participate in fisheries decision-making processes.
BOX 15
MANAGING BYCATCH MORE SUSTAINABLY IN LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
1
FAO. 2019. Sustainable Management of Bycatch in Latin America and Caribbean Trawl Fisheries (REBYC-II LAC). In:
FAO
[online]. [Cited 2 January 2020].
www.fao.org/in-action/rebyc-2/en/
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Guidelines and best practices
for sustainable aquaculture
Aquaculture is a millennia-old activity that has
evolved slowly, often by building on traditional
knowledge, advances gained through farmers’
curiosity, needs, positive experience and errors,
or cooperation. As a result, it has expanded
for centuries, integrated with its natural,
social, economic and cultural environments.
Major developments in aquaculture have
benefited from scientific progress in the
twentieth and twenty-first centuries. The result
in terms of growth has been unprecedented,
and aquaculture now supplies more than half
of the world’s fish for human consumption (Cai
and Zhou, 2019). However, there have also been
undesirable environmental impacts at the local,
regional and global levels. These detrimental
effects include social conflicts between users of
land and aquatic resources (especially water), and
the destruction of important ecosystem services.
Moreover, recent aquaculture undertakings have
raised concern and societal debate, especially
with regard to: poor site selection; habitat
destruction (e.g. of mangroves); the use of
harmful chemicals and veterinary drugs; the
impact of escapees on wild stocks; inefficient or
unsustainable production of fishmeal and fish oil;
and social and cultural impacts on aquaculture
workers and communities.
Although most traditional systems have been
viable over a long period, the need to develop
and promote sustainable aquaculture practices
emerged in the 1990s and has since gained
strong momentum. Several approaches have been
implemented in this regard:
The first such approach has promoted
traditional sustainable aquaculture systems by
giving them due recognition. One example is
the designation Globally Important Agricultural
Heritage Systems (GIAHS), which, for example,
has been awarded to China’s rice–fish system
and its mulberry–dyke and fish-pond system
(FAO, 2019g). Several other countries also
promote their own sustainable aquaculture
heritage in different ways.
Other efforts have privileged the development
of codes of practice, codes of conduct,
good aquaculture practices, best (or better)
management practices, technical guidelines,
etc., and their implementation by governments
and stakeholders through incentives (subsidies,
tax reductions, technical support, research
and development, etc.) and enforcing
regulations targeting unsustainable practices
(strict requirements to obtain permits,
regulations banning unsustainable practices,
establishment and enforcement of authorized
veterinary drugs, etc.). In 1995, FAO adopted
the Code of Conduct for Responsible Fisheries
(the Code) (see the section How has the
Code supported the adoption of sustainable
practices?, p. 92), the reference framework for
national, regional and international efforts to
ensure sustainable production and harvesting
of aquatic living resources in harmony with
the environment (FAO, 1995). Since 1997,
the Code has been enriched by a strategy to
improve information on status and trends of
aquaculture and several technical guidelines to
promote sustainable aquaculture (FAO, 2019h).
The expansion of global fisheries and
aquaculture trade, at a time of food and
consumer protection issues and scares in
the 1990s and 2000s, led to the emergence
of stricter food laws and regulations,
private standards and market-based
requirements, initially to tackle food safety
issues by promoting good aquaculture
practices, and gradually encompassing
environmental and social as well as animal
well-being considerations.
However, these developments have often ignored
the burden for farmers (e.g. cost of certification,
technical capacity of the smaller stakeholders,
or the need to comply with various competing
standards). Moreover, they do not always
consider the local specificities of production
systems (Mialhe
et al
., 2018). As a result,
inclusive, non-sectoral, participatory and holistic
approaches, such as the ecosystem approach
to aquaculture, have been promoted in order
to re-establish a satisfactory trade-off between
the various local and global dimensions of
aquaculture sustainability.
Per capita global fish consumption has doubled
since the 1960s (FAO, 2018a). In a context of
projected global demographic growth and rising
incomes, aquaculture production will need to
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2020
grow in the coming decades, while at the same
time comply with the 2030 Agenda. This requires
the adoption of new and more sustainable fish
production systems.
