AFRICA: And then there were no fish
(0 Votes)
JOHANNESBURG (IRIN) - In the not-too-distant future, several African countries will face the reality of collapsed fisheries and the permanent degradation of their marine environment, a new report has warned.

"This in turn will continue to adversely impact on food-security and economic development, with coastal communities dependent on fishing being the hardest hit," noted The Crisis of Marine Plunder in Africa, published by the Institute for Security Studies (ISS), a regional think-tank.

Poaching and overfishing in a number of African countries could lead to collapsed stocks and cause permanent damage to the marine environment, according to Andre Standing, author of the new ISS study. Some of these are issues also highlighted in the UN Environment Programme's (UNEP) Global Environment Outlook 4 (GEO-4).

"While the demise of marine biodiversity is not a peculiar problem for underdeveloped countries, there are strong reasons to suspect that once abundant fish stocks and marine biodiversity situated in the Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZ) of African countries are threatened," said Standing.

Exploitation of West Africa's fish resources by European Union (EU), Russian and Asian fleets "increased sixfold" between the 1960s and 1990s, the GEO-4 report noted. "Much of the catch is exported or shipped directly to Europe, and compensation for access is often low compared to the value of the landed fish."

Standing told IRIN that the problem did not "stem largely from rogue fishing companies who evade laws and break regulations with impunity", but "vested interests" that allowed this situation to occur, and that these "vested interests span not only foreign governments and inter-governmental organisations, but also African elected leaders and public officials".

The UNEP report points out that fish is a critical source of animal protein in poor countries; globally it provides more than 2.6 billion people with at least one-fifth of their average per capita animal protein intake. "Fish accounts for 20 percent of animal-derived protein in Low-Income Food Deficit (LIFD) countries, compared to 13 percent in industrialised countries, with many countries where overfishing is a concern also being LIFD countries."

Standing cited the 2005 British Marine Resources Assessment Group, which "provided a conservative estimate that illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing in Africa could be valued at approximately US$1 billion every year".

"It was estimated that in Somalia the total annual value of illegal fishing in only the tuna and shrimp industries amounted to $94 million. In Angola illegal fishing was measured in the sardine and mackerel fisheries to be roughly $49 million annually, which equates to 21 percent of the total value of Angolan fish exports. In Mozambique, illegal fishing in the tuna and shrimp industry was set at approximately $38 million."

These quantities were "comprehensible", Standing wrote, "when one considers that in South Africa, for example, over a two-year period in the early 2000s some 320,000 tonnes of Patagonian Toothfish were harvested, whilst the annual Total Allowable Catch was set by the government at only 450 tonnes.

"Likewise, in 2001, in one single incursion, long-line fishing vessels from Taiwan illegally entered Tanzania's EEZ and took approximately $20 million worth of tuna."

Trade liberalisation

Fisheries access agreements, which allow foreign vessels into local fishing grounds, adversely affect fish stocks, reduce artisanal catches, and affect the food security and well-being of coastal West African communities, according to the GEO-4. Many of these agreements came into effect after the countries were pressured to liberalise trade.

Much of the catch is exported or shipped directly to Europe, and compensation for access is often low compared to the value of the landed fish 
In Mauritania the fisheries sector is predominantly influenced by the terms of the Cotonou Agreement, which binds the 79-member African,Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) group to the EU. "Cotonou provides for all ACP exports a customs-free entry to the European market. This has led to an export-oriented development of the fisheries sector," said Anja von Moltke, of UNEP's Division of Technology, Industry and Economics, in a study on Mauritania.

"Mauritania's trade liberalisation measures are primarily characterised by a dismantling of customs duty on imports and exports, state redrawing of both public fisheries processing facilities, and numerous bilateral fisheries agreements with Algeria, Japan, Morocco, Russia, Senegal, Tunisia and the EU."

The increased export revenue brought by trade liberalisation has helped reduced the national debt, but it has had a negative impact on food consumption and poverty reduction, "resulting in a situation of high dependence of the fisheries sector on these foreign financial payments," von Moltke said.

Studies have also shown the environmental costs: a large number of Mauritania's main fish stocks have decreased significantly over the past years, with many already being overexploited or close to overexploitation, the author commented. "The octopus stock, for example, is currently being overexploited by 24 to 40 percent."

Job losses

Economically, the biggest repercussions in developing countries have been lost job opportunities and hard currency revenues, said the GEO-4 report. "After processing in Europe, the end value of seafood products from these resources is estimated at about $110.5 million, illustrating a huge disparity in value of the resources taken by EU companies and the licence fee paid to the countries, which is only 7.5 percent of the value of the processed products."

