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fao/naca consultation on aquaculture for sustainable rural development PDF

295 Pages·2006·1.98 MB·English
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FAO Fisheries Report No. 611, Supplement FIRI/R611 Suppl. (En) ISSN 0429-9337 Papers presented at the FAO/NACA CONSULTATION ON AQUACULTURE FOR SUSTAINABLE RURAL DEVELOPMENT Chiang Rai, Thailand, 29–31 March 1999 Copies of FAO publications can be requested from: Sales and Marketing Group Information Division FAO Viale delle Terme di Caracalla 00100 Rome, Italy E-mail: [email protected] Fax: (+39) 06 57053360 FAO Fisheries Report No. 611, Supplement FIRI/R611 Suppl. (En) Papers presented at the FAO/NACA CONSULTATION ON AQUACULTURE FOR SUSTAINABLE RURAL DEVELOPMENT Chiang Rai, Thailand, 29–31 March 1999 compiled by Matthias Halwart FAO Fisheries Department, Rome, Italy Dilip Kumar Central Institute of Fisheries Education, Mumbai, India Melba G. Bondad-Reantaso FAO Fisheries Department, Rome, Italy FOOD AND AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION OF THE UNITED NATIONS Rome, 2005 The designations employed and the presentation of material in this information product do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations concerning the legal or development status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. ISBN 92-5-105450-9 All rights reserved. Reproduction and dissemination of material in this information product for educational or other non-commercial purposes are authorized without any prior written permission from the copyright holders provided the source is fully acknowledged. Reproduction of material in this information product for resale or other commercial purposes is prohibited without written permission of the copyright holders. Applications for such permission should be addressed to the Chief, Publishing Management Service, Information Division, FAO, Viale delle Terme di Caracalla, 00100 Rome, Italy or by e-mail to [email protected] © FAO 2005 PREPARATION OF THIS DOCUMENT This document contains the final version of the background papers originally prepared for and presented at the FAO/NACA Consultation on Aquaculture for Sustainable Rural Development held at Chiang Rai, Thailand, from 29 to 31 March 1999. The consultation was a collaborative activity of the Fisheries Department of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and the Network of Aquaculture Centres in Asia-Pacific (NACA). The Consultation was attended by national experts, thematic reviewers, and representatives of the major regional and international stakeholders involved in small-scale aquaculture promoting rural development in the Asia-Pacific region. The participants, by actively participating in a sharply focused examination of critical issues and participatory review of specific components of the draft programme concept, developed a detailed framework to serve as the guiding principles for the development of a regional programme on “Aquaculture for Sustainable Rural Livelihood Development (ASRLD)”. This document was finalized into its present form after revision of the presented papers by the authors. Papers were compiled by M. Halwart, D. Kumar and M.G. Bondad-Reantaso. L. Overton and P. Balzer assisted in the finalization of this document. The report of the Consultation is available as FAO Fisheries Report No. 611. Distribution: Network of Aquaculture Centres in Asia-Pacific (NACA) FAO Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific Participants FAO Fisheries Department FAO Regional Fishery Officers ii i Halwart, M.; Kumar, D.; Bondad-Reantaso, M.G. (comps). Papers presented at the FAO/NACA Consultation on Aquaculture for Sustainable Rural Development. Chiang Rai, Thailand, 29–31 March 1999. FAO Fisheries Report. No. 611, Suppl. Rome, FAO. 2005. 282p. ABSTRACT The Consultation took an overview of the role of small-scale aquaculture in providing livelihoods for rural communities and discussed various related issues including its future potential, constraints that impede development, government policies and priorities, and strategies that can be employed for using small-scale aquaculture as an entry point for satisfying the basic human development needs. From the country statements, lessons drawn from field projects, experiences of regional and international development organizations and donor agencies, and the thematic reviews it was implied that small-scale rural aquaculture contributes significantly to supplementing family income, enhancing food security, generation of gainful employment opportunities in rural areas, improving social equity and environmental well being. It was also expressed that the majority of smallholders and landless families in rural areas still practice low input – low output methods relying on family labour and depending largely upon indigenous knowledge and as such there is great scope for improving productivity, but a range of obstacles impede this development. Issues related to the weak institutional support for small-scale rural aquaculture were also pointed out. There was general agreement that there is a need to have a positive shift from technology-led production-oriented interventions to people-centred sustainable livelihood approach. A growing awareness towards holistic and participatory approach to development to enhance the quality of life of rural poor communities was clearly noted. This is beginning to happen with the formation of farmers’ groups or associations that empower the small farmers to have access to resources, technology and support services. Credit and other services become more accessible to small farmers through participatory micro-finance programme with the establishment of the group- based micro-credit/savings schemes. Participatory approaches were considered as a requisite criteria for the planning and implementation of aquaculture projects. Recognizing the role of rural women in various farming activities it was clearly emphasized that women should be involved in planning and implementing development activities. They should be given