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2020
Committee for the West Central Gulf of Guinea)
or informal information-exchange working
groups (e.g. Network of Exchange of Information
and Experience among Latin American and
Caribbean Countries), to combat IUU fishing.
Finally, negotiations are continuing within the
WTO for an agreement that would obligate
States to prohibit subsidies from being given
(or continuing to be given) to persons involved
in IUU fishing. However, invoking such a
prohibition involves a number of prerequisites,
including agreeing on a set of definitions of
terms such as “IUU fishing” and the steps or
criteria for determining the occurrence of IUU
fishing. Agreeing on these definitions and
criteria is proving to be a major challenge, but
there is hope for consensus.
Product legality and origin
As global demand for fish and fishery products
has increased significantly in recent years,
so has awareness of the need to ensure that
supplies come from operations free of economic,
environmental and social issues along the
whole fish value chain. Besides the original
requirements that seafood traceability was
established to address, namely food safety, more
attention has focused on the legality aspect of
fish and seafood supplies. Concurrently, debate
on the utility, costs and benefits of sustainability
certification in fisheries and aquaculture
has continued, and various improvement
programmes have stemmed from concerns
over challenges facing developing-country
producers in this regard. Another issue linked to
product legality is food fraud. While not a new
phenomenon, it has come under the spotlight
in recent years. Major initiatives are under way
in many countries, at both governmental and
private-sector levels, to combat food fraud.
Catch documentation schemes (CDSs) are
broadly recognized as a useful tool for
preventing the entry into the value chain of
fish originating from catches inconsistent
with applicable measures, with which seafood
legality is ensured at the entry point. After the
adoption of the FAO Voluntary Guidelines for
Catch Documentation Schemes (FAO, 2019b),
the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission initiated
the process to develop a new CDS. This will be
the fourth CDS introduced by an RFMO, after
those by the Convention on the Conservation of
Antarctic Marine Living Resources, International
Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic
Tunas, and Commission for the Conservation
of Southern Bluefin Tuna. In the meantime,
several market-related measures to combat IUU
fishing have been introduced. These include
the Catch Certification System of the Republic
of Korea (targeting three species), the Seafood
Import Monitoring Program of the United States
of America, and the CDS of the Association
of Southeast Asian Nations. Other national
or regional initiatives are under discussion
or development. This demonstrates the
global commitment and consensus to combat
IUU fishing through multiple approaches.
Almost a decade after its introduction, the catch
certification regulation of the European Union
has evolved into “CATCH”, an electronic CDS
that is expected to provide a single database with
real-time monitoring of import controls.
Several recent FAO publications explore the
roles different national authorities could play
to ensure the effectiveness of national seafood
traceability, and eventually to support the
functionality of CDSs (Hosch, 2018; FAO, 2018c).
The Global Dialogue on Seafood Traceability
(GDST, 2016) is an industry-led international
platform to develop a unified framework for
interoperable seafood traceability practices
based on four pillars: (i) internationally agreed
key data elements; (ii) technical specifications
for interoperable traceability systems;
(iii) internationally agreed benchmarks for
verifying data validity; and (iv) harmonization
of business-smart national regulations.
Another international initiative, the Seafood
Alliance for Legality and Traceability, seeks
collaboration and synergy among efforts around
seafood traceability.
The debate on sustainability certification has
focused more on challenges in developing
regions, such as high costs, low incentives, lack
of data and poor governance. However, in recent
years, the numbers and multiplicity of such
schemes have been confusing. The proliferation
of rating systems, fishery improvement projects
and aquaculture improvement projects has
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SUSTAINABILITY IN ACTION
further complicated the picture. Progress towards
harmonization is noticeable, as the Global
Sustainable Seafood Initiative (GSSI) has
successfully recognized nine ecolabels (for
both wild-caught and farmed seafood) using
its benchmark tools (GSSI, 2019). There is
no evidence that sustainability certification
will be phased out in the near future, also in
view of consumers’ increasing demand for
sustainable seafood, and the absence of a better
alternative. A significant proportion of global
seafood production is not ready to engage with
the available sustainability ecolabelling and
certification schemes. The GSSI Measuring
and Accelerating Performance Program,
supported by FAO, is a market-based programme
targeting seafood producers currently working
towards or not participating in sustainability
certification. The programme supports local
producers in committing to essential incremental
improvements within specific time frames,
in conformity with the Code. With market
incentives for verified sustainability performance
improvements and a lower barrier to entry, the
programme has the potential to significantly
expand the participation of seafood producers in
the improvement and certification process.
The fisheries and aquaculture sector is highly
vulnerable to food fraud given the complexity
of the sector, the price differential between
lookalike species, and the multiplicity of species
and their corresponding value chains. Studies in
the United States of America and the European
Union have shown the seafood sector to be in the
top two or three food sectors most vulnerable to
fraudulent activity. A recent major coordinated
action by the European Commission, INTERPOL
and Europol across 11 European countries
detected fraudulent practices concerning
tuna fish, including species substitution and
fraudulently selling tuna intended for canning
as fresh tuna. More than 51 tonnes of tuna were
seized and 5 criminal cases initiated.
