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Introduction

The USAID Fish Right Program is a partnership between the governments of the United States and the Philippines to promote sustainable and resilient fisheries. Launched in 2018, this $33 million project aims to address biodiversity threats, improve marine ecosystem governance, and increase fish biomass in select marine key biodiversity and fisheries management areas in the Philippines.

Challenge

Situated in the apex of the Coral Triangle, a region known as the global center of marine biodiversity, the Philippines is recognized as the center of marine shore fish biodiversity. It is ranked as one of the world’s top fishing countries, recording an average of four million metric tons of fish catch every year. Fish and fish products provide food and livelihoods for millions of Filipinos living in coastal communities. This rich and precious marine biodiversity, however, is threatened by destructive and illegal fishing practices. These unsustainable fishing practices, exacerbated by climate change and the degradation of coral reefs and mangrove ecosystems, significantly impact food security, employment, and livelihoods. For instance, the productivity of  “wild” fisheries has leveled off since 1991, suggesting most fish stocks are now overexploited and overfished.

Approach

The overarching goal of the USAID Fish Right Program is to address threats to coastal and marine biodiversity by reducing overfishing, destructive and illegal fishing, and degradation of marine ecosystems. Fish Right aims to achieve this goal by catalyzing systemic actions within the fisheries sector; increasing the capacity of the national, regional, and local governments to implement an ecosystems approach to fisheries management; fostering fisheries ecosystem stewardship; and addressing the issue of illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing.

Fish Right initially focused on three marine key biodiversity areas (MKBAs) – Visayan Sea, Southern Negros, and the Calamianes Island Group, and expanded to cover the West Philippine Seascape (WPS) in the South China Sea during its fourth year of implementation. In October 2021, the program also started expanding its geographical coverage from MKBAs to fisheries management areas (FMAs), and has now pivoted to working on broader threats reduction in additional FMAs in the WPS, where fisheries resources are further challenged by foreign fishing vessels like distant-water fleets. The program promotes a science-based, participatory, and transparent governance framework to sustainably manage fisheries in these areas. 

Key Activities

As the program pivots to the WPS in the South China Sea, it aims to adapt and apply its experience in science-based and constituency-building approaches to improving fisheries compliance and reducing IUU fishing. Fish Right’s key activities include: 1) building the management capacity and leadership of relevant institutions in the WPS; 2) strengthening science, technology, and innovation partnerships between universities, governments, civil society organizations, and other stakeholders; and 3) leveraging data platforms to facilitate the use of science in policy-making and implementation. In addition, USAID’s Fish Right provides direct assistance to fishing communities that are vulnerable to diminished resources as a result of IUU fishing and further compounded by the impacts of climate change. This community assistance involves a multifaceted set of resilience interventions that include:

  • IUU assessment and risk reduction planning
  • ensuring resilience of fish stocks
  • systematic marine protected area network designing
  • improving fish catch through appropriate harvest controls
  • setting up safety nets in fishing communities, such as: improving fishers’ financial literacy; establishing market linkages between fishers and distribution channels, government agencies, academic institutions, and the private sector; and establishing microenterprises to lessen their dependence on marine resources. 

The program places a special focus on youth and women’s inclusion and empowerment, and these groups play a significant role in managing marine resources sustainably. The unstable and low income of fishers perpetuates a vicious cycle of poverty and natural resource depletion. USAID Fish Right’s interventions are designed to advance sustainable and resilient fisheries, anchored in boosting the resilience of small-scale fishers to help them break the cycle of poverty.

 

Video SeriesUSAID Fish Right Legacy Part 1: Why Fish Right

The USAID Fish Right Legacy Video Series provides information about the Fish Right program. Part 1 focuses on the context and background of the program. View all 10 videos in the series by clicking below.

 

Featured Resources

 
 
A crab fisher shows off his catch.
 

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Featured BlogIt Takes a Village to Save a Crab

How responsible fishing practices help a community in the Philippines and the blue swimming crab thrive

In the Philippine island of Igbon’s waters, Franchalie “Frans” Laurio attempts to fill his net with a natural treasure—crabs with speckled blue and olive-green shells. A public awareness campaign by the Philippines Department of Agriculture’s Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources and the Fish Right Program is focused on conserving the Visayan Sea blue swimming crab fishery.

“I want Igbon’s crabbers’ lives to improve, for us all to rise from poverty.” Frans said. “The blue swimming crab is our best hope.”
 

Featured BlogJojo's Odyssey

A Filipino man’s quest to stop illegal fishing and protect the sea

Every morning, Jose “Jojo” Mazo peers through his binoculars, scanning the turquoise waters of Siete Pecados Marine Park, off the Philippine island of Coron. He checks to make sure there’s no one fishing. All he sees these days is a crystal clear sea teeming with life.

“We want to show that people can dare to dream beyond the present and mere survival," said Jojo, park manager. "In harvesting fish, our fishers should be able to think of the future.”
 
Siete Pecados Marine Park
 

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