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TERMS OF REFERENCE Short-term Consultancy to Develop the Financial Sustainability Plan and financial model for the proposed SADC Regional Fisheries Monitoring Control and Surveillance Coordination Centre 1. BACKGROUND The Southern African Development Community (SADC) Member States have a long experience of cooperation in many areas, including fisheries as attested by the 2001 SADC Protocol on Fisheries. Following the 2008 SADC Statement of Commitment to combat Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) fishing, that provided further elaboration of the principles set out in the SADC Protocol on Fisheries, the SADC Member States agreed to establish a SADC Regional Fisheries Monitoring Control and Surveillance Coordination Centre (MCS Centre) as a priority action. In July 2010, at the meeting of the SADC Ministers responsible for Natural Resources and Environment held in Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe, the SADC Action Plan for IUU fishing, which provides for the establishment of the MCS Centre, was approved by the SADC Member states, along with the decision for Mozambique to be the hosting country. In early 2011 an assessment study for the establishment of the MCS Centre was undertaken. The study produced two main reports: a) Guidelines for the establishment of the MCS Centre, and b) Project proposal for the start up project for the MCS Centre. The outcome of the study was presented at the SADC Technical Committee on Fisheries meeting held in Gaborone during April 2011. Consequently, the SADC Ministers responsible for Natural Resources and Environment approved it at their meeting of May 2011. The same Ministers also approved the members of the SADC Task Force on IUU fishing. The Task Force met for the first time in September 2011 and developed a work programme and a road map for the establishment of the MCS Centre. One of the immediate priorities was the development of a financial sustainability plan for the MCS Centre. The study, funded by the ACP Fish II Programme, produced a report titled Elaboration of a sustainability plan for the regional MCS Centre. The report used information already approved in the a) Guidelines for the establishment of the MCS Centre, and b) Project proposal for the start up project for the MCS Centre. This report analysed potential revenue sources for the MCS Centre and attempted to identify sustainable sources of revenue. This report was also approved by Ministers in 2013. In 2015, Ministers of Natural Resources and Environment realised that delays in establishing this project were due to lack of approval from SADC Council of

Ministers, and they then directed the SADC Secretariat to seek approval for establishing the MCS Centre in Mozambique. The SADC Council at its meeting in August 2016 at Lozitha, Swaziland, considered the request for establishing the MCS Centre in Mozambique and requested the SADC Secretariat to assess financial implications for establishing and operationalising the MCS Centre. In 2017, a short consultancy, funded by the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), was engaged to update the project document and this was adopted by the SADC Ministers responsible for Agriculture, Food Security, and Fisheries and Aquaculture, at their joint extra-ordinary meeting held during May 2017 in Ezulwini, Swaziland. However, Ministers identified gaps in the existing documents, viz. (a) that information available was a bit outdated, and (b) that there was a lack of a clear financial sustainability plan, that provides for financial model incorporating risk mitigation plan. It is against 1.1 Context for the MCS Centre 1.1.1 General fishery context Fisheries production in Southern Africa has been growing since the 1950s, but recently stagnated around 2.6 million tons. Broadly speaking, the region s marine resources are characterized by cold water fisheries on the West coast, and warmer water fisheries on the East coast. Due to the upwelling system of the Benguela current, the productivity on the West coast is richer, with strong inter annual variations. The fishery is predominantly industrial. In contrast, the environmental conditions on the East coast are more stable, characterized by greater species diversity and higher social importance with greater artisanal fisheries. The large inland production is particularly from the lakes in the East, including Lake Victoria, Lake Tanganyika, Lake Malawi and Lake Kariba, and the Zambezi River. Table 1: Total fish landings in the SADC region Source: FAO, 2015-2 -

