Showing posts with label fisheries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fisheries. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 26, 2023

Maritime Competition in West African Waters

 The U.S. Naval War College posted early in 2023 a 48 minute podcast titled "Maritime Competition in African Waters" with Captain Kamal-Deen Ali (Ghana Navy retired) and questions by Isaac Kardon, U.S. Naval War College, and Naunihal Singh, National War College.  

Captain Ali responded to a wide range of questions related to maritime security in the Gulf of Guinea, including illegal fishing, piracy, food security, mining, and great power competition. He demonstrated a thorough understanding of all these issues.   

Monday, September 18, 2023

China and Sustainable Fisheries in West Africa

 The Stimson Center published in July 2023 a major report titled "Charting a Blue Future for Cooperation between West Africa and China on Sustainable Fisheries" by Sam Geall, Carolyn Gruber, Regina Lam, Lily Schlieman, Lauren Shea, U. Rashid Sumaila, and Sally Yozell.  

Over the past decade, Chinese owned and flagged distant water fishing vessels have expanded their presence in West Africa.  The Stimson Center coordinated a comprehensive review of illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing, fisheries management, and the role of China in the development of West Africa's sustainable blue economy.

This report offers the governments of West African states and China clear, concise, and actionable recommendations to foster sustainable fisheries management and counter IUU fishing in the Gulf of Guinea and beyond.

Tuesday, September 10, 2019

Somaliland Moving Forward

The Brenthurst Foundation has just published a report titled "Somaliland: New Ways of Doing Things in a Tough Neighborhood" by Greg Mills, Ray Hartley, and Marie-Noelle Nwokolo.

Still not recognized by any other country, Somaliland is attempting to forge ahead by modernizing its economy by establishing an ambitious new trade corridor with Ethiopia following a large investment in road and port development by the UAE and seeking investment in new industries that will soak up large numbers of unemployed youth.

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Somali Piracy on the Decline

The World Bank has just published a massive study titled "The Pirates of Somalia: Ending the Threat, Rebuilding a Nation."

Source: World Bank
The study notes there has been a sharp decrease in the number of Somali attempted and successful pirate attacks. It attributes this decrease to heavily-armed naval patrols and better security on-board commercial shipping. It emphasizes, however, that a sustained solution to ending piracy will only come with the recreation of a viable Somali state that can deliver essential services throughout the entire country to reduce poverty and create opportunity.

The study estimates that piracy costs the global economy about $18 billion annually in increased trade costs -- an amount that dwarfs the estimated $53 million annual ransom paid since 2005.  Piracy has significantly harmed tourism and exports of fish products from the region.

The fact that pirates can anchor their hijacked vessels along the Somali shoreline reflects their ability to win support from government officials, business people, clan elders, militias, and local communities. The pirate bosses split an estimated 70 to 86 percent of piracy proceeds with these stakeholders, without whose support anchoring hijacked ships would not be possible.

On-shore interventions such as local economic development or law enforcement will help discourage young Somalis from becoming pirates by increasing the attractiveness of alternative jobs or by promising long prison terms in the case of capture. At the same time, pirate bosses may simply offer higher pay to poor, unemployed Somali young men to take the risk of capture or death at sea.