November 1998 COFI/99/7

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FAO

COMMITTEE ON FISHERIES
Twenty-third Session
Rome, Italy, 15-19 February 1999
FISHERIES AND AQUACULTURE ISSUES IN SMALL ISLAND DEVELOPING STATES


SUMMARY

This paper addresses some of the more important fisheries and aquaculture issues in small island developing States (SIDS) that affect long-term sustainable resource use in these countries. The introduction provides background information on SIDS and makes note of the special international recognition given to island States. Some of the general characteristics of SIDS are then reviewed, and a number of the critical issues considered. Constraints on the sustainable management and development of the fishery sector are assessed, and the agreed FAO framework of fisheries assistance to address those constraints outlined. The suggested action by the Committee is that it is invited to review some of the more important fisheries and aquaculture issues facing island States. Furthermore, the Committee is invited to note progress with steps taken by FAO to secure funding for the FAO Programme of Fisheries Assistance for Small Island Developing States and to urge interested donors to commit funds to enable the Programme to be implemented.




I. INTRODUCTION

1. Despite geographic and economic differences among small island developing States (SIDS),1 all island communities are extremely dependent on the sea and its living resources for their existence. Since opportunities for land-based development are limited, the sea and the fisheries sector play a critical role in the lives and economy of all island communities.

2. The nature of problems faced by SIDS concerning the sustainable utilization of fisheries resources are not essentially different from those of other States. However, SIDS are considerably disadvantaged in that they do not have the same range of solutions to these problems as larger States. As essentially self-contained ecosystems, fisheries problems in SIDS usually manifest themselves more obviously, more quickly, and with greater effect than in larger continental States.

3. The special fisheries and aquaculture requirements of SIDS, and their dependence on the fisheries sector for food, employment and national income, have been recognized by FAO for the past two decades. Indeed, the Committee on Fisheries (COFI) first acknowledged the particular fisheries needs of SIDS at its Fifteenth Session in 1983. The Strategy adopted by the 1984 FAO World Conference on Fisheries Management and Development underscored the importance of the fisheries sector to SIDS when it noted that "… Due consideration should be given to the special role of small-scale fisheries in the economies of island States where they are often the major source of employment and foreign exchange earnings. …"2 Later, the Twenty-first and Twenty-second Sessions of COFI in 1995 and 1997, respectively, addressed SIDS issues, when it was agreed that an FAO Programme of Fisheries Assistance for Small Island Developing States should be elaborated and submitted without delay to the international donor community for funding.

4. In addition to its own initiatives focussing on fisheries and aquaculture issues in small island States, FAO also sought to highlight the importance of the fisheries sector to SIDS in international fora and in the negotiation of international declarations and instruments. For example, FAO inputs to the preparatory commissions for the negotiation of Agenda 21 of the 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development and the 1994 Barbados United Nations Global Conference on the Sustainable Development of Small Island Developing States, were cases in point.3

5. A recent development concerning the importance of fish to island States was the 1998 deliberations by the High-level Panel of External Experts in Fisheries. In the course of discussions references were made to the fish and food security in SIDS, to problems island States face with respect to obtaining a fair share from the exploitation of their fisheries, and to the difficulties associated with the sustainable management of their fisheries resources. More specifically, the Panel noted:

6. In terms of their participation in international fisheries affairs, which can be quite financially burdensome for island States, Table 1 shows 35 SIDS are Members of the United Nations and 33 are Members of FAO. In most instances it is the smallest island States from the South Pacific (Cook Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Nauru, Tuvalu) that are not members of the United Nations or FAO. Eleven island States (or 13 percent of the total) are classified as low-income food deficit countries (LIFDCs),4 while 11 States (or 23 percent of the total number of least developed States), have ‘least developed’ status5 within the UN System.6

7. Selected UN development indicators for developing island States are shown in Table 2. These data provide an indication of the relative social and economic status of States. In summary, the data show that:

II. CHARACTERISTICS OF SIDS

8. Although there are apparent differences among regional groupings of SIDS, and indeed even within regional groupings, it is nonetheless possible to generalize about a number of common characteristics of SIDS. These characteristics include, inter alia:

III. SOME MAJOR FISHERY ISSUES

Food Security

9. Fish provides the basic source of animal protein for many SIDS, and as such fish therefore figures heavily in the food security equation in these countries.9 Indeed, largely out of necessity, per caput fish consumption rates (from both capture fisheries and aquaculture) in island States are high by international standards.