1.1.2 IUU fishing and MCS Fishery production is important for employment, consumption and trade. One of the threats to the sustainability and economic viability of fisheries is IUU fishing. One estimate puts current illegal and unreported fishing losses worldwide at between USD 10 and 23.5 billion annually, representing between 11 and 26 million tons. IUU fishing can be broadly defined to include fishing without permission or in contravention of laws and regulations, deficient/insufficient reporting to the relevant authorities or fishing in areas to which no specific regulations apply and in a manner inconsistent with State responsibilities. The three components of IUU have somewhat different causes and may require slightly different solutions. In general, they will require establishing or strengthening the fisheries governance system in a way that provides incentives for compliance and improving fisheries monitoring, control and surveillance (MCS). Ministers of the SADC stressed in the 2008 Statement of Commitment on IUU fishing that IUU activities are considered a plague to sustainable management of the regions fishery resources and they pledged to fight it. Their rationale was based on the facts that IUU fishing results in less fish to catch for the legal fishers, independently of whether stock assessments have been carried out or not. Illegal activities may also have less regard for the environment/habitats/bycatch/level of discards than the legal activities as they tend to operate under less scrutiny. Such negative impacts will in turn affect legal operations. The global increase in demand for fish and fish products provides an incentive to increase the supply through illegal activities. Since the illegal catch constitutes uncontrolled overexploitation of fish stocks, it may be pushing the prices upwards. 'Uncontrolled overexploitation may diminish stocks more rapidly, which could cause the price to jump for particular species, and thus stimulate even more intense fishing for that species. Diminishing supply, increasing demand, and increasing fuel costs of having to go further to catch the fish all contribute to the negative spiral of increase in price and thus increasing incentives for IUU activities. 1.1.3 The policy context Fighting IUU fishing has become an important agenda item in international fishery discussions and one that the SADC region is active in. The region is well aware that combating IUU fishing requires the application of different types of tools, and that these tools cannot be used in isolation or by countries in isolation. Some of the most important tools being developed are the International Plan of Action to Prevent, Deter and Eliminate IUU fishing which was adopted by the FAO Committee on Fisheries (COFI) of 2001; the Port State Measures Agreement (PSMA) of 2009, which came into force in June 2016, and five SADC Member States (Madagascar, Mauritius, Mozambique, Seychelles and South Africa) have ratified it; the Voluntary Guidelines for Flag State Performance of 2014; the market state measures (e.g. catch and/or trade documentation schemes); and the Global Record (vessel database). The active participation of the region in the development of these instruments and the value of the Centre in coordinating their implementation, including the SADC Regional Plan of Action to Combat IUU fishing is very important and has far reaching benefit for Member States. - 3 -

All of the SADC countries belong to regional policy processes relating to fisheries outside of the SADC region. These will be important to building cooperation in the region through the MCS Centre. The exclusive economic zones (EEZs) surrounding the region fall into two regional fisheries bodies (RFBs) that of the South West Indian Ocean Fisheries Commission (SWIOFC) and the Benguela Current Commission (BCC), while the areas outside of the EEZs but adjacent to the SADC EEZs fall into the South East Atlantic Fisheries Organization (SEAFO), Southern Indian Ocean Fisheries Agreement (SIOFA), and Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR) for general fisheries management; and International Convention on the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT) and the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission (IOTC) for tuna and tuna like species (also within the EEZ but only for highly migratory species). For inland fisheries the main bodies of importance are the FAO Committee for Inland Fisheries and Aquaculture of Africa (CIFAA), the Lake Victoria Fisheries Organization (LVFO), the Lake Tanganyika Authority (LTA) and Fishery Committee for the Eastern Central Atlantic (CECAF). The Centre will also fall within the context of the wider continental framework of the African Union (AU) and NEPAD Agency and other African countries that are not in SADC but are important neighbours for fisheries issues will also need to be considered, supported by the Policy Framework and Reform Strategy for Fisheries and Aquaculture in Africa (PFRS). Considering the above summaries, it can thus be considered that the diversity in the SADC countries fisheries and MCS activity contexts will provide some challenges with regard to coordination and cooperation of regional MCS efforts. However, although each national context is quite unique, there are opportunities for lesson learning and sharing of best practices. Countries can learn from each other and thereby improve their capacities. Working together to combat IUU fishing in the region is likely to also highlight similarities and shared problems, which will inevitably inspire shared solutions and greater fishery derived benefits. 2. DESCRIPTION OF THE ASSIGNMENT 2.1 Objective The overall objective of this assignment is to contribute to the realisation of the SADC MCS Centre project to contribute to sustainable management and use of fisheries resources in the region by identifying and drafting the Finance Model suitable for the Southern Regional MCS Coordination center. The consultant(s) will leverage knowledge and lessons learnt from Regional Economic Communities (RECs) and RFBs within Africa, Asia, Europe and elsewhere that have established similar regional Centres. 2.2 Purpose of the Assignment The purpose of the assignment is to: 2.2.1 Undertake a systematic analysis of the financial ability of SADC to meet the strategic objectives and targets set out in the SADC MCS Centre project documents: - 4 -

