Many Ghanaians will experience hunger and malnutrition by 2030 due to anticipated drop in national fish production, Professor Berchie Asiedu, the Dean, School of Natural Resources, University of Energy and Natural Resources (UENR) has hinted.He said the nation's fish consumption was expected to reach 888,096 tonnes by 2030; however, total fish production was anticipated to constitute only about 43 per cent of the total fish requirement.'This clearly shows that demand for fish consumption is expected to outweigh the national supply,' Prof Asiedu explained.At the current growth rate, per capita fish consumption is predicted to decline from 28 kg in 2018 to 23.9 kg in 2030, Prof Asiedu, stated saying, 'fish consumption would increase, but people would be eating less fish.'Prof Asiedu made this known when speaking on a research update session, organised by the School of Natural Resources of the University in Sunyani on the theme 'Managing our Natural Resources: Academia-Industry Partnership for Sustainabl e National Development.'The session was attended by natural resources experts.Prof Asiedu explained that as the cheapest and most consumed animal protein (60 percent) in the country, fish demand had increased rapidly over the past few years, growing from 960,000 tonnes in 2010 to 1.1 million tonnes in 2020.Within the same period, per capita fish consumption increased from 24.2 kg to 27.9 kg at a rate of 1.6 percent per annum.Following the gaps in the trends of production and consumption, Prof Asiedu called for an urgent need for policies to accelerate aqua-culture development in the country.He also underlined the importance of ensuring general improvement in the fisheries management practices, as well as exploration of adaptive strategies and thereby improve the adaptive capacity of fishers to climate change.Later in an interview, Mr. Hanson Kodzo Dzamefe, the Bono Regional Director of the Fisheries Commission, expressed concern about the nation's over-reliance on marine fishes, and called for pri vate sector collaboration to develop the nation's aqua-culture sector.He said aquaculture had huge potential for job creation and food security, saying the inland fishing value chain could create millions of jobs if investments were put into the sector.Mr Dzamefe said aquaculture remained a lucrative business, and therefore, called on the unemployed youth and graduates to engage in commercial fish production to better their lots and advance national food security too.Source: Ghana News Agency
Related Articles
Ghana International Bank to hold conference on boosting trade for Africa
The Ghana International Bank (GHIB) is set to host its inaugural ‘CNVERGE’ conference, to promote dialogue and collaboration on improving African international trade banking.
The conference will be held from August 5 to August 9, 2024, in London, on …
2025 Palm Oil Barometer Calls for Fairer Palm Oil Value Chains in West Africa
Accra: A new report, Palm Oil Barometer 2025: Procurement for Prosperity, has called for a fundamental shift in global palm oil procurement practices. The report emphasized the need for equitable value distribution to support smallholder farmers in We…
PURC Recovers Over GHC 835,000 for NEDCo in Bono Region
Sunyani: The Bono Regional Office of the Public Utilities Regulatory Commission (PURC) successfully recovered GHC 835,579.69 in revenue for the Northern Electricity Distribution Company (NEDCo) from January to March 2025.
According to Ghana News Agen…
