AFRICAN UNION – INTERAFRICAN BUREAU FOR ANIMAL RESOURCES TENDER AUGUST 2025
REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS |
ALIGNMENT OF NATIONAL FISHERIES AQUACULTURE STRATEGIES CONSULTANT.
Closing date: 5 Sep 2025
Background Information
The Assignment
This consultancy aims to achieve the following objectives:
- To assess and align national fisheries and aquaculture policies and strategies with the Policy Framework and Reform Strategy (PFRS) for Fisheries and Aquaculture in Africa and relevant international instruments.
- To review national frameworks in order to propose specific recommendations for the alignment and domestication of global instruments and international conventions.
- To support African Union Member States (AU-MS) in developing and implementing fisheries and aquaculture strategies and National Agricultural Investment Plans (NAIPs) that align with the PFRS and climate adaptation goals. This also includes establishing peer-review and twinning mechanisms to strengthen sectoral coherence and policy capacity in line with the PFRS.
AU-IBAR is a specialized technical office under the Department of Rural Economy and Agriculture (DREA) of the African Union Commission (AUC), tasked with coordinating and supporting the use of animal resources—including livestock, fisheries, aquaculture, and wildlife—for economic development and human well-being across AU Member States. Its Strategic Plan 2018–2023 envisions an Africa where animal resources significantly contribute to integration, prosperity, and peace.
AU-IBAR’s fisheries and aquaculture work is guided by the PFRS, developed in response to recommendations from the first and second Conferences of African Ministers of Fisheries and Aquaculture (CAMFA I & II), and endorsed at the 2014 African Union Summit in Malabo. The PFRS aims to improve governance in the sector to enhance its contribution to food security, livelihoods, and wealth creation. It is aligned with the African Union Agenda 2063 and the Africa Blue Economy Strategy, which promotes an inclusive and sustainable blue economy.
One of the statutory roles of the AUC is to draft common positions and coordinate AU Member States’ engagement in international negotiations. In the fisheries sector, some progress has been made in ratifying and implementing global instruments such as the Port State Measures Agreement (PSMA), the Code of Conduct for Responsible Fisheries (CCRF), and the UN Fish Stock Agreement (UNFSA), as well as regional and continental instruments.
Nevertheless, further efforts are needed to encourage AU Member States to ratify and implement relevant instruments.
This requires :
- Capacity-building support.
- Monitoring mechanisms to track implementation progress.
- Studies to identify opportunities and changes related to global instruments—building on awareness created under FishGov1.
- Actions to strengthen compliance frameworks.
Background
Africa’s fisheries sector produces over 11 million tonnes of fish annually, employs over 12 million people, and contributes approximately 1.24% to the continent’s GDP. It plays a vital role in ensuring food and nutritional security for over 200 million Africans and serves as a primary livelihood source for many rural communities. The sector holds substantial potential for reducing poverty and promoting rural development.
However, ongoing challenges such as resource decline, post-harvest losses, and weak governance have impeded the sector’s full contribution to sustainable development. The need for reform has been highlighted through various high-level political commitments, including the WSSD target to restore fisheries to maximum sustainable yields by 2015, the Abuja Declaration from the Fish for All Summit, and CAMFA resolutions. These efforts have led to the establishment of the African Fisheries Reform Mechanism (AFRM) and the development of the PFRS.
In support of these initiatives, AU-IBAR facilitated a consultative process to develop the ‘Guide for the Implementation of the PFRS’, involving stakeholders such as AU Member States, Regional Economic Communities (RECs), regional institutions, non-state actors (NSAs), and development partners. This Guide serves as a complementary document to the PFRS, offering practical implementation direction.
Following the success of FishGov1, the EU-supported second phase—FishGov2 (“Enhancing sustainable fisheries management and aquaculture development in Africa”)—was launched to accelerate sectoral reform. The programme contributes to AU Agenda 2063 by advancing food security, livelihoods, and economic development. It focuses on implementing the principles and goals of the PFRS, AFRM, and associated declarations.