To date, various policies and technologies
have been implemented in several
countries in support of sustainable and
resilient aquaculture. These include
technology-intensive innovations such as
aquaponics or integrated aquaculture, and
raceways-in-ponds technologies, but also
innovative governance, policies for decent
work, gender equity, certification and
many other commendable practices (
Box 16
).
The Sub-Committee on Aquaculture (of COFI)
called for the identification of such initiatives
and their documentation and compilation
into guidelines. The aim is to help countries
improve implementation of the Code, while
engaging and enabling their aquaculture sector
to effectively participate in the implementation
of the 2030 Agenda (FAO Committee on
Fisheries, 2018; FAO, 2019i).
The Sustainable Aquaculture Guidelines (SAG),
which target primarily policymakers, will be
developed by making use of, and sharing the
Fish tanks for catfish culture integrated with horticulture
has proved a productive combination in countries such
as Ghana and Nigeria, where fish feed and fingerlings
are locally available. After some experimental attempts,
it was concluded that youth groups of 10–15 persons
could easily manage clusters of 10 tanks. The youth
groups, who later formed cooperatives, started their
aquaculture production with 500 juvenile catfish in
each tank. FAO has implemented projects in close
collaboration with young people in Ghana, and with
internally displaced persons in combination with host
communities in Nigeria, due to an unstable situation in
the Lake Chad region.
The projects have provided the beneficiaries with
fish and water tanks, fingerlings and fish feed. The fish
tanks are filled with about 3 000 litres of groundwater
and 500 specimens, making the fish density high, and
thus the fish consequently produce much waste. The
polluted water is drained and replaced whenever the
water becomes, as a rule of thumb, “smelly”, and is
then used to irrigate tomato plants, maize and other
crops with nutrient-rich water. At harvest time, both the
fish and various crops are harvested.
Fish growth performance in both countries has been
impressive, with an average feed conversion ratio of
1.1 kg of feed for 1 kg of fish. This is a remarkable
result for novice fish farmers; with increased
experience, the ratio may even improve further.
By design, the projects have been implemented in
remote areas to assist vulnerable communities.
Therefore, available economic data indicate that profits
are being made, but that there will be room for
improvement if the supply of fish feed and fingerlings is
more centrally organized. This also holds for the
marketing of the products. For that purpose, the
projects have developed training programmes to show
where operational costs can be reduced. The projects
provided the inputs for the first production cycle, but it
was made clear to the participants that they would
have to purchase subsequent batches of fingerlings and
feed themselves. At harvest time, the entire production
from one tank generally has to be sold straight away.
In order to reduce possible post-harvest losses, the
projects supplied FTT fish smoking kilns (FAO-Thiaroye
Technique). These kilns can significantly reduce toxic
substances (polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons) in the
smoke inhaled by the fish processors – almost all of
whom are women – inhale, and also help prevent such
substances from entering the fish flesh. The processed
fish has an increased shelf life and is of excellent
quality, meaning it could readily sell on regional and
international markets.
The aquaculture–horticulture approach piloted in
Ghana and Nigeria has increased the self-reliance and
self-confidence of project beneficiaries, who produce
their own food and earn income. The food and
nutrition security in their communities has improved
considerably. Rural distress migration among young
people and the number of them joining of militant
groups have both fallen significantly.
BOX 16
FAO’S AQUACULTURE–HORTICULTURE APPROACH IN REMOTE AREAS IN WEST AFRICA
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lessons learned from, various case studies
selected in different regions. In parallel, existing
guidelines will be reviewed during regional
consultations in order to identify the gaps to be
filled, and the updates needed, as well as the
specific constraints, needs and expectations of
Members. The SAG will consist of three main
components (
Figure 45
):
1. Possible pathways towards successful
implementation of sustainable aquaculture
in different regional contexts, based on case
studies of accomplishments in similar settings
or regions.
2. A series of practical thematic modules that
will represent the core of the SAG. They will
describe the rationale and attributes for
approaches and practices on specific topics,
the existing guidelines and practices, and
the key recommendations for successful
implementation and capacity development,
based on the achievements and difficulties
highlighted by case studies. They will be
comprehensive and practical. They will cover
both the aquaculture farms and their wider
environments (i.e. at the sector, value chain,
landscape, territory, country or region levels).