10. Data showing fish consumption rates in SIDS, and the contribution of fish to the overall protein intake, are shown in Table 3. These data indicate that:

11. Significantly, and contrary to general expectations, many small island States are net importers of fishery products. These imports are for use both by island populations and, in some cases, for the tourist industry. Table 3 shows that 29 SIDS, for which data are available, are net importers of fishery products. In view of this situation, and the need to ensure that fisheries continue to contribute to the maximum extent possible to food security in island States, every effort should be made to facilitate long-term sustainable resource use.

Social and Economic Considerations

12. The fisheries sector is important in island States because it is an avenue for both self- and paid-employment. Near urban centres or tourist resorts, small-scale fishermen and fish farmers have the opportunity to catch and farm fish and to sell their catches in urban markets. Where industrial fisheries exist, islanders can obtain work on vessels, as is the case in some South Pacific countries. The marketing of catches, both from small-scale fisheries and the by-catch from industrial fleets, presents opportunities for islanders, and in particular women, to participate in an economic activity to which they otherwise would not have access.

13. The fisheries sector generates national income for SIDS through fish exports and revenue from fisheries access fees. This revenue can be substantial, and in some cases is the most important source of revenue available to an island State (e.g., Kiribati). Fees for fishing access, primarily for tuna, are paid by foreign fishing fleets to island countries in the South Pacific and Indian Ocean for the right to fish in their respective EEZs.

14. Employment opportunities in SIDS are limited, and this situation presents difficulties where it is necessary to re-locate fishermen as part of fisheries rationalization programmes. In cases where there is pressure on fisheries resources, and possibilities for tourism exit, it has been possible for some fishers to re-orientate their activities in support of small-scale eco-tourism, often with an emphasis on sports fishing and other water sports. In other cases fishers have found work outside the country. The remittances from these workers are economically important in many cases.

Improved Management, Sustainable Development and Utilization

15. The maintenance of the contribution of fisheries to food security, and the preservation of the fisheries sector’s key social and economic role in island States, is fundamentally related to fisheries conservation and management, and the subsequent utilization of resources, particularly those resources harvested in coastal areas. This is despite the economic importance of offshore resources, such as tuna, which are in most instances subject to lower levels of fishing efforts than inshore resources adjacent to population centres.

16. A common feature of inshore fisheries in SIDS is the deterioration of conservation and management practices as population pressure has increased and opportunities for commercial fish sales developed. Migration and social change has also led to the breakdown of traditional fisheries management practice which hitherto had been rather effective on islands which are populated by indigenous groups. Measures to rekindle and strengthen management practice, building on and working through traditional institutions, is viewed as the most realistic means of promoting inshore management in island countries, given the lack of success with so-called conventional management approaches.10 Indeed, the greater involvement of fishing communities in decision-making concerning fisheries management, as opposed to centralized approaches to management, is being promoted generally in developing countries as the most effective conservation and management avenue to pursue.

17. With respect to fish preservation, techniques were not usually well developed in island countries because the need for fish preservation was not pressing. However, with continuing transportation and marketing difficulties, growing urban populations, high fishing pressure on coastal resources adjacent to urban centres, and rising imports of fish and other animal protein in SIDS, there is a need to introduce and improve fish preservation techniques. In addition, marketing channels need to be made more efficient given that opportunities exist in some island States to move fish from outer islands to urban centres.