Objectives, Purpose & Expected Results
Overall objectives
The overarching objective of this consultancy is to ensure that national fisheries and aquaculture policies and strategies are aligned with the Policy Framework and Reform Strategy (PFRS) for Fisheries and Aquaculture in Africa, as well as relevant international instruments. The consultancy will also make specific recommendations for the domestication of global instruments and assess the extent to which AU Member States have aligned their National Agricultural Investment Plans (NAIPs) with fisheries and aquaculture strategies, the PFRS, environmental management, and climate change adaptation plans.
Purpose and Specific Objectives
The purpose of this contract is to:
- Produce a revised national fisheries and aquaculture policy/ strategy
- Facilitate the analysis of national fisheries and aquaculture policies and relevant international instruments;
Review (but not exclusively):
- a)Global, continental and regional best practices for promoting and implementing climate-smart fisheries and aquaculture.
- b)National and regional fisheries and aquaculture sectoral plans, NAIPS, national and regional CAADP compacts, climate-change national action plans and related documents on best practices for integrating climate change into the fisheries and aquaculture sector.
- c)From the review, compile a list of indicators relevant for assessing climate-smart fisheries-aquaculture development in Africa.
- d)Undertake a SWOT analysis to assess the extent to which the PFRS and climate change has been mainstreamed into NAIPs and the impacts thereof based on PFRS Implementation Guidelines and CAADP compacts.
- e)Compile national success stories as case studies demonstrating the benefits and challenges associated with mainstreaming climate-change into the fisheries-aquaculture industry for lessons learning and knowing sharing.
- f)Recommendations for the way forward showing options for policy, resource mobilization and building partnerships to promote the adoption and implementation of climate-smart environmentally sustainable fisheries-aquaculture development aligned to the PFRS among AU-MS and other stakeholder initiatives within the industry.
- g)Prepare documentation on mainstreamed on NAPIS with fisheries and aquaculture mainstreamed.
- h)Organize and facilitate stakeholder validation workshops.
Results to be achieved by the selected national consultant
- Final consultancy report highlighting the outcomes of the policy review, the policy gaps and issues for the reforms of the fisheries and aquaculture, the best practices and lessons learnt and the policy intervention entry points.
- Consultancy report highlighting the outcomes of the policy analysis, priority instruments and strategies for effective participation as well as specific recommendations for implementation, ratification and domestication of relevant instruments and the policy intervention entry points.
- A report on the status of alignment of the country’s NAIP to national fisheries and aquaculture policies and strategies, the PFRS and national environmental management and climate-change change adaptation strategies highlighting the implications for the sectors sustainable development and recommendations.
- Final Technical Report incorporating inputs from stakeholder’s validation workshop to be produced 15 days maximum after the workshop.
- National stakeholder validation workshop organized and facilitated.
Scope of Work
General
The contract is within the overall broad theme of ensuring fisheries and aquaculture policies in Africa are coherent with the PFRS and coordinated at continental, regional and national levels in order to maintain healthy, productive and resilient marine, coastal and freshwater ecosystems in the context of climate change.
Among the major challenges undermining Africa’s effort for sustainably increasing the contribution of its fisheries and aquaculture sector to food security, increased livelihood and wealth creation among others is the capability of AU MS and RECs to implement policy reforms. The FISHGOV II project endeavours to address this by strengthening the capacity of AU MS and RECs develop the rational strategies and investments to facilitate coherence and effective implementation of the PFRS anchored onto global and continental best practices, so that national, regional and continental sectoral goals can be achieved.
Consequently, the main goal of the assignment is to assess the extent to which the PFRS and climate-resilience have effectively been mainstreamed into fisheries and aquaculture sectoral plans; and accordingly, into NAIPS, RAIPS and other investment programs.
To achieve these goals, the African Union Inter-African Bureau for Animal Resources (AU-IBAR), through the provision of the EU funded Fisheries governance phase 2 (FishGov 2) project in collaboration with the African Union Development Agency (AUDA-NEPAD) is through due diligence seeking to identify and engage suitably and appropriately qualified national consultant to assess the to Establish whether the PFRS, environmental sustainability and climate-resilience have been mainstreamed into national fisheries and aquaculture sectoral plans; and accordingly into NAIPS and other national investment programs.
The selected individual consultant for each of the AU member states may be invited to share their findings at national and/or regional consultative validations workshops organised by AU-IBAR in a selected AU-MS.
