Women fishermen in Kenya: from the sea to ecotourism due to the climate crisis
Nuru Mohammed, 54, leads a group of women hanging fishing nets as decorations at her new restaurant in Malindi, northeast of Mombasa. In a few days it will open its doors. “For us women, this is hope,” she says. “It will help support many families who have depended on the ocean for decades.”
Along the East African coast, fishermen are reinventing themselves. Climate change, overfishing and ocean deterioration threaten their livelihoods. In Kenya, women transform restored mangroves into sources of income through beekeeping and ecotourism. In Zanzibar, communities protect reefs with locally managed closures. In Mozambique, seagrass restoration creates jobs.
“Communities that depend on the ocean are also its best guardians,” says Andréanne Martel, project director of the ReSea conservation program. “When local people, especially women, lead in conservation, they protect biodiversity and create more resilient livelihoods.”
Mohammed says that his boats have been stolen and that it is difficult for him to compete with industrial trawlers. A nearby Chinese processing plant reflects the changes. “I can’t compete with that power,” he says. “It’s been hard. I fought to stay a fisherman, but I think it’s a battle I can’t win anymore.”
10 kilometers away, Beatrice Mwanyiro oversees a mangrove nursery and restaurant for Samahco, a self-help group of 30 women supported by the Canadian government. “We have to adapt. The number of fish decreases every year. Without another source of income we will not be able to feed our families,” he explains.
Mohamed Somo, a fishing leader in Lamu, says that they used to catch up to 100 kilos of fish per boat; now less than 30. Kenyan law prohibits trawling within 9 kilometers of the coast, but some vessels operate closer. Illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing costs $23 billion annually, according to the FAO.
“The trawlers fish on the high seas during the day, but at night they enter the shallow waters where we artisanal workers work. There is very little left in the morning,” adds Somo.
Jerry Mang’ena of Action for Ocean in Tanzania says: “Coastal communities are on the front lines of climate change, but they are also drivers of resilience. If we want to protect the ocean, we must invest in those who have cared for it.”
At the recent Our Ocean Conference in Mombasa, organizations called for ratifying the BBNJ (high seas) treaty, which came into force in January and has been signed by 145 countries and ratified by 81. Aliou Ba of Greenpeace Africa says: “The agreement offers a historic opportunity to protect the high seas and tackle illegal fishing that deprives communities of food and income. Governments cannot delay.”