equal rights and opportunities through capacity building so as to gain more access to resources for development. It was also realized that there has been little coordinated attempt within the region to harness the potential of small-scale aquaculture in rural livelihood development and as such there is a need to develop a programme with a specific focus on small-scale aquaculture within an overall farming system context and to demonstrate improved forms of aquatic resources management in practice at the level of the community. Rural development would be enhanced through improved coordination and cooperation between organizations focusing on sustainable rural development through aquaculture programmes. This needs a clear national policy and well-defined institutional framework. Lessons and experiences of a series of field projects would be fed into policy through wider national structures and institutions. Exchange of information about lessons, experiences and policies through regional network would enhance the quality and pace of rural development through small-scale aquaculture. In the background of these emerging issues the draft Sustainable Aquaculture Rural Developmentprogramme concept was thoroughly discussed in the subsequent sessions through parallel working group discussions and a revised framework was developed through consensus to serve as guiding principles for the formulation of a regional programme “Aquaculture for Sustainable Rural Livelhood Development (ASRLD).” iv FOREWORD From Aquaculture for Sustainable Rural Livelihood Development (ASRLD) to Support to Regional Aquatic Resources Management (STREAM) The programme on Aquaculture for Sustainable Rural Livelihood Development (ASRLD) derived its rationale and impetus from a number of collaborative activities between FAO and the Network of Aquaculture Centres in Asia-Pacific (NACA) and with other organizations and stakeholders in rural development in the Asian region. Specifically, it was the offshoot of an FAO/NACA survey and workshop of aquaculture development research capacities and priorities in selected Asian countries in 1994–1996, among which recommendations was to strengthen rural institutions that are serving rural communities in order for research results to be more effectively spread, absorbed and utilized.1 This was followed by a project planning and formulation exercise which included a mission of FAO, NACA and Government officers to selected countries in Asia. The mission’s findings and recommendations were developed for a regional consultative meeting in March 1999, attended by representatives of most of the major regional stakeholders, including donor organizations, in small-scale aquaculture development. The FAO/NACA Consultation on Aquaculture for Sustainable Rural Development adopted the programme title ‘Aquaculture for Sustainable Rural Livelihood Development’ (ASRLD). It was the first systematic initiative to promote the development of small-scale rural aquaculture on a regional basis in Asia.2 The programme’s focus on livelihoods required that it be guided by tested approaches. One such well- tested strategy is the Sustainable Livelihoods Approach (SLA) that the United Kingdom’s Department for International Development (DFID) had pioneered and adopted for its projects aimed at promoting development and reducing poverty. It became timely that DFID’s South East Asia office decided in 1999 to extend its period of support to aquaculture in the region through a regionally focused institution after reviewing its objectives for aquatic resources management support in the context of its livelihoods approach. One result of the decision was NACA and DFID agreeing to NACA’s hosting of DFID’s Aquatic Resource Management Program (ARMP), which then focused on South East Asia and poverty reduction through aquaculture and fisheries management covering the countries of the Mekong sub-region. The programme informed and financially and logistically supported the subsequent exercises to develop an implementation framework for ASRLD. The series of consultations among DFID, FAO, NACA and the Voluntary Services Overseas (VSO), during 20002001, moulded the programme into a theme-based communications and learning initiative drawing on all the collaborative activities of NACA and the specific support and direction provided by FAO and DFID. Through these consultations, three strong issues emerged. The first was the over-riding importance of communications; the second was the centrality of people’s livelihood objectives in poverty alleviation – a move away from the centrality of aquaculture; and the third was the importance of institutional and policy change to empower people. A key development in the evolution of ASRLD at this time was the focal shift from support for small- scale aquaculture to support for the livelihood objectives of people who are poor. In 2001, a planning meeting involving NACA, DFID and FAO in Bang Saen, Thailand, adopted the use of the term ‘initiative’ in favour of ‘project’ or ‘programme’ to emphasize the long-term approach. The meeting also proposed the broadening of the focus of the initiative from aquaculture alone to aquatic resources management, to better match the broad portfolio of activities undertaken by people who are poor. Finally, the meeting formally proposed the name ‘Support to Regional Aquatic Resources Management’ or the STREAM Initiative.3 The plan for implementation of the STREAM Initiative was developed at the sixth Meeting of NACA’s Technical Advisory Committee (May 2001, Siem Reap, Cambodia). It was formally incorporated into the NACA Work Programme by the thirteenth Governing Council Meeting (January 2002, Langkawi, Malaysia). This volume comprises the documents presented and discussed at the FAO/NACA Consultation on Aquaculture for Sustainable Rural Development which was held at Chiang Rai, Thailand, from 29 to 31 March 1999.4 Many 1 FAO Fisheries Department; Network of Aquaculture Centres in Asia-Pacific (NACA). 