Corruption and illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing threaten the food security of coastal populations in Madagascar and the Indian Ocean. These illegal practices reduce available fish stocks, while local fishermen find themselves competing with large fleets engaged in IUU fishing.
IUU fishing includes practices such as fishing without authorisation, misreporting catches, using destructive fishing methods and fishing in protected areas. This IUU fishing is often fuelled by a quest for quick profits and encouraged by the lack of adequate surveillance and the growing demand for fish products. In recent years, IUU fishing has been responsible for the over-consumption of certain fish species, including tuna.
AN ESTIMATED ANNUAL LOSS OF 142.8 MILLION DOLLARS
A study entitled ‘Sustainability, Stability and Security in the Fisheries Sector’, carried out by WWF France between 2016 and 2021, explains that IUU fishing of tuna and shrimp species causes an estimated $142.8 million in financial losses each year in the exclusive economic zones (EEZs) of Kenya, Madagascar, Mozambique, South Africa and Tanzania. The document indicates that nearly 36% of all tuna and shrimp catches in these zones are potentially linked to IUU fishing.
In addition, 48.7% of tuna catches in the region between 2016 and 2021 ares estimated to be potentially illegal or unregulated, resulting in financial losses estimated at 96 millions dollars per year. Shrimp catches deemed illegal represented 26.4% of stocks, that is an annual loss of 47 millions dollars. Tanzania is the country most affected by IUU fishing, recording a loss of revenue of 65.4 millions dollars per year, or 46% of the total losses recorded for the five countries studied. The largest tuna fishing operations in the EEZs of these countries are carried out mainly by Taiwan, Japan, South Korea, China and Spain, while China, Greece and Portugal dominate shrimp fishing.
Several other countries in Africa and the western Indian Ocean region are also affected by a worrying practice of IUU fishing, including Senegal, Sierra Leone, Ghana, Côte d’Ivoire, Nigeria, Angola, Namibia, Mauritania, Somalia, Seychelles, Mauritius and Comoros. A study published in December 2022 by the journal Fish and Fisheries revealed that around 6% of industrial fishing operations carried out in the territorial waters of some 33 African countries and territories are carried out in areas reserved for small-scale fishing by local populations. In other countries, this practice is described as ‘the most common form of illegal fishing in the region’.
SOME KEY ELEMENTS OF THE LEGAL FRAMEWORK FOR FISHERIES MANAGEMENT
Fisheries management is a complex global challenge, requiring robust legal regulation to ensure the sustainability of marine resources, the protection of marine ecosystems and the economic viability of fishing industries.
The complex issues of overfishing, marine biodiversity conservation and fishermen’s rights require strong national and international legal frameworks. Global cooperation and effective implementation of these laws and regulations are crucial to ensuring a sustainable future for the fishing industry and the health of our planet’s oceans.
The challenges of fisheries management
Fisheries management faces complex challenges : overfishing, the use of destructive fishing tools, degradation of the marine environment and the need to ensure sustainable livelihoods for fishing communities.
The national legal framework
National legal instruments vary according to the needs, resources and priorities of each country. ”The overall orientation of fisheries sector management is towards the protection of resources. This means setting up marine protected areas, implementing fisheries management plans or transferring resource management to the local community. To improve management of the sector and strengthen its regalian functions, the ministry in charge of fisheries has been obliged to set up control, surveillance, health and funding bodies”, explains Mamy Andriantsoa, the consultant in charge of the study on strengthening the legal framework for the governance of Madagascar’s fisheries.
Here are some key concepts and references relating to Malagasy fisheries:
Here are some of the key international legal instruments :
Written by Ismaël Mihaja, Cynthia Rahelindisa, Rova Andriantsileferintsoa
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