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FAO’s: The State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture 2024

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The State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture (fao.org)
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Less than six years before 2030, there are major concerns that progress on most of the Sustainable Development Goals is either moving much too slowly or has regressed, shadowed in the face of intensified challenges. Conflict, climate extremes, environmental degradation and economic shocks combined with the high cost of nutritious foods and growing inequalities continue to threaten food security and nutrition. We know that over 3.1 billion people – more than 40 percent of the world population – cannot afford a healthy diet. Hunger and malnutrition occur unevenly across and within continents and countries, and current agrifood systems are highly vulnerable to shocks and disruptions arising from climate variability and extremes, exacerbating growing inequities.

Today, aquatic systems are increasingly recognized as vital for food and nutrition security. But more can be done to feed a growing and more urbanized population. Because of their great diversity and capacity to supply ecosystem services and sustain healthy diets, aquatic food systems represent a viable and effective solution that offers greater opportunities to improve global food security and nutrition today and for generations to come. However, if we want aquatic food systems to enhance their contribution to sustainable development, transformation is essential. In 2021, FAO adopted the Blue transformation, a Programme Priority Area anchored in the FAO Strategic Framework 2022–2031, aimed at maximizing the opportunities presented by aquatic food systems to enhance food security, improve nutrition, eradicate poverty and support the achievement of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. Furthermore, these objectives fully align with the key FAO strategies on climate change, innovation and biodiversity.

This edition of The State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture is devoted to “Blue Transformation in action”. It illustrates how FAO effectively uses its resources, expertise and comparative advantage to promote collaborative efforts and initiatives involving Members, partners and key stakeholders. Implemented through the Blue Transformation Roadmap – presented at FAO Regional Conferences during 2024 – these efforts focus on priority actions to achieve three global objectives: sustainable aquaculture growth to meet the increasing demand for aquatic foods; effective fisheries management for healthier fishery stocks and equitable livelihoods; and upgrading of aquatic food value chains to guarantee their social, economic and environmental sustainability.

The State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture 2024 has benefited from significant improvements in data collection, analytical and assessment tools, and methodologies generating more reliable and expanded data on the state of world fisheries and aquaculture resources, and their exploitation and utilization. In 2022, fisheries and aquaculture production reached an all-time high of 223.2 million tonnes, worth a record USD 472 billion and contributing an estimated 20.7 kg of aquatic animal foods per capita. This constituted about 15 percent of the animal protein supply, reaching over 50 percent in several countries in Asia and Africa. While capture fisheries production has remained largely unchanged for decades, aquaculture has increased by 6.6 percent since 2020, contributing over 57 percent of aquatic animal products used for direct human consumption. The fisheries and aquaculture sector employs an estimated 62 million people in primary production alone. Where sex-disaggregated data are available, approximately 24 percent of the total workforce were women; of these, 53 percent were employed in the sector on a full-time basis, a great improvement since 1995, when only 32 percent of women were employed full time. Aquatic products continue to be one of the most traded food commodities, involving over 230 countries and territories and generating a record USD 195 billion in 2022 considering all aquatic products.

Despite these significant achievements, the sector still faces major challenges from climate change and disasters, water scarcity, pollution, biodiversity loss and other anthropogenic impacts. We need to accelerate efforts to ensure 100 percent of fishery stocks are placed under effective management, to reverse unsustainable practices, combat illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing, and reduce overfishing. An ecosystem approach should be at the centre of future aquaculture intensification and expansion, to minimize environmental impacts and secure animal health and food safety, with an efficient, diverse and sustainable use of inputs and resources, in particular water, land and feed, while improving yields and supporting livelihoods, especially for the most vulnerable communities and populations. Although significant improvements are reported in processing and utilization of aquatic foods, additional efforts are required to reduce loss and waste of aquatic products, upscaling successful FAO initiatives promoting innovative technologies, implementing circular economy solutions, facilitating access of producers, particularly small-scale ones, to regional and international markets and making aquatic foods available to all consumers.

The importance of fisheries and aquaculture for Sustainable Development Goal 14 – Conserve and sustainably use the oceans, seas and marine resources for sustainable development – highlights the responsibility of FAO, as custodian of four out of ten indicators of SDG 14, to accelerate the global momentum to secure healthy diets from healthy and productive oceans. This is being effectively implemented through activities aimed at improving the capacities of Members to implement, monitor and report progress and to inform on the challenges they face for achieving SDG 14 targets related to fisheries and aquaculture.

Recognition of the importance of fisheries and aquaculture in global fora is illustrated by the increasing inclusion of aquatic food systems in United Nations Food Systems Summit dialogues, United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change negotiations and the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, in addition to the adoption of the Agreement under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea on the Conservation and Sustainable Use of Marine Biological Diversity of Areas beyond National Jurisdiction, and the World Trade Organization Agreement on Fisheries Subsidies, as well as the upcoming international agreement on plastic pollution, including in the marine environment. 

Our world population is projected to reach 8.5 billion by 2030 – many living in urban areas – with almost 600 million people remaining chronically undernourished. Providing sufficient food, nutrition and livelihoods for this growing population demands significant investments. As highlighted in this report, aquaculture has a major role to play, particularly in Africa where its great potential is not yet realized. We need to urgently explore all opportunities and take transformative action to make agrifood systems more efficient, more inclusive, more resilient and more sustainable. These transformative actions are needed to move forwards into a world with better production, better nutrition, a better environment and a better life, leaving no one behind.