Specific work
The consultant for each of the AU member states will carry out the following specific activities to meet the expected outcomes and produce a comprehensive report:
- Alignment of National Policy to PFRS
- Meeting with the relevant stakeholders at national level and where possible at regional level (e.g. RFOs, RECs, etc);
- Analyze relevant documents (national policy, strategies and legislative/regulatory frameworks) using the Guide for implementation of the PFRS developed by AU-IBAR, with reference to the preliminary analysis that has been done by the ACECOR (University of Cape Coast) on policy alignment and also ensuring adoption of relevant international best practices.
- Identify policy gaps and key issues for the reforms of the fisheries and aquaculture sector.
- Document best practices (including critical enablers) and lessons leant from the implementation of current or past policies and strategies.
- Propose policy intervention entry points and priority actions to fast track the reforms for coherence/alignment to the PFRS.
- Prepare in close consultation with the National Departments of Fisheries, or the National Competent Authorities responsible for Fisheries the draft revised National Fisheries Policy/strategy that is coherent with PFRS.
- Facilitate a stakeholder’s consultation to validate the draft document, ensuring uptake and ownership by national stakeholders.
- Recommendations for alignment and domestication of global instruments and relevant international conventions.
- Organize consultations with the relevant national authorities and stakeholders at national level and where possible at regional level (e.g. RFOs, RECs, etc)
- Analyze relevant documents (national policy, strategies and legislative/regulatory frameworks) with reference to the preliminary analysis and findings that has been done by the African Center of Excellence for Coastal Resilience (ACECoR) of the University of Cape Coast, Ghana on Mechanisms to Facilitate the Domestication of Global Instruments and Initiatives at Continental, Regional and National Levels.
- Identify and analyze priority instruments and initiatives and outline strategies for effective participation.
- Develop a mechanism with specific recommendations for implementation, ratification and domestication of relevant instruments.
- Facilitate a national stakeholder’s consultative workshop in close consultation with AU-IBAR and the National Departments of Fisheries, or the National Competent Authorities responsible for Fisheries to validate the draft document, ensuring uptake and ownership by national stakeholders.
- Alignment of NAIPs to fisheries and aquaculture strategies and investment plans to the PFRS, environmental management and climate-change adaptation action plans.
- A detailed and comprehensive inception briefing with relevant AU-IBAR staff to agree on expectations and provide clarity on any outstanding issues.
- A desk review of international, continental and national documents including AU policy instruments and strategies relevant to this Contract area, such as (but not exclusive) including the Comprehensive Africa Aquaculture Development Program (CAADP), the PFRS, Africa Blue Economy Strategy, Regional and National fisheries management and aquaculture development policies, plans and programs, NAIPs/RAIPs, CAADP compacts, environmental management and climate-change adaptation. This process must also take into full account the preliminary analyses and findings generated by African Centre’s of Excellence, including Rhodes University and the Central Laboratory for Aquaculture Research (CLAR), particularly those relating to climate change impacts and the formulation of mitigation measures within the fisheries and aquaculture sector.
- An evaluation of the extent to which the country has mainstreamed the PFRS, environmental sustainability and climate-change resilience into its (adaptation) fisheries and aquaculture sectoral strategies, and NAIPS other investment programs within the country.
- For best practices, liaise with national institutions such as departments of fisheries and aquaculture, water development, environmental management and development planning and monitoring especially in relation to the CAADP to identify key informants, sectoral documents and relevant data for the Contract.
- Undertake a situation analysis highlighting the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats (SWOT) affecting the mainstreaming and implementation of climate-smart environmental sustainability fisheries-aquaculture within AU-MS and RECs.
How to apply
Submission of Applications
Applications should be submitted through email to: procurement@au-ibar.org with a copy to albert.obiero@au-ibar.org and should include the title “Consultancy Service for Alignment of National Fisheries & Aquaculture Strategies for Egypt / Togo / Comoros / Uganda / Senegal” in the subject of the email.
Applications should include the following:
- Detailed curriculum vitae (CV) and brief cover letter.
- Copies of academic and professional certification documents.
- Declaration on exclusion criteria (see format attached).
- Identification documents.
- A Personal Data Protection and Privacy Statement is attached as information for the applicants.
Application Deadline