Multi-Stakeholder Platforms for Sustainable Fisheries and Aquaculture
Paper on promoting stakeholder collaboration with an integrative approach for the sustainable development of the fisheries and aquaculture sector
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Sustainable management of fisheries and aquaculture is increasingly hindered by fragmented efforts, conflicting interests, and complex challenges ranging from overfishing to policy gaps. These problems are compounded by the involvement of diverse and often uncoordinated actors across public, private, and civil society sectors.
This paper addresses the urgent need for more inclusive and coordinated decision-making through multi-stakeholder platforms. Designed for practitioners, development agencies, and community leaders, it outlines practical steps to establish and manage multi-stakeholder platforms that bring together diverse actors under a shared governance framework.
By offering a structured, adaptable model that spans stakeholder mapping, governance, and funding, this approach serves as a guide to building collaborative platforms that foster long-term dialogue, drive policy reform, and enhance sustainability outcomes across the fisheries and aquaculture value chains.
About the Programme
By 2050, the world’s population is expected to reach nine billion people, resulting in increased demand for food and jobs. Thanks to the nutrients they contain, fish products are a means of combating undernourishment and malnutrition. They help to secure the livelihoods of millions of families. However, illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing is depleting fish catches and contributing to economic losses. There is a lack of legal framework conditions, access to high-quality resources such as feed and technical knowledge regarding sustainable fish production and processing.
Objective
The population facing food insecurity has access to more fish products and higher incomes derived from sustainable and resource-friendly fisheries and aquaculture.
Approach
‘More fish, more work’: the project advises small and medium-sized businesses on sustainable fish production and processing. This creates jobs and income-generating opportunities in the value chain. Innovative production methods cut costs and reduce after-catch losses.
‘Sustainable fish’: the project also advises the governments in its partner countries on planning and implementing strategies, action plans and other measures. In this way, it contributes to providing the necessary framework conditions for resource-friendly, artisanal fishing and aquaculture.
‘Less fish from IUU fishing’: IUU fishing is to be curbed by introducing registration and licensing systems for fishers and their boats and by conducting inspections.
The European Union supported the project until September 2022 with a cofinancing arrangement to develop and implement hygiene standards in the fish value chain in Mauritania.
In addition, the project cooperated until March 2022 with the non-governmental organisation Stop Illegal Fishing to support partner countries in implementing the Agreement on Port State Measures (PSMA) of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.
Contact
Friederike Sorg, friederike.sorg@giz.de
