Tuna: Investigations of value addition and potential EU investments in tuna fisheries in Africa

  • Pierre Failler Centre for Blue Governance, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth PO1 3DE, UK; UNESCO Chair in Ocean Governance, 75007 Paris, France
  • Grégoire Touron-Gardic Centre for Blue Governance, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth PO1 3DE, UK
  • Juliana Arias Hansen Blue Resource/Sjókovin, 520 Leirvík, Faroe Islands
  • Alexandre Rodriguez Long Distance Advisory Council – LDAC, 28001 Madrid, Spain
  • Sonia Doblado Long Distance Advisory Council – LDAC, 28001 Madrid, Spain
  • Øystein Hermansen Nofima, NO-9291 Tromsø, Norway
  • Jónas R. Viðarsson Matís, 113 Reykjavik, Iceland
  • Andy Forse Centre for Blue Governance, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth PO1 3DE, UK
  • Benjamin Drakeford Centre for Blue Governance, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth PO1 3DE, UK
Keywords: climate change; adaptation measures; vulnerability; co-creation; sustainability
Ariticle ID: 107

Abstract

This research studies investment opportunities within the tuna fish pole and line fishery along the coast of the African Atlantic Façade (mainly SW-Senegal) and the associated value chains. Also, a section is dedicated to investigating the specific case of the investment of French capital in tuna fisheries in the Seychelles in the Indian Ocean. The investigation was conducted under the FarFish project, whose overarching objective is to provide knowledge, tools, and methods to support responsible, sustainable, and profitable EU fisheries outside European waters, both within the jurisdiction (EEZ) of non-EU coastal states as well as in international waters and high seas. In order to achieve this, the aim of this research is to identify, study, and potentially recommend investment opportunities for EU operators within some of the project’s case study countries. The investigations into tuna fisheries were based on interviews with relevant stakeholders, including shipowners and key personnel from public bodies and institutions both in West Africa and Europe (see Appendix A for the list of stakeholders consulted). In addition, most of the data presented in this section was acquired from DG-Mare in a non-public dataset compiling every fishing lot from EU vessels operating within SFPAs in Senegal. A second case study in tuna fisheries, in this case in the Indian Ocean, investigates the investment from the French company SAPMER to improve the land infrastructure in the Port of Victoria (Seychelles), as this would be the only notable investment by European interests in recent years for tuna fishing in Africa. These sections conclude that the fishing area where EU pole-and-line vessels are active is becoming less productive, decreasing the profitability of European-flagged vessels as well as of Senegalese-flagged vessels that maintain close partnerships with Europe. As a response, they have attempted to extend their fishing grounds. Additional fishing opportunities are opening in The Gambia (whose EEZ is restricted), and other countries are expected to follow. Contrastingly, the EU sustainable partnership fisheries agreement with Senegal or Mauritania could include fewer fishing opportunities in terms of tonnage as well as increasingly restrictive conditions for access and landings. European operators have reacted so far by considering the switch to a private regime instead of operating under SFPA as a preferred strategy.

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Published
2024-05-21
How to Cite
Failler, P., Touron-Gardic, G., Hansen, J. A., Rodriguez, A., Doblado, S., Hermansen, Øystein, Viðarsson, J. R., Forse, A., & Drakeford, B. (2024). Tuna: Investigations of value addition and potential EU investments in tuna fisheries in Africa. Sustainable Economies, 2(2), 107. https://doi.org/10.62617/se.v2i2.107
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Article