Implementation
of the plan will cover a five year period at a cost of US$85 million. With
financial and technical support from the Food and Agriculture Organisation
(FAO), the Plan is aimed at enhancing and improving the practice, management
and development of aquaculture as a viable business.
Aquaculture
is fast gaining pace as an alternative source of animal protein as Ghana’s
marine and freshwater fishery production decline.
The
country’s fish demand for 2012 was estimated at 968,000 metric tons while the
country’s fish production for that year was 486,000 metric tons, representing
about 50.2 per cent of requirement.
Dr.
Emmanuel Anokye Frimpong, who is involved in the training of Ghanaian fish
farmers under the USAID Aquaculture and Fisheries Collaborative Research Support
Program, notes that the practicality of aquaculture must be understood if it is
benefit people as a business.
“Aquaculture
is a hands-on activity; it is also a business that involves doing”, he explained,
adding that some people struggle in the business “primarily because it is difficult
for them to just get their feet wet and their hands dirty”.
With
the new intervention, aquaculture production is expected to increase by 360
percent from the current 27,750 metric tons to 130,000 metric tons while
generating an estimated 220, 000 jobs across the value chain.
The
capacity of aquaculture associations to improve the knowledge, skills and
management capabilities of indigenous fish farmers will be prioritized,
according to Nayon Bilijo, Minister for Fisheries and Aquaculture Development.
To
achieve this, Dr. Anokye Frimpong believes access to information on new developments
in fish farming via radio, television and mobile phones would empower fish
farmers to maximize opportunities in the sector.
In
2012, Ghana’s Water Research Institute (WTI), in
partnership with WorldFish, came out with the
‘Akosombo’ strain of Nile Tilapia, which grows three times faster than
non-improved tilapia.
The improved variety is to increase
aquaculture productivity and food security in West Africa.
For local consumption, an increase in
productivity can result in greater availability of fish in the market, reducing
the price of the product and making it more accessible to poor consumers.
Story
by Kofi Adu Domfeh
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