Abstract

Climate change can severely impact artisanal fisheries and affect the role they play in food security. We study climate change effects on the triple bottom line of ecological productivity, fishers’ incomes, and fish consumption for an artisanal open-access fishery. We develop and apply an empirical, stochastic bio-economic model for the Senegalese artisanal purse seine fishery on small pelagic fish and compare the simulated fishery’s development using four climate projections and two policy scenarios. We find that economic processes of adaptation may amplify the effects of climate variations. The regions’ catch potential increases with climate change, induced by stock distribution changes. However, this outcome escalates over-fishing, whose effects outpace the incipiently favorable climate change effects under three of the four climate projections. Without policy action, the fishery is estimated to collapse in 2030–2035 on average over 1000 runs. We propose an easily implementable and overall welfare-increasing intervention: reduction of fuel subsidies. If fuel subsidies were abolished, ecological sustainability as well as the fishery’s welfare contribution would increase regardless of the climate projection.

Highlights

  • Fish constitutes one of the most important natural resources with respect to food security, protein intake, and income generation

  • We evaluate how climate change outcomes for a fishery could be shaped if fuel subsidies were abolished

  • Its variability is higher under ECE-o and ECE-bc for both seasons, which is in line with the higher upwelling variability

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Summary

Introduction

Fish constitutes one of the most important natural resources with respect to food security, protein intake, and income generation. More than 20 kg of fish is consumed per capita per year, and in 2018, more than 40 million people earned their livelihoods in capture fisheries [1, 2]. The artisanal sector accounts for around 90% of this employment. Consumers are highly dependent on fish as a protein source [3, 4]. Artisanal fishing communities are vulnerable to climate change [5] and economic impacts may be severe [6,7,8]. Upwelling-favorable winds are expected to increase in the north, decrease in the south [9, 10], and change

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