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Improving ARTISAN fishing and conserving biodiversity



Improving
fishing and conserving marine biodiversity along the coastal mainland, was a
topic that was brought up in discussion between the
Committee on Fisheries (COFi) of the UN Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) and Member States, which (with Honduras among them),
should meet this year to discuss and approve. “FAO Voluntary Guidelines to
Ensure Sustainable Small-Scale Fisheries” is an instrument for the
improvement in the lives of the people, and for those who manage or rely on
catches and marketing of small scale fisheries, as well as for those concerned
about the continued conservation of biodiversity degradation in aquatic
environments on the planet. 
There is no universal definition for small scale
fisheries because of diversity of economic, cultural, dependence on fishing,
traditional knowledge, labor relations, type and size of the boat, gear, etc.,
so many States primarily consider small scale fisheries to be like traditional
fishing, considering it as a livelihood for obtaining food, shelter, education,
health, income and small employment, with small boats and fishing gear operated
manually.
The Guidelines also establish principles and criteria for
the development and implementation of policies and strategies aimed at
improving governance, management and administration of resources and ensure a legitimate
social development, employment and decent work. They also seek to establish a
more efficient and fair trade chain from capture fisheries to the consumer, not
to mention the valuable role of women and strengthening the resilience of
communities to disaster risk and climate change. 
For the effort undertaken by civil society, the COFi / FAO
and member states realized that there must be congruence and implementation of
policies, inter-institutional coordination and collaboration with civil society,
backed by solid research, frank and fluid information and capacity building,
both within fishing communities as competent government agencies. But above
all, there must be political and financial support for excellent execution and
monitoring.
 In late January 2013,
at the meeting in Rome, representatives of civil society in Southeast Asia,
Africa, Europe, Central and North America had already achieved consensus on the
“zero draft,” which in February will be presented to COFi / FAO. This
in turn will allow them to select what is deemed appropriate and present it to
the annual meeting of COFi. 

Halfway through mid-2004, full member states of
COFi / FAO met. It was important that regional associations, such as the Organization of Fishing and Aquaculture in Central America (OSPESCA),
Group of Latin America and Caribbean Countries (GRULAC) and others, previously met with representatives of networks of fishing
organizations to ensure the practice of including civic participation, and
better yet take positions already agreed. The same is recommended for that next
meeting, where knowledgeable officials previously accrue and become the subject
accompanied by network members to jointly propose and achieve the adoption of
international guidelines for the benefit of 90% of fishermen and fish traders
Worldwide, 50% are women, and many enjoy the benefit of aquatic biodiversity. 

Jorge A. Varela Marquez
Jorge Varela is an environmentalist from Honduras. He received the Goldman Environmental Prize in 1999, for his contribution to marine conservation in the Gulf of Fonseca