At the farm level, the thematic modules
will focus on: the impact of fish farming
(zoning, site selection, area management,
environmental impact assessment, risk
assessment and mitigation measures);
farm operation and business management
(biosecurity and aquatic health management
engineering or rehabilitation, food safety
and quality management, animal well-being,
decent and safe work); and special aquaculture
operations (aquaculture-based fisheries,
capture-based aquaculture, offshore and high
seas aquaculture, etc.). Beyond the farmgate,
they will focus on: market access; governance;
gender; sector and value chain performance;
specific capacity of the State in monitoring
the sustainable development of the sector;
integration; synergies and trade-offs between
aquaculture, surrounding ecosystems and
other stakeholders (small-scale fisheries,
tourism, and shipping); data and statistics;
communication and knowledge exchange; and
resource sharing.
FIGURE 45
THE PROCESS OF THE SUSTAINABLE AQUACULTURE GUIDELINES AND THE CONTENT FOR
THEIR DEVELOPMENT
Pathways
Thematic modules
Case studies
INPUTS
SUSTAINABLE AQUACULTURE GUIDELINES
Existing guidelines
Case studies
SOURCE: FAO.
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THE STATE OF WORLD FISHERIES AND AQUACULTURE
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3. A series of case studies describing the process,
the accomplishment and the constraints, to
illustrate the possible pathways and thematic
fact sheets.
The methodology for development of the SAG
was discussed at an expert consultation held in
Rome in June 2019 and presented at the tenth
session of the Sub-Committee on Aquaculture
in August 2019. The Sub-Committee on
Aquaculture welcomed the work proposed and
expressed its full support, requesting Members
to contribute their experiences. For this, a
regional consultation took place in Bamako, Mali,
in December 2019, and further consultations
will be organized in Asia and Latin America
in 2020. The Sub-Committee on Aquaculture
also underlined the need to develop guidelines
covering all aspects of aquaculture and applicable
to large-, medium- and small-scale farms.
It further recommended that the SAG be a
dynamic document, regularly revised.
n
REPORTING ON
FISHERIES AND
AQUACULTURE
SUSTAINABILITY
Fisheries, aquaculture and the 2030 Agenda
for Sustainable Development
2030 Agenda
Sustainable development presents an
international challenge that will require
consistent, coherent and effective cooperation
among countries and institutions. To this end,
the United Nations’ 2030 Agenda for Sustainable
Development (2030 Agenda) was adopted in 2015.
The 2030 Agenda builds on the foundations of
the Millennium Development Goals and provides
a comprehensive set of objectives by which
businesses, governments and individuals may
focus their efforts for the betterment of society.
The objectives are built on 17 wide-ranging
SDGs, which, among other objectives, aim to
end all forms of poverty, reduce inequality and
tackle climate change. Inclusive development
is at the heart of all policies. The targets are
highly interlinked, such that progress in one
area will aid the achievement of other objectives
and bring benefits for society as a whole.
Having a quantifiable and agreed-upon set of
targets allows individual countries, subnational
entities and other bodies to formulate policy and
assistance in a focused, coordinated and effective
manner. As part of this process, gender and
social equality should be addressed, while also
providing opportunities to improve the standard
of nutrition and secure sustainable livelihoods for
those most in need.
Sustainable Development Goals
In the context of fisheries and aquaculture, the
SDGs promote environmentally and socially
sustainable production systems. In principle, this
promotes a fair and just way of meeting the needs
of today without compromising the ability of
future generations to do the same. Fisheries and
aquaculture are central to the achievement
of food security, and economic, social and
environmental goals. Sustainable Development
Goal 14 (Conserve and sustainably use
the oceans, seas and marine resources for
sustainable development) has clear and important
implications for fisheries and aquaculture; by
extension, achievement of its objective will
bring progress across other SDG objectives.
Enhanced fisheries management, policy, practices
and technology are pivotal in providing quality
food to ever-more people while ensuring
that practices are ethical and sustainable.
The challenges are many, especially improving
data collection, protecting threatened species,
preventing IUU fishing, sustaining MPAs and
ensuring social sustainability in the value chain.
