PART 2
SUSTAINABILITY
IN ACTION
The multisectoral nature of food security and nutrition
(FSN) calls for policies that address these issues by
different sectors in a coordinated way. In the island
nations of the Pacific, where people face numerous
challenges in accessing affordable, nutritious and
diverse foods, fish are an essential part of the
diet, constituting an important source of protein
and micronutrients.
Pacific communities have long been particularly
dependent on marine resources, with consumption
levels at 2–4 times the global average.
1
However,
substantial changes in consumption patterns have
resulted in a greater focus on processed,
cheap and
unhealthy foods, thereby fuelling an obesity pandemic
and contributing to high rates of non-communicable
diseases in all Pacific countries.
Despite these facts and the importance of fisheries
for food and nutrition in the Pacific, general awareness
on the need to consider FSN in fisheries policies
remains limited (see figure), as does the incorporation
of fisheries in FSN policies. Moreover, evidence-based
ways on how to implement integration are even harder
to find.
FAO is working in the FSN policy landscape to
reverse this situation. Country-level diagnostics
assessing the effectiveness of FSN in Fiji and
Solomon Islands were carried out by the Food and
Nutrition
Security Impact, Resilience, Sustainability
and Transformation
(
FIRST) programme in 2019 in
an attempt to improve resource allocation and
investment and capacity development decisions in
this domain, informing the new policy initiatives. The
analyses identified fisheries as key to achieving Zero
Hunger and provided entry points and
recommendations on how to incorporate the sector in
upcoming FSN actions.
Countries are now seeing the need to integrate
these important pieces of policy into the national
policy framework. Fisheries is part of two upcoming
FSN policies in Solomon Islands. The Lokol Kaikai
Initiative, a framework for action on food security, and
the National Food Security,
Food Safety and Nutrition
Policy both consider the fisheries sector as one of the
main pillars. For the latter policy, fisheries stakeholders
have been actively engaged as members in the
working committee overseeing its implementation.
Making progress in a multisectoral environment is
challenging, and more needs to be done to bridge the
gap between policy design and actual implementation.
However, these examples provide promising evidence
of ongoing changes in terms of FSN policy and
planning, and show that integration has already begun.
BOX 21
NOT LEAVING FISHERIES AND AQUACULTURE BEHIND IN MULTISECTORAL POLICIES
FOR FOOD SECURITY AND NUTRITION
1
Bell, J.D., Johnson, J.E., Ganachaud, A.S., Gehrke, P.C., Hobday, A.J., Hoegh-Guldberg, O., Le Borgne, R., Lehodey, P., Lough, J.M., Pickering, T.,
Pratchett, M.S. & Waycott, M. 2011.
Vulnerability of tropical Pacific fisheries and aquaculture to climate change: summary for Pacific island countries and territories
. Noumea, Secretariat of the Pacific Community. 394 pp.
NOTE: Low = only a mention of food security and nutrition (FSN); moderate = FSN included as an objective; and high = FSN included in objectives along with specific
details and action items needed to meet those objectives.
SOURCE: Koehn, J.Z. 2020.
Fishing for nutrition - improving the connection between fisheries, the food system and public health.
University of Washington, Seattle.
(Doctoral dissertation)
LEVEL OF INTEGRATION OF FOOD SECURITY AND NUTRITION IN NATIONAL FISHERIES POLICIES IN THE PACIFIC
Australia and New Zealand
Melanesia
Micronesia
Polynesia
No
Low
Moderate
High
| 156 |
THE STATE OF WORLD FISHERIES AND AQUACULTURE
2020
but can also be a significant issue from a food
security and nutrition perspective (Asche
et al
.,
2015). In addition, lower-value small fish may be
diverted from human consumption to feeds for
farmed fish species, although they could have
a greater impact in terms of food security and
nutrition if consumed directly.
There has been increased
attention to the use of
small fish and seaweed in value-added products
such as snacks and seasonings, fish chutney
and fish powders for fortifying young children’s
foods. Small fish and fish powders are easy
to share and mix into dishes with vegetables,
legumes and other foods, enhancing nutrient
bioavailability. Fish powders produced from
grinding all parts of small fish or unused parts
of larger fish (bones, head, eyes and viscera,
which can account for up to 50 percent of the
fish when processed) are micronutrient-rich
and have been found to be highly acceptable to
children (Bogard
et al
., 2015).
Communities situated at greater distances
from waterbodies or fish farms (so-called “fish
deserts”) may spend more money on fish; per
capita income and fish
consumption are positively
correlated, and social norms may play into
intra-household consumption patterns (Asche
et al
., 2015). This underlines the importance of
location, seasonality, socio-economic status, and
gender in relation to access to fish as food.
The significant investment required for
aquaculture farms, coupled with limited
purchasing power in developing countries,
may drive investment into export-oriented
and lucrative aquaculture (Asche
et al
., 2015).
For aquaculture to create lasting solutions
to nutrition security without exacerbating
existing inequities in access to food and land,
development programmes must consider the
sociocultural dynamics of local food systems.
Cost-sensitive production of innovative fish
products, expansion of nutrition-sensitive
preservation, storage and distribution of fish to
fish deserts, and improving women’s direct access
to fish – both economically and geographically –
have the potential to enhance food security
and nutrition, particularly in nutritionally
vulnerable communities.
There are successful cases of aquaculture’s
orientation for food security and nutrition in
populations with little access to fish or income
opportunities. These
include approaches such
as pond polyculture, where nutrient-rich
small fish for household consumption are
grown together with higher-value large fish to
increase household income. From a livelihoods
perspective, capture fisheries and aquaculture
indirectly contribute to food security through
livelihood opportunities for almost 60 million
people engaged in the primary sectors of
capture fisheries (38.98 million) and aquaculture
(20.53 million). Women account for 14 percent
of those 60 million people, although when
secondary-sector activities such as processing
and marketing are considered, the total work
force is more evenly divided. Many studies
have demonstrated that women’s
engagement
in livelihood activities is linked to better health
and nutrition outcomes for themselves and
their children.
Evidence of the positive impact of fish and
aquatic foods on human health is prevalent
in the scientific literature, but is not reaching
enough decision makers, marginalizing the
role that capture or culture fisheries can and
should play in national food security and
nutrition policies. If the benefits of fisheries
and aquaculture are to be realized for food
security and nutrition – particularly in
nutritionally vulnerable populations – attention
in policymaking and management must focus
on smaller, food-critical
and economically
viable fisheries and fish farms (Bogard
et al.
,
2019). Better understanding of nutritionally
vulnerable populations’ fish preferences,
combined with improved preservation, storage
and distribution, can re-orient fisheries and
aquaculture for food security and ensure that
fish is available and accessible in fish deserts.
Data on sustainable fish food systems can be
improved through: (i) disaggregation of nutrient
composition data by species; (ii) inclusion of
local and underutilized species in composition
and consumption data; (iii) diet–environmental
footprint analysis for various fish production
methods; and (iv) improved reporting methods
for inland fisheries stocks. Expanding the data
and evidence on fish in nutritious, sustainable
food systems has the potential to improve the
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: