4.1 Alternative sources of finance for MCS
4.2 Development assistance
4.3 Reducing costs
In developing countries, MCS activities are typically financed from five alternative sources:
a) from the governments recurrent, or investment budget (treasury);Treasury. A developing countrys finance ministry may be justifiably concerned about the high costs of surveillance and likely to make strong arguments for sharing MCS patrol platforms between military and civilian users. The option of creating a either a private sector, or dedicated sea fisheries protection service was carefully considered and rejected in one OECD country. The reasons included:b) through a fisheries sector fund into which registration fees, licence fees, royalties, fines, or revenue from fishing access agreements may be deposited;
c) by direct contributions from the fishing industry;
d) commercial loans and contracts; or
e) through development assistance.
Sector revenues. Fishermen pay for MCS directly through a range of fees, taxes and other levies (e.g., fishing licence fees). They also pay for MCS through fines for violations. However, fishery protection will not pay for itself through revenues from fines. Experience from the Falkland Islands (approximately 160 large vessels operating in the 200-mile zone) shows that, providing the fishery protection operation is efficient, and the chances of being caught are high, and fines are set at a level which has deterrent value, then in the long-term fines may not amount to more than five percent of costs. In OECD countries, direct revenues, e.g., from licences and fines, rarely exceed the costs of MCS activities. Many developing countries operate fisheries funds under the direct control of the fisheries authorities. Revenues from the industry are deposited and may be used to supplement or finance MCS expenditures and offer fisheries authorities some financial independence.
Direct contributions. Examples include the financing of VMS installation and operating charges by the fishing vessel operators. In Mozambique, one of the shrimp fishing companies has provided a trawler to patrol the grounds during the closed season. In Namibia, the industry pays a specific fee for observer services. A wide range of reports (logbooks, radio, sales, VMS) which may be required by the fisheries authorities are also financed by the industry.
Commercial loans and contracts. Mozambique is financing a VMS system using commercial credit arranged by the system supplier. Sierra Leone financed fishery protection provided by the private sector (early 1990s) by contracting for a share in revenues from licences and fines. However, revenue estimates were over-optimistic and failure to pay fines on a timely basis undermined the arrangement[28].
The South Pacific (FFA area) provides an example of how MCS costs are shared between coastal (developing) states, distant-water fishing nations and development assistance. Australia provides 400 hours of aerial surveillance per year (P3C Orion), New Zealand 270 hours (P3C Orion) and France/New Caledonia 30 hours (Falcon 200 Guardian).
Table 4.1: Costs of regional MCS activities in the South Pacific, FFA area. (US$1 000)
|
Pacific Islands countries |
Distant-water fishing nations |
Development assistance* |
VMS installation (capital investment) |
|
5 000 |
|
Patrol vessels/aircraft (capital investment) |
|
|
1 200 |
VMS operation |
350 |
850 |
|
Aerial surveillance |
|
|
5 000 |
Sea-going surveillance |
3 000 |
|
3 000 |
Observer programme |
1 000 |
250 |
250 |
Regional register |
20 |
500 |
|
Data collection |
600 |
400 |
40 |
Source: Estimates from Van Santen and Muller, 2000. *Mainly from EU, Australia and New Zealand.As indicated in the following table (not exhaustive), numerous countries have benefited from development assistance for MCS.
Table 4.2: Examples of development assistance for MCS
Donor(s) |
Recipient(s) |
Nature |
FAO/FISHCODE (NORAD) |
South Asia, Southeast Asia, Indian Ocean |
technical and legal advice, training, international
cooperation |
EU |
SADC countries, COI countries, Yemen, Madagascar |
Hardware, information systems, training, international
coordination |
Australia, New Zealand, EU, France |
Pacific Islands Countries |
VMS, patrol vessels, aerial surveillance |
Germany |
Mauritania |
hardware, software, technical assistance, patrol
vessels |
Luxembourg, Canada |
Sub-Regional Fisheries Commission countries |
aerial surveillance, installations and technical
assistance |
UK/DFID |
SADC, Sierra Leone |
inshore patrol vessels (RIBs) |
France |
Indian Ocean, Senegal, Angola, Pacific Islands |
wide spectrum of activities |
Norway |
Namibia, Mozambique |
Training, technical assistance, patrol vessel |
Japan |
Yemen |
patrol vessels |
Sweden |
Angola |
technical assistance, information systems |
Note: Examples only, list not exhaustive and excluding linkages with fishing access agreements.
As surveillance patrols are the major MCS cost item, savings in patrol costs are a key focus and cost reduction is a major argument for sharing hardware and coordinating field operations between the various stakeholders involved in maritime surveillance (e.g., fisheries, navy, customs, and air/sea rescue). The savings can be achieved both by sharing and increasing the effectiveness of the patrol platforms:
A second major argument is whether to charter or purchase patrol vessels or surveillance aircraft.
Table 4.3: Charter, or purchase patrol platforms?
In favour of chartering |
Against chartering |
Avoids capital investment. Avoids senior officials spending
time and effort to maintain and manage vessels and aircraft. |
In-house or national capabilities may not be
developed. However, this could be avoided by training components in the charter
agreement. |
Experience indicates that private companies may operate patrol
platforms more cost-effectively than public institutions. |
Recurrent costs may be relatively high. The market for patrol
vessels is relatively limited (i.e., there may be few experienced companies
which can charter suitable patrol vessels). |
Allows the fisheries administrations to test various types and
sizes of patrol vessels. |
May not give adequate operational control over the patrol
platform. May be difficult to use chartered platforms for non-fisheries tasks
(e.g., related to national security). |
The surveillance platform may only be required
part-time. |
If owned the patrol platform must be maintained and crewed on
a full-time basis. |