The Solomons should be able to get a much better return from its tuna-rich waters.
The agreement, at this month’s Pacific Islands Forum in
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The catch is processed outside the region and exported to global markets.
Scarce investment in infrastructure for downstream facilities such as processing and canning has led to billions of dollars of missed opportunities for value addition to marine farmed product.
New trade rules have further sought to put the region at a disadvantage and the islands' small fishing and canning industry has languished over the past few years.
The
It has its own small canning industry, but it urgently needs an upgrade.
â€We want to move quickly into downstream processing, more onshore facilities to cater for the high-end market. We want to restructure our canneries. Value-addition is the only way forward,†Solomons Finance Minister Gordon Darcy Lilo said in May.
The agreement at the forum would justify such a move. It is part of an interim trade deal that has been cobbled together after discussions between
The WTO-compatibility factor built into the interim deal is expected to form the basis of a new, longer term Economic Participation Agreement (EPA) that will be signed next year.
The prospect of this new EPA spells a good opportunity for revitalizing the region's fish processing industry.
The Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat's economic governance director, Dr Robert Grynberg, said: “The EU has never done this with any other region in the world. The development is good, especially for the Melanesian states, which already have canneries.â€
This opens big investment and joint venture opportunities with Islands governments, particularly for the smaller nations of
Relatively low costs of setting up industries, cheap and plentiful labor and the 10-year window the new regime will operate in are factors in favor of any new investment in the sector in the islands region.
The 10-year window is important, because within a decade, the EU is set to lower its external tariffs from 24 to about 8 or 9 per cent. That will level the field for Pacific processed fish exporters and those outside, narrowing the difference in the margins.
Soruce: Written by Dev Nadkarni