UL and NAFAA launch bachelor’s degree program in Fisheries

With support from the World Bank, the University of Liberia in collaboration with the National Fisheries and Aquaculture, has officially launched a bachelor’ s degree program in Fisheries and Aquaculture. The Department of Fishery and Aquaculture Sciences, falls under the Thomas Jefferson Faulkner College of Science and Technology at the University of…

With support from the World Bank, the University of Liberia (UL) in collaboration with the National Fisheries and Aquaculture (NaFAA), has officially launched a bachelor’s degree program in Fisheries and Aquaculture.

The grand ceremony took place in the auditorium of the University’s Capitol Hill campus Wednesday, January 25, 2023.

University and high school students, international partners, members of the faculty, and the public, graced the occasion.

The Department of Fishery and Aquaculture Sciences (DoFAS), falls under the Thomas Jefferson Faulkner College of Science and Technology at the University of Liberia.

The Department will offer a Bachelor of Science Degree to students who major in Fishery Science and Management.

Performing the official launching exercise, Liberia’s Vice President Madam Jewel Howard-Taylor said the Visitor of the University and President of the Republic of Liberia, Mr. George Manneh Weah has committed the government’s contribution to the program.

She said President Weah has committed half a million United States Dollars to ensure that people can enroll into the Fisheries and Aquaculture Sciences program free of charge at the University of Liberia.

She said President Weah is quite clear that his job is to make Liberia better, and not bitter.

She said the Medical program, and the Teacher’s College are free, and so the government will ensure that the Fisheries and Aquaculture Sciences program is free.

The Liberian Vice President stated that international partners provided almost two million United States dollars for this degree-granting program to be run at the University of Liberia.

Additionally, Vice President Howard-Taylor said it is important to encourage females to be a part of the program because it will help sustain their families and provide all kinds of benefits to their children.

The President of the University of Liberia, Prof. Dr. Julius Julukon Sarwolo Nelson, Jr., expressed special gratitude to the government for the contribution that will come to the new program.

“Madam Vice President, we are grateful, I know we won’t stop calling you here. You are an Alumna, and we will make sure that we will work with you, and the Deputy Speaker, and Representative [Moima Briggs] Mensah and other members of the House and the Senate,” said Dr. Nelson.

He said the University will work with the Legislature to ensure that it gets a special allocation for the Fishery industry.

In his welcome statement, Dr. Nelson said Fisheries in Liberia play a key role in terms of food and nutritional security.

“We love to eat fish in Liberia, and have the best fish in the world,” said Dr. Nelson.

Right now, he said, the fishery sector provides jobs for 33,000 Liberians, revenues and foreign exchange earnings for the government and contribute around 10% to Liberia’s gross domestic product (GDP).

“But I believe we can do better to improve these numbers. That is exactly what we have recognized in our partnership with NaFAA and the World Bank,” he added.

In 2012, Dr. Nelson explained, the World Bank-West African Regional Fisheries Project, agreed to finance the preparation of a bachelor’s degree in Fisheries and Aquaculture Science Curriculum (FASC) for the University of Liberia.

He said it approved funding to support the establishment and running of the program under the Liberia Sustainable Management of Fisheries Project (LSMFP).

“We are grateful to Hon. Emma Metieh Glassco and her team for working closely with the UL Family that led to the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) in March 2022,” he noted.

The UL President said the University anticipates offering this program to students as early as the first semester for the 2022/2023 academic year.

In an overview, NaFAA Director General Hon. Emma Metieh Glassco said key progress has been observed and well documented in the Liberian fisheries sector.

But she noted that human capacity and capacity development, especially for private sector involvement, remain a major challenge, indicating the need for continued capacity development.

“In retrospect, the World Bank, West African Regional Fisheries Project, agreed to finance the preparation of a bachelor’s in Fisheries and Aquaculture Science Curriculum for the University of Liberia in partnership with the University of Iceland, to address this gap,” said Madam Glassco.

She detailed that in this new project, the Liberia Sustainable Management of Fisheries Project, funding was again approved in the amount of 1.5 million United States dollars to support the establishment and running of the program.

She said the program is expected to provide students with an opportunity to obtain an undergraduate degree in fisheries and aquaculture sciences.

“It is designed to prepare fisheries professionals with competencies and acquiring practical skills in fisheries and aquaculture as well as fish processing and marketing issues,” she noted.

In order to provide short-termed hands-on technical training, research and scientific interventions in addressing the gaps in the sector, Madam Glassco revealed that it has been agreed to establish a Regional Center of Excellence for Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences at the University of Liberia.

The Center will be very key in supporting the transition of the Liberia fisheries sector to semi and large scale industrialization through capacity development, institutional strengthening, innovation, research, extension service, and quality assurance, among others.

In his keynote address, Deputy House Speaker Cllr. J. Fonati Koffa pleaded that the fishery sector should not be like the [rubber sector] in Liberia.

He lamented that Firestone is nearly a hundred years old in Liberia, and yet the country remains a nation of tappers.

He stated that tires and other finished rubber products are not made in Liberia.

“But this [is] our fish, you can’t turn us into fishermen for the industrial fishing industries in Europe. Bring some of them here, let us process our tuna here,” said Cllr. Koffa.

Cllr. Koffa assured that the Legislature will stand ready to appropriate the necessary funds for the development of the infrastructure at the University and at NaFAA to develop the industry.

Making remarks, the World Bank Group Global Director of Environment, Natural Resources and Blue Economy, Dr. Valerie Hickey said she was proud because the timing of the program is right.

But she suggested that Liberians should turn fishery into food security, jobs and GDP.

She urged Liberians to also make sure that as they move from artisanal fishery to industrial fishery, they should own and operate the industrial factories in the sector.

She said the frontier of innovation, industrialization, and economic development is on the oceans.

These days, she said ocean energy is talked about more than other types of energy.

Education Minister Prof. Dr. Ansu Sonii hailed the launching of the new academic program in Fisheries Sciences at the University of Liberia.

In the 70s, he said, fishery was primary to the economy of the country. He congratulated UL, and NaFAA Boss Madam Glassco for the program.

He also hailed Madam Glassco for taking fishery from a little building at the Freeport of Monrovia, making it an esteemed institution in the country.

Dr. Sonii said he believes that President Weah may have envisioned that when he appointed Madam Glassco to head NaFAA, saying she has not disappointed “any one of us.”

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