The case study on Mauritania found that it processed only 12 percent of its catch. "This has several far-reaching impacts. First, it leads to a real disconnection between the production system under access agreements and the Mauritanian system. Second, there is no investment in Mauritania's processing facilities, remaining uncompetitive.

Increased exports have lead to a lack of fish in local markets, particularly high-value fish, which has affected prices and led to the substitution of fish for poultry, which was now cheaper than fish. Von Moltke also found that traditional fish species were being replaced by new types of lower value species.

The GEO-4 report pointed out that overexploitation of fish was having a long-term impact on livelihoods and had forced artisanal fishers from coastal West Africa to migrate to some of the regions exploiting their resources. "Senegalese fishers emigrating to Spain claim the reason for leaving their homes is the lack of their traditional fisheries livelihood."

Action needed

Standing said, "Although the solution to overfishing requires action on an international level, it does seem clear that African countries can do much more to improve the situation; it is not simply the case that African states lack the capacity to do more to protect their marine resources, although this is a major problem.

"What seems important to understand is that overfishing and some forms of illegal fishing flourish due to corruption and expediency by those in public office or government," he claimed.

Von Moltke said there was a need for more transparency during negotiations for access to fisheries, which should be reflected in the design of the agreements.

"In this context it is important to recognise that government-to-government access agreements, although under scrutiny for their social and ecological impacts, could provide channels for developed countries to contribute to effective fisheries management (including support for effective monitoring, control and surveillance systems) and to sustainable development of host countries more easily than government-to-private access deals."

The GEO-4 report said further action would be needed to induce governments to increase their political commitment to reduce fishing efforts globally, and to provide funds for regional fish-management bodies.

Lesson from extractive industry

Analysts have suggested emulating the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) by a coalition of governments, companies, civil society groups, investors and international organisations, which aims to strengthen governance in the extractive sector by improving accountability.

The ISS was trying to involve civil society in achieving this, said Standing. "Efforts by civil society to improve transparency in the extractive industries and logging industries should be a source of inspiration here. In particular, the Publish What You Pay Campaign has helped put pressure on governments and companies to address corruption."

http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=75443
Namibia: Protecting Our Coast - Your Voice Matters
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The Namibian (Windhoek) - For the next two weeks, people in the Erongo and the Kunene regions will be able to make an input in the formulation of a policy on the conservation and management of Namibia's coast.

In consultation with representatives of Nacoma (the Namibia Coast Conservation and Management project), communities will have an opportunity to share their views, concerns and objectives on the current and future use of the coastal areas and resources.

Public participation is crucial, since it is the people's needs and aspirations that would form the basis for the Namibian Coastal White Paper - a government document stipulating the future policy and management of the coast - says the co-ordinator of Nacoma, Timo Mufeti.

"The coast from the Kunene to the Orange River is rich in biodiversity, and has many special areas worth protecting since they are tourist attractions and have other economic benefits. These areas are however threatened by human activities and therefore their protection calls for wise conservation," Mufeti said. This is why Nacoma was established: to help Government and citizens to conserve, sustainably use and manage the coastal biodiversity.

The first series of consultative meetings will be held for the people of Erongo. The first two meetings will be held at Swakopmund today - at the Tamariskia Town Hall at 14h00, and then at the Meduletu Hall at 18h00. Tomorrow, a meeting will be held at the Walvis Bay Community Hall. People at Arandis and Henties Bay can attend meetings on Friday at the Arandis Town Hall at 09h00, and the Henties Bay Community Hall at 17h00.

The Topnaars along the Kuiseb River and Rooibank can attend a meeting on Saturday at the traditional authority's office. No time has been confirmed for this meeting. The people of the Kunene Region will also be able to attend meetings from November 25 to 29. These meetings will be held at Terrace Bay, Opuwo, Sesfontein, Orupembe, Purros and Torra Bay.

The times and venues for these meetings, as well as the dates for meetings to be held in the Hardap and Karas regions, will be announced in due course.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200711200610.html

Rainforest Reserve Established in DR Congo to save bonobo
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The government of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) has announced the creation of a 11,803-square mile rainforest reserve to protect the habitat of the endangered bonobo, the so-called "peaceful chimp". The reserve is located in the Sankuru region, an area that experienced extensive fighting during the long-running civil war in the Congo.

