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Today the Agulhas and Somali Current Large Marine Ecosystems (ASCLME) Project joined 17 other organisations in forming an African Centre for Capacity Development in Ocean Governance (AfriCOG).

Together they will ensure that African nations are equipped with the personnel and scientific information they need to meet their national and international obligations to support sustainable development, safeguard the marine and coastal environment and ensure maximum benefits are derived from the goods and services offered by the oceans to sustain their people and economies.

Signatories to the AfriCOG partnership agreement (L-R) Edosa Omoregie (UNAM), Warwick Sauer (Rhodes), Blandina Lugendo (UDSM), Akiko Yamamoto (UNDP), Juliet Hermes (SAEON), Johann Augustyn (DAFF), David Vousden (AfriCOG/ASCLME), Larry Hildebrand (WMU), Adnan Awad (IOI), (SANBI), John Wrench, (BCRE), Coleen Moloney (UCT), Andrew Leitch (NMMU), Magnus Ngoile (IUCN), Ronney Ncwadi (UFH). Not pictured are Saleem Badat (RU), Larry Oellermann (SAAMBR/ORI), Angus Paterson (SAIAB), Peter Myles (NMBMC), Mish Hamid (IW:LEARN).

Dr. David Vousden, AfriCOG’s Interim Coordinator and Director of the UNDP supported GEF financed Agulhas and Somali Current Large Marine Ecosystems Project said that “AfriCOG represents a rare opportunity for organisations across Africa to join together in creating integrated learning and capacity-building programmes and in fostering research links, ongoing research programmes and ensuring sound management advice for managers and decision-makers”. With regard to the need for a body like AfriCOG, he noted that this was important “because it is clear from all the ocean governance initiatives undertaken over the past decade or two that effective management of the oceans and marine ecosystems is not achievable – particularly in Africa – until we can strengthen capacity across many sectors, including research, monitoring, prediction, translation in to policy and management advice and actually carrying out management, compliance and enforcement activities.”

Considering the importance of capacity building, Dr. Vousden said “Training is a vital part of this, and can take place at both institutional and personal levels. Institutional training is vital as many organisations recognise the need for this type of training but are not sure how to proceed, or lack the expertise needed to create sound training programmes. Ensuring institutional training, rather than just training individuals is vital, because as people become more trained, they are often lost from research into more lucrative - but usually unrelated - government or private sector employment opportunities. Making certain that ongoing training programmes exist and creating sustainable employment opportunities for trained individuals is vital to ensuring we’re able to meet the information needs resource managers and policy makers have, and in creating rewarding and fulfilling careers and research for marine and coastal governance experts.  The partners in AfriCOG recognise these challenges and will work together and leverage international support to meet them head on”.

The initiative enjoys strong regional and international support.

Mr. Sloans Chimatiro, Senior Fisheries Advisor of the NEPAD Planning and Coordination Agency noted that “NEPAD is very pleased to see this important Pan-African initiative for capacity building and training moving ahead in its development through this foundational signatory process” and that AfriCOG “could support the African Union Commission and NEPAD in delivering a Pan-African Fisheries Policy Framework and Reform Strategy”.

The UNDP’s Head of Water and Ocean Governance Programme, Andrew Hudson, said that “Millions of people in Africa are directly dependent on coastal and marine resources for their well-being and food security. These coastal communities are also highly vulnerable to economic, climatic and social change”.  He further elaborated that AfriCOG would “develop experience and resource networks that build capacity for pro-poor growth and human development; piloting and replication of new management approaches and best practices; institutional level rather than just individual training; and the overall promotion of science, technology and innovation as important drivers of growth and sustainable development”.

Wendy Watson-Wright, Executive Secretary of the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission and Assistant Director-General of UNESCO congratulated the partners and expressed their support for the initiative. “It is with considerable interest and strong enthusiasm that we at the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO take note of today’s important proceedings and this landmark signature by the founding institutions to establish and develop an African Centre for Capacity-Building and Ocean Governance. IOC-UNESCO now looks forward to seeing AfriCOG grow and expand to include more academic and research institutes throughout the continent of Africa and its island states, thereby strengthening its remit to be truly pan-African in its outreach and forging ever stronger partnerships throughout the region and, indeed, throughout the world”.

Indeed, partnerships and cooperation are the cornerstones of AfriCOG, which recognises that considerable expertise exists within the region, but that it needs to be better coordinated, ensure long-term institutional capacity is maintained, and build scientific consensus and management advice to advance the sustainable management of marine and coastal resources throughout Africa. AfriCOG’s partner organisations will support not only training but also ongoing research to answer key research questions that affect the people and economies of the regions, most notably around the effects of climate change, ecosystem variability, trends and patterns and ecosystems goods and services.

The 18 founding partners include the University of Fort Hare, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, Rhodes University, University of Cape Town, Department of Aquatic Sciences and Fisheries of the University of Dar es Salaam, University of Namibia, World Maritime University, International Ocean Institute, Benguela Current Commission, Oceanographic Research Institute, the NRF’s South African Environmental Observation Network and South African Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity, South African National Biodiversity Institute, Bayworld Centre for Research and Education, Nelson Mandela Bay Maritime Cluster, International Union for Conservation of Nature, GEF International Waters Learning Exchange and Resource Network and the GEF financed UNDP supported Agulhas and Somali Current Large Marine Ecosystems Project.

The signature ceremony was conducted at the iconic seafront Winchester Mansions Hotel in Sea Point, Cape Town.

About AfriCOG
The African Centre for Capacity Development in Ocean Governance (AfriCOG) seeks to foster partnerships and support for training and strengthening Pan-African capacity and skills in Marine Resource Management and Ocean Governance and to enhance and encourage the use of trained human resources in the sustainable management and use of coastal and marine goods and services for the long-term security and welfare of associated countries and communities.