Brazilian Government Gives Fishing Its Own Ministry

Brazilian fishing boatThe president of Brazil, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, sanctioned last
week the bill which confers the Special Secretariat of Aquaculture and
Fisheries, SEAP, the status of ministry, enacted to boost the fishing
sector and develop the country's maritime and fluvial potential.

The new ministry is responsible for national fisheries and aquaculture polices, including production, transport, processing, trading, supply, storage among others.

The creation of the new ministry is part of the Brazilian government long term strategy to increase fisheries production by 40% in the next three years.

Altemir Gregolin, head of SEAP was confirmed as the first Brazilian Fisheries minister.

"The creation of the Fisheries and Aquaculture ministry means the consolidation of long term government policies for Brazilian aquaculture and fisheries potential, besides clear evidence of the government's commitment to the sector's activities," said Gregolin.

At the ceremony held in Itajaí­ in the southern state of Santa Catarina, Lula da Silva also announced the new Fisheries Bill which will facilitate artisan and coastal fishermen access to credit.

According to the new legislation artisan fishermen will be provided by the National Program for the Strengthening of Family Farming which has approximately 12.5 billion US dollars in funds to support peasants and subsistence agriculture.

Coastal fishermen are now catalogued as "rural producers" and in equal conditions to their peasant farmers.

"What matters now is that these resources are well invested, because there's nothing more frustrating than to fight for something and then see it plummet," said President Lula da Silva.

Although Brazil has 7.300 kilometers of coast along the Atlantic and a huge fluvial network with some of the largest rivers in the world, landings only amount to less than a million tons including 25% from fish farming.

The new ministry is also responsible for promoting the consumption of fish which is not a common dish among Brazilians. Per capita annual consumption is 9 kilos compared to 15 kilos world-wide and 25 in Europe, according to FAO statistics.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil’s Latest Fad: the Narghile

The table pipe, which is very appreciated in the Arab countries, became popular in ...

Be Patient: Brazilians Get Lessons on How to Make Deals with Arabs

Brazil's CCAB (Arab Brazilian Chamber of Commerce) has placed at the disposal Brazilians a ...

Another Step into Brazil-Latin America Integration

“A ten-year-long dream that finally came true,” was the way Minister of Foreign Relations, ...

Living the Moment in Brazil

My Brazilian niece, Luiza, is getting ready for her first semester in university. I ...

Abbott Gets Brazil Ultimatum: Lower AIDS-Drug Price or Lose Patent

Brazil’s Ministry of Health has declared the anti-retroviral drug Kaletra (Lopinavir/ritonavir), manufactured by Abbott ...

Led by Russia, Brazilian Pork Export Earnings Grow 82%

Brazilian pork exports grew for the third straight month. 60,873 tons were exported in ...

Brazil Accuses EU of Moving Backwards on WTO Agreement

In a press conference Tuesday, January 24, Brazil’s Minister of Foreign Relations, Celso Amorim, ...

Just Passing Through

Foreigners feel they would never be able to live like Brazilians and cannot understand ...

French gets dethroned

After being for generations the second language de rigueur for well-bred Brazilians, French has ...

Authorized Use of Leishmaniasis Vaccine Made in Brazil

The world’s first leishmaniasis vaccine received authorization from the Ministry of Agriculture to be ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`