18. Of international fisheries concern at the present time is the issue of by-catch and discards. In artisanal fisheries in island States, there is little, if any, by-catch, and virtually no discarding of fish; all catch is retained for human consumption. However, in industrial fisheries the situation is somewhat different. Where vessels are locally based (e.g. tuna vessels or shrimp trawlers), by-catch is often brought back to port where it is sold, often by women and other disadvantaged groups. In this way the industrial by-catch augments food supply in island States. In the case of distant-water fishing nation vessels, which operate from ports outside the regions where island States are located, the practice of high-grading (i.e. retaining only high-valued species and fish that is of good quality) is common, principally because of the limited storage space on vessels. It is this practice in industrial fisheries which is the current focus of international attention.

Regional Fisheries Cooperation

19. Regional cooperation in marine capture fisheries among SIDS is well developed, and is therefore very important, in all regions. Island States recognize that, given their limited national financial and human resources, and the possibility of being individually manipulated in fisheries negotiations, cooperation and the sharing of information is essential in fisheries, taking into account that many of the stocks are shared and similar fisheries challenges faced. Cooperation among SIDS is pursued through regional organizations such as the Pacific Community and Forum Fisheries Agency in the South Pacific; the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) and the Organization for Eastern Caribbean States (OECS), and the Western Central Atlantic Fishery Commission (WECAFC) in the Caribbean; and the Committee for the Development and Management of Fisheries in the Southwest Indian Ocean of the Indian Ocean Fishery Commission (SWIO/IOFC) in the Indian Ocean. Tuna management, in which SIDS have a major interest, is facilitated through the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission (IOTC) and the International Commission of Atlantic Tunas. A regional tuna fishery body, incorporating fully the principles and concepts of the UN Fish Stocks Agreement, is currently being negotiated in the Western and Central Pacific.

20. Regional fisheries cooperation among island States is extensive, and ranges from the sharing of fisheries and related information, joint training and research programmes, to collaboration in MCS. Indeed, regional cooperation in the area of MCS, as a means of responsibly strengthening fisheries management, is being pursued as a matter of importance in both the Caribbean and South Pacific regions. Efforts to strengthen regional fisheries cooperation at all levels and in all areas should be actively encouraged among SIDS given the benefits that such cooperation can bring.

IV. CONSTRAINTS

21. A number of factors can be identified that constrain the development and management of the fisheries sector in island States. These factors include, inter alia:

V. FAO FRAMEWORK OF ASSISTANCE TO ADDRESS CONSTRAINTS

22. In considering the FAO Programme of Fisheries Assistance for Small Island States, the Twenty-second Session of COFI " … urged FAO to proceed with the Programme’s implementation without delay."11 In conformity with that request, FAO has taken initial steps to secure funding for the implementation of the Programme.12

23. The purpose of the Programme is to enable SIDS to adopt and implement policies and measures to ensure that the capacity of their fisheries administrations is enhanced; that fisheries resources are conserved, managed, developed and utilized in a rational manner; that national food security is enhanced; and that the utilization of fisheries resources continues to contribute to national economic and social development on a sustainable basis. The Programme will also be used as a vehicle to assist SIDS implement the Code of Conduct for Responsible Fisheries in a constructive and concrete manner.

24. The FAO Programme, which is consistent with the fisheries provisions of the 1984 Programme of Action for the Sustainable Development of Small Island States, has a tight focus and will address six areas that have been identified by island States as being of high priority. The six areas are:

25. FAO will keep future Sessions of COFI briefed on steps taken to implement the Programme and will continue to liaise with AOSIS on this matter.

VI. SUGGESTED ACTION BY THE COMMITTEE

26. The Committee is invited to review some of the more important fisheries and aquaculture issues facing island States. Furthermore, the Committee is invited to note progress with steps taken by FAO to secure funding for the FAO Programme of Fisheries Assistance for Small Island Developing States and to urge interested donors to commit funds to enable the Programme to be implemented.