In 2018, an FAO report highlighted how
combating fish fraud is a complex task requiring
the strengthening of national food regulatory
programmes, the development of effective,
science-based traceability systems, and improved
methods for fish authenticity testing (FAO,
2018d). It also emphasized the need for the fish
industry to develop and implement systems for
fish-fraud vulnerability assessment in order to
identify potential sources of fish fraud within
supply chains, and to prioritize control measures
to minimize the risk of receiving fraudulent or
adulterated raw materials or ingredients.
In 2019, the Codex Committee on Food Import
and Export Certification and Inspection Systems
established an electronic working group on
food fraud with a wide-ranging remit to review
existing Codex texts to determine how to
progress work in this area.
Building on these initiatives, FAO held a
technical workshop on food fraud in Rome in
November 2019 to aid the development of a
comprehensive approach to tackling food fraud.
At the workshop, experts and FAO staff explored
the multifaceted aspects of food fraud, and
identified key measures, tools and procedures in
place to combat food fraud across various value
chains. Specifically, the purpose of the workshop
was to agree on key elements that contribute
to food fraud and to identify the elements,
institutions and mechanisms that countries need
to put in place in order to effectively address
the issue.
Sustainability, tenure, access and user rights
For natural resources such as land, water, forests,
fisheries and other aquatic resources in lakes,
rivers, and seas, the term “tenure” generally
refers to the norms and rules about how people
govern, access and use these resources. The term
“user” means the person, group of people, or
other entities who may be doing these actions.
Thus, the topic of tenure and user rights is about
who can use these resources, for how long and
under what conditions. The governance of tenure
and user rights describes whether and how
people are able to clarify, acquire and protect
rights to use and to manage these resources.
In marine and inland fisheries, the connection
between sustainable resource use and
secure tenure, user and access rights is
widely recognized. There is also increasing
acknowledgement that environmental
sustainability is intrinsically linked to and
dependent on the social and economic
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THE STATE OF WORLD FISHERIES AND AQUACULTURE
2020
sustainability of coastal and inland fisheries
communities in the long term. The livelihoods
of many, particularly among the rural poor, are
based on having secure and equitable access to
and management of fisheries and aquaculture
resources, as these resources provide shelter
and highly nutritious food, underpin social,
cultural and religious practices, and are a central
factor in equitable economic growth and social
cohesion. Therefore, ineffective governance of
tenure and user rights that does not consider
the need to balance environmental, social and
economic sustainability constitutes a major
threat to secure livelihoods and the sustainable
use of natural resources. Such governance
often results in extreme poverty and hunger
for communities that depend on these natural
resources. Appropriate tenure systems, including
clear access and user rights, are thus fundamental
elements of securing sustainable fisheries and
their contribution to the SDGs.
For centuries, many different tenure systems
have existed, supporting different combinations
of implicit and explicit social, management and
policy objectives, which commonly reflect the
three pillars of sustainability: ensuring resource
conservation; contributing to social well-being;
and generating economic benefits in a context
of food security and poverty eradication.
These systems range from community, traditional
or other groups’ access and use rights, to
individual transferable quotas or catch shares,
to preferential zones for particular groups such
as small-scale fishers. While some systems
prioritize economic efficiency among recognized
resource users (such as individuals or groups of
people), others are inspired by, or bring about
the formal recognition of, informal or customary
tenure systems.
If properly designed, tenure and user rights
systems can secure the activity of historical
users and dependent communities, and establish
exclusive access to the resource and create the
conditions to help avoid overfishing. In doing so,
fishing becomes a long-term activity where the
resource users are responsible for the future of
the sector and play an important role as stewards
of the resource. However, as rights are allocated
and limited, they also become valuable for
stakeholders inside and outside the sector, and
this may render the sector subject to investment
forces with different objectives from those of
historical users and the communities that have
relied on the local aquatic resources. Therefore, it
is vital to safeguard legitimate tenure rights
against transactions that could threaten the
livelihoods, food security and nutrition of coastal
communities. This consideration is manifest in
the Committee on Food Security’s Principles
for Responsible Investment in Agriculture and
Food Systems (CFS-RAI), the CFS Voluntary
Guidelines for Responsible Governance of Land,
Fisheries and Forests in the Context of National
Food Security (VGGT) and in the Voluntary
Guidelines for Securing Sustainable Small-Scale
Fisheries in the Context of Food Security and
Poverty Eradication (SSF Guidelines).
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Different ways of recognizing and allocating
tenure, user and access rights generate
important social, economic and environmental
trade-offs. It is vital to understand this point
as aquatic resources are gaining attention in
national policies for economic development
and conservation of natural resources.
Competition over resources within the fisheries
and aquaculture sector can arise where tenure
systems are not clearly defined or not properly
enforced. This is, for example, the case where
large-scale and small-scale fisheries target the
same fish stocks, or where a growing aquaculture
industry in freshwater and marine areas
claims more space and generates unintended
consequences for capture fisheries. Similarly, the
expansion of other sectors, such as tourism,
urban development, port infrastructure, energy,
transport and other industries, in locations where
fisheries or aquaculture operations and related
activities take place needs careful assessment.
Such expansion can generate livelihood
opportunities that complement or integrate
fisheries activities. More often, however, fisheries
and aquaculture activities are not considered and
nor are stakeholders consulted, despite the fact
that international norms call for their inclusion
in decision-making about who is granted tenure
and user rights to land, water and aquatic
resources, and how. International norms also
require consideration of fisheries and aquaculture
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For more information, please refer to previous editions of
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