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Why fish production is declining in Kenya

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Kenya’s fisheries sub sector has declined over the last three years from Sh25.5bn earned in 2014 to Sh22.9bn earned last year due to the encroachment of water hyacinth, coupled with destructive fishing practices and dwindling stocks of Nile perch species in Lake Victoria according to the latest economic survey report.

The total quantity of fish landed declined from 147.7 thousand tonnes in 2016 to 135.1 thousand tonnes in 2017.

In this, fish from fresh water sources dropped from 123.5 thousand tonnes in 2016 to 111.8 thousand tonnes in 2017, mainly attributed to decline in catches from Lake Victoria, Lake Turkana and fish farming.

Over the last five years, fish from fresh water sources accounted for over 80 per cent of the total fish landed. Fish landed from marine sources contributed a relatively smaller share mainly due to inadequate facilities and technology necessary for fishing in deep waters.

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Fishermen upload a catch on the shores of Lake Victoria. Photo: courtesy

Fish landed from Lake Victoria accounted for 68.5 per cent of the total fish landed during the year under review. However, the lake’s annual output dropped from 98.7 thousand tonnes in 2016 to 92.7 thousand tonnes in 2017.

Fish landed from Lake Turkana declined from 7.9 thousand tonnes in 2016 to four thousand tonnes in 2017 on account of receding water levels coupled with improper fishing practices and poor fish handling.

The quantity of fish from fish farming reduced from 15,000 metric tonnes in 2016 to 12.4 thousand metric tonnes in 2017. The decline was partly attributed to failure by farmers to re-stock fish ponds in 2017, citing high prices of fish inputs and drying up of ponds due to drought during the year under review.

Total output from marine sources recorded a decline of 3.7 per cent from 24.2 thousand tonnes in 2016 to 23.3 thousand tonnes with marine fish accounting for 88.5 per cent. Crustaceans and molluscs contributed only 3.0 and 8.5 per cent of marine sources, respectively, in 2017.

Total value of fish landed which has been on the decline for three consecutive years, dropped further from Sh24.5bn in 2016 to Sh23bn in 2017. The value of fresh water fish dropped by 6.1 per cent from Sh19.8bn in 2016 to Sh18.6bn in the year under review. Similarly, the value of fish from marine sources decreased from Sh3.4bn in 2016 to Sh3.3bn in 2017.


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1 thought on “Why fish production is declining in Kenya”

  1. Fishing can provide large share if the government can work with the fishermen. Chinese come to Kenya with there trawlers over 230 trawlers owned by companies in China. They overfished to our ocean ad destroying our coral reefs that are necessary for marine lives. why Kenya cannot provide adequate technology personnel and provide fishing vessels so that we earn and benefit from our available resource.

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