 

Table 1 - Membership of Organizations, Population, Land and EEZ Areas and Coastline Length of Members and Observers of the Alliance of Small Island States and other Small Island Developing States

Area / state

UN FAO member country

LIFDC

Least Developed

Population

('000)

Population Density

(per km2)

Population growth rate (%)

Land area (km2)

EEZ area (000 km2)

Land : EEZ ratio

Coastline length (km)

Atlantic Ocean

                     

Cape Verde

x

x

x

x

417

103

2.48

4 033

230

1 : 57

965

Guinea Bissau

x

x

x

x

1 135

31

1.98

36 125

44 000

1 : 1

350

Sao Tome and Principe

x

x

x

x

117e

121

2.00

964

49

1 : 51

209

                       

Caribbean

                     

Antigua and Barbuda

x

x

   

69g

156

0.65

442

-

-

153

Bahamas

x

x

   

293

21

1.59

13 940

759 000

1 : 54

3 452

Barbados

x

x

   

263

611

0.29

430

49

1 : 114

97

Belize

x

x

   

230

10

2.49

22 965

9

1 : 0.4

386

Cuba

x

x

x

 

11 115

100

0.43

110 862

106

1 : 1

3 735

Dominica

x

x

   

75e

100

0.05

750

10

1 : 13

148

Grenada

x

x

   

85b

246

0.41

345

8

1 : 23

121

Guyana

x

x

   

857

4

1.04

214 970

130 000

1 : 0.6

459

Jamaica

x

x

   

2 539

231

0.94

10 991

87

1 : 8

1 022

St Kitts and Nevis

x

x

   

41e

157

-0.09

261

20

1 : 77

135

St Lucia

x

x

   

136e

221

1.28

616

5

1 : 8

158

St Vincent and the Grenadines

x

x

   

106e

272

0.89

389

10

1 : 26

84

Suriname

x

x

   

443

2

1.16

163 265

101 000

1 : 0.6

386

Trinidad and Tobago

x

x

   

1 318

257

0.82

5128

22

1 : 4

362

                       

Indian Ocean

                     

Comoros

x

x

x

x

672

360

3.07

1 862

73

1 : 39

340

Maldives

x

x

x

x

182

610

3.44

298

279

1 : 936

644

Mauritius

x

x

   

1 154

566

1.08

2 040

345

1 : 169

117

Seychelles

x

x

   

76g

167

1.03

454

393

1 : 856

491

                       

Mediterranean Sea

                     

Cyprus

x

x

   

775

84

1.25

9 251

-

-

648

Malta

x

x

   

374

1 184

0.63

316

-

-

140

                       

Pacific Ocean

                     

Cook Islands

 

x

   

19b

80

0.90

237

1 830

1 : 7 721

120

Federated States of Micronesia

x

     

106e

151

2.75

700

2 978

1 : 4 254

6 112

Fiji

x

x

   

822

45

1.56

18 376

1 290

1 : 70

1 129

Kiribati

     

x

73a

90

1.90

812

3 550

1 : 4 372

1 143

Marshall Islands

x

     

63

350

3.51

180

2 131

1 : 11 839

370

                       

Pacific Ocean (cont.)

                     

Nauru

       

10x

476

1.3x

21

320

1 : 15 238

30

Palau

x

 

x

 

17x

38

1.66x

458

629

1 : 1 373

1519

Papua New Guinea

x

x

   

4 602

10

2.24

462 840

3 120

1 : 7

5 152

Samoa

x

x

x

x

170

60

1.13

2 831

120

1 : 42

403

Solomon Islands

x

x

x

x

416

15

3.21

27 556

1 340

1 : 49

5 313

Tonga

 

x

   

97e

130

0.38

748

700

1 : 936

419

Tuvalu

   

x

x

10x

385

1.45x

26

900

1 : 34 615

24

Vanuatu

x

x

 

x

183

15

2.49

12 190

688

1 : 56

2 528

                       

