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ABOUT NFA
COASTAL FISHERIES
MANAGEMENT AND DEVELOPMENT PROJECT

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this link for downloads available from the project.
Coastal fisheries resources contribute significantly to both food
security and community incomes throughout the Pacific region. But
in places like Papua New Guinea, poor access to seafood markets,
a paucity of information and understanding about how to properly
manage coastal resources, and a need for training in better management
and resource assessment, are further complicated by PNG’s
sheer size and widely dispersed and remotely located communities.
A US$ 10 million project to promote the sustainable development
and management of marine resources in Papua New Guinea’s coastal
waters is well underway and is already showing positive signs of
building the capacity of coastal Papua New Guineans.
Funded by the PNG government through a concessionary loan by t he
Asian Development Bank, the PNG Coastal Fisheries Management and
Development Project (CFMDP) is implemented by the PNG National Fisheries
Authority. The CFMDP works directly with national, provincial and
local fisheries administrations, the seafood industry, NGOs, and
village communities in four of PNG’s coastal provinces.
CFMDP has five main areas of activity: infrastructure development,
fisheries assessment and monitoring, strengthening information flows,
community-based fisheries management, and institutional strengthening.
Project activities are initially focusing on New Ireland Province
because some infrastructure is already in place, and because NFA
has good support facilities in the province.
Infrastructure development
Throughout coastal PNG, improved wharves, jetties, and fish freezing
and storage facilities are needed. For example, in Daru, in PNG’s
Western Province (one of the project sites), a proper fish landing
area and better wharf facilities would not only make it possible
for fishing boats to land and offload fish catches more efficiently,
but would also improve the sanitation conditions and reduce the
turnaround time for users who come from distant islands. The CFMDP
will begin construction of a small-boat jetty there later this year.
In places where infrastructure has already been developed, it has
changed the way that local fishermen operate. As an example, a small
boat jetty in Kavieng, in PNG’s New Ireland Province, now
allows fishermen to offload their catch to nearby market facilities,
as well as to refuel, buy ice, and load cargo all in one place.
Next to the small boat jetty is a larger-scale wharf that can accommodate
commercial tuna fishing vessels. Such a wharf rationalizes a facility
that allows for cold storage, ice production, air freight and refrigerated
shipping. This facility in turn creates opportunities for small-scale
fishermen whose catch would otherwise never justify such an infrastructure.
Fisheries assessment and monitoring
The CFMDP’s one-year program of sampling fish landings will
provide a picture of the pattern of fish landings and use within
New Ireland Province. The data will allow the CFMDP team to identify
which resources are economically or socially important, and which
may require management attention.
A baseline socioeconomic survey to ascertain the economic role
of fisheries and the nature of people’s attitudes to resource
use, conservation and management in New Ireland Province, is already
providing some interesting indicators of resource management concerns
and issues, such as the over-use of Derris sp., a poisonous plant
that is used to catch fish; dynamite fishing and its impact on reefs
and marine resources; illegal fishing in PNG waters; and better
management of community reef and mangrove resources. Some 800 interviews
have been conducted and nearly all the data have been entered into
the project database. The survey will be repeated in three years
and will help to judge the success of the project.
Strengthening information flows
During project scoping meetings, coastal fisheries stakeholders
– who included members of local communities, commercial and
subsistence fishers, national and provincial governments, non-governmental
organizations and the seafood industry – consistently repeated
that they needed better and more regular information on various
fisheries-related topics. As a consequence of this demonstrated
interest, the CFMDP includes a significant information component,
which is currently developing appropriate information products and
is establishing effective information delivery systems.
A variety of information materials have already been produced,
ranging from comic books for primary school children about destructive
fishing practices and reef conservation to weekly radio spots, with
topics that include HIV/AIDS and seafarers, overfishing, and safety
at sea. Other information materials — such as posters that
indicate why mangroves are important to both people and the marine
resources they depend on, and video documentary-dramas that depict
the negative impacts of dynamite fishing and using poisonous plants
— are being produced to help reinforce the messages in the
comics and radio programs. The aim is to develop information that
is both interesting and readily understood by a range of people,
and which reinforces the project’s goals.
Community-based fisheries management
The CFMDP has developed course manuals and has implemented a one-month
training program for local and provincial fisheries officers in
community-based management (CBM) and communication skills. Following
on from this training, the CFMDP is working with a local New Ireland
Province NGO, Ailan Awareness, to raise awareness about CBM through
village “road shows”, making use of plays, songs and
videos, and radio programs to deliver their message. Follow up visits
are made to communities that express a keen interest in actively
managing their marine resources.
Four communities have been selected for more comprehensive support,
and the team is providing them with assistance and technical input
in order for them to develop their own fishery management plans.
The ultimate goal is to get a significant proportion — approximately
25% — of coastal waters around New Ireland Province under
some form of community or customary-based protection.
Two international NGOs directly support the community-based management
program by providing funding and helping to carry out activities
that support or complement those of the CBM program. For example,
Wildlife Conservation Society is undertaking resource monitoring
of some of the participating communities’ reefs, while The
Nature Conservancy is helping Ailan Awareness to set up accounting
and financial control systems so that the NGO will be self –sufficient
before the CFMDP ends in 2007.
Institutional strengthening
One of the key elements of the project is building local capacity
to assist with, and then take over, the fisheries management activities
the CFMDP is setting up.
In New Ireland Province several training courses for local fishery
officers, observers and port samplers have been run. As a result
there is now a competent and motivated field team whose members
are taking responsibility for many aspects of the project’s
work program. Later this year, the project will take the same approach
in other target provinces, Morobe and Milne Bay.
According to Garry Preston, Team Leader for the project, “The
CFMDP project represents a comprehensive, integrated approach to
coastal fishery management that is of relevance to other Pacific
Island countries and locations. Our project will be happy to share
its experience and information with interested parties from countries
in the region.”
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