FAO, Japanese Embassy Sign Fishery/Agriculture Agreement

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The Director General of the National Fisheries and Aquaculture Authority (NaFAA) has expressed appreciation for the signing of the funding agreement between the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), United Nations, and the Japanese embassy in Liberia.  FAO will implement the project in partnership with the National Fisheries and Aquaculture Authority (NaFAA) and the Ministry of Agriculture (MOA).

   Speaking during the signing ceremony at the Mesurado Pier on Monday, October 18, 2021, Emma Glassco termed the signing ceremony as a dream come true, and at the same time thanked the Japanese government and people for their continued support to the fishery and agriculture sectors. The project targets ten counties, including the nine coastal counties and one inland county, Bong.

   The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the Japanese embassy signed the funding agreement, which is in the tune of US$3,564,000 and is geared towards the full implementation of a three-year project, “Strengthening Capacities in the Fisheries and Rice Cultivation Sectors for Food Security and Nutrition Improvement”.

   The project, which is designed to address challenges of low marine production, is partly due to the fact that fishermen, fishmongers and processors are not fully equipped to stay safe and healthy at sea and undo post-catch losses, which remain unfulfilled in all nine coastal counties.

   The project will address, among other things, quadripartite challenges confronting fisheries through a well-coordinated, stakeholder-driven approach. Strategically also, the project will support improvement in local rice production, whilst promoting the integration of agri-aquaculture production in rice fields.

   The project is expected to impact the country by helping to reduce poverty, food and nutrition insecurity and livelihood vulnerability among women and men of young and middle ages. As an outcome, it will directly ensure that 3,000 fisher folks, rice farmers, fish-famers, and fishmongers and processors have resilient livelihoods and income, food and nutrition security amidst the COVID-19 pandemic. Local communities in ten counties will be impacted, with value chain actors and producers empowered in a climate-smart and environmentally-friendly manner through the four outputs: 1: Enhanced small-scale fisheries at the sea; 2: Female fish processors livelihoods improved; 3: Integrated agri-aquaculture promoted in rice fields; and 4: Capacity developed to combat illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing. 

   The project has two specific objectives and one overall project outcome: to reduced poverty, food and nutrition insecurity and livelihoods vulnerability among women and men of young and middle-ages.  Objective one is to strengthen the small-scale fishery sector through the creation of employment, the diversification of income and the improvement of methods and safety of fisher folks, capacity of fishmongers and curtailing of illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing. Objective two is promote an inimitable method of integrating rice and fish farming using climate-smart agricultural practices. In a COVID-ravaging era, the project will contribute to income diversification, resilience building, and sustainable livelihoods. The project seeks to contribute to the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), in particular to Goals 1, 2, 3, 8, 9 and 14.

   Commenting before the signing ceremony, FAO Representative, Mariatou Njie, said the project aims to achieve its objectives and outcome through four project outputs: enhance small-scale fisheries in the sea, female fish processors livelihoods improved, Integrated agri-aquaculture promoted in rice fields and capacity developed to combat illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing.

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