South China Sea

                     

Singapore

x

     

3 491

5 463

1.50

639

100

1 : 0.2

193

                       

Observers

                     

American Samoa

-

-

   

47a

241

2.81

195

390

1 : 2 000

116

Guam

-

-

   

159

290

1.81

549

218

1 : 397

126

Netherlands Antilles

-

-

   

198

248

0.70

800

-

-

364

Niue

-

-

   

2x

8

-3.65x

262

390

1 : 1 489

64

US Virgin Islands

-

-

   

102a

287

0.65

355

-

-

188

                       

Non AOSIS members

                     

Bahrain

x

x

   

293

473

2.08

620

-

-

161

Dominican Republic

x

x

   

8 232

170

1.65

48 380

78

1 : 1.6

1 288

Haiti

x

x

x

x

7 533

273

1.86

27 560

47

1 : 1.7

1 771

                       

Notes:


  1. For population size, the suffix a indicates data from 1990. The series runs through to suffix g for data relating to 1996. Source of all other data are 1998 estimates by the Population and Statistics Divisions of the UN Secretariat, New York. The suffix x is most recent data from the CIA webpage, where UN data is not available.

  2. Population growth estimates are Average Annual Rates of Change for 1995 – 2000, as calculated by the Population and Statistics Divisions of the UN Secretariat. Negative values indicate an estimated decrease in population size.

  3. The Observers are not eligible for UN/FAO membership because they are territories.

  4. Low-income food deficit countries (LIFDCs) are those countries which had a negative food trade position during the period 1992-94 and a per caput income equal or inferior to that used to determine eligibility for IDA/IBRD funding (i.e., US $ 1 465 per caput GNP in 1995). In addition, the country should have designated itself as a LIFDC.

 

Table 2 - Development Indicators in Member States and Observers of the Alliance of Small Island States and Other Small Island Developing States

Area/State

Income Indicator (GNP)

Human Development (HDI)

 

High

Medium

Low

High

Medium

Low

Atlantic Ocean

           

Cape Verde

 

x

   

x

 

Guinea Bissau

   

x

   

x

Sao Tome and Principe

   

x

 

x

 
             

Caribbean

           

Antigua and Barbuda

 

x

 

x

   

Bahamas

x

   

x

   

Barbados

 

x

 

x

   

Belize

 

x

 

x

   

Cuba

 

x

   

x

 

Dominica

 

x

 

x

   

Grenada

 

x

 

x

   

Guyana

   

x

 

x

 

Jamaica

 

x

   

x

 

St Kitts and Nevis

 

x

 

x

   

St Lucia

 

x

 

x

   

St Vincent and the Grenadines

 

x

 

x

   

Suriname

 

x

   

x

 

Trinidad and Tobago

 

x

 

x

   
             

Indian Ocean

           

Comoros

   

x

   

x

Maldives

 

x

   

x

 

Mauritius

 

x

 

x

   

Seychelles

 

x

 

x

   
             

Mediterranean Sea

           

Cyprus

x

   

x

   

Malta

 

x

 

x

   
             

Pacific Ocean

           

Cook Islands

 

-

   

-

 

Federated States of Micronesia

 

x

   

-

 

Fiji

 

x

 

x

   

Kiribati

 

x

   

-

 

Marshall Islands

 

x

   

-

 

Nauru

 

-

   

-

 

Palau

 

-

   

-

 

Papua New Guinea

 

x

   

x

 

Samoa

 

x

   

x

 

Solomon Islands

 

x

   

x

 

Tonga

 

-

   

-

 

Tuvalu

 

x

   

-

 

Vanuatu

 

-

   

x

 
             

South China Sea

           

Singapore

x

     

x

 
             

Observers

           

American Samoa

 

x

   

-

 

Guam

 

-

   

-

 

Netherlands Antilles

x

     

-

 

Niue

 

-

   

-

 

US Virgin Islands

x

     

-

 
             

Non AOSIS members

           

Bahrain

 

x

 

x

   

Dominican Republic

 

x

   

x

 

Haiti

   

x

   

x

Notes:


  1. Income Indicators: High (GNP per capita above $9 386); Medium ($766 to $9 385); Low (below $765)
  2. Human Development: High Human Development (HDI 0.800 and above); Medium (HDI 0.500 to 0.799); Low (HDI below 0.500). Where a country is not record a default 'no entry' (-) mark is given in the middle column. This is for location purposes only and does not indicate the status of that country.

