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Friday, November 1, 2024

14 Senate bills about aquaculture near finality

With the Senate set to approve on third reading 14 bills creating multi-species marine hatcheries, Senator Cynthia Villar said aquaculture will now get  a needed boost in the provinces.

“It is not surprising that aquaculture now has an uptrend globally given the dwindling catch from the wild. With the creation of these hatcheries and more in the future, our people are now assured of a source of food,” Villar said.

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After hurdling the second reading last week,  14 bills seeking the creation of marine hatcheries in various municipalities in Quezon, Surigao del Sur and Albay are up for  third and final reading.

Villar, chairman of the  committee on agriculture and food and principal sponsor of the measures, said marine hatcheries will contribute to the growth and development of the fisheries sector and allied industries in the respective cities and municipalities.

“This also presents an opportunity for our fisherfolks to undergo training and improve present practices to improve productivity,” she added.

Aquaculture is defined as the farming of aquatic organisms such as fish and shellfish for human consumption or commercial purposes. It is also used to restore threatened and endangered marine species. Macon Araneta

Under the bills, the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources will construct the hatcheries. Within two years, management will be transferred to the local governments   after implementing a training and phasing-in program.

Villar cited the study of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization saying 20 years ago, 70 percent of our fish production came from the ocean and 30 percent from aquaculture. At present, fish production is 50 percent wild catch and 50 percent aquaculture. 

“Overfishing is a major concern globally, with experts issuing warnings that if sustainable fishing is not practiced and oceans are not given time to recover, they could become ‘virtual deserts’ by 2050 or barely 33 years from now,” Villar said. 

She  noted that the Philippines, being the sixth biggest fish producer in the world, has an aquaculture production of over US$1.58 billion. The fisheries sector also provides direct and indirect employment to over one-million people, or about 12 percent of the agriculture sector of the labor force. 

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