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AQUACULTURE PROJECT Funded by USAID

AQUACULTURE PROJECT Funded by USAID. Presented in AAS Hub Scoping at Khulna . Project Objectives . Dissemination of improved quality fish and shrimp seed Improving the nutrition and income status of farm households

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AQUACULTURE PROJECT Funded by USAID

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  1. AQUACULTURE PROJECTFunded by USAID Presented in AAS Hub Scoping at Khulna

  2. Project Objectives • Dissemination of improved quality fish and shrimp seed • Improving the nutrition and income status of farm households • Increasing investment, employment and fish/shrimp production through commercial aquaculture • Policy and regulatory reform and institutional capacity building to support sustainable aquaculture growth

  3. Working in 20 Districts with 4 hubsKHULNAJESSOREBARISALFARIDPUR

  4. COMPONENTS • Fish and Shrimp Seed • Household Aquaculture • Commercial Aquaculture • Institutions and Policies

  5. PHASE 1 Phase 1 Strategy: • Lay foundation for future commercial and household aquaculture by focusing on fish and shrimp seed in first 18 months to March 2013 • Rapid impacts through collaboration with existing USAID programs (MYAPs, IPAC, CSISA), partner NGOs and others

  6. PHASE 2 Phase 2 Strategy: • Concentrate on household and commercial aquaculture, supported by implementation of new GoB policies to September 2016. • Management of most operations by nationalpublic and private institutions after three years

  7. OVERALL TARGETS

  8. PARTNERSHIPS • National institutions: • DoF – • Provide use of DOF hatchery/brood banks, PCR lab; import improved lines from abroad • WFC provide support for implementation of Hatchery & Feed Laws (discussions with FAO) • BFRI – • Provide use of farms for brood development, on- station research, PCR labs for testing shrimp PL

  9. PARTNERSHIPS • MYAPs: Expand SAVE activities to reach 12,000 households; Expand CARE activities in year 2 • Include homestead aquaculture in IPAC: livelihoods programsfor8,000 households in areas adjacent to the Sunderbans • Partnership with 85 private depots to reach 20,000 shrimp farmers • Assist 5,000 commercial carp farmers (2000 through by Nobo-Jibon) • Co-ordinate with CSISA to leverage greater impacts

  10. Summary of major achievements to date • MOAs/agreements signed: 40 carp hatcheries; 14 shrimp hatcheries; 38 depots; 1 INGO (Save the Children); 2 national NGOs (CODEC & Speedtrust); IPAC, BCCP • Client selection: 45,000 farmers selected (20,000 shrimp; 20,000 homestead pond; 5000 commercial fish) • Brood distribution: 13,000 kg to 40 carp hatcheries out of 14,000 kg • Staff recruitment: WFC – 45; Nobo-Jibon partners - 72; IPAC partners 45; depot staff 85, hatchery-18

  11. Summary of major achievements to date • Individuals trained: 80 hatchery technicians (brood & hatchery management); 117 partner staff (basic aquaculture); 85 depot staff (shrimp aquaculture) • Artificial Insemination: Introduction of milt transfers- Provision of high quality Common Carp milt to a number of private sector hatcheries has begun. • National market price database: Developed with CSISA

  12. 1: DEVELOPMENT AND DISSEMINATION OF IMPROVED FISH & SHRIMP SEED • Fastest impacts is through improvements in seed therefore ≈ 60-70% of investment in Phase 1 • Main partners GOB: DOF, BFRI; working with CIFA/ICAR (India) • Disseminate improved quality and genetically improved lines of tilapia, carps (rohu and catla), shrimp/prawns

  13. Component1: Set up facilities

  14. Component1: Carp and Tilapia Seed Quality

  15. Component1: Carp and Tilapia Seed Quality

  16. Component1: Shrimp Seed Quality

  17. 2: HOUSEHOLD AQUACULTURE • Improved incomes through adoption or improvement of aquaculture as a livelihood choice. • Improved nutrition through education and adoption of horticulture management techniques including Vitamin A rich sweet potato and increased consumption of small fish.

  18. Component 2: Household Nutrition

  19. Component2: Household Aquaculture

  20. 3: COMMERCIAL AQUACULTURE • Collaborate closely with private sector Hatcheries, Nurseries and Depots to widen impacts from commercial aquaculture • Investment, employment and incomes - in the southern region through increased production and better technologies • ‘New' commercial fish species resilient to increasing salinity in the southern region

  21. Component3: Commercial Aquaculutre

  22. 4: POLICY AND INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY Implementation of the Hatchery Act and Feed Act and India-Bangladesh MOU (coordination with FAO) Strengthen the institutional capacity of associations Support improved aquaculture statistics reporting (discussion with FAO taking place) Policy support for mandatory PCR testing of shrimp post larvae

  23. Component4: Institution and Policy

  24. Component4: Institution and Policy

  25. Component4: Institution and Policy

  26. Component4: Institution and Policy

  27. Artificial Insemination: Common Carp

  28. THANK YOU

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