Prospects of fish supply-demand and its implications for food and nutrition security in Egypt
Aquaculture plays an increasingly important role in meeting the rising global demand for fish fuelled by economic and demographic growth. However, in many middle-income countries, aquaculture is constrained by rising labour costs, limited input supply, environmental concerns, and infectious diseases...
| Autores principales: | , , , , , |
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| Formato: | Journal Article |
| Lenguaje: | Inglés |
| Publicado: |
Elsevier
2022
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| Materias: | |
| Acceso en línea: | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/128796 |
| _version_ | 1855541738207182848 |
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| author | Tran, Nhuong Long Chu, Hoang Chan, Chin Yee Peart, Jeffrey Nasr-Allah, Ahmed Karisa, Harrison |
| author_browse | Chan, Chin Yee Karisa, Harrison Long Chu, Hoang Nasr-Allah, Ahmed Peart, Jeffrey Tran, Nhuong |
| author_facet | Tran, Nhuong Long Chu, Hoang Chan, Chin Yee Peart, Jeffrey Nasr-Allah, Ahmed Karisa, Harrison |
| author_sort | Tran, Nhuong |
| collection | Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace) |
| description | Aquaculture plays an increasingly important role in meeting the rising global demand for fish fuelled by economic and demographic growth. However, in many middle-income countries, aquaculture is constrained by rising labour costs, limited input supply, environmental concerns, and infectious diseases. In this paper, we developed a multi-species, multi-sector equilibrium model and applied it to the fishery sector of Egypt, a leading aquaculture producer in Africa, to examine these barriers. Projection results show that rising wage rates would slow down the growth of labour-intensive aquaculture compared to those that use relatively less labour. The demand for feed, seed inputs and water use for aquaculture would substantially increase. The results also show that disease outbreaks would possibly affect production sectors via output reduction and also consumers via increases in fish price. Our findings suggest that stabilising the prices of feed and seed, investments in disease control and input-use efficiency improvement technologies, including water use, are important while the overall effectiveness of tax instruments is modest. Though calibrated to Egypt, our approach can be applied to other middle-size national aquaculture industries. |
| format | Journal Article |
| id | CGSpace128796 |
| institution | CGIAR Consortium |
| language | Inglés |
| publishDate | 2022 |
| publishDateRange | 2022 |
| publishDateSort | 2022 |
| publisher | Elsevier |
| publisherStr | Elsevier |
| record_format | dspace |
| spelling | CGSpace1287962025-12-08T10:06:44Z Prospects of fish supply-demand and its implications for food and nutrition security in Egypt Tran, Nhuong Long Chu, Hoang Chan, Chin Yee Peart, Jeffrey Nasr-Allah, Ahmed Karisa, Harrison aquaculture fisheries seed water feeds fish infectious disease tax Aquaculture plays an increasingly important role in meeting the rising global demand for fish fuelled by economic and demographic growth. However, in many middle-income countries, aquaculture is constrained by rising labour costs, limited input supply, environmental concerns, and infectious diseases. In this paper, we developed a multi-species, multi-sector equilibrium model and applied it to the fishery sector of Egypt, a leading aquaculture producer in Africa, to examine these barriers. Projection results show that rising wage rates would slow down the growth of labour-intensive aquaculture compared to those that use relatively less labour. The demand for feed, seed inputs and water use for aquaculture would substantially increase. The results also show that disease outbreaks would possibly affect production sectors via output reduction and also consumers via increases in fish price. Our findings suggest that stabilising the prices of feed and seed, investments in disease control and input-use efficiency improvement technologies, including water use, are important while the overall effectiveness of tax instruments is modest. Though calibrated to Egypt, our approach can be applied to other middle-size national aquaculture industries. 2022-12 2023-02-21T04:10:40Z 2023-02-21T04:10:40Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/128796 en Open Access application/pdf Elsevier Nhuong Tran, Hoang Long Chu, Chin Yee Chan, Jeffrey Peart, Ahmed Nasr-Allah, Harrison Karisa. (1/12/2022). Prospects of fish supply-demand and its implications for food and nutrition security in Egypt. Marine Policy, 146. |
| spellingShingle | aquaculture fisheries seed water feeds fish infectious disease tax Tran, Nhuong Long Chu, Hoang Chan, Chin Yee Peart, Jeffrey Nasr-Allah, Ahmed Karisa, Harrison Prospects of fish supply-demand and its implications for food and nutrition security in Egypt |
| title | Prospects of fish supply-demand and its implications for food and nutrition security in Egypt |
| title_full | Prospects of fish supply-demand and its implications for food and nutrition security in Egypt |
| title_fullStr | Prospects of fish supply-demand and its implications for food and nutrition security in Egypt |
| title_full_unstemmed | Prospects of fish supply-demand and its implications for food and nutrition security in Egypt |
| title_short | Prospects of fish supply-demand and its implications for food and nutrition security in Egypt |
| title_sort | prospects of fish supply demand and its implications for food and nutrition security in egypt |
| topic | aquaculture fisheries seed water feeds fish infectious disease tax |
| url | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/128796 |
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