Source: UNDP. 1998 Human Development Report 1998. Oxford University Press. pp. 224 - 225.

 

Table 3 - Per Caput Consumption of Fish and Fishery Products in Member States and Observers of the Alliance of Small Island States and Other Small Island Developing States

 

Area/State

Fishery Imports (live weight, tonnes)

A

Fishery Exports (live weight tonnes)

B

Net Imports of Fish (tonnes)

A-B

Annual per capita fish consumption (l.w.e. kg)

Fish as a percentage of animal (and fish) protein

Fish as a percentage of total protein (animal and plant)

Atlantic Ocean

           

Cape Verde

201

265

- 64

18.2

22.9

8.3

Guinea Bissau

685

1 241

- 556

5.4

16.7

3.2

Sao Tome and Principe

439

7

432

24.3

61.6

15.5

             

Caribbean

           

Antigua and Barbuda

1 157

130

1 027

22.7

14.3

9.3

Bahamas

3 226

6 086

- 2 860

24.2

13.7

8.6

Barbados

4 767

324

4 443

30.0

17.8

10.3

Belize

434

1 215

- 781

6.7

6.4

2.9

Cuba a

22 603

10 871

11 732

10.9

13.8

5.7

Dominica

1 214

0

1 214

29.0

19.4

10.7

Grenada a

1 148

367

781

25.5

22.8

12.5

Guyana a

1 647

6 227

- 4 850

48.2

48.3

21.2

Jamaica a

47 281

1 312

45 969

24.8

20.8

10.6

St Kitts and Nevis a

485

-

485

14.4

14.3

8.0

St Lucia a

1 064

25

1039

16.1

10.8

6.0

St Vincent and the Grenadines a

589

598

- 9

11.4

11.7

7.1

Suriname a

1 601

3 137

- 1 536

26.9

31.0

13.0

Trinidad and Tobago a

6 951

6 060

891

10.6

12.9

5.0

             

Indian Ocean

           

Comoros

746

-

746

22.8

64.3

18.2

Maldives a

-

65 855

- 65 855

153.2

81.7

49.3

Mauritius

34 045

20 763

13 282

28.7

26.3

11.6

Seychelles

13 304

12 944

360

62.2

51.9

25.4

             

Mediterranean Sea

           

Cyprus

14 177

550

13 627

22.4

8.9

5.5

Malta

8 560

822

7 738

26.0

11.2

6.2

             

Pacific Ocean

           

Cook Islands

380

83

297

64.5

41.3

27.2

Federated States of Micronesia a

2 119

53

2 066

43.2

48.9

24.1

Fiji

19 324

22 530

- 3 206

36.0

281

12.5

Kiribati a

845

717

128

75.1

65.9

31.5

Marshall Islands a

190

119

71

6.0

-

-

Nauru a

-

-

-

35.7

32.7

26.6

Palau

879

49

830

123.4

-

-

Papua New Guinea a

26 529

1 494

25 035

11.7

23.8

7.4

Samoa a

7 071

220

6 851

45.4

34.3

18.1

Solomon Islands a

113

35 451

- 35 338

44.4

77.9

28.9

Tonga a

824

315

509

34.2

30.7

15.5

Tuvalu a

-

260

- 260

13.9

26.5

9.2

Vanuatu a

1 812

222

1 590

26.2

33.9

12.5

             

