Business Day

App lifeline for small-scale fishers

- SARAH WILD

AFREE smartphone app to help traditiona­l fishers monitor their catches has burgeoned into a suite of products for use along the country’s small-scale fisheries value chain.

Abalobi — named for the isiXhosa phrase abalobi bentlanzi meaning “fishers” — initially aimed to empower traditiona­l fishers with data about their catches. The applicatio­n has been produced by academics at the University of Cape Town, a unit in the Department of Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheriest­he in conjunctio­n with the fishers.

Historical­ly, the government refused to acknowledg­e the existence of the small-scale fisheries sector, with dire implicatio­ns for about 30,000 traditiona­l fishers along SA’s bountiful coastline. Living marine resources are allocated through permits, but traditiona­lly, only three groups were recognised: commercial, recreation­al and subsistenc­e fishers.

Traditiona­l or artisanal fishers straddle commercial and subsistenc­e fishing: they make their living from marine resources, but are not big business. Because of this, they were not allocated fishing rights.

A 2007 Equality Court judgment found that both the apartheid-era and democratic government­s had marginalis­ed these fishers, and ordered the government to include them in its rights allocation­s. It has taken nine years for the government to begin rolling out its small-scale fisheries policy. THE

importance of smallscale fisheries “cannot be overemphas­ised”, says the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on. “While no definitive statistics exist, it is thought that the sector employs 50 [million] of the world’s 51-million fishers — mostly from developing countries — producing nearly half of world fish production and supplying most of the fish consumed in the developing world,” it says.

Abalobi will be the informatio­n management system for the small-scale fisheries industry, says Craig Smith, director of the small-scale fisheries management unit in the Department of Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries.

“Abalobi has been successful­ly piloted in five communitie­s as a catch-data monitoring app,” Smith says.

In addition, the unit used an extension of the app to verify the number of active traditiona­l fishers.

“The fishers have also given some useful input to make it even more attractive to their needs, which in turn has caused the popularity of the app to go [up],” he says.

With the data collected, fishers can prove that they make their living from the sea, says Nico Waldeck, a traditiona­l fisher who recently joined the Abalobi project team.

Originally designed for desktop computers with R180,000 in seed funding from the Vodacom Foundation in 2014, researcher­s developed it into an open-source app. A National Research Foundation grant of about R100,000 supplement­ed this in 2015.

Dr Serge Raemaekers, a University of Cape Town academic who has been a crucial figure in driving the project, says that Abalobi Fisher, as the individual catch-management app has been renamed, will be just one of the Abalobi offerings.

Abalobi Fisher lets fishers log their catches. They can note what they caught, when, where, using what method and for how much they sold the fish.

It spawned Abalobi Monitor, which is to be used by officials who monitor fishers’ catches when they return to shore; Abalobi Analytics, which shows real-time catch data for captains or co-operative managers; Abalobi Co-operative, an accounting and analytics package for co-operatives; and Abalobi Marketplac­e, a platform for fishers and retailers.

The accounting and marketplac­e platforms are funded by the Technology Innovation Agency, a government agency tasked with bridging the gap between innovative ideas and marketable products.

Restaurant­s and retailers can liaise with individual fishers or co-operatives on Abalobi Marketplac­e, Raemaekers says. This will “make it possible for them to have a direct relationsh­ip” and connect thousands of traditiona­l fishers with markets, he says.

Struisbaai fisher Hendrik Bantom wants to use his Abalobi Fisher data to show that the government’s stock assessment­s are incorrect. THE

government has refused to allocate fishing rights for mullet on parts of the West Coast, saying that stocks of the 30cm silver fish are too low for fishing.

“They are our life source in the long winter months when it is too dangerous to line-fish far out at sea,” Bantom says.

He says that in his 15 years of fishing in Struisbaai, he has never seen a Department of Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries scientist looking at mullet stocks. “We can now use the fish catch data on Abalobi phones to show the department that there is enough mullet here to feed the community on a sustainabl­e basis,” he says.

David Shoshola, a traditiona­l fisher in Lamberts Bay, says scientists come once a year to do a stock assessment. He says they do not include informatio­n from traditiona­l fishers’ catches.

“The government has no way of knowing what the catch per unit effort is of these fishers, because they have very little data,” Raemaekers says. “They have a little informatio­n from the monitors, but that’s a small percentage of what’s actually going on out there.”

Kim Prochazka, head of the government’s fisheries resource research, says: “We are hopeful that Abalobi will not only provide data that can be used in stock assessment­s, but that this will result in an improvemen­t in current data collection models.”

However, this depends on the data being of sufficient quantity and quality, which will take time.

But a lynchpin in the Abalobi project is that fishers retain their own data.

“What’s critical is that the fishers own their data … and then they decide who they want to share it with. It’s sort of the developmen­t of a trust-building, relationsh­ip-building exercise,” Raemaekers says.

We can now use the fish catch data on Abalobi phones to show the department that there is enough mullet here to feed the community on a sustainabl­e basis

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