The State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture, an FAO flagship publication,continues to provide evidence-based information, policy and technical insights on challenges and innovations shaping the present and future of the sector. I hope that this 2024 edition will meet the expectations of its expanding audience of policymakers, managers, scientists, fishers, farmers, traders, civil society and consumers to inform on the vital role and contributions of fisheries and aquaculture in addressing the challenges of the twenty-first century.

Qu Dongyu
FAO Director General

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What Will You Learn?

  • The preparation and production of The State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture 2024 is a 15-month process which started in April 2023. The work was guided and supervised by an editorial board, chaired by the FAO Assistant Director-General and Director of the FAO Fisheries and Aquaculture Division (NFI), representing all the teams of the division, and steered by a core executive group of the NFI Information and Knowledge Management Team and a representative of the FAO Office of Communications.
  • The editorial board met regularly to design, develop and refine the structure and content of the report, then to review progress and address emerging issues brought by the core executive group. Based on the agreed structure, different senior editorial board members were assigned the leadership of a thematic section. Most contributions were prepared by FAO authors, including from FAO Decentralized Offices, in collaboration with external experts where appropriate (see Acknowledgements, p. xii). The work of the editorial board benefited from wider consultation among the FAO teams in charge of the FAO flagship publications.
  • Between April and June 2023, thematic section leaders coordinated proposals for a wide range of topics from the officers in the division, in consultation with officers from other FAO divisions and FAO Decentralized Offices. The proposals were reviewed by the editorial board to refine the outline ensuring it addressed current and emerging issues. The working outline took into consideration how ongoing FAO undertakings reflect Blue Transformation in action and align with the outcomes of high-level global and regional events and initiatives as well as concrete achievements on policies, norms and standards, technical innovation, partnerships and results at regional and country levels.
  • The longstanding Part 1 on world review, status and trends has benefited from improved data collection methodology, tools and analyses and has been extended to cover the regular monitoring of the SDG 14 indicators under FAO custodianship. Part 2 sets the scene for reporting and demonstrating Blue
  • Transformation in action in global and regional fora, but also on the ground. Part 3 addresses outlook and contemporary issues, complementing the other two parts to inform stakeholders and to provide guidance to policy- and decision-makers in charge of fisheries and aquaculture. Following on from the 2022 edition, this report includes an executive summary, which covers the entire publication, and an expanded glossary. For the first time, The State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture features infographics to illustrate the key messages and executive summary.
  • In June 2023, a summary was prepared for each section and subsection, with inputs from section leaders, and revised based on feedback from the editorial board. The summary document was submitted to NFI management, then to the FAO Deputy Director-General for approval in July 2023. This document formed the blueprint guiding authors in the drafting of the publication.
  • Part 2 and most of Part 3 were drafted and edited for technical and language content between August 2023 and November 2023. Part 1 and the section on projections in Part 3 were drafted and edited between 1 January and 1 April 2024, because they are based on FAO’s official fisheries and aquaculture statistics, which only become available upon annual closure of the thematic databases in which the data are structured. The process requires careful collation, cross checking, revision and validation. In the absence of national reporting, FAO makes estimates based on the best data available from other authoritative sources or through standard methodologies.
  • All parts were reviewed by a subgroup of the editorial board including managers of the FAO Fisheries and Aquaculture Division. In addition, Parts 2 and 3 (except projections) were submitted in December 2023 to a panel of three external experts covering respectively aquaculture, capture fisheries and value chains for their review and recommendations (see Acknowledgements, p. xii).
  • Based on an agreed schedule, the finalized English drafts of The State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture 2024 were submitted in batches to the Language Branch for translation into FAO’s other five official languages and to the Publications and Library Branch for copyediting, layout and processing.
  • Recent developments in fisheries and aquaculture have been accompanied by a major expansion of the associated terminology necessitating its thorough review to ensure coherence throughout the report. The glossary prepared in 2022 has been expanded for this edition, using definitions provided by authoritative sources of FAO or others. A Glossary Working Group was set up to complete this task and assist authors.
  • A final draft of The State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture 2024 was submitted to the Office of the FAO Deputy Director-General and to the Office of the FAO Director-General for approval.

Course Content

World Review
GLOBAL FISHERIES AND AQUACULTURE AT A GLANCE Aquatic food systems are very diverse and offer a variety of environmental, economic and social benefits and services. They are increasingly recognized – at the global level and in many countries and communities – for their nutritional value and ecosystem services that contribute to sustaining healthy diets and aquatic biodiversity. More than ever before, they represent viable solutions and offer opportunities to improve global food security and nutrition, enhance livelihoods and preserve the environment.

Blue Transformation in Action
BLUE TRANSFORMATION: A ROADMAP An alarming 735 million people around the world are facing hunger, 122 million more than before the COVID-19 pandemic. In addition, over 3.1 billion people cannot afford a healthy diet today and projections indicate that 600 million people will remain chronically undernourished in 2030. During both the 2021 United Nations Food Systems Summit (UNFSS) and again at the 2023 UNFSS Stocktaking Moment, UN Member States recognized the multifaceted nature of food insecurity, and the need to address both supply chains and communities involved in all food production sectors through agrifood systems transformation.

Outlook and Contemporary issues
AQUATIC FOODS: AN UNTAPPED POTENTIAL FOR HEALTHY DIETS Aquatic foods can be an integral part of a healthy diet that is environmentally, socially and economically sustainable. Unfortunately, their role in sustainable food systems is often under-recognized. This section highlights this role and how simple solutions can improve the contribution of aquatic foods to healthy diets and to the four betters (better production, better nutrition, a better environment and a better life) through the Blue Transformation Roadmap.

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8 months ago
Expansive and inclusive with pointers to connected resources.