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2023 Fishing Closed Season Starts In July

This year’s fishing closed season will be observed between July and August, the Ministry of Fisheries and Aquaculture Development has said.

While canoe and inshore fishers would observe the closed season between July 1 and 31, industrial trawlers would observe it from July 1 to August 31, it added.

Alternative livelihood training 

At a stakeholders’ meeting to discuss the 2022 closed season report in Accra Thursday (April 13, 2023), the sector Minister, Mavis Hawa Koomson, said the ministry was engaging neighbouring countries in the West Central Gulf of Guinea (FCWC) to implement the fishing closed season at the same period.  

She said fishery resources had been the economic backbone of the many fishing communities in the country for centuries; however, the fisheries sector was being threatened following the depletion of fish stock, as shown by low catches confirmed by fishers.

The decline in catches, she said, could be attributed to climate change, illegal, unregulated and unreported (IUU) fishing, excessive fishing capacity, overfishing, among other factors.

The implementation of the closed season, she said, was part of a series of strategies to recover fish stock and ensure sustainable management of fisheries resources.

She stressed that the closed season gains would not be realised “if we all do not collectively combat IUU fishing activities”. 

Report

Presenting the report on the 2022 fishing closed season, the Director of the Fisheries Survey Scientific Division of the Fisheries Commission, Emmanuel Dovlo, said a socio-economic survey was conducted in four fishing communities, namely: Elmina, Keta, Sekondi and Tema, to find out the impact of the closed season on the livelihood of fisher folk.

He said an analysis of fish catch data and biological studies, where some species of fish were sampled on a monthly basis, showed that July and August were the best period for the observation of the closed fishing season.

“The landing of small pelagic species, round sardinella and anchovy were higher after the closed season,” he said.

He recommend that the seasonal closure should be accompanied by social protection for the fishing communities and training for livelihood alternatives, while fisheries enforcement measures must be enhanced to curb inappropriate methods of fishing.

The Board Chairman of the Fisheries Commission, Professor Francis Nunoo, said the benefits of the closed season would be reaped after years of effective implementation.

“The assessment, after last year’s implementation, has shown that there has been an improvement in fish catch. If we do it over the years, we will see the change. Following the 2022 fishing closed season, we are seeing that the sizes of the fish have improved and the harvested fishes have also laid eggs before they were caught,” he said.