1997. Survey and analysis of aquaculture development research priorities and capacities in Asia. FAO Fisheries Circular No. 930. Rome, FAO. 263p. Available at http://www.fao.org/docrep/W6937E/W6937e00.htm 2 A related follow-up Expert Consultation on aquaculture for rural development was convened by the FAO Asia-Pacific Fisheries Commission: APFIC 1999. Report of the Ad Hoc Working Group of Experts in Rural Aquaculture. Bangkok, Thailand, 20–22 October 1999. FAO Fisheries Report. No. 610. Rome, FAO. 22p. 3 Information about STREAM is available at http://www.streaminitiative.org/index.html. 4 The report of the Expert Consultation and the concept for a regional Aquaculture for Sustainable Rural Livelihoods have been previously published and are available from FAO or NACA: (i) FAO/NACA 1999. Report of the FAO/NACA Consultation on Aquaculture for Sustainable Rural Development. Chiang Rai, Thailand, 29–31 March 1999. FAO Fisheries Report No. 611. Rome, FAO, and (ii) FAO/NACA 2000. Programme Document: Aquaculture for Sustainable Rural Livelihood Development (ASRLD). February 2000. Bangkok. 24p. v people have contributed in various important roles and functions to the preparation of the 1999 Consultation as well as later on in the process of transformation from ASRLD to STREAM, importantly Ziad Shehadeh (FAO Senior Fishery Resources Officer – retired), Manuel Martinez (FAO Fishery Resources Officer – retired), Dilip Kumar (formerly NACA Senior Aquaculturist, currently Director, Central Institute of Fisheries Education, India), Pedro Bueno (NACA Advisor and NACA Director General 2002–2006), Rohana Subasinghe (FAO Senior Fishery Resources Officer), Jiansan Jia (Chief, FAO Inland Water Resources and Aquaculture Service), Matthias Halwart (FAO Fishery Resources Officer), Graham Haylor (Director STREAM), Michael J. Phillips (Environment Specialist and Regional Manager for Research and Development Programme – NACA), P.C. Choudhury (FAO Regional Aquaculture Officer – retired), H. Kongkeo (NACA Technical Assistant to the DG and NACA Coordinator 1996–2000), Xiaowei Zhou (NACA Training Specialist and Programme Officer) and Simon Funge-Smith (FAO Regional Aquaculture Officer). The proceedings reported here contain three types of reviews: (i) country reports on national efforts at developing and applying aquaculture to achieve social and economic development objectives that include poverty alleviation, improvement of food security, and sustaining the natural resource base of aquaculture and enhanced fisheries; (ii) experiences and lessons from projects that were mostly implemented with collaborative assistance to governments from development agencies and non-governmental organizations, which highlight critical and key issues in rural development that are linked with aquaculture development and aquatic resources management processes; and (iii) expert views on concepts, institutional arrangements, and strategies that could be adopted to effectively integrate aquaculture and aquatic systems management to help governments achieve rural development goals. The country reports, case studies and expert views presented here were prepared quite some time back, however, they offer a valuable, in-depth and broad view of the options and opportunities for improving the livelihood of the rural poor with the integration of aquaculture and aquatic systems management into rural development strategies. FAO and NACA take pleasure in making this body of information available to all concerned and interested entities. v i CONTENTS Page Abbreviations and acronyms ix Section I: Status and role of aquaculture in rural development – Country reports 1 Bangladesh 3 China 16 Indonesia 20 India 30 Philippines 47 Thailand 77 Viet Nam 92 Section II: Presentations of organizations/donor agencies and non-governmental organizations on experiences, lessons learnt and issues 99 AIT Aqua Outreach: Experience, lessons learnt and issues 101 Rural Extension Project for aquaculture development in the Mekong Delta Phase I (Cambodia and Viet Nam): overview and lessons learned 109 Fisheries and aquaculture in rural development: DFID strategies 116 Lessons learned, and issues relating to aquaculture and rural livelihoods: DFID Bangladesh 123 Aquaculture for rural development: Some lessons from IFAD's experience - the Oxbow Lakes Project in Bangladesh 129 Experiences gained from DANIDA–assisted Mymensingh Aquaculture Extension Project in Bangladesh 138 Experiences of the Fish Culture Research Institute (HAKI), Szarvas, Hungary 146 The Pond Dynamics/Aquaculture CRSP: Developing technologies and networks for sustainable aquaculture and rural development 151 Aquaculture development in Bangladesh through capacity building: Experiences of CARE 161 ICLARM Research Experience on Integrated Aquaculture-Agriculture (IAA) for Sustainable Rural Development 170 Section III: Thematic reviews 175 Community level planning for rural development: Lessons from the FARM Programme 177 Strategies and approaches for Trainers' Training for the dissemination of information to rural households 185 Technical options for aquaculture for a rural livelihood 188 Recent developments in agricultural extension 199 Gender issues in rural development 208 Aquatic resources management to benefit rural poor: need for formation of strategic alliances 216 Access to resources for rural and aquaculture development 224 vi i Section IV: SARDev Programme Background 241 Sustainable Aquaculture for Rural Development ( SARDev): Regional relevance and background 243 Sustainable Aquaculture for Rural Development (SARDev): Programme concept 247 Section V: Revised Programme Framework 253 Framework for ASRLD Programme 255 Section VI: Synthesis of presented papers 259 Small-scale Aquaculture in Rural Development: Issues, directions and lessons 261 vi ii

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Network of Aquaculture Centres in Asia-Pacific (NACA). FAO Regional .. Australian Agency for International Development. BAAC CIFA. Central Institute of Freshwater Aquaculture of India. CPR. Common Property Regime. CRSP Culture of fish and shrimp in freshwater and brackishwater are age-.
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