Little is known about how vulnerable fishery-dependent livelihoods are on a local level due to climate change. Most research has concentrated on the impact of climate change on fisheries systems at the global, regional, and country scales. To fill this gap, WorldFish commissioned a scoping study to assess how climate change affects the fishing communities in two riparian counties along Kenya’s Lake Victoria.

These counties are Migori and Homa Bay, which are hotspots of community vulnerability to climate change because of the high rates of poverty. SEI, together with WorldFish have organized a workshop on Climate Change, Gender, and Livelihoods in Migori and Homa Bay. The workshop will be organized around sessions that include plenary presentations, group breakout sessions and demonstrations of key technologies. It will bring together about 40 key stakeholders, including representatives from the national and county governments, local fishing communities, NGOs operating in the fisheries sector, researchers and scholars, and private sector agencies including financial institutions (Cooperative societies and banks).

Workshop Title: Climate change, gender, and livelihoods among fisher communities in the Lake Victoria zone region in Kenya

Representative from WorldFish: Rahma Adam, Lead, Social and Economic Inclusion, WorldFish

Date: Monday-Tuesday, 25-26 September 2023

Location: Florence Hotel, Migori, Kenya

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Background

Globally, over 500 million people depend on aquatic food production for their livelihood (FAO 2016, 2022). Global capture fisheries output in 2020 (excluding algae) was approximately 90.3 million tonnes, valued at an estimated USD 141 billion. This output included 11.5 million tonnes from inland waters and 78.8 million tonnes from marine waters. Of the estimated 58.5 million people engaged in aquatic food production as full-time or part-time workers, 65% are employed in capture fisheries (FAO, 2022). Due to rising surface water temperatures, it is predicted that fish productivity will grow in areas of high latitudes and decline in mid- or low latitudes, with significant variability (Barange et al., 2018; Lam et al., 2016). 

Climate change in the Lake Victoria region

The Lake Victoria fishery currently supports more than 200,000 fishers (LVFO, 2014), with an estimated 35 million people dependent directly or indirectly on it for a living (Weston, 2015). The Lake Victoria fisheries’ contribution to the GDP in terms of food, income, employment, and foreign exchange earnings is 0.8% in Kenya (KNBS, 2022). The fishery resources of Lake Victoria are contributing enormously to the livelihood of the communities and the riparian states in terms of food security, employment, wealth generation, foreign earnings, and other multiplier effects. 

Workshop objectives

  • Share with the participants evidence on the impacts of Climate Change and Fisheries globally and in Kenya;
  • Present preliminary findings and obtain feedback on the scoping study on study on adaptation to impacts of climate change on fishing communities in Migori and Homa Bay Counties; and
  • Identify interventions and measures that can contribute towards strengthening adaptation and resilience to the impacts of climate change in the fisheries sector in Migori and Homa Bay counties as it relates to governance of fisheries resources, Technology and value addition, financing, and education and awareness.

Expected outputs from the workshop

  • Report of the Proceedings from the workshop discussion;
  • Feature story on the impacts of climate change on fisheries in the Lake Victoria region;
  • Recommendations for improvements in relevant policies for fisheries, climate change and gender, at the county level (e.g., CIDP), and national level (e.g., National Climate Change Action Plan 2023-2027); and
  • Recommendations for practical interventions to increase adaptation and resilience to climate change in the fisheries value chain.

 

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We look forward to your active participation.

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