ACTIVITY TITLE
Sustainable Oceans, Livelihoods and food Security Through Increased Capacity in Ecosystem research in the Western Indian Ocean (SOLSTICE-WIO)
ACTIVITY SCOPE COLLABORATION TYPE AID TYPE FINANCE TYPE FLOW TYPE TIED STATUS HIERARCHY
Regional 2 Bilateral 1
Other technical assistance D02
Standard grant 110 ODA 10 Untied 1
Planned start date 2017-04-01
Planned end date 2021-03-31
Actual start date 2017-10-01
Actual end date 2019-10-31
activity status: Closed
Physical activity is complete or the final disbursement has been made.
WHO'S INVOLVED ( 4 )
PARTICIPATING ORG REFERENCE ROLE TYPE
DEPARTMENT FOR BUSINESS, ENERGY & INDUSTRIAL STRATEGY
REF GB-GOV-13
Funding Government
NATIONAL OCEANOGRAPHY CENTRE
Implementing Academic, Training and Research
NATURAL ENVIRONMENT RESEARCH COUNCIL
Accountable Other Public Sector
NATURAL ENVIRONMENT RESEARCH COUNCIL
Extending Other Public Sector
General
Ten percent of the world's population depend on the ocean for a readily accessible source of protein and employment, with the majority (95%) living in developing countries. Poor coastal communities are at the frontier for climate change impacts, compounded by population growth and food demand, but are among the least resilient to the challenges of the future. SOLSTICE-WIO will focus on coastal communities in nine developing countries and island states in eastern Africa, interlinked culturally and ecologically and collectively known as the Western Indian Ocean (WIO) region. All nine (South Africa, Mauritius, Seychelles, Kenya, Tanzania, Mozambique, Somalia, Madagascar, Comoros) are on the list of Official Development Aid recipients, with five identified as Least Developed Countries. In the WIO over 100 million people live within 100 km of the ocean, with a significant proportion employed in local fisheries. This leaves the region highly dependent on the ocean for economic stability, food security, and social cohesion. These coastal communities have limited adaptive capacity to cope with dramatic reductions in fish stocks caused by overfishing, habitat destruction, and increasing environmental pressures - all aggravated by climate change. The decline of WIO fisheries has had profound socio-political ramifications, from the rise of piracy to general political instability. A clear example of the devastating effect of a fish stock reduction is the collapse of the Chokka Squid fishery in South Africa. SOLSTICE-WIO will use this as a case study to demonstrate the strengths of a holistic approach to human-ecosystem-fisheries research and the potential solutions this can offer. The squid fishery was the 4th most valuable fishery in South Africa, bringing foreign currency into one of the poorest provinces. It was directly employing 5000 fishermen with 30,000 dependents. The 2013 crash had a devastating effect on the Eastern Cape, yet the underlying reasons are unknown: local fishermen believe the collapse was caused by environmental change. Until the mechanisms behind the collapse are understood, there is little potential for aiding recovery or guiding adaptation. SOLSTICE-WIO will provide this urgently needed understanding to help inform the fishery and Government as to the fate of the local ecosystem, whether it will recover, and whether the crash could have been predicted or prevented. How will SOLSTICE achieve this? The key to stability of living marine resources lies in an ecosystem approach to fisheries (EAF), which sees human-natural systems as a whole, integrated entity rather than separately considering individual target species. Simply put: you cannot manage something you don't understand, nor can you adapt to change through management improvements unless you can describe, measure and understand the changes. The core strength of SOLSTICE-WIO lies in its integral approach to food security, drawing on UK expertise in physical oceanography, marine ecology, autonomous observations, environmental economics and the human dimension,and WIO expertise in fisheries, the marine economy and regional policy development. SOLSTICE will provide the region with the state-of-the-art technology to deliver cost-effective marine research and provide the information needed to achieve maximum potential from the region's living marine resources. In the UK marine robotics, ocean models and novel data products from satellite observations have developed rapidly in the last decade, and now underpin Blue Economies and Ocean Governance in Europe. These technologies are highly agile and ready to be applied in the developing world as cost-effective ways to maximise understanding and sustainable exploitation of living marine resources. Such "technology leapfrogging" can overcome the severe lack of research ships in the WIO and save decades of effort in developing predictive modelling systems from scratch.