The Bonobo Conservation Initiative (BCI) joins the government of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) in announcing the creation of the new Sankuru Nature Reserve, a huge rainforest area harboring the endangered bonobo, a great ape most closely related to humans. Larger than the state of Massachusetts, the new reserve encompasses 11,803 square miles of tropical rainforest, extremely rich in biodiversity.

"This is a monumental step towards saving a significant portion of the world's second largest rainforest, of critical importance to the survival not only of humankind's closest great ape relative, the bonobo, but to all life on earth given the increasing threat of climate change," said Sally Jewell Coxe, president and co-founder of the Bonobo Conservation Initiative.

The Sankuru region was hit very hard during the recent war in the Congo, which devastated the local people and claimed four million lives -- more than any war since WWII. In addition to the critical environmental challenges presented by unsustainable hunting, the humanitarian crisis must also be addressed. "The people of Sankuru rely on the forest for every aspect of their livelihood. Helping them to develop new economic opportunities apart from the bushmeat trade is one of the most urgent priorities," Coxe said.

In danger of extinction, bonobos (Pan paniscus) were the last great ape to be discovered and are the least known great ape species. Found only in the DRC, bonobos inhabit the heart of the Congo Basin, Africa's largest rainforest, which is threatened by the onslaught of industrial logging. Bonobos are distinguished by their peaceful, cooperative, matriarchal society, remarkable intelligence, and sexual nature. Other than humans, bonobos are the only primates known to have sex not only for procreation, but also for pleasure and conflict resolution -- and with members of either sex. They serve as a powerful flagship both for conservation and for peace.

In addition to the bonobo, the Sankuru Reserve contains the okapi (Okapia johnstoni), an exotic short necked forest giraffe also endemic to the DRC, but not previously found outside of their known range far to the northeast. Survey teams from the Congo's Center for Research in Ecology and Forestry (CREF) sponsored by BCI made this exciting discovery. Sankuru also contains elephants, which have been hunted out in many other areas of the Congo forest, plus at least 10 other species of primates, including the rare owl faced monkey and blue monkey.

The wildlife is under intense pressure from organized hunting for the commercial bushmeat trade. The report from the Congolese Institute for Conservation of Nature (ICCN) on its recent expedition to the area states that "the ecocide must be stopped" and recommends immediate action to protect this invaluable ecosystem and watershed. The DRC Minister of the Environment, Didace Pembe Bokiaga, who officially declared the new reserve, said, "This increases the total area of protected land in the DRC to 10.47%, bringing us closer to our goal of 15%. We are proud that the Sankuru Reserve is being created in the framework of community participative conservation...and will be zoned to guarantee the rights of the local population."

Andre Tosumba, director of BCI's Congolese NGO partner, ACOPRIK (Community Action for the Primates of Kasai), led the successful local effort to protect Sankuru. "When I saw the extent to which people were hunting bonobos, okapi, and elephants, we began to sensitize them to realize the value of these animals," he said. "Once they came to understand, the people themselves decided to stop hunting these precious species and to create a reserve to protect their forest. BCI has helped ACOPRIK and the local people at every step of the way...we call on the international community to join our effort."

Protecting Sankuru Reserve's forest will contribute significantly to mitigating global warming. Approximately 20% of annual green house gas emissions come from deforestation and other land-use change. Keeping this rich tropical forest intact will make an important contribution to global efforts to reduce emissions while simultaneously conserving biodiversity. The Sankuru Reserve stores up to 660 million tons of carbon, which if released by deforestation would emit up to 2 billion tons of carbon dioxide, comparable to emissions from 38,000,000 cars per year for 10 years.

"This is a huge victory for bonobo and rainforest conservation," Coxe said. "However our work has just begun. Now we need investment to successfully manage the reserve. And, other areas need to be protected to ensure the long-term survival of the bonobo and the integrity of the Congo rainforest." The Sankuru Reserve is the southern anchor for a constellation of linked, community-based reserves being developed by BCI in the Bonobo Peace Forest, a project supported by DRC President Joseph Kabila since its inception in 2002.

The Bonobo Conservation Initiative (BCI) is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization dedicated to the survival of the highly endangered bonobo (Pan paniscus) and its rainforest habitat in the Congo Basin. BCI works with indigenous Congolese people through cooperative conservation and community development programs and the government of the DRC to establish new protected areas and to safeguard bonobos wherever they are found. BCI has been selected as a featured charity in the Catalogue for Philanthropy for excellence, innovation and cost-effectiveness.