FAO-led initiatives have laid the foundations
for progress in many aspects pertinent to
fisheries and aquaculture through, among others,
implementation of the Code, PSMA and SSF
Guidelines. Measurable outputs that should
result from implementing the SDGs include
improving livelihoods and achieving greater
equality, while preserving natural resources, and
directing policies, programmes, partnerships
and investments.
The comprehensiveness of the SDGs reflects the
extent of the challenge faced, and provides a
road map to enable development that is socially,
environmentally and economically sustainable
and inclusive.
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Food security goals
The framework of SDG 2 balances food security
concerns with sustainability considerations,
seeking to “end hunger, achieve food
security and improved nutrition and promote
sustainable agriculture.” The underlying
issues threatening food and nutrition security
are often complex and continue to present
challenges for development. It is estimated
that 821 million people, 1 out of 9 people
in the world, were undernourished in 2018.
Having been on a declining trend for many
years, this figure been rising since 2014.
The need for sustainable and resilient food
systems is increasingly apparent. The fisheries
and aquaculture sector offers unique
opportunities to support all four pillars of food
security, namely: availability, access, utilization
and stability. Efforts are under way to increase
fish availability and consumption, and thereby
contribute to the eradication of hunger and
malnutrition. Fish consumption levels continue
to rise, feeding billions of people and helping
to ensure that diets are nutritious. Fish often
provides a cheap and nutritious source of
protein rich in essential amino acids and it is an
important source of essential micronutrients,
necessary for healthy diets. This is particularly
true for isolated communities that rely on
small-scale and artisanal fisheries and
aquaculture, where fish is a central part of the
diet. With proper management, fisheries and
aquaculture provide a resilient, high-quality
and sustainable component of nutrition.
Economic goals
The SDGs promote inclusive and sustainable
economic growth that is able to guarantee
decent employment and reduce social and
gender inequality. The fisheries and aquaculture
sector encompasses numerous opportunities
to enable sustainable development and income
enhancement, especially in the achievement of
SDG 1 (End poverty in all its forms everywhere)
and SDG 8 (Promote sustained, inclusive
and sustainable economic growth, full and
productive employment and decent work for
all). The fisheries and aquaculture value chain
extends from harvesting through to processing
and marketing. The sector provides income and
employment for an estimated 250 million people
and, as a consequence, it is central for ensuring
the livelihoods of a substantial proportion of the
world’s population. This is particularly relevant
in developing countries. In some instances,
small-scale and subsistence fisheries may
provide the principle source of income for entire
communities, providing economic resilience
where often sources of alternative employment
are limited or non-existent.
Social sustainability goals
Social sustainability, non-discrimination,
gender equality and shared growth are key
focuses of the SDGs, with the objective of
ensuring the widest distribution of benefits
from natural resources and their use. The SDGs
aim to nurture broad development and engender
wider social inclusiveness and stability.
As part of this process, efforts to empower
organizations that support the development
of fishing and aquaculture communities
and fish processors are key areas of focus.
The fostering of social sustainability in fisheries
and aquaculture may serve as a catalyst for
improving equality within society as a whole by
promoting gender equality, securing workers’
rights, enacting social protection schemes
and reducing social inequalities overall.
A particular focus is the empowerment of
women through SDG 5 (Achieve gender equality
and empower all women and girls), especially
in the marketing of fish and the post-harvest
processing of fisheries products, where women
make up the majority of the workforce. In many
less-developed communities that depend on
fisheries and aquaculture, improving conditions
and equality along the value chain will have
wide-ranging benefits for society as whole and
help to ensure that the benefits of development
are felt by all.
Environmental goals
The use of natural resources and the principles
of sustainable food systems permeate all of
the SDGs, being particularly pertinent to
SDG 12 (Ensure sustainable consumption
and production patterns) and SDG 13 (Take
urgent action to combat climate change and its
impacts). The output of fisheries and aquaculture
produces lower greenhouse emissions for the
equivalent nutrition than do most agricultural
food systems. At the same time, there are
environmental challenges relating to fisheries
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2020
management, climate change and preventing
illegal exploitation. Properly managed fisheries
combined with aquaculture practices that foster
the sustainable use of resources while preserving
aquatic biodiversity are needed to ensure the
future of the sector. The role of new technologies
in minimizing food loss and waste across the fish
value chain will allow for the more efficient use
of resources, and move towards more complete
utilization of fish, thereby reducing the need
to extract further resources. This includes the
transformation into valuable and nutritious goods
of that part of the harvest that would otherwise
be wasted. Robust fisheries management, more
efficient transport and greater waste reclamation
must all play a part in reducing post-harvest
losses and limiting the environmental effects of
the sector.
