Over the next few years, the FAO and the Abidjan Convention - a UN Environment body - will carry out restoration on around 350 hectares of accessible mangroves sites - or approximately 654 football fields' worth - in Fresco and Sassandra.
Conservation work will be particularly beneficial in Sassandra, where mangroves are home to key commercial fish, such as sardine and herring. These fisheries provide livelihoods for almost 2 000 small-scale fishers, who represent the vast majority - 70% - of the Ivorian fishing industry.
The work will go hand-in-hand with broader efforts to better manage coastal fisheries. Improve working conditions, enhancing the quality of fish products as well as empowering women in the seafood value chain and raising awareness on mangrove conservation are all part of the bigger umbrella of the Coastal Fisheries Initiative (CFI), funded by the Global Environment Facility (the GEF).
Côte d'Ivoire is not be the only country to benefit. The CFI also encompasses Cabo Verde, Ecuador, Indonesia, Peru and Senegal to make coastal fisheries more environmentally, socially and economically sustainable.
The teams and agencies involved recently gathered in Abidjan to plan the work for next year and exchange knowledge on coastal fisheries management and mangrove conservation.