Daily Trust Sunday

At FAO’s meeting, experts deliberate on sustainabl­e fisheries mgt, others

- By Vincent A. Yusuf

On Monday, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) hosted a regional meeting in Abuja to discuss ways to improve the management of fishery resources and coastal ecosystems of West Africa.

The initiative, Enhanced Regional Fisheries Governance in Western Africa (PESCAO), is supported by the European Union (EU) and being implemente­d by the United Nations’ Food and Agricultur­al Organisati­on (FAO), L’Institut Agro, and the University of Portsmouth.

In order to adopt a sustainabl­e management of the fishery resources of the ECOWAS maritime domain, more than 100 experts were invited by the organisati­on to discuss and draw up a roadmap for the use of the results of various researches.

These profession­als include directors of fisheries and aquacultur­e, researcher­s, nonstate players, and officials of the European Union, African Union, USAID, and the FAO.

The PESCAO Programme Team Leader, MrAmadou Tall, stated that collaborat­ion was key to developing sustainabl­e

fisheries management in West Africa.

“By leveraging the expertise of the various institutio­ns, regional organisati­ons and communitie­s in the West Africa region, we set the narrative for fisheries governance and ensure that these vital resources are managed sustainabl­y across the ECOWAS maritime domain and beyond.

“The evidence-based approaches prompted by PESCAO Component 3 and the outcomes of the Abuja regional meeting has taken into account the latest scientific knowledge crucial to achieving sustainabl­e fisheries across West Africa,” he said.

Speaking at the event, the FAO

representa­tive in Nigeria and ECOWAS liaison officer, Mr Fred Kafeero, said the state of fisheries in the ECOWAS region was complex and varies, depending on the country and the sub-region.

“This vital source of aquatic foods and income for millions of people faces enormous pressure and threats of overexploi­tation, illegal, unreported and unregulate­d (IUU) fishing; poor management practices that cripple our progress towards sustainabl­e fisheries; especially the small-scale fisheries sector, the backbone of our fishing communitie­s, we must do more.

“Although we face such obstacles, the fact that we convene here demonstrat­es the mounting desire to enhance fisheries management through bolstering governance and technical proficienc­y, both in the public and private domains,” he stated.

Issues from PESCAO projects

The programmes that make up Component 3 of PESCAO are led by FAO, L’Institut Agro, and the University of Portsmouth respective­ly. Throughout their assignment under the PESCAO, they have enhanced communicat­ion between fisheries actors and researcher­s, increasing awareness of fisheries in West Africa and their management and data systems.

The Demersal Ecosystems Project (DEMERSTEM) project, run by the L’Institut Agro, aims to enhance stock assessment methods that are based on science.

Fisheries science partners from Mauritania, Senegal, Guinée Bissau, Guinee, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Spain, Italy, and France took part in meetings and long training sessions, both in-person and virtually, over the course of the project’s four years to update regional knowledge on the process of stock assessment.

A set of new methods have been benchmarke­d to evaluate their suitabilit­y to regional stocks (regarding data availabili­ty or not). Other results concerning stock identifica­tion, sensitive habitat assessment, artisanal fisheries monitoring or ecosystem knowledge will be disseminat­ed during the meeting.

Led by the University of Portsmouth, the Fisheries Management and Resilience of Small Pelagics in West Africa project (GREPPAO) has three components: research, articulati­on between research and public policy and training.

On the research side, the project was said to have published national and regional reports and 32 scientific articles on the issues of fish consumptio­n in West Africa, on the economics of pelagic fish and on the issue of migratory fisheries.

The issues dealt with in relation to food security, wealth creation and the developmen­t of migratory fisheries in West Africa was the subject of intense exchanges with the technical partners and fisheries stakeholde­rs, resulting in the provision of knowledge to support policy-making.

The FAO and partners collective­ly agree that improved regional cooperatio­n is essential to address these issues for effective fishery governance.

 ?? ?? fish processing at Kado market, Abuja
fish processing at Kado market, Abuja

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria