Value | Category | Cases | |
---|---|---|---|
Access to productive fishing grounds e.g the Hardap dam | 1 |
4.8%
|
|
Dirty drinking water | 1 |
4.8%
|
|
Fish is expensive small scale business people are struggling to keep up with sky-rocketing fish price in Walvis Bay | 1 |
4.8%
|
|
Fishers are not organized, not speaking in one voice | 1 |
4.8%
|
|
Lack of capital to construct eathern ponds | 1 |
4.8%
|
|
Lack of funds | 1 |
4.8%
|
|
Lack of information about fish farming and management | 1 |
4.8%
|
|
Lack of knowledge on fishing | 1 |
4.8%
|
|
Lack of land to construct ponds | 1 |
4.8%
|
|
Lack of money to buy productive fishing assets such as externally produced net. | 1 |
4.8%
|
|
Lack of training and recognition of their value chains as they are regarded illegal fishers | 1 |
4.8%
|
|
Long distances travelling to go buy fish | 1 |
4.8%
|
|
N/a | 1 |
4.8%
|
|
No awareness on type of nets to use | 1 |
4.8%
|
|
No support from government towards small scale fisheries no quatos (fishing light) allocated to scale scale fisheries meaning their have to buy from big commercial companies at high price. | 1 |
4.8%
|
|
No support structures in place in the area | 1 |
4.8%
|
|
Struggles for transportation from where fish is caught | 1 |
4.8%
|
|
Technological support | 1 |
4.8%
|
|
There are no customers | 1 |
4.8%
|
|
Weather and season changes | 1 |
4.8%
|
|
Women who sell fish fish do not have proper infrastructure where they sell their fish, and this puts their things at risk of theft. To sum up, the councillor of Onyaanya constituency also explained that women are willing to start farming fish but there ar | 1 |
4.8%
|