Harnessing Aquatic Foods for Healthy People, Healthy Planet, and Shared Prosperity
people, including women and children, nourished adequately with aquatic foods integrated in their diets
women and people from other marginalized groups empowered with greater access to resources, markets, and decision-making in the fisheries and aquaculture sector
households increased their incomes through increased sustainable production of aquatic foods
hectares restored through sustainable/ improved management of natural resources
MT of fish, seaweed, and other aquatic foods produced with reduced greenhouse gas emissions and greater resource efficiency
Impact Story
“In 2013, a WorldFish-organized visit to Bangladesh transformed how I run my hatchery, introducing me to advanced technologies at the Bangladesh Fisheries Research…
Social and Economic Inclusion • 21 Aug 2025
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Hatchery-based mass seed production of Small Indigenous Species (SIS) represents a vital innovation in strengthening resilient and nutrition-sensitive aquatic food…
Nutrition and Public Health • 14 Aug 2025
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On Inhaca Island in southern Mozambique, a group of young people have been trying something new. With support from Eduardo Mondlane University, they’ve begun farming…
Climate and Environmental Sustainability, Social and Economic Inclusion • 12 Aug 2025
Read Moremillion number of people around the world who depend on small-scale fisheries and aquaculture for their livelihoods.
million tons - the volume of aquatic food production by 2030.
million - number of people engaged in the primary sector of fisheries and aquaculture in 2018.
trillion - the value of the ocean economy, including fisheries, shipping lanes and tourism.