By Loretta B Manele
Working in silos or working independently should be a thing of the past and replaced with collaboration and strengths from all members.
Justin Ilakini, the Managing Director of the National Fisheries Authority in Papua New Guinea raised this while speaking at one of the side events of the Honiara Summit called “Sustainable fisheries development initiatives” this week.
He said Pacific Island countries cannot continue to do things in silos anymore.
Ilakini stressed that the region has been successful in terms of regional solidarity with regards to the management of tuna thus should apply this same principal to the development or economic maximization of the same resource.
“We need to collaborate. We need to come together. I don’t think we need to continue to work in silos anymore.
I think those days are over. We need to harness our strengths together, bring everything to the table and start to look throughout the global value chain of tuna.”
Ilakini also shed light on the East New Britain Initiative (ENBi) which he referred to as not a project but a platform to mobilize and encourage Forum Fisheries Agency (FFA) members to come together to look at innovative and inclusive investment pathways.
He added that as FFA members start to look at these investment pathways, members should begin to identify where in the global value chain is the most visible entry point.
“We begin to realize that you can participate in the global value chain. Let me be frank. Like for Papua New Guinea, we’ve done harvesting, we’ve done processing and we’re asking this question, can we also do trading?”
He highlighted that FFA members they must bring to the table whatever strengths they have under the ENBi platform and work together to see how they can maximize economic returns from the tuna resource that has been managed so well over the many years.
Ilakini mentioned that about two weeks ago, they had an investor consultation meeting in Singapore with all major tuna plants.
“We met with all the ENBi and we made it very clear to them that the economic aspiration of the region has shifted. We are no longer interested in collecting rents. We’ve been rent collectors for ages.
We want to really participate now. We want to start looking at opportunities where traditionally we didn’t think, existed.”
Ilakini said the Republic of Marshall Islands (RMI) has shown the region an example and that is supplying tuna from the resource zone all the way to one of the biggest retailers in the world.
“People have told us that that wouldn’t be done before, but it’s happening now.
We are coming to a time, I think, in the management of the tuna resource in the region that there needs to be a paradigm shift.”
Ilakini stated that there needs to be a change in mindset and that is in the sense of taking hold of economic destiny, stepping out and believing in ourselves that we can do these things and it is just starting.
“The next thing going forward now, just for the information of everybody, we need to accelerate this initiative or this platform.”
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