Initial support for this project has been provided by the Great Ape Conservation Fund, administered by the US Fish and Wildlife Service in collaboration with USAID's Central African Regional Program for the Environment.

http://news.mongabay.com/2007/1119-congo.html

MINFOF, CIFOR, To Institute Model Forest Governance
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The Ministry of Forestry and Wildlife, MINFOF, and the Centre for International Forest Research, CIFOR, have resolved to make Model forest a reality in Cameroon.

This decision was the main substance of a meeting to evaluate the activities of the Camop Ma'an and the Dja et Mpomo model forest sites, at the conference hall of the Mvog-betsi Zoo in Yaounde, November 16.

Model forests, according to experts, are large multi-functional landscapes governed by a voluntary partnership representing all important uses and values within that landscape.
They represent a collective approach in forest governance that fully and collectively engages civil society together with government, industries and indigenous groups, research organisations and NGOs.

CIFOR began the model forest project in Cameroon in 2003, with the help of the International Model Forest Network, IMFN, which is working towards the sustainable management of forests around the world.   

According to Chimere Diaw, Director of CIFOR, the concept of model forest is one that regulates the conflicting interests of various stakeholders such that they all make gains within the policy of sustainable forest management.

The establishment of the model forest concept in Cameroon took collective efforts of CIFGOR, IMFN, the Canadian International Development Agency, CIDA, the Central African Forest Commission, COMIFAC, the World Conservative Union, the Food and Agricultural Organisation, FAO, and MINFOF.

They developed the Campo Ma'an model forest in the South Province and the Dja and Mpomo model forest in the East Province to act as pilot sites for the Congo Basin.
While evaluating the first phase of the project, the stakeholders lauded the fact that rural women, pygmy communities, resource persons, the local forest administration, development agencies researchers, conservationists, local NGOs and forest and agro industries were in harmony.

The second phase of the forest model project would kick off from 2008-2013.Addressing participants at the meeting, the MINFOF's Secretary General, Dr. Madi Ali, said the initiative by CIFOR and its partners ensures a new positive dispensation in forest governance that emphasizes on the fight against poverty.

The Vice president of the Campo Ma'an model forest project, Madame Angeline Dooh, said the sites covers a surface area of 8000 hectares. To her, the project succeeded because it brought together different stakeholders under the vision of the model forest vision. She noted that their management is a bottom-top approach, which is aimed at ensuring that the interests of local communities are well taken care of.

The mayor of Lomie in the East Province presented the Dja and Mpomo model forest that covers an area of 7000 hectares and foru administrative areas.According to CIFOR researchers, Cyprian Jum, Joachim Nguiebouri, Mireille Zoa and Chimere Diaw, the two model forests in Cameroon are broad-based partnerships between diverse stakeholders to make sustainable forest management a reality.

They, however, expressed the need to overcome conflicts between forests actors.

By Kini Nsom

http://www.postnewsline.com/2007/11/minfof-cifor-to.html#more

Mabira Forest to stay, says VP Bukenya
(0 votes)

THE Vice-President, Prof. Gilbert Bukenya, has assured environmental activists and donors that Mabira Forest Reserve will not be degazetted for sugarcane growing.

“We are a democratic country and had to listen to the people.’’

Bukenya was addressing journalists at the Nile Resort in Jinja on Saturday.
“You can develop without disrupting ecology. It is possible to plant trees to replace those that have been cut down.’’
He cited the example of the ground on which the British Parliament stands, which he said was previously a swamp.
“What we could look at is the entire ecological system and consider what would happen to the rest of the ecological system if some trees are cut down.’’

The Vice-President had earlier presided over the drafting of recommendations (The Jinja Declaration) that will be debated during the Commonwealth summit that starts in Kampala on Friday.
The recommendations will also form part of the discussions at the UN meeting on climate change in Bali, Indonesia, next month.

Bukenya said climate change in Uganda was manifested in the adverse weather and climate conditions “Between 1991 and 2,000, Uganda experienced seven droughts, compared to about seven during the period 1900 to 1970,’’ he said.
“The last years have also witnessed an increase in intensity and frequency of heavy rains, floods and landslides in the highland areas as well as outbreaks of diseases.’’

Bukenya called for action against climate change.

“The most developed countries will be required to do more. This is not only because they contribute and continue to contribute to most of the causes and sustenance of climate change, but also because the UN framework on climate change emphasises differentiated responsibilities to address climate change effectively.’’

Bukenya also launched last year’s the National State of Environment Report and the fourth Global Environment Outlook report.
 
http://www.newvision.co.ug/D/8/13/597791

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