The purpose of the project was to promote new knowledge on the impact of climate change on the sustainability of capture and enhancement fisheries and people dependant upon them to key policy stakeholders, and relate findings to similar outputs from other renewable natural resource sectors.  Due to the short-term nature of the project (7 months), success was monitored through assessments of current knowledge, attitudes and practices. A review of literature on climate change impacts on wider natural resource sectors was carried out and hot-spot analysis to determine countries most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change on fisheries. Key communications messages were determined through a project meeting and were promoted through a flyer, a policy brief and a poster produced for DFID and press release.

A workshop at DFID, brought together stakeholders from a range of environmental and development sectors (fisheries, climate change, poverty reduction, risk reduction and environmental management), in order to assess current understanding on climate change, poverty and fisheries and determine recommendations for future research (see Workshop report).

A range of future research needs and priorities have been identified to further understand the impacts of climate change on poverty within fisheries, and ways of supporting adaptation and reducing the vulnerability of fisher folk and vulnerable economies.

A literature review of the impacts of climate change was produced and a policy brief has been published in collaboration with FAO as part of their policy series 'New Directions in Fisheries'. A draft scientific paper on the socio-ecological resilience of fisheries and fishing communities to the impacts of climate change has also been written from results of project R4778J.

Name of Client

DFID

Project Dates

-

Country

Global

Services