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Brussels Development Briefing n.32 Fish-farming the new driver of the blue economy? 3 rd July 2013 http://brusselsbriefings.net Overview of the significance of the fish- farming sector: challenges and opportunities. David Little, University of Stirling http://brusselsbriefings.net
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EU FP7 Funded Project No. 222889 (2009-2013) Overview of the significance of the fish-farming sector: challenges and opportunities African, Caribbean and Pacific -ACP- countries David Little Institute of Aquaculture University of Stirling
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Farming in water Photo Trevor Telfer Photo Andrew Shinn
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CTAs agenda CTA is committed to sustainable development, increasing prosperity and improving the wellbeing of agricultural and rural populations in ACP countries in a cost-effective and environmentally friendly manner Small-holders, sustainable intensification
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Relative contribution of aquaculture and capture fisheries to food fish consumption Capture Aquaculture FAO, 2012
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Overview of global fisheries, including aquaculture http://www.unep.org/dewa/vitalwater/jpg/0314- fishcatch-EN.jpg
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Fish consumption in terms of protein http://www.unep.org/dewa/vitalwater/articl e176.html
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Production intensity Modified from FAO, 2012Mean data:2008-2010
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Contributions to the economy Modified from FAO, 2012Mean data:2008-2010
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Sector growth Modified from FAO, 2012 Mean data:2008-2010 compared to 2003-2005
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Rapid transformation From domestic demand to global trade Led by shrimp but now being followed by white fish species, pangasius and tilapia Exotic or local species? Source FAO, 2010, modified by Zhang et al, 2012 Shrimp and tilapia in China
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Export or local? Belton et al, 2011
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Seafood –Number 1 exported commodity from developing countries FAO, 2012
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A story of cities and deltas… Rapid growth of urban settlement Increasing demand for animal source foods Comparative change to aquatic food as a commodity……….. Transformation of land and water use on deltas towards value-added products Growth in national, regional and international trade
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..from production to consumption
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Urbanisation PHOTO. P.EDWARDS Aquaculture has often developed and been sustained nearer high centres of population…..
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Urban aquaculture -Africa Clarias, Abuja,Nigeria Photo AtandeTunde Tilapia, Lake Volta, Ghana Photo Will Leschen
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Aquaculture development or aquaculture for development Belton and Little, 2011
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Development and change Immanent: on-going, undirected Interventionist: intentional, externally inserted Returns to ‘small-scale’ typically less than 10-15% of household income But often multiple, complex benefits – -more than 70% of farming families identified more than ten benefits of rice-fish in NW Bangladesh (Haque et al, 2010) Incremental rather than transformational Complexity of social structure and market incentives Rapid uptake of commercial aquaculture by entrepreneurs rather than farmers
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Does size matter- ‘small-scale’ and poverty Belton, Haque and Little, 2012
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Commodity aquaculture ‘Small-scale’ as a term is often misleading and generally not comparable to a small-holder producing a staple crop Maybe many benefits elsewhere in the value chain Commodity-orientated aquaculture is not always intensive
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Can export be compatible with local food security? Extensive ‘free-range’ shrimp ponds in Southwest Bangladesh
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Local food chains and employment Income from extensive ‘shrimp’ ponds in southeast Bangladesh less than half of income from shrimp Employment gains for the poorest groups
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Local fish for local people Photo:Susan Thompson– Inconsistent quality seed and feed often undermine sustainability post-intervention
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Cage aquaculture Cage farming in Ghana Crystal lakes- overseas investment Local markets Site limitations
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Limited freshwater sites Cages Lake Victoria Uganda Access to sites, exclusion of other users? Photo Will Leschen
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Challenges in attaining positive livelihood impacts Aquatic animals in the diet-coastal, lake or delta living people Markets-urbanisation, export (not just the West!) Seed and hatchery Feed and nutrient management Markets Governance ….and broader development Benefits not as producers but elsewhere in the value chain (employment, consumption)
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‘Local’ international markets Regional trade within Asia and between Asia and elsewhere is growing faster than conventional South- North trade Traditional trade between African states in dried, smoked fish
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Input costs, output value FAO, 2012
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Jamaica Beginning in the 1940s by the late 1990s, >500ha, 100 farms >3000MT - 85% one company significant exports Photo Janielle Wallace
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2007-8 Loss of export markets Focus on domestic but lack of competitiveness also Post Hurricane damage interruptions in fry supply Gradual contraction ; change from intensive to semi-intensive – Local price $4.50/ lb – Imported $2.10/ lb – Failure of ‘eat local tilapia’ campaign
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Seed and feed Broodfish selection, Son hatchery Uganda Extruded feeds in Ghana, Raanan Feeds Photo Will Leschen
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…not just fish and shellfish Womens’ cooperative producing seaweed in Tanzania
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Linking Asia and Africa
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Examples of new projects Development of insect larvae production to support high quality feed ingredients for fish and livestock production and off-set costs of sanitary waste disposal (Ghana) Fisheries and aquaculture value chain development in Malawi and Uganda Developing African Aquaculture Networks Towards Sustainable Innovation
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SARNISSA-networking Visit www.sarnissa.org and sign up nowwww.sarnissa.org
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Thanks CTA for the invitation Will Leschen for African photographs Neil Handisyde for graphics Colleagues on the Sustaining Ethical Aquaculture Trade project www.seatglobal.eu Contact me on dcl1@stir.ac.uk
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