Objectives
The Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF) supports cutting-edge research to address challenges faced by developing countries. The fund addresses the UN sustainable development goals. It aims to maximise the impact of research and innovation to improve lives and opportunity in the developing world.
policy marker( 8 )
CODELIST SIGNIFICANCE VOCABULARY DESCRIPTION
Gender Equality not targeted OECD DAC CRS The score "not targeted" means that the activity was examined but found not to target the policy objective.
Disaster Risk Reduction(DRR) not targeted OECD DAC CRS The score "not targeted" means that the activity was examined but found not to target the policy objective.
Disability not targeted OECD DAC CRS The score "not targeted" means that the activity was examined but found not to target the policy objective.
Nutrition not targeted OECD DAC CRS The score "not targeted" means that the activity was examined but found not to target the policy objective.
Aid Targeting the Objectives of the Convention on Biological Diversity not targeted OECD DAC CRS The score "not targeted" means that the activity was examined but found not to target the policy objective.
Aid Targeting the Objectives of the Framework Convention on Climate Change - Mitigation not targeted OECD DAC CRS The score "not targeted" means that the activity was examined but found not to target the policy objective.
Aid Targeting the Objectives of the Framework Convention on Climate Change - Adaptation significant objective OECD DAC CRS Significant (secondary) policy objectives are those which, although important, were not the prime motivation for undertaking the activity.
Aid Targeting the Objectives of the Convention to Combat Desertification not targeted OECD DAC CRS The score "not targeted" means that the activity was examined but found not to target the policy objective.
recipient country ( 9 )
Comoros (the)KM
11.11111111111111
KenyaKE
11.11111111111111
MadagascarMG
11.11111111111111
MauritiusMU
11.11111111111111
MozambiqueMZ
11.11111111111111
SomaliaSO
11.11111111111111
South AfricaZA
11.11111111111111
Tanzania, the United Republic ofTZ
11.11111111111111
SeychellesSC
11.11111111111111
sector ( 1 )
OECD DAC CRS 5 digit1( 1 )
The sector reported corresponds to an OECD DAC CRS 5-digit purpose code http://reference.iatistandard.org/codelists/Sector/
Education policy and administrative management11110
100
GLOSSARY
Education policy and administrative managementEducation sector policy, planning and programmes; aid to education ministries, administration and management systems; institution capacity building and advice; school management and governance; curriculum and materials development; unspecified education activities.
Financial Overview
Outgoing Commitment ( 1 )
Disbursement ( 8 )
Budget ( 3 )
Outgoing Commitment
Disbursement
Budget
Budget ( 3 )
START END TYPE STATUS VALUE
2017-04-01 2018-03-31 Original Indicative 473,749
GBP
2018-04-01 2019-03-31 Original Indicative 1,697,404
GBP
2019-04-01 2020-03-31 Original Indicative 852,138
GBP
Budget
Transactions ( 9 )
Outgoing Commitment ( 1 )
DATE DESCRIPTION PROVIDER RECEIVER VALUE
2017-04-01
6,934,488.29
GBP
Outgoing Commitment
Disbursement ( 8 )
DATE DESCRIPTION PROVIDER RECEIVER VALUE
2017-12-31
236,674
GBP
2018-03-31
237,075
GBP
2018-06-30
422,633
GBP
2018-09-30
422,633
GBP
2018-12-31
426,069
GBP
2019-03-31
426,069
GBP
2019-06-30
426,069
GBP
2019-09-30
426,069
GBP
Disbursement
General Enquiries
Department of Business Energy and Industrial Strategy
General enquiries
Department of Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, 4th Floor, 1 Victoria Street, SW1H 0ET