Sustainable Aquaculture for Poverty Alleviation
(SAPA): a Strategy for Improving Rural Livelihoods
through Aquaculture and Aquatic Resources
Management in Vietnam
In Vietnam, the resolutions of the Party
Congresses VII, VIII and the Decree of the Party
Central Committee defined that: in parallel with
economic development and growth, Vietnam must
concentrate on Hunger Eradication and Poverty
Reduction. The resulting Hunger Eradication and
Poverty Reduction (HEPR) programme under the
Ministry of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs
(MOLISA) has been recognized in Vietnam and
internationally as s successful framework for
poverty reduction. Over the last 10 years many
policies, institutional changes, programs, projects
have been put in place to promote agriculture and
rural development, build up irrigation systems,
strengthen credit policy, support marketing of
products and generally to increase living standards
especially for the poor.
The strategy for 2001-2010 is to expend the
poverty alleviation content of HEPR, based on new
poverty line definitions, to eradicate hunger and
enact policies that encourage communication of
appropriate technologies, strengthen and diversify
capital assets and reduce vulnerability of the
poor. Inter-ministerial cooperation is coordinated
by MOLISA with each line ministry responsible for
formulation of policy and the mechanism by which it
is implemented and to provide implementation
guidance at the local level (MOLISA, 2000).
The Ministry of Fisheries (MoFI) played a
limited role in the first decade of the HEPR
programme. Its focus was more on industrial and
commercial scale development especially of
aquaculture. However, following lengthy discussion
among Government officials of MoFI and other
concerned agencies and with the effective support
from MPI and NORAD in March 2000, MoFI hosted a
Scoping Meeting on "Sustainable Aquaculture for
Poverty Alleviation" (SAPA), in Hanoi from the
23rd-25th May 2000. The meeting was attended by 100
representatives from MoFI, Ministry of Planning and
Investment (MPI), MOLISA, Ministry of Agriculture
and Rural Development (MARD), as well as provincial
government agencies, people's organisations,
international organisations and donors including
NORAD, DFID and NACA who played a key role in
planning and facilitating the meeting as well as
AIT, DANIDA, ACIAR, UNDP and FAO. The meeting aimed
to review the role of aquaculture development (in
freshwater, brackish and marine environments) in
poverty alleviation and hunger eradication in
Vietnam, to identify strategies for more effective
application of aquaculture and aquatic resources
management in poverty alleviation and to prepare an
action plan to follow on from the meeting.
The meeting identified key issues, including:
the need to build a poverty-oriented approach to
policy involving better understanding of livelihood
goals of poor people as a basis for identifying
aquaculture interventions: the poor technical
knowledge-base amongst practitioners, weak capacity
among institutions at all levels, poor
infrastructure and the importance of co-operation
among agencies involved in implementing and
supporting poverty alleviation through aquaculture
(SAPA Scoping Meeting Proceedings 2000). An action
plan was proposed to analyse existing information
on poverty and aquatic resources in Vietnam, to
identify key areas where significant numbers of
poor people benefit or could benefit from improved
aquatic resource management and to better
understand their livelihoods to inform the
development of the SAPA strategy; to prepare a
strategy paper for submission to the Prime
Ministers office prior to budget planning for
poverty alleviation by MPI.
As recommended by the meeting, MoFI sent a
formal invitation to concerned participating
agencies and organisations establishing an 8-person
Task Force, under the overall direction of the
Vice-Minister to assist the MoFI in preparing the
strategy comprising representatives from MoFI,
Research Institute for Aquaculture 1 (RIA.1),
NORAD, DFID, NACA and AIT Outreach (SIDA). A Task
Force Resource Group comprising 12-14 members from
different agencies and organisations supported the
Task Force (including MoFI, MOLISA, MARD, RIA-1,
DANIDA, FAO, NORAD, ACIAR). The work of the Task
Force was also informed by a DFID funded aquatic
resource and poverty assessment implemented between
June and September 2000.
In September a finalization workshop was
convened by MOFI to review progress of the working
group and begin to finalize a strategy paper. This
'Sustainable Aquaculture for Poverty Alleviation'
strategy is based on the discussions and
recommendations from that workshop.
There is general agreement amongst government
and many donors that improved aquaculture and
aquatic resources management can make a significant
and direct impact on poverty reduction and hunger
eradication in Vietnam and will depend on the
sharing of effective and sustainable systems for
aquaculture and aquatic resources management. The
key policy issue is to better support poor and
vulnerable groups who depend on aquatic resources
through the use of the livelihoods perspective.
The SAPA strategy recognizes: there is a need
for awareness raising and better communication of
the role of aquaculture and aquatic resources
management in sustaining poor people's livelihoods
in Vietnam, for improved understanding of
participatory approaches, improved institutional
capacity and poverty focus; a need to recognise and
address the gap between farmers/fishers needs and
the services offered by extension institutions; to
appreciate the wide range of stakeholders involved
in aquatic resource management, and address issues
of access to markets and financial services by the
rural poor.
In response to these issues, the SAPA strategy
is being formulated with the following
objectives:
- Enhancing capacities of poor people in
rural areas to improve livelihoods through
awareness raising and improved aquatic resources
management and aquaculture;
- Strengthening the capabilities of
institutions, and particularly local
institutions, to understand and support the
objectives of poor people in inland and coastal
communities who depend on, or could benefit
from, aquaculture and related aquatic resources
management;
- Sharing environmentally sound, low-risk,
low-cost aquaculture technologies and aquatic
resources management practices;
- Developing national policy based on lessons
and experience from local pilots and through
effective information exchange, and improving
inter-sectoral collaboration on strategies for
addressing poverty.
The primary target group of SAPA is poor people
in rural areas where opportunities exist to
diversify and improve livelihoods through
aquaculture and aquatic resource management.
Special attention will be given to the most
vulnerable groups. In terms of spatial attention,
the first focus will be on the Northern Mountains,
Central Highlands, North Central Coastal provinces
and the Mekong delta. Moreover, links will be
pursued with district, provincial, national and
regional institutions and donor agencies with
responsibilities for poverty alleviation and
sustainable rural development.
The SAPA strategy emphasizes a process approach
and will build further on the understanding derived
from sustainable livelihood analyses and local
pilots. For the implementation, SAPA will be part
of the Ministry of Fisheries and use a Sector
Committee to guide the overall development of the
Strategy and an Implementation Support Unit for the
execution of the strategy. The SAPA strategy will
form a part the Government umbrella "Hunger
Eradication and Poverty Reduction" programme.
|