WOW panel transcript

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This transcript is taken from the DFM panel discussion at the June 2021 WOW Small-Scale Fisheries Open House, facilitated by Ben Belton. Source text is lightly edited from the YouTube automatic captions so contains some errors.

   [BEN]
   so that was a
   fascinating and
   diverse set of videos to kick off the
   session there and i think a really nice
   introduction
   so we're now moving to the the panel
   segment
   and so i'd like to invite all of the
   panelists
   to turn on their their cameras if they
   would like to
   okay so good evening everyone i'd
   like to start off
   with a question for for tara
   actually two two questions that are
   linked
   so so first of all what are some of
   the different types of
   value that are associated with dried
   fish
   in your study area in gujarat and then
   do you find that people different groups
   of people with different backgrounds
   value those dried fish in different ways
   [TARA]
   good afternoon everyone thanks so much
   for this opportunity
   you know as i told you gujarat is a
   very
   very distinct you know different kind
   of a context
   to study fisheries per se and definitely
   write fish
   it's a supplier to you know many
   parts of
   india and outside india but it's a
   very
   sort of you know very limited consumer
   of all kinds of
   sort of official products i think 75
   according to the official statistics 75
   percent of gujarat's population
   has never eaten fish
   so that's the that's that's a context
   within which the industry is located
   but it is a very
   you know sort of dramatically
   industrialized you know state
   so i from that point of view you
   know i may not be really women
   we were not able to see a lot of
   very deep cultural sort of associations
   you know within the social
   communities but i thought
   an important you know sort of
   uh
   value an alternative value i would say
   is what i would
   call as inclusive local development if
   that can be seen as a as
   a value and the importance of you
   know dried fish processing
   for you know by its in
   in very pop very many parts its focus on
   small fishers and small
   processors inclusive local
   development i think is a very important
   value that you know we could really
   observe in the case of
   gujarat and it's a very low technology
   you know low fixed cost kind of an
   enterprise so entry barriers are very
   low
   so you know that really you know adds
   to the inclusion
   possibility of direct sectors
   women's participation of course
   i will never say that dried fish would
   bring in a lot of gender equity
   in the local areas but that's a much
   deeper sort of a problem
   but it has definitely been able to
   incorporate a
   large number of women workers into the
   into the value chain
   because fish drying is a very labor
   intensive activity and women are
   found to be extremely convenient to
   provide that kind of you know
   drudgeris so what a work but they
   they do
   participate in a lot of sort of
   activities and i think the fourth value
   i would say would be
   the the kind of you know deep
   cultural
   sort of interlinkages between you
   know with
   other regions for instance
   interestingly the the person who really
   led
   us into the dry fish industry is a
   keralite and somebody who belongs to
   kerala
   you know but very deep financial
   business interest
   in the dry fish sector in gujarat so
   which we would
   be observed everywhere so there is a
   there's a very interesting cultural
   exchange
   sort of a possibility quite a deep
   long-standing historical one
   we could discover through this
   study i think i considered that as
   another
   sort of you know another important value
   that you know apart from
   all the other values of well-being and
   you know all that we generally talk
   about
   and as i told you because you know
   gujarat is not a very
   consuming fish liking kind of a state
   you know we we have not even been
   able to talk
   to very many people about you know
   how do you associate dry fish with
   in terms of consumption from the
   consumption point of view of course the
   coastal communities are you know
   they they never say we are very fond
   of they said that they do
   eat fish you know dried fish
   when we do not get
   you know the the the what you call
   it the fresh fish
   otherwise the entire stock is exported
   to different parts including from
   bombay to bangladesh to
   the northeast and it really goes
   right now in the form of you know
   fish feed exercise goes up to vietnam
   and
   you know all kinds of women of course
   that's another country that we
   discovered so i i stop here i hope i
   have answered that question
   [BEN]
   okay thank you Tara yes that's a
   really nice
   overview and quite a unique
   situation in gujarat actually compared
   to to some of the other sites in the
   project
   so i'd like to ask a similar question
   now actually to sisir so we saw
