The future of fish in Africa: Employment and investment opportunities
One of the most pressing challenges facing food systems in Africa is ensuring availability of a healthy and sustainable diet to 2.4 billion people by 2050. The continent has struggled with development challenges, particularly chronic food insecurity and pervasive poverty. In Africa’s food systems, f...
| Autores principales: | , , , , , |
|---|---|
| Formato: | Journal Article |
| Lenguaje: | Inglés |
| Publicado: |
Public Library of Science
2021
|
| Materias: | |
| Acceso en línea: | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/142852 |
| _version_ | 1855518573210894336 |
|---|---|
| author | Chan, Chin Yee Tran, Nhuong Cheong, Kai Ching Sulser, Timothy B. Cohen, Philippa J. Wiebe, Keith D. |
| author_browse | Chan, Chin Yee Cheong, Kai Ching Cohen, Philippa J. Sulser, Timothy B. Tran, Nhuong Wiebe, Keith D. |
| author_facet | Chan, Chin Yee Tran, Nhuong Cheong, Kai Ching Sulser, Timothy B. Cohen, Philippa J. Wiebe, Keith D. |
| author_sort | Chan, Chin Yee |
| collection | Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace) |
| description | One of the most pressing challenges facing food systems in Africa is ensuring availability of a healthy and sustainable diet to 2.4 billion people by 2050. The continent has struggled with development challenges, particularly chronic food insecurity and pervasive poverty. In Africa’s food systems, fish and other aquatic foods play a multifaceted role in generating income, and providing a critical source of essential micronutrients. To date, there are no estimates of investment and potential returns for domestic fish production in Africa. To contribute to debates about the future of fish in Africa, we applied the International Model for Analysis of Agriculture Commodities and Trade (IMPACT) to explore two Pan-African scenarios for fish sector growth: a business-as-usual (BAU) scenario and a high-growth scenario for capture fisheries and aquaculture with accompanying strong gross domestic product growth (HIGH). Post-model analysis was used to estimate employment and aquaculture investment requirements for the sector in Africa. Africa’s fish sector is estimated to support 20.7 million jobs in 2030, and 21.6 million by 2050 under the BAU. Approximately 2.6 people will be employed indirectly along fisheries and aquaculture value chains for every person directly employed in the fish production stage. Under the HIGH scenario, total employment in Africa’s fish food system will reach 58.0 million jobs, representing 2.4% of total projected population in Africa by 2050. Aquaculture production value is estimated to achieve US$ 3.3 billion and US$ 20.4 billion per year under the BAU and HIGH scenarios by 2050, respectively. Farm-gate investment costs for the three key inputs (fish feeds, farm labor, and fish seed) to achieve the aquaculture volumes projected by 2050 are estimated at US$ 1.8 billion per year under the BAU and US$ 11.6 billion per year under the HIGH scenario. Sustained investments are critical to sustain capture fisheries and support aquaculture growth for food system transformation towards healthier diets. |
| format | Journal Article |
| id | CGSpace142852 |
| institution | CGIAR Consortium |
| language | Inglés |
| publishDate | 2021 |
| publishDateRange | 2021 |
| publishDateSort | 2021 |
| publisher | Public Library of Science |
| publisherStr | Public Library of Science |
| record_format | dspace |
| spelling | CGSpace1428522025-01-24T14:12:17Z The future of fish in Africa: Employment and investment opportunities Chan, Chin Yee Tran, Nhuong Cheong, Kai Ching Sulser, Timothy B. Cohen, Philippa J. Wiebe, Keith D. investment employment fish One of the most pressing challenges facing food systems in Africa is ensuring availability of a healthy and sustainable diet to 2.4 billion people by 2050. The continent has struggled with development challenges, particularly chronic food insecurity and pervasive poverty. In Africa’s food systems, fish and other aquatic foods play a multifaceted role in generating income, and providing a critical source of essential micronutrients. To date, there are no estimates of investment and potential returns for domestic fish production in Africa. To contribute to debates about the future of fish in Africa, we applied the International Model for Analysis of Agriculture Commodities and Trade (IMPACT) to explore two Pan-African scenarios for fish sector growth: a business-as-usual (BAU) scenario and a high-growth scenario for capture fisheries and aquaculture with accompanying strong gross domestic product growth (HIGH). Post-model analysis was used to estimate employment and aquaculture investment requirements for the sector in Africa. Africa’s fish sector is estimated to support 20.7 million jobs in 2030, and 21.6 million by 2050 under the BAU. Approximately 2.6 people will be employed indirectly along fisheries and aquaculture value chains for every person directly employed in the fish production stage. Under the HIGH scenario, total employment in Africa’s fish food system will reach 58.0 million jobs, representing 2.4% of total projected population in Africa by 2050. Aquaculture production value is estimated to achieve US$ 3.3 billion and US$ 20.4 billion per year under the BAU and HIGH scenarios by 2050, respectively. Farm-gate investment costs for the three key inputs (fish feeds, farm labor, and fish seed) to achieve the aquaculture volumes projected by 2050 are estimated at US$ 1.8 billion per year under the BAU and US$ 11.6 billion per year under the HIGH scenario. Sustained investments are critical to sustain capture fisheries and support aquaculture growth for food system transformation towards healthier diets. 2021-12-27 2024-05-22T12:11:11Z 2024-05-22T12:11:11Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/142852 en Open Access Public Library of Science Chan, Chin Yee; Tran, Nhuong; Cheong, Kai Ching; Sulser, Timothy B.; Cohen, Philippa J.; Wiebe, Keith D.; et al. 2021. The future of fish in Africa: Employment and investment opportunities. PLoS ONE 16(12): e026161. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0261615 |
| spellingShingle | investment employment fish Chan, Chin Yee Tran, Nhuong Cheong, Kai Ching Sulser, Timothy B. Cohen, Philippa J. Wiebe, Keith D. The future of fish in Africa: Employment and investment opportunities |
| title | The future of fish in Africa: Employment and investment opportunities |
| title_full | The future of fish in Africa: Employment and investment opportunities |
| title_fullStr | The future of fish in Africa: Employment and investment opportunities |
| title_full_unstemmed | The future of fish in Africa: Employment and investment opportunities |
| title_short | The future of fish in Africa: Employment and investment opportunities |
| title_sort | future of fish in africa employment and investment opportunities |
| topic | investment employment fish |
| url | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/142852 |
| work_keys_str_mv | AT chanchinyee thefutureoffishinafricaemploymentandinvestmentopportunities AT trannhuong thefutureoffishinafricaemploymentandinvestmentopportunities AT cheongkaiching thefutureoffishinafricaemploymentandinvestmentopportunities AT sulsertimothyb thefutureoffishinafricaemploymentandinvestmentopportunities AT cohenphilippaj thefutureoffishinafricaemploymentandinvestmentopportunities AT wiebekeithd thefutureoffishinafricaemploymentandinvestmentopportunities AT chanchinyee futureoffishinafricaemploymentandinvestmentopportunities AT trannhuong futureoffishinafricaemploymentandinvestmentopportunities AT cheongkaiching futureoffishinafricaemploymentandinvestmentopportunities AT sulsertimothyb futureoffishinafricaemploymentandinvestmentopportunities AT cohenphilippaj futureoffishinafricaemploymentandinvestmentopportunities AT wiebekeithd futureoffishinafricaemploymentandinvestmentopportunities |