South China Sea

           

Singapore

268 944

177 412

91 532

31.9

16.6

9.2

             

Observers

           

American Samoa

-

-

-

3.2

3.5

1.9

Guam

-

-

-

2.2

2.8

1.5

Netherlands Antilles a

2 522

355

2 167

16.2

8.6

5.5

Niue a

-

-

-

56.2

25.7

15.2

US Virgin Islands a

-

-

-

8.5

43.1

43.1

             

Non AOSIS members

           

Bahrain

4 103

3 646

457

17.7

9.6

4.2

Dominican Republic

43 378

1 790

41 588

7.9

10.2

4.6

Haiti a

13 562

57

13 505

2.7

11.7

1.9

Notes:


  1. a indicates countries with data for 1996. All other data refer to 1995.

  2. - indicates no data available.

  3. l.w.e. means Live Weight Equivalent

Source: FAO Fisheries Circular No. 821 Revision 4 (in press).

 

Table 4 - 1996 Fish Catches and Aquaculture Production in Member States and Observers of the Alliance of Small Island States and Other Small Island Developing States

Area/State

Marine Capture (tonnes)

Inland Capture (tonnes)

Aquaculture (tonnes)

Total

(tonnes)

Marine as percent of total

           

Atlantic Ocean

         

Cape Verde

9 187

0

0

9 187

100

Guinea Bissau

6 750

250

0

7 000

96

Sao Tome and Principe

2 900

0

0

2 900

100

Sub-total

18 837

250

0

19 087

99

           

Caribbean

         

Antigua and Barbuda

530

250

0

780

68

Bahamas

9 862

0

24

9 886

100

Barbados

3 439

0

0

3 439

100

Belize

977

0

1 004

1 981

49

Cuba

73 529

6 762

28 467

108 758

68

Dominica

840

0

4

844

100

Grenada

1 577

0

1 577

100

Guyana

44 110

700

190

45 000

98

Jamaica

12 133

710

3 100

15 943

76

St Kitts and Nevis

216

0

4

220

98

St Lucia

1 271

0

3

1 274

100

St Vincent and the Grenadines

1 300

0

0

1 300

100

Suriname

12 999

150

1

13 150

99

Trinidad and Tobago

12 793

0

12

12 805

100

Sub-total

175 576

8 572

32 809

216 957

81

           

Indian Ocean

         

Comoros

13 000

0

0

13 000

100

Maldives

105 558

0

0

105 558

100

Mauritius

12 379

0

165

12 544

99

Seychelles

4 645

0

278

4 923

94

Sub-total

135 582

0

443

136 025

100

           

Mediterranean Sea

         

Cyprus

2 575

64

465

3 104

83

Malta

825

 

1 552

2 377

35

Sub-total

3 400

64

2 017

5 481

62

           

Pacific Ocean

         

Cook Islands

1 071

10

0

1 081

99

Federated States of Micronesia

9 846

5

9 851

100

Fiji

28 733

3 034

275

32 042

90

Kiribati

24 948

0

432

25 380

98

Marshall Islands

390

0

0

390

100

Nauru

400

0

0

400

100

Palau

1 363

0

1 363

100

Papua New Guinea

12 895

13 592

23

26 510

49

Samoa

698

0

698

100

Solomon Islands

53 592

0

11

53 603

100

Tonga

2 841

0

0

2841

100

Tuvalu

400

0

0

400

100

Vanuatu

2 829

0

0

2829

100

Sub-total

140 006

16 641

741

157 388

89

           

South China Sea

         

Singapore

9 943

0

3 567

13 510

74

Sub-total

9 943

0

3 567

13 510

74

           

Observers

         

American Samoa

-

-

-

-

-

Guam

121

0

220

341

35

Netherlands Antilles

996

0

4

1 000

100

Niue

113

0

0

113

100

US Virgin Islands

0

0

0

100

Sub-total

1 230

0

224

1 454

85

           