   in west bengal there's quite a different
   scenario in terms of the sort of the
   cultural significance of dried fish for
   instance
   so sisir could you tell us about
   some of the different types
   of value that are associated with dried
   fish
   in your study area and then
   how maybe different groups of people
   in that area may value dried fish in
   different ways
   [SISIR]
   hello
   hello hello
   so because because the electricity
   the
   connection is literally unstable but
   uh
   thanks thanks ben i think west bengal
   and i'll mostly talk about the eastern
   part of eastern bay of bengal
   where is bengal and orissa here
   so we look at in in this it is
   strongly culturally socially as
   economically is embedded in the whole
   system
   in the society so as you have seen in
   the video
   it's a part of its cuisine
   delicacy and people have many
   historical kind of a consumption
   relationship with the dried fish at
   the same
   time people look at dried fish systems
   here
   when i woke in a village here i saw a
   liquid
   diet fish system quite differently they
   look at it as a coping
   because the fishing pattern and fishing
   type timing for the small scale fishers
   who do not go for a
   deep sea fishing their ecological
   knowledge kind of they call it jutia and
   padilla in our local languages in west
   bengal
   and orissa where they follow this
   lunar cycle for five days before
   this full moon day and after
   the full moon day and similarly the
   the
   the other part of the month so they
   catch a lot of fish and during that time
   they see that during that this
   gives an opportunity for them to really
   go for processing heavy processing and
   then they can
   really survive on that so they look at
   an equipping system so we had a
   very interestingly we had a cyclone in
   west coast and the next week we had a
   cyclone in the west east coast so after
   the cyclone when i checked it
   in the villages i am working i saw
   people have nothing they have rice
   and dried fish so look people say we are
   only surviving because our agriculture
   is gone
   nothing is available one cannot go and
   buy in an epidemic and nothing
   is done so they're getting
   some rice from ration and they're
   we're eating with this dried fish
   so it's a ready to eat kind
   of food it can be stored and people look
   at it
   [BEN]
   i i think maybe your connection has
   gone down this is here
   so maybe we'll we'll move to the to
   the next question but
   thank you that was really interesting to
   hear about the importance of dried fish
   as a survival food
   so i'd like to ask now
   a similar question to gayathri actually
   so gayathri you're currently in
   sri lanka but
   you were working doing research under
   dfm
   in cambodia as well so
   similar question to you how do you
   see the
   the the the values of dried fish
   for different groups of people and do
   you notice any differences
   between the south asian context and
   the southeast asian context
   [GAYATHRI]
   thanks ben i think i mean i'll start
   with
   the last part of your question i mean
   you know most of my work had been
   in in south asia in sri lanka
   primarily
   so the when i first moved to cambodia
   for to carry
   out this research for dried fish
   matters project
   i think the first thing you know the
   first
   kind of shift shifting of lenses that
   i had to do
   was to start appreciating start
   recognizing
   freshwater fish as
   you know this popular for for people
   because i come from an you know
   from an island nation and i i grew up
   very close to the sea in sri lanka so we
   you know we are very we are
   socialized
   into consuming uh fresh fish that
   comes from the sea
   as well as a dried fish that's linked to
   the sea
   but when i went to cambodia that the
   whole system
   or most of the system that's in place in
   terms of
   aquatic products for cambodia the
   symbolic value the economic value is
   actually attached to
   freshwater fish so this is sourced
   from the ton lesap the lake
   as well as the mekong and the
   tributaries
   india is also a rice like paddy
   the fish that comes from the paddy piers
   you know there is there's a whole system
   attached
   as well so i think that is one of the
   big changes that i noticed when i went
   then then of course you know
   living there and then you know
   consuming my own consumption patterns
   also had to you know adjust to this
   so that's that's
   that's one part of it if i talk about
   you know the different kinds of values
   that
   cambodians attach to
   dried fish or what i actually call
   processed fish in cambodia because there
   are certain products that are actually
   not
   dried in cambodia such as fermented fish
   for example
   but it's it's processed and it can
   be saved
   it can be kept without refrigeration
   for you know one year two years three
   years
   so i think the this diverse you know
   product range itself shows how important
   it is for the cambodian cