Namibia facing threats to fish stocks
Namibia’s fish stocks is depleting quickly due to tremendous climate change, heavy pollution and excessive harvesting.
ANNONCER
Namibia’s fish stocks is depleting quickly due to tremendous climate change, heavy pollution and excessive harvesting.
Ghana’s tuna and other seafood export have reached new heights by hitting 70,000 tonnes in 2007.
Angola will soon have its own world class fishing academy which will be constructed by the republic of Poland.
Fish prices in Uganda rising enormously due to rampant smuggling of the seafood to the Democratic Republic of Congo.
The AuAgriS Project has announced that it will hold a workshop on the use of by-products in aquaculture on 11 and 12 June this year.
Nigerian government has announced that the nearly 500 fish farmers of Zamfara State are to be benefited from fish farming loan.
Ghana’s Minister for Fisheries announced that the government will support a project under which the harvest and process of tuna will be done in large quantities.
A recent study shows that shrimp like krill stocks can survive far deeper waters than previously thought.
The government of Trinidad has welcomed the tilapia fish farm initiative so that the citizen could spend less for fish.
The Spanish fishing company, Pereira Fishing, has inaugurated its new cold storage and processing facility which will add value to Namibia’s fishing industry.
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