|
Strategic Importance of Small-Scale Fisheries
Artisanal and small-scale fisheries contribute significantly to
the achievement of sustainable development goals. It is widely recognised
that such fisheries play an important role in resource conservation,
food and livelihood security, poverty alleviation, wealth creation
and foreign exchange earnings. There are, however, a number of significant
constraints that prevent small-scale fisheries from realising their
full potential.
These potentialities and constraints were given particular consideration
at the 25th Session of FAO Committee on Fisheries (COFI 25), February
24-28 2003. They formed part of a special agenda item on “Strategies
for Increasing the Contribution of Small-Scale Fisheries to Food
Security and Poverty Alleviation”. They were discussed in
a background paper submitted to the meeting, which noted that:
“…probably the most important are the constraints
in the form of governance and policy issues over access to and control
over aquatic environments and resources and markets, and the distribution
of benefits accruing from those resources… In marine small-scale
fisheries, access, control and distribution issues are more often
linked with competition from industrial and foreign interests.”
It further noted that: “Conflict between small-scale and industrial
fishing activity may stem from, or be reinforced by, governance
and policy issues. And that “Such conflict shows the importance
of improving policies, institutions and processes and orienting
them towards the reduction of the vulnerability of those in small-scale
fisheries and defending their rights”
Importance of Protecting Access Rights for Artisanal Fisheries
In the COFI background paper to COFI, referred to above, several
suggestions for action were proposed. These included:
better management (of small-scale fisheries) through the allocation
of secure fishing rights backed by appropriate legislation to small-scale
fishers in coastal and inland zones and their effective protection
from industrial fishing activity or activities that degrade aquatic
resources and habitats;
One of the major challenges facing marine fisheries is improved
and responsible management of fish stocks. The implementation of
the FAO Code of Conduct could play an important in this regard,
particularly as concerns improving policies, institutions and processes,
and making them more pertinent to and supportive of small-scale
fisheries. Article 6.18 of the FAO Code of Conduct makes explicit
the importance of protecting the access rights for small-scale fisheries.
It advocates that States “should appropriately protect the
rights of fishers and fishworkers, particularly those engaged in
subsistence, small-scale and artisanal fisheries, to a secure and
just livelihood, as well as to preferential access, where appropriate,
to traditional fishing grounds and resources in the waters under
their national jurisdiction”
Protecting Access Rights and Artisanal Fishing Zones in Latin
America
Artisanal fishing rights have been recognised in many Latin American
countries. These are often enshrined in laws that establish special
zones within the near-shore waters reserved exclusively for artisanal
fishing activities. These artisanal fishing zones encompass waters
up to a certain distance from the coast, or up to a certain depth,
and are reserved for the artisanal sector. In most cases the original
objectives for establishing such zones were for conservation purposes
(hence the use of the terms “reserves” and “areas
de reserva”). But their additional role in meeting social,
economic, demographic and other policy objectives has subsequently
been recognised and valued. These zones may also serve to reduce
inter-gear (passive/active) and inter-sectoral (small/large-scale)
conflicts.
Artisanal fishing zones, or “areas de reserva”, have
often been established (and extended) as a result of the demands
of artisanal fisher organisations as a result of conflicts and unequal
and increasing competition from large-scale fishing activities.
Many artisanal fishworker organisations now claim these fishing
reserves as a fundamental and inalienable right. However, maintaining
the integrity of these zones is often the source of considerable
conflict between small-scale and industrialised fisheries, frequently
requiring the intervention of state institutions. Thus in both Chile
and Peru the breaching of the coastal areas reserved for artisanal
fishing by industrial fishing activities has been up held by national
laws, leading to social disruption and law and order problems.
Protected access to fishing areas may also take other forms. In
Chile management areas in near-shore waters have been set up, allowing
access to sedentary resources to well-defined community groups.
Similar arrangements have been established in Peru and several other
Latin American countries (including Argentina and Ecuador), where
fishing concessions have been granted to artisanal fishing groups.
A slightly different concept of marine extractive reserves is presently
being consolidated and applied in Brazil.
In several instances, artisanal fishworker organisations have also
established their own regulations. For example, in the case of Chile,
there is a self imposed prohibition on the use of trawl nets by
artisanal fishing vessels within the 5 mile zone. Likewise there
are self imposed regulations on the size of gill nets, and a variety
of additional seasonal (closures/biological rest periods) and gear
restrictions. Such measures are very much in line with Article 6.6.
of the FAO Code of Conduct, which advocates that: “Where
proper selective and environmentally safe fishing gear and practices
exist, they should be recognised and accorded a priority in establishing
conservation and management measures for fisheries”.
Threats to Protected Access and Sustainability in Small-Scale Fisheries
In several Latin American countries, notably those in the Southern
Cone (Chile, Argentina and Peru), the allocation of tradable individual
user rights (Individual Transferable Quotas or ITQs) is being strongly
advocated as the means to improve management in over-capitalised
and economically inefficient industrial fisheries. However, the
extension of ITQs to small-scale and artisanal fisheries has been
questioned, and its application to this sector is the cause of some
controversy. Many organisations argue that ITQs are not an appropriate
management tool for community-based small-scale fisheries under
any circumstances, as they inevitably lead to the concentration
of ownership, the disenfranchisement of fishing communities, and
lead to an erosion of working conditions and other benefits flows
to fishworkers (such as household food security).
Small-scale fisheries may require alternative management and resource
allocation systems that explicitly recognise the collective access
rights of specific communities or user groups (craft-gear groups).
In this regard the promotion of community-based management through
the development of local institutions and traditional practices
may be the most viable option for achieving sustainability in artisanal
and small-scale fisheries.
International agreements for free trade and investment in the fisheries
sector pose a further threat to the protection of access rights
of local small-scale fisheries. More generally overcapacity and
resource scarcity problems have resulted in increasing pressures
from the large-scale fishing sector to fish in the near shore waters.
Unfortunately these interests (for foreign trade and investment
and for large-scale fisheries) often carry more political weight
than small-scale fisheries. The potential role of the FAO Code of
Conduct in addressing these unequal conflicts of interest needs
to be explored.
Importance of Protecting Land Settlement Rights
Issues related to access rights to land-based resources and settlement
rights are equally important, but are often not given sufficient
attention. Fishing livelihoods depend on both seagoing and land
based activities. In addition to living space requirements, the
plethora of pre- and post-capture activities, on which the sea going
activities depend, require access to water, electricity, fuel and
other resources, and access to transport and communications infrastructure.
The important linkages of sustaining livelihoods in artisanal and
small-scale fisheries, the protected and priority access to fishing
areas, and protected land settlement rights along the coastal strip
therefore need to be explored and made explicit.
Examples of such linkages include the legal recognition of the
“caleta” as a fishing settlement, and the development
of artisanal fishing ports run by local fishworker organisations.
However, the land settlement rights of fishing communities in areas
adjacent to the coast are often not recognised. Insecure settlement
on land makes their livelihoods highly precarious and vulnerable,
particularly when faced with increasing competition for space and
resources in the coastal zone.
|