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6. Conclusion
The aquaculture sector is the fastest-growing food sector in the world. Farmed fish and
shellfish are reported to have exceeded the volume of wild-caught fish and shellfish
for human consumption for the first time in 2008, offering increased opportunity
to harness the market growth potential for pro-poor livelihood development in the
aquaculture sector.
However, this review has shown that there are a number of challenges being faced
by small-scale aquaculture farmers in developing countries. These challenges are mainly
due to market liberalization in developing countries along with globalization, which
have led to the withdrawal of State service provision and an end to guaranteed markets
for farmers. Along with the concentration of market chains and the increasingly strict
quality and safety requirements demanded by buyers of aquaculture products, these
challenges are leading to the marginalization of small-scale aquaculture producers, who
are finding it increasingly hard to compete with large commercial producers from around
the world. It has been argued in this review that collective action through participation
in well-organized and efficiently managed FOs can provide an effective mechanism
to assist individual small-scale aquaculture producers overcome these challenges and
effectively participate in and influence modern market chains and trade. In order to
explore this approach, this review has examined and analysed the importance of FOs in
developing countries from both a theoretical and an empirical viewpoint. It has shown
that a clear case for FOs can be put forward and has shown the range and diversity of
aquaculture FOs in practice using illustrative examples of successful aquaculture FOs
from Bangladesh, India, Indonesia and Thailand. The review has also highlighted the
realizable potential that the implementation of BMPs through a cluster management
approach offers for achieving success in the small-scale aquaculture sector. Key lessons
and factors associated with successful FOs have also been distilled from the research and
development literature and from the in-depth field-based case analyses of shrimp FOs in
India and Thailand. The review has also suggested some important actions and support
needed from key stakeholders and development organizations to assist aquaculture
FOs’ success and has highlighted some guiding principles, gleaned from the literature,
for supporting the successful establishment and operation of FOs and their spread.
This concluding chapter examines the implications of the foregoing review for
harnessing the potential of aquaculture FOs for pro-poor development along with
the constraints, challenges and opportunities facing small-scale aquaculture FOs in
developing countries. The chapter concludes by looking ahead at the prospects for the
successful development of aquaculture FOs and the small-scale aquaculture sector in
general.
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