Sustainable Development Goal 14
Fisheries and aquaculture are integral to
sustainable development and have a key role to
play in achieving the objectives set out by the
2030 Agenda. Sustainable Development Goal 14
(Conserve and sustainably use the oceans,
seas and marine resources for sustainable
development) has clear implications for
marine fisheries and aquaculture, providing
actionable objectives that require international
collaboration. The strong linkages that exist
between the SDGs mean that achieving the
targets set out in SDG 14 will have positive
knock-on effects that are felt across society,
and that achieving SDG 14 will be dependent
on good progress being made towards the
other closely related SDGs. The ten targets
of SDG 14 are wide-ranging and diverse,
addressing fundamental issues for healthy,
sustainable economies. FAO is the custodian
agency for the implementation and monitoring
of four targets: end overfishing; curtail
harmful subsidies; increase economic benefits
from sustainable fisheries; and ensure access
to resources and markets for small-scale
fishers. The work of FAO has high relevance
to successfully achieving SDG 14, which also
includes targets to reduce marine pollution,
protect aquatic ecosystems, minimize ocean
acidification, develop scientific capacity relevant
to fisheries, and improve the implementation of
international law pertinent to the sustainable
use of oceans.
Stock sustainability
Sustainable Development Goal (SDG)
Indicator 14.4.1, for which FAO is the custodian
United Nations agency, measures the proportion
of fish stocks within biologically sustainable
levels (see the section The status of fishery
resources, p. 47, and
Box 4
, p. 55). A fish stock
whose abundance (total number or biomass
of all the fishes that constitute a stock) is at
or greater than the level that can produce the
maximum sustainable yield (MSY) is classified
as biologically sustainable. In contrast, when
abundance falls below the MSY level, the stock is
considered biologically unsustainable.
To calculate this proportion, it is necessary
to establish a reference list of stocks, and to
assess the status of each stock using agreed
methodologies. In ideal circumstances, a stock
assessment would be conducted to diagnose the
current status of all stocks in the reference list.
However, reliable stock assessment requires
catch statistics data as well as fishing effort
data, life-history parameters of fish stocks, and
technical parameters of fishing vessels, which
in many cases are not available. Moreover, stock
assessment requires numerical modelling skills.
As a result, today only about 25 percent of the
global catch comes from numerically assessed
stocks. Estimating the status of the large number
of unassessed stocks is a highly challenging task,
but one that is necessary in order to significantly
increase the volume of stocks for which estimates
of status are known. For implementation of
SDG Indicator 14.4.1, FAO has worked to
develop new methods that are applicable to
data-limited and capacity-poor fisheries, while
maintaining current methodologies for assessed
stocks. Below is a summary of FAO’s plan for
country-level assessment and reporting.
Target and current status for SDG Indicator 14.4.1
FAO has been monitoring the state of the world’s
fishery stocks since 1974, classifying about
445 stocks every 2–3 years. The species that have
been assessed account for about 75 percent of
global catch, and thus provide a comprehensive
overview of global sustainability status. For some
species, different types of data exist, whereas
for others, little information apart from catch
statistics is available. To balance the goals of
using the best available data and assessing
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stock status worldwide, FAO uses various
methods ranging from recognized model-based
assessment to surrogate measures of abundance
supplemented by expert opinions.
FAO’s current assessment is carried out
based on FAO statistical areas, rather than by
country, and classifies fish stocks into three
categories: underfished, maximally sustainably
fished, and overfished. Overfished stocks are
considered biologically unsustainable, while both
underfished and maximally sustainably fished
stocks are considered biologically sustainable.
The percentage of biologically sustainable stocks
is used as SDG Indicator 14.4.1.
FAO’s global assessment results are published
biennially in
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