Cuba still awaits the unlikely miracle of fish

More than two years after Cuban Vice Prime Minister Jorge Luis Tapia Fonseca urged citizens to raise fish at home, the idea continues to spark more jokes than family meals. Despite the logic in promoting small-scale aquaculture, the government's lack of support has hindered its success. Overexploitation of marine resources and economic woes exacerbate Cuba's fish shortages.

Vice Prime Minister Jorge Luis Tapia Fonseca's proposal, made over two years ago, drew from Asian small-scale aquaculture models that provide high-quality protein at low cost, which the UN has promoted in developing countries. Yet, like prior efforts in pig farming and rice cultivation in the 2010s, the government provided only the idea, without resources, tax incentives, or support for private or foreign investment.

A 2018 study in the Cuban Journal of Fisheries Research found 79.6% of marine fishing resources overexploited or collapsed, with all northern coast zones at alarming levels. The first fishing law of July 2019 changed little, leading authorities to impose harsher penalties and moratoriums, such as the five-year ban on Creole grouper capture starting December 2024 to save the species from collapse.

State fishing companies, whose catches mainly go to exports like lobster and shrimp, saw a 73% drop in exports from 2019 to 2023. Amid this, fishermen like Raciel work in a gray area of illegality. Holding sport fishing permits, he travels four times a week from Camagüey to reservoirs like La Jía and Jimaguayú to catch tilapia and catfish during the dry season until May. "As such, we are not authorized to fish for sale," Raciel explains, selling informally at low prices: under 250 pesos per pound for catfish, versus over 650 for pork.

In a nation where the minimum wage is 2,100 pesos (under $5) and the 2025 average was around 6,700 pesos ($14), such informal earnings are essential. Aquaculture could ease shortages, but it demands investments the government cannot provide.

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Cuban government officials have suggested that citizens change their eating habits to achieve food sovereignty by removing rice and potatoes from the regular diet due to cultivation challenges on the island. In a television program, experts argued that these foods do not adapt well to Cuba's climate and require high investments. The proposal has sparked mixed public reactions amid current shortages.

EU fishing ministers have agreed that Mediterranean boats can fish 143 days in 2026, the same as this year, in exchange for maintaining sustainability measures. Spanish Minister Luis Planas highlighted the difficulty of the negotiation, which started from an initial proposal of just 9.7 days. The agreement also sets quotas for the Atlantic with mixed results.

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Neels Loff, born into a fishing family in Hawston in 1976, found himself excluded from South Africa's quota system despite earning a skipper's license. Forced into what authorities call poaching, he describes a life of night dives and dangers driven by survival needs. His story highlights the injustices faced by indigenous fishermen in a broken regulatory framework.

 

 

 

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