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Regional seminar on
aquaculture for Embassies,
Norad and fisheries advisers
Michael Phillips, WorldFish
WorldFish is a member of the CGIAR
WorldFish Mission and Vision
Mission: To reduce poverty
and hunger by improving
fisheries and aquaculture
Vision: to be the research
partner of choice for
delivering fisheries and
aquaculture solutions in
developing countries
Research foci and impact
Focal Area
Reduce poverty and vulnerability
through fisheries and aquaculture.
Improve the lives of 15 million people in
priority countries within 6 years,
increasing to 50 million by 2022
through scale up and scale out.
Sustainably increase food and
nutrition security through fisheries
and aquaculture. Achieve annual
production growth rates of over 10% in
priority countries, leading to gender
equitable increases in per capita
consumption by over 20% for 20m
poor consumers by 2018 and
contributing to reduced micronutrient
deficiencies among these populations.
4
Key research question
Climate
Change
Vulnerability
and
Adaptation
How will climate change affect fisheries and
aquaculture in developing countries and
how can adaptive capacity be built?
Improved
value chains
How can we improve input and output
value chains to increase the development
impact of aquaculture and fisheries?
Nutrition and
health
How can investments in fisheries and
aquaculture best improved human nutrition
and health?
Gender and
equity
How can strengthening the rights of
marginalized fish dependent people reduce
inequality and poverty?
Sustainable
aquaculture
technologies
How do we increase productivity,
ecological resilience and development
impact of aquaculture?
Policies and
practice for
resilience
What policy and management investments
will increase the resilience of small-scale
fisheries and increase their contribution to
reducing poverty and hunger?
WorldFish
Geographic focus
Reform
Old
New
15 Independent Centers 1 Consortium
Diffuse CGIAR priorities
Focus on 15 research
programs (CRPs)
Recognition of impact
Focus on impact
Weak partnerships
Effective partnerships
CGIAR Research Program 3.7
More Meat Milk and Fish by and for the Poor
CRPs Climate change agriculture and food
security and Agriculture for nutrition and health
CRP 1.3 - Harnessing the potential of Aquatic
Agricultural Systems for the poor and
vulnerable
IRRI
Aquatic
agricultural
systems
AAS - where annual aquatic production dynamics
contributes to household income
Household approach - Improving
productivity in AAS
• Limited diversity of crops and varieties
available to poorest farmers
• Over 75 varieties of rice, wheat and maize
+ tilapia and carps; but varieties not
sufficiently targeted to locations
• Increased dissemination and uptake of
technologies
• High adoption rates of new practices
• Reduced gender gap in technology adoption
rates
• Improved incomes
• Equitable sharing by men and women
• Increased share for poorest and vulnerable
Gender
“Evidence of commitment to
gender analysis in CRP 1.3 is
Reduced
in:
reflectedgender
in budgetgaps
figures,
M&E plans and gender goals
that are
clearly stated and are
• access
to technologies
transformative in nature”
• workload
for activities
CGIAR Gender Scoping Study
•
•
•
•
“CRP 1.3 is a clear example of best
practice” CGIAR Gender Scoping Study
access to/share of resources
food availability and nutrition
health and life expectancy
survival rates after disasters
More Meat Milk and Fish by and for the
Poor
Approach: Solution-driven R4D to achieve impact
An integrated value-chain approach for focused impact . . .
R4D integrated to transform selected value chains
for selected commodities in selected countries.
Inputs & Services
Production
Processing
Marketing
Consumers
Value chain development team + research partners
Program components
Platform
Research
Targeting
Breeds
Monitoring &
Evaluation
Feeds
Health
Process IPG’s
(Action Learning)
Technology IPG’s
Adaptive
Research
In country
value-chain
research and
knowledge
application
.. target both households and SMEs
• Households
– Income
– Nutrition
• SMEs
– Commercial
– Value chains
– Business
development
– supplyingurban poor
(1) Targeting - an example of research on
aquaculture and food security from Cambodia
Partnership • Excellence • Growth
Analyzing future fish scenarios
Cambodia’s future fish
• sectoral analysis
• scenario setting for 2030
• map high and low impact
pathways
• investments needed
Difference in climate
change impacts
(t CO2 eq per tonne)
catfish
 Impacts of catfish and tilapia on
climate change can be reduced
by 3-4 times through applying
technologies and management
systems of existing “best
performers”…
tilapia
2008
2030
Breakdown of aquaculture production by
source
Source
Quantity
(t)
% of
total
Semi-subsistence homestead ponds
399,389
29
Commercial semi-intensive ponds
391,668
29
Commercial intensive ponds
395,000
29
Shrimp & prawn
97,746
7
Other
71,114
5
Total
1,354,944
100
Aquaculture is substituting for declining
capture fisheries1996
2006
Changes in farmed and wild fish consumption among 957 households in 4
districts, 1996-2006 (IFPRI survey data)
(2) Breeding and genetics
Quantitative Genetics – “new” technology in fish
Little capacity – government and private sector
Tilapia, Carps, Catfish, Freshwater Prawn
(3) Business - returns to “project” can
be significant, but it takes time
• SMEs and patient capital...
India
Aceh
2,000,000
revenue from all
farmers (USD$2.39m)
net profit from all
farmers (USD$1.44m)
project investments
(USD$1.90m)
5,100,000
4,800,000
4,500,000
4,200,000
3,900,000
3,600,000
3,300,000
3,000,000
2,700,000
2,400,000
2,100,000
1,800,000
1,500,000
1,200,000
900,000
600,000
300,000
-
1,800,000
1,600,000
1,400,000
1,200,000
1,000,000
800,000
600,000
400,000
200,000
0
2007
2008
2009
2010
Revenue
generated - total
$8,884,444
Net profit
generated - total
$3,524,444
Baseline
(2001
survey)
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
Incubating SMEs…
• Collective arrangements cooperatives, farmer producer
companies..
• Collective arrangements allow
– Reduce transaction costs and
economies of scale
– Makes investment easier
• Capacity building takes time
• Business not project
• “Incubation”
• Opportunities to build business
ecosystem, network and build
scale
The future of certification?
• Wider coverage of
certification, or
alternative management
tools needed for the
other 90%..
Thankyou