Non AOSIS members

         

Bahrain

12 940

0

0

12 940

100

Dominican Republic

12 606

1 205

789

14 600

86

Haiti

5 514

500

0

6 014

92

Sub-total

31 060

1 705

789

33 554

93

           
           

Total AOSIS

484 574

25 527

39 801

549 956

88

Total SIDS

515 634

27 232

40 590

583 456

88

           

World Total

88 195 676

7 533 151

34 116 249

129 865 076

68

           

AOSIS as percentage of World

0.55

0.34

0.12

0.42

-

SIDS as a percentage of World

0.58

0.36

0.12

0.45

-

           

Notes


  1. 0 indicates that production was nothing.

  2. … indicates that data are not available, but there will be some production.

  3. - indicates no data available at all.

Source: FAO. FISHSTAT+. Rome.




1 There is no internationally accepted definition of a small island developing State. However, for the purposes of this paper SIDS are taken to be the 42 members and observers of the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS) – four of which are low-lying coastal States (Guinea-Bissau, Belize, Guyana and Suriname). Three additional small island developing States, which are members of FAO, but not of AOSIS (Bahrain, Dominican Republic and Haiti), have also been included.
2 FAO. 1993. Implementation of the Strategy Adopted by the FAO World Conference on Fisheries Management and Development. FAO. Rome. p.28.
3 The Code of Conduct for Responsible Fisheries, a voluntary instrument adopted by the FAO Conference in 1995, takes due account of the situation of island developing States. Similarly, the 1995 Agreement for the Implementation of the Provisions of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea of 10 December 1982 relating to the Conservation and Management of Straddling Fish Stocks and Highly Migratory Fish Stocks (UN Fish Stocks Agreement) reflects the particular situation of SIDS. The special circumstances that set SIDS apart from other developing States were also acknowledged at the 1992 FAO Technical Consultation on High Seas Fishing.
4 Low-income food deficit countries (LIFDCs) are those countries which had a negative food trade position during the period 1992-94 and a per caput income equal or inferior to that used to determine eligibility for IDA/IBRD funding (i.e., US $ 1 465 per caput GNP in 1995). In addition, the country should have designated itself as an LIFDC.
5 Least developed status refers to countries that are the ‘poorest of the poor’. Currently there are a total of 48 such States, 23 percent of which are SIDS. Least developed countries enjoy a number of benefits including low-interest loans from international institutions, debt write-offs, preferential market access and free travel to selected UN meetings.
6 On 26 October 1998 it was reported by the United Nations that the UN’s Committee for Development Policy recommended that Maldives be removed from the least developed country category, and that three other island States – Cape Verde, Samoa and Vanuatu – be removed from the list by 2000.
7 The human development index is a broader measure than GNP alone. The index is comprehensive socio-economic measure. It has three basic components: longevity (which is measured by life expectancy), knowledge (which is measured by a combination of adult literacy and mean years of schooling) and standard of living (which is measured by purchasing power, based on real GDP per capita adjusted for the cost of living).
8 In many instance these data exclude subsistence production and catches by recreational fishers.
9 This consideration has been recognized explicitly by a range of international declarations and instruments, including the 1995 Kyoto Declaration and Plan of Action and the 1996 World Food Summit Plan of Action.
10 Recent Australian technical assistance in Samoa has shown that it is possible to effectively re-establish and strengthen inshore fisheries conservation and management through community-based approaches and working with, and through, traditional institutions.
11 FAO. 1997. "Report of the Twenty-second Session of the Committee on Fisheries". FAO Fisheries Report No. 562. FAO. Rome. p. 6. FAO has also consulted with the Alliance of Small Island Developing States (AOSIS) concerning the development of the Programme.
12 This action was taken by the Secretariat in August 1998 when the Governments of Australia, Canada, Japan, Republic of Korea and New Zealand as well as the European Community to determine if they would be interested in funding the Programme, or components of it.