MARINE AQUACULTURE POLCY – STAKEHOLDER ROUNDTABLE CONVENED

Environmental Panorama
International
June of 2007

 

29 JUNE 2007 - The Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism (DEAT) will be hosting a national stakeholder roundtable from 3-4 July 2007 in Port Alfred, Eastern Cape to discuss a revised draft marine aquaculture policy before gazetting it. The roundtable follows the publishing of the second draft of a marine aquaculture policy for a further 30-day public comment period from today, Friday 29 June 2007 to Tuesday 31 July 2007.

The purpose of the national roundtable is to provide an opportunity for further engagement between the Department and stakeholders towards the finalisation of the marine aquaculture policy. Following the publishing of the first draft for public comment in September 2006, stakeholder inputs led to the revision of the policy. International experience and review of aquaculture policies of six (6) countries which are Australia, Chile, China, Ireland, Norway and Vietnam will further the revised draft. A discussion paper based on the review and analysis of these countries’ policies will form the basis for deliberations at the roundtable.

The roundtable will also provide an opportunity for the Department to initiate discussions on strategies that will form the basis of the Marine Aquaculture Policy Implementation Plan to be drafted and finalised once the policy is approved and will further afford an opportunity for networking and will help to improve the co-operative governance and relations between various stakeholders in this sector.

The stakeholders participating at the roundtable will include legislators (members of parliament), government departments (all spheres), the aquaculture and fishing industry, fishing communities, labour representantives, NGOs, research, and academic institutions.

Topics to be covered include an aquaculture international case studies of 6 countries, community, industry, labour and economic perspectives, research and technological needs, environmental protection, training and skills development, funding for small medium, and micro enterprises and fish health issues.
Comments on the 2nd draft policy must reach the department on or before 31 July 2007 and can be sent to the following address:

The draft policy is available from our website www.deat.gov.za or www.mcm-deat.gov.za.
For further information contact Mava Scott on or Carol Moses
Issued by the Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism

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STATEMENT BY THE OFFICE OF MARTHINUS VAN SCHALKWYK, MINISTER OF ENVIRONMENTAL AFFAIRS AND TOURISM, THURSDAY 28 JUNE 2007

SOUTH AFRICA GETS 8TH WORLD HERITAGE SITE

“I am proud to announce that yesterday, at the 31st session of the World Heritage Committee that is being held in Christchurch, New Zealand, the Richtersveld Cultural and Botanical Landscape was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List as the eighth South African World Heritage Site. This site joins the Isimangaliso Wetlands Park (Greater St Lucia Wetlands Park), uKhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, Robben Island, Cape Floral Region Protected Areas, Mapungubwe Cultural Landscape, Vredefort Dome and the Fossil Hominid-bearing Sites of South Africa (i.e., Cradle of Humankind, Makapan Valley and Taung Skull Fossil Sites) as places of outstanding universal value, the Minister said”

In support of this achievement, the Minister will proclaim the Richtersveld Cultural and Botanical Landscape as a World Heritage Site in terms of a provision of the World Heritage Convention Act (Act No. 49 of 1999).

The Richtersveld Cultural and Botanical Landscape covers an area of 160,000 hectares of dramatic mountainous desert in the north-west part of South Africa. Communally owned and managed harsh, dry landscape, with extremes of temperature, affords a semi-nomadic pastoral livelihood for the Nama people, reflecting seasonal patterns that may have persisted for as much as two millennia in Southern Africa. It is the only area where the Nama still construct portable rush-covered, domed houses, |haru oms.

Thus, when listing the Richtersveld Cultural and Botanical Landscape as a World Heritage Site, the World Heritage Committee had this to say about the area: “The extensive communal grazed lands are a testimony to land management processes which have ensured the protection of the succulent Karoo vegetation and thus demonstrates a harmonious interaction between people and nature. Furthermore, the seasonal migrations of graziers between stockposts with traditional demountable mat-roofed houses, |haru oms, reflect a practice that was once much more widespread over Southern Africa, and which has persisted for at least two millennia; the Nama are now its last practitioners.”

The Nama people are descendants of the Khoi-Khoi people who once occupied lands across southern Namibia and most of the present-day Western and Northern Cape Provinces of South Africa. Over a century or more, those in the south were pushed north by the spread of farms north from the Cape. Today, the Nama live in three small villages, established as mission settlements, outside the proclaimed area: Kuboes to the north, Lekkersing to the south-west and Eksteenfontein to the south.

The proclaimed Richtersveld Cultural and Botanical Landscape is ‘buffered’ by the following protected areas: the Richtersveld National Park to the north, Nababiep Provincial Nature Reserve to the east, and designated communal grazing areas to the south and west owned by the Sida !hub Community Property Association: Richtersveld ‘Coloured’ Reserve, Korridor 21 consisting of the former farm units and Korridor Wes 2 consisting of nine former farm units.

The Richtersveld is an area that was a few years ago returned to the ownership of the people under the national programme of land restitution. One of its unique features, both in South African and international terms is that a community has not only chosen to dedicate such a vast area of land to conservation, but it is a World Heritage Site that is managed and run by a community that until a few years ago had little to call its own. It is remarkable that within a few short years this community has not only aspired to management of its cultural and environmental assets to the highest international standards, but that it has through acquiring World Heritage status succeeded in achieving the highest level of recognition for this. It is testimony to the success of the land restitution programme. It is hoped that other communities will emulate what is a truly South African success story.

INQUIRIES: MAVA SCOTT / RIAAN AUCAMP

 
 

Source: South African Environmental (http://www.environment.gov.za)
Press consultantship
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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