Audio By Carbonatix
Director of the Environment and Natural Resource Research Initiative (ENRRI-EfD Ghana), Professor William Akpalu has advocated for proactive measures to enhance the prospects of Ghana’s fishing industry.
According to him, the outlook of the industry is not encouraging. He says an analysis of the catch per vessel over the years from the 1990s to 2018 indicated a sharp reduction in the catch made by the fishers.
“Each vessel is catching less and less fish, and potentially we are losing a lot,” he told the Ghana News Agency (GNA), Accra, on the sidelines of a workshop on ‘Emerging Issues on Capture Fisheries Management in Ghana.’
Prof Akpalu said that the fisheries, like any other renewable resource, was such that “if the rate at which you are extracting the resource exceeds the rate at which the resource is replenishing itself, eventually the stock will collapse.”
The workshop, which was organised under the auspices of the ENRRI-EfD Ghana and funded by the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency, brought together scientists and researchers from academia, members from the Scientific and Technical Committee of the Fisheries Commission, and other stakeholders.
Prof. Akpalu, who is also the Dean, School of Research and Graduate Studies, Ghana Institute of Management and Public Administration (GIMPA), stressed the need for the country to establish marine parks.
He said this is necessary to check over-exploitation of the fish resources while improving the stock for the benefit of the nation.
Additionally, the country ought to build a good database for the fishing industry, he advised, saying this was critical to inform policies required to making life comfortable for those whose livelihood depends on fishing.
The workshop discussed topics relating to improving the fishing value chain, revenue lost due to illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing, premix fuel subsidy, among others.
Latest Stories
-
Mahama commends US for lifting tariffs on Ghana’s agricultural exports
23 minutes -
Only punishing the public – FABAG rejects ‘insensitive’ tariff hikes amid soaring inefficiency
30 minutes -
Kumasi schools face dangerous air pollution – Researcher warns
35 minutes -
Veep hails private medical schools’ role in strengthening Ghana’s healthcare
42 minutes -
Reset the system, not tariffs – FABAG demands full audit before any increases
53 minutes -
Former Liverpool co-owner Hicks dies aged 79
1 hour -
Hojlund scores twice as Napoli beat Juventus to go top
1 hour -
Spurs investigate Yves Bissouma nitrous oxide claim
1 hour -
Pressure increases on Alonso as Celta Vigo beat 9-man Real Madrid
2 hours -
Canadian airline to start cancelling flights ahead of planned strike
2 hours -
Death of Venezuelan opposition figure in custody ‘vile’, US says
2 hours -
Trump says $72bn Netflix-Warner Bros deal ‘could be a problem’
2 hours -
Nigerian gov’t secures release of 100 kidnapped schoolchildren, Channels TV says
2 hours -
Shooting at South African bar leaves 11 dead, including a young child, police say
2 hours -
Bobi Wine says Uganda security forces beat him
3 hours
