By Wisdom JONNY-NUEKPE
Government has introduced that the 2024 fishing closed season will start from July 1 to August 31, for artisanal, semi-industrial and industrial trawl fleets
The announcement and implementation of the closed season by the Ministry of Fisheries and Aquaculture Development (MoFAD) is a part of a technique agreed upon with stakeholders to scale back extreme stress and over-exploitation of shares within the marine subsector. It goals to assist replenish the nation’s declining marine fish inventory.
Sector minister Mavis Hawa Koomson, who made the announcement in Accra, expressed optimism that implementing the technique will allow the sector to attain the specified long-term goal of stock-recovery.
Explaining the schedule, she mentioned Artisanal and Semi-industrial fleets (inshore) will perform the train from July 1 to July 31, 2024; whereas Industrial Trawl vessels will bear the exercise for 2 months, from July 1 to August 31 this yr.
“The approved dates are based on scientific advice and in consultation with various Fisheries Associations. We are hopeful that compliance for this year will be high as the previous years,” the minister disclosed.
Madam Koomson is optimistic that implementing the measures will guarantee sustainability for Ghana’s marine and fisheries sources and defend the fishing business from collapse.
Meanwhile, MoFAD has acknowledged the ever-increasing problem of unlawful and unreported fishing, and noticed that the specified results of implementing closed-seasons shall be attained when unlawful actions equivalent to using toxic and poisonous chemical compounds, dynamite and different explosives are successfully managed in fishing.
Though unlawful and unreported fishing actions are mentioned to value the financial system an annual worth of greater than US$50million, MoFAD mentioned it’s decided to collaborate with the assorted fisheries affiliation such because the Ghana National Canoe Fishermen Council, the National Fisheries Association of Ghana, Ghana Industrial Trawlers Association and the Ghana In-shore Fishers Association to finish the illegalities.
Data from MoFAD point out that the fisheries sector helps the livelihood of about 3 million Ghanaians alongside the fisheries and aquaculture worth chain. But stakeholders imagine the sector may benefit extra Ghanaian households if sources are channeled to preventing unlawful fishing actions.
Representatives and leaders of the assorted associations and different stakeholders have all pledged their dedication to authorities to abide by the foundations as a way to implement the closed-season over the subsequent two months.
The Fisheries Act (2002) Act 625 emphasises the significance of utilizing finest scientific info for managing fisheries sources. In line with this, MoFAD and the Fisheries Commission have been implementing Closed Fishing Seasons since 2016 with the principle goal of aiding inventory restoration.