Transparentsea database on aid to Africa's fisheries

The TransparentSea project of CFFA has finished compiling a comprehensive database of Official Development Assistance to fisheries in Sub-Sahara Africa, available here as an excel spreadsheet. The database contains information on 3370 separate projects dating back to the mid 1970s. In total the database shows that during this time, total project commitments amount to $6,016,958,014.   

This database is incomplete and does not capture the entire picture of what funds have been transferred to whom. There are several challenges in compiling this information:

  • Not all donors publish complete and accurate data on their aid projects. There are some countries that we know relatively little about, including Russia and China. Other countries started reporting publicly on aid projects later than others, and for many projects it is hard to get information on what funds were actually transferred and when.

  • The database has limited information on funds to NGOs working on African fisheries, including those based outside Africa. We also lack information on the spending by private donors and philanthropic organisations.

  • The definition of ODA is contested and some payments are included in donors' reporting for their ODA that probably shouldn’t be, and some are missing that probably should be. The EU, for example, started reporting payments for fisheries management assistance to African countries through FPAs as ODA during the mid 2000s, but then stopped doing this more recently. Should FPA payments be considered aid, a subsidy or something different?

  • A large amount of funding for fisheries development comes through multi-sectorial projects, particular on agriculture. It is extremely difficult in many cases to identify how much money is being given for fisheries work in particular in these type of projects.

Despite these challenges, the CFFA database hopefully represents a good start to increasing access to information and understanding about the scale and purpose of aid spending over the years.

Why have we done this?

Our database has been complied to help broaden debates about what the impact of aid is on fisheries, particularly small-scale fisheries, and also to raise questions about effectiveness, coherence, transparency and accountability. It comes at a time when many organisations are arguing for more aid in fisheries, and in particular the launch of the Global Ocean Partnership that hopes to raise an additional billion dollars or more for the reform of fisheries in developing countries. We will publish a report soon analyzing the data and discussing some key questions:

  • What are the trends in aid spending? Is the fisheries sector getting more aid now than it used to? Who are the main funders and recipients?

  • What type of projects do different donors prioritize? What share of aid spending goes to support small-scale fisheries, as opposed to industrial fisheries or marine conservation? How has donor’s ideology changed over the years (from modernizing fleets, supporting small-scale fisheries, promoting market based policies and the wealth based approach etc.).

  • To what extent is aid used by foreign fishing nations to support firms from their countries? How might aid be strategic for countries from the EU and Asia?

  • How accountable are donors and recipients on the use and impact of aid projects? How many projects have independent evaluations?

  • In what ways can aid be positive for fisheries development, and how might it have negative outcomes?

  • Does Africa need more money for fisheries development, or perhaps less but used more wisely?

  • Should there be more participation by small-scale fishers and others on identifying projects and providing oversight?

How have we complied this database?

The bulk of the data has been taken from data reported by donors to the Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD).  Additional information has been used from the database complied by the aid data project and then further information has been found through research by us – from donor’s websites, project documents and other sources of information. Information from OECD contains some obvious mistakes, so we have also tidied up their data and re-arranged it to make it slightly more easy to use. The CFFA aid database is certainly not complete, so we will add to it overtime and release newer versions.

So which countries get the most, and where does it come from?

Although we will publish a longer report using this database, it may be of interest to share some preliminary findings. The following is two lists, the first showing the value of projects for each country and then the second shows the value of projects for the main multi-lateral and bi-lateral donors. The 'Adjusted' amount represents the value of projects in 2011 - so if a 1 million project was funded in 1980, we can work out what the value of that project would be in 2011. This helps show the relative worth of projects over time. We are busy updating the data for 2014, and that will be published in our report. 

Country

Mozambique

Mauritania

Senegal

Angola

Ghana

Tanzania

Nigeria

Guinea

Mali

Uganda

Madagascar

Somalia

Cape Verde

Namibia

Kenya

Guinea Bissau

Seychelles

Burkina Faso

Gabon

Malawi

Gambia

Mauritius

Benin

Sierra Leone

Cameroon

Cote d`Ivoire

Niger

Djibouti

Eritrea

DRC

Sao Tome and Principe

Republic of Congo

Sudan

Zambia

Rwanda

Chad

Comoros

South Africa

Equatorial Guinea

Zimbabwe

Mayotte

Burundi

Ethiopia

Togo

CAR

Liberia

St Helena

Original Amount

400,533,192

393,072,063

355,595,328

299,656,691

249,662,118

224,624,647

205,530,961

191,778,562

184,888,210

184,674,066

155,650,023

147,029,881

139,667,563

131,607,364

107,231,030

106,462,071

105,344,192

102,438,024

97,652,222

92,714,339

88,467,293

82,753,130

80,736,576

71,848,434

64,908,708

64,171,074

60,860,535

59,786,094

51,675,568

49,150,136

48,466,087

44,331,785

44,266,435

33,415,998

33,303,938

31,864,057

28,426,391

24,783,701

24,249,808

18,932,152

17,822,372

17,458,599

11,630,884

10,649,729

7,620,942

6,153,941

3,504,030

Adjusted (2011)

635,806,432

616,035,844

653,330,696

574,372,949

340,218,432

414,667,090

476,302,369

336,599,791

237,996,337

354,530,442

245,862,505

345,465,496

200,404,761

197,009,109

171,208,285

147,743,606

179,712,017

142,535,178

137,476,254

189,732,434

163,733,233

134,118,752

120,463,677

128,810,958

159,894,738

114,344,336

85,617,632

99,848,301

66,806,464

68,500,913

76,092,120

59,836,422

72,686,554

89,052,597

50,213,965

38,022,954

52,046,800

36,491,654

43,156,869

26,254,670

26,996,940

40,387,788

24,101,917

12,122,613

15,111,855

6,290,471

4,828,408

Donor

World Bank

AFDB Group

Japan

EU

GEF

Int.Fund for Agri.Dev

Sweden

Italy

Norway

France

Arab Bank for int.dev

Spain

Canada

Germany

Netherlands

OPEC Fund for Int.Dev

United Kingdom

United States

Kuwait

Denmark

Islamic Development Bank

Finland

Belgium

United Arab Emirates

Iceland

Taiwan

Ireland

Korea

Saudi Arabia

Portugal

Original Amount

1,148,007,084

901,428,447

821,154,584

400,946,877

367,562,226

305,148,187

265,001,107

225,868,740

225,080,609

224,481,221

155,883,865

136,615,406

125,504,153

96,972,174

72,138,802

71,138,000

59,324,828

52,623,061

47,806,693

43,994,657

42,312,569

37,794,289

37,283,318

35,202,491

32,832,130

24,710,032

7,373,164

6,157,693

5,347,189

1,310,305

Adjusted (2011)

2,024,622,459

1,435,774,979

1,162,662,307

600,380,723

397,967,669

493,792,692

481,161,556

455,710,163

560,669,947

419,256,400

308,374,951

173,311,814

299,236,804

140,568,141

145,015,061

97,647,650

60,281,308

73,092,938

113,618,380

90,990,939

62,206,963

41,913,373

47,123,801

55,488,510

37,100,617

32,266,856

7,519,803

6,470,692

9,810,109

2,044,812

 

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