Vessel registrationlicensing Assessment of the cross border trade in Sole fish

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3.2.4 Vessel registrationlicensing

Vessel registration and licensing is required under the Fisheries Act 2007 and associated regulations. This is a necessary step in understanding the total effort in the sole fishery and ultimately to achieve satisfactory scores for MSC certification. The registration and licensing exercise is necessary in order to keep track of all fishing vessel arrivals and exits as well as to establish a baseline for an eventual policy to limit entry which will be one measure necessary to prevent overfishing. Ultimately, licensing can also pave the way to consider possible establishment of catch shares in this fishery given the fact that sole is only landed in a few centers means that a share system may be feasible. However, the feasibility of a share system and discussions with fishermen concerning interest and willingness to experiment with such a system will be activities in subsequent years of the Project. The Project assisted the Department of Fisheries with the registration efforts and provided all the necessary inputs to conduct the exercise along the north and south coasts. The registration exercise started in the latter part of the 2 nd . Quarter and was completed in the 3 rd . Quarter. The Statistical Unit of the Department of Fisheries will prepare a report on the registration exercise and make it available to the Ba-Nafaa project and CRCURI.

3.2.5 Assessment of the cross border trade in Sole fish

The value chain assessment for sole fishery identified that an unknown quantity of sole caught and landed in Gambia is transshipped into Senegal and much of this transshipment is not being fully captured by the Department of Fisheries statistics and distorts Senegal sole capture statistics and implication on marketing an eco-labeled product is also a concern. Sole caught in Gambia is loaded into trucks coming from the Casamance Southern Senegal but reported as caught in Southern Senegal and then transshipped to Senegal for eventual processing and export. This illegal trade can have significant impacts on trying to accurately assess landings of sole caught in Gambian waters as well as have impacts concerning ecolabeling. Therefore, additional assessment of the cross border trade is needed to fully understand market context and opportunities for improved marketing that benefits more fully Gambian fishermen, processors and exporters. Since cost differences in the two countries have been cited as key reasons for the lack of processing activity in The Gambia and exports to Senegal, this assessment will to the extent possible also look into the comparative cost structure for processing plants and exports to Europe in the two countries. Two consultants one Senegalese and one Gambian have been identified to conduct a Comparative Cost Study of the Gambian Sole Fishery. The study was planned to commence in the 2 nd Quarter but is delayed due to procedural matters to recruit the Gambian consultant. The study is rescheduled to start in the 4 rd . Quarter.

3.2.6 Early actions at the landing sites water and sanitation improvements