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Incentivising the private provision of public tuna information through traceability
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Transcript of Incentivising the private provision of public tuna information through traceability
Incentivising the private provision of public tuna information through traceability
Simon Bush, Megan Bailey, Paul van Zwieten and Momo Kochen The 6th International Conference on Agribusiness Economics and Management, 2-3 September 2014, Davao City, Philippines
Informational needs and challenges
Informational demands: Limit and target reference points, by-catch, food safety, IUU, provenance, benefit allocation and conservation burden, employment and food security ?
? ?
?
Global challenges
● North placing ever greater demands on South
● South information poor and fish rich (?)
● Private sector in South starting to face barriers to export markets
Global tuna information architecture
Database
Static d
ata
Dyn
amic d
ata
Enumeration (E),
Collation (C), Reporting (R)
RFM
O co
mp
liant
Pu
blic/
private
Intero
perab
ility
Op
enA
ccess system
Op
enA
ccess data
Mo
bile A
pp
.
FAO Tuna Atlas X C R X Public Weak X Sea Around Us X C R Public Weak X FAO iMarine X C R Public Weak X X
ThisFish X E C R Private Fair X X X
Oceanwise R Private Weak X
Pacifical b.v. X E C R X Private Weak IMACS/ANOVA X E C R X Public/Private High X
CSIRO/ACIAR X E C X Public High
SPC TUFMAN X C R X Public Fair DGCF Indonesia X E C R Public Weak BAS Philippines X E C R Public Weak
Informational transparency
Different access to informational technology –
North-South divide.
(Global) informational flows becoming as important as material flows
New expectations to ‘know’ placing new
demands on informational infrastructures
Complexity of trans-boundary resources and
trade
Value chain transparency
Who is providing what information to who, how and why?
Forms of transparency
Information disclosure by ...
For ...
1. Management Upstream economic actors in chains
Downstream economic actors in chains
2. Regulatory Private (economic) actors
Regulatory and inspection bodies
3. Consumer Economic actors in chains
Consumers and certification bodies
4. Public Private (economic) actors, certification bodies
Public (citizen-consumers)
Adapted from Mol (Forthcoming), J. Clean. Prod.
Informational governance
Decisions around the control of information is an act of environmental governance
Public regimes Private networks
Hybrid arrangements? Setting transparency requirements in
exchange for market access.
Questions
1. What opportunities are there for collaborative public-
public collection, storage, analysis and communication of tuna information?
2. What kinds of incentives can ‘information rich’ consumer facing traceability create for on-going (sustainable) data collection in these fisheries?
3. Does the introduction of consumer facing traceability generate information flows that are of a high enough quality, timely, accessible and understandable?
Improving Fisheries Information and Traceability for Tuna (IFITT)
0
100000
200000
300000
400000
Jan FebMar
AprMay
Jun
Catc
h Kg
STATE/COMMUNITY IFISH DATABASE
PRIVATE ENUMERATION
DATA MANAGEMENT COMMITTEES
2. UPLOAD INFO 1. CODE THE CATCH
3. HANDLE + SHIP 4. TRACE TO DISCOVER
Discover the story of your seafood
Timely and legible information
iFISH
Sub-national National Regional
Producer Consumer
Mar
ket
Stat
e
?
?
?
Networked data flows
iFish database Alternative system to WCPFC TUFMAN database. Greater interoperability, OpenAccess, Cloud based.
MDPI Investing in RFMO compliant enumeration, observer programmes – fisheries data (target and non-target), ETPs.
ThisFish Providing consumer facing traceability system with transparent information to consumers and
REGULATORY And
MANAGEMENT
VC Transparency
REGULATORY and
MANAGEMENT
CONSUMER and
PUBLIC
Where are the incentives?
What resolution of
traceability?
What changes to value chain coordination?
What efficiencies emerge in chain practices?
Information brokers and blockers
Who are brokers of
information?
Where change towards sustainability can be leveraged?
Who are barriers of information exchange?
A new informational architecture?
Regimes remain backbone of informational governance supplemented by private infrastructure
But emerging trend that private actors and networks are sources of public fisheries information
Question remains:
Can goals of fisheries data collection and traceability can be aligned to creating new incentives for information provision?
www.besttuna.org/en/besttuna/IFITT
Helping Indonesia emerge from the ‘informational periphery’