Type | Book Section - Promotion and Management of Marine Fisheries in Namibia |
Title | Towards Sustainable Fisheries Law |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2009 |
Page numbers | 139-186 |
URL | http://cmsdata.iucn.org/downloads/eplp_74.pdf#page=154 |
Abstract | Namibia inherited a severely depleted fishery. The previous regime left the fishing industry uncontrolled, with excessive exploitation practices and no sustainable fishing practices in place. This opened the waters to long-distance fleets which openly exploited the fish stock found outside the territorial waters and put severe pressured on the resource. The former administration had jurisdiction over 12 nautical miles out from the shore, while the remainder was managed by the International Commission for South East Atlantic Fisheries. This organization which was established mainly as a tool to ensure sustainable fishing in the South East Atlantic was abused by member states whose main aim was to harvest to the maximum the rich resources found in the said waters. With the attainment of independence and the change in the governing regime, a new fisheries management regime started with the enactment by parliament of the Territorial Sea and Exclusive Economic Zone Act (Act 3 of 1990). It stipulates that the ‘sea outside the territorial sea of Namibia, but within a distance of 200 nautical miles from the low water line or any other base line from which the territorial sea was measured, shall constitute the exclusive economic zone (EEZ) of Namibia’. This proved to be a mammoth task at first as Namibia had no adequate means to enforce the fisheries laws within the EEZ. For the first year illegal fishing by uncontrolled foreign vessels continued. This prompted the government to implement a fisheries management system and parliament enacted the Sea Fisheries Act (Act 29 of 1992) to ensure that Namibia’s living marine resources were utilized on a sustainable basis, as required by Article 95(l) of the Constitution of Namibia. Namibia has one of the most productive fishing grounds in the world and its marine ecosystem is dominated by the Benguela current. The fishery supports vast populations of commercially exploitable fish species, some of which are shared with Angola and South Africa. The inshore marine environment provides valuable migration and nursery habitats for many marine organisms. These organisms, in turn, support rich populations of fish, which constitutes the very foundation of marine fisheries in Namibia. As is the case in other upwelling systems, relatively few species dominate and their abundance is very much dependent on changing environmental and climatic conditions. |
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