a) Guidelines for the establishment of the MCS Centre; b) Project proposal for the start up project for the MCS Centre; and c) Elaboration of a sustainability plan for the regional MCS Centre. 2.2.2 Establish the up to date capital requirements for the SADC MCS Centre; 2.2.3 Update/develop a financial sustainability plan on: a) The proposed and new modalities of resource mobilisation for the financial requirements to implement the SADC MCS Centre project; and b) The mechanisms to ensure sustainability for growth of financial resources for the MCS Centre. 2.2.4 Develop risk management plan for the SADC MCS Centre. 2.3 Specific Activities In particular, the Consultant(s) will investigate and submit a financial sustainability plan/financial model for the SADC MCS Centre outlining: a) Modalities for resourcing of the SADC MCS Centre by Member States, the private sector, and International Cooperating Partners (ICPs); b) Ways to leverage existing sources of funds to support the implementation of regional and national MCS activities to combat IUU fishing; c) Modalities for sustainably growing financial resources for the MCS Centre; and d) Risk management plan with clear mitigation measures. The following activities should be undertaken: a) Review experiences of other RECs and RFBs that have established regional Centres like this, including funding of fisheries initiatives, and incorporate lessons learnt to advancing the operationalization of the SADC MCS Centre; and b) Play a supporting role in the discussions among SADC Secretariat Directorates and SADC Senior Technical Officials towards understanding and the adoption of recommendations made. 2.4 Suggested Methodology The following methodology is suggested: - 5 -

Step I: In-depth Analysis Carrying out an in-depth analysis of the experiences of other RECs and RFBs that have attempted to establish or have established similar regional initiatives. The analysis should include an assessment of the long-term financial sustainability, legal, institutional, governance settings for each case examined together with identifying the strengths, weaknesses and lessons learnt in each instance, which could be taken into account when developing proposals for the implementation modalities of the SADC MCS Centre. Step II: Sources of Funding and Long-Term Sustainability Identifying and assessing potential sources for funding for the proposed SADC MCS Centre including Member States contributions, private sector, regional and international capital markets, potential grant-aid donors, and existing regional and multilateral development banks; and the long-term sustainability including growth options for financial resources for the Centre. Step III: Findings and Recommendations Presentation of the study findings and recommendations at a workshop of SADC Secretariat officials and Senior Technical Officials and provision of technical support at other meetings as may be required. 2.5 Required Outputs The specific and measurable outputs expected of the assignment are: 2.5.1 Execution Plan that outlines a detailed approach and methodology for implementing this study including proposed institutions/country visits giving rationale of choice of Member States chosen for possible visits; 2.5.2 Inception Report that will, inter alia, provide an assessment of the existing documentation and highlight success factors for effective and efficient operationalization of the SADC MCS Centre; 2.5.3 A Draft Report with technical annexes proposing the financial sustainability options, funding options, and any other relevant elements necessary for a successful operationalization of the SADC MCS Centre. These documents will also form the basis for a stakeholders validation workshop with the SADC Secretariat and Senior Technical Officials; and 2.5.4 A Final Report with specific recommendations for the operationalization of the SADC MCS Centre, including as annexes, funding, financial model and risk management plan. The Final Report must take into account comments of the SADC Secretariat and Senior Technical Officials, Member countries written comments on a draft of the Final Report, and other formal interactions with the consultants; All reports and communications with the contracting authority shall be in English in MS Word/Excel/PowerPoint format, and ready for printing and distribution. The SADC Secretariat and its partner organization, WWF will arrange for the translation of reports and communications into all SADC languages. - 6 -

3. EXPERT PROFILE OR EXPERTISE REQUIRED 3.1. Expert 1: Team Leader - Development Finance Expert 3.1.1 Minimum requirements: a) University degree in the field of economics, finance, business administration or related field. Professional qualification in an area related to financial sector development, banking or related field will be an added advantage; b) At least 10-years post-graduate experience working on issues related to regional economic integration and development finance. Experience in setting up multinational financing mechanisms will be a strong advantage; c) Excellent report writing capability; d) Fluent in spoken and written English. Working knowledge of French and/or Portuguese is an added advantage; and e) Computer literate with good working knowledge of the standard Microsoft Office suite of programmes. 3.1.2 Specific/other requirements: a) Experience in the assessment and formulation of financial sustainability options will be a requirement; b) Experience in financial modelling and financial risk management; and c) Experience working in the SADC region or in a regional or multilateral development finance institution, would be an asset. 4. LOCATION AND DURATION The location of the assignment will be home based with travel to Gaborone, Botswana and Maputo, Mozambique, for initial meetings/presentations, travel to selected SADC Member States, and travel to participate in regional workshops. This is a short assignment which is expected to start in June 2017 with the first report due for consideration at the SADC Task Force on IUU fishing meeting to be held end in July 2017. The total number of days allocated for this assignment is 15 working days during a lapse period ending July 2017. The following table provides an indicative timetable for the assignment. 5. REPORTING The consultant will report to the WWF Country Director through the Regional Coordinator for South west Indian Ocean Fisheries Programme, and the SADC FANR Director through the Technical Advisor for Fisheries. 6. BUDGET - 7 -

The estimated budget for this consultancy is USD10,000. - 8 -