- Unlike the industrial tuna fishery, there is no
regional approach to coastal fisheries
management. - Ineffective coastal fisheries management is a
real tragedy for the Pacific region. - Failure of the management techniques has resulted
in closing down of fisheries to prevent collapse
of the resource - Production will not expand in future.
- Production will decline and the situation will
become worse in the future
4Major Drivers
- Significant growth forecast in all three regions
- Highest in Melanesia
- Substantial urbanization most growth in urban
areas - Rural populations in Micronesia and Polynesia
likely to decline
- Very high consumption
- Great dependence in rural areas
- Mainly subsistence
- Most fish consumed fresh
- Fish supplies most animal protein
5Challenges Food security Gap
Assume a whole snapper 25-30 cm or around
250g Plate size fish
Fish gap within 15 years
115,000 metric t of Coastal fish
460,000,000 pieces of coastal fish
6Challenges _ Livelihoods
- Very important for local incomes - provides
around 50 of coastal households with 1st or 2nd
source of income.
7Challenges - Patterns of Economic Development
- Many people without jobs will seek income and
food security from harvesting of coastal
fisheries - Willingness to compromise tomorrows
sustainability for todays food security and
income
8Threat- Urbanization
- Coastal fishery resources are over-exploited,
close to urban areas where population creates the
greatest demand for fish
Increase population in urban areas
Higher proportion of people not having access to
sufficient fish for consumption
More coastal fish shipped in from less populous
areas
Exporting urban-type fisheries problems to rural
areas
9Threats Habitat degradation
- Coastal production depends on good habitat
- Production decline affected by habitat
destruction or degradation - NO HABITAT NO FISH!!
10Threat Climate Change
- Frequency of tropical cyclones
- Rising sea surface temperatures and more acidic
oceans impacting on - coral reefs,
- coastal habitats,
- growth and survival coastal fishery resources and
food webs - Changes in rainfall or sea level impacts
migration patterns of fish affecting production
levels
11Current Approach
12WHICH MANAGEMENT PATHWAY?
13Key Impacts of the current approach
- Limited coastal fisheries policies backed up by
legislation to manage coastal fisheries - Limited budget allocation to Coastal Fisheries
management - Limited and unfocused human resources on Coastal
Fisheries management
14New song for Change
- A new Song for change from business as usual
for Coastal fisheries management is urgently
needed - The new Song must be sang in harmony by all
stakeholders from the same song book.
15Composition of the new Song for Change for
Coastal Fisheries Management
16The role of CROP Agencies
- Council of Regional Organisations in the Pacific
- Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat (PIFS)
- Major political initiatives
- Pacific Islands Forum Fisheries Agency (FFA)
- Provide management advice on tuna fisheries and
increasing benefits to Pacific island countries
from tuna fishing activities - Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Environment
Programme (SPREP) - Environmental aspects of fisheries
- University of the South Pacific (USP)
- The School of Marine Studies is involved in a
wide range of training. - Secretariat of the Pacific Community (SPC)
- Most aspects of coastal fisheries and scientific
research on tuna.
17Harmonization of CROP Agencies roles for
coastal fisheries management
18Reporting evaluation of the effectiveness of
the new Song
New SONG
FFC
HOF9
SPC CRGA
FFC MIN
PIF/POC
PIF LEADERS
19Thank youMerci beaucoup