Project

CTI West Pacific-East Asia Oceanic Fisheries Management Project - under the Coral Triangle Initiative

Resources (6)
Project Identification Form
Name Media Type Language Date
PDF English 06 Apr 2010
PDF English 06 Apr 2010

Key Basin Project Results

1. National tuna management plan which includes enhancement of fishery data collection, assessment of fish stocks in their waters and allocation of annual allowable catch, monitoring of fishing operations and evaluation processes 2. This project has greatly enhanced the quality of Indonesian and Philippine fishery data that are applied to regional tuna stock assessments conducted for the WCPFC. 3. More than 60 full-time enumerators were hired at local tuna landing sites in the provinces of the three participating countries, along with data managers and data entry assistants to manage the data.

Results Indicators

Regional legal agreements and cooperation frameworks
Year: 2004

YES

Convention for the Conservation and Management of Highly Migratory Fish Stocks in the Western and Central Pacific Ocean (WCPF Convention) which entered into force on 19 June 2004.
Regional Management Institutions

YES

Body: West Central Pacific Fisheries Commission The WCPF Convention draws on many of the provisions of the UN Fish Stocks Agreement [UNFSA] while, at the same time, reflecting the special political, socio-economic, geographical and environmental characteristics of the western and central Pacific Ocean (WCPO) region. The WCPFC Convention seeks to address problems in the management of high seas fisheries resulting from unregulated fishing, over-capitalization, excessive fleet capacity, vessel re-flagging to escape controls, insufficiently selective gear, unreliable databases and insufficient multilateral cooperation in respect to conservation and management of highly migratory fish stocks. A framework for the participation of fishing entities in the Commission which legally binds fishing entities to the provisions of the Convention, participation by territories and possessions in the work of the Commission, recognition of special requirements of developing States, and cooperation with other Regional Fisheries Management Organizations (RFMO) whose respective areas of competence overlap with the WCPFC reflect the unique geo-political environment in which the Commission operates. The Commission supports three subsidiary bodies; the Scientific Committee, Technical and Compliance Committee, and the Northern Committee, that each meet once during each year. The meetings of the subsidiary bodies are followed by a full session of the Commission. The work of the Commission is assisted by a Finance and Administration Committee. Members Australia, China, Canada, Cook Islands, European Union, Federated States of Micronesia, Fiji, France, Japan, Kiribati, Republic of Korea, Republic of Marshall Islands, Nauru, New Zealand, Niue, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Chinese Taipei, Tonga, Tuvalu, United States of America, Vanuatu.
National/Local reforms

YES

Through this project, each participating country has developed a national tuna management plan which includes enhancement of fishery data collection, assessment of fish stocks in their waters and allocation of annual allowable catch, monitoring of fishing operations and evaluation processes. Management plans were first developed in Indonesia and Vietnam through this project, while an existing management plan was revised in the case of Philippines. The developed national plans were submitted to each respective government for review, approval and implementation. Each participating country has provincial associations but there were no concrete activities on a national level in Indonesia and Vietnam, though both have initiated appropriate national structures. The project supported the establishment or updating of the structure and functioning of national level tuna associations.

Information sources

IWC6 Results Note (2011)

To strengthen national capacities and international cooperation on priority transboundary concerns relating to the conservation and management of highly migratory fish stocks in the west Pacific Ocean and east Asia (Indonesia, Philippines and Vietnam)

Project Category

Fisheries

Country

Indonesia, Philippines, Viet Nam, Regional

Budget

USD 3,125,000

Total Cost of the project

USD 925,000

GEF Allocation to project

Partners

United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS)

The UN Office for Project Services - UNOPS - manages project resources to help developing nations and countries in transition in their quest for peace, social stability, economic growth and sustainable development.

Contacts

Sungkwon Soh

Project Manager

Jose Erezo Padilla

Regional technical Adviser(RTA)

GEF ID

3523

Status

closed

Focal Area

International Waters

Project Type

Medium-Size Project

Start Date

06 Jan, 2010

End Date

01 Dec, 2013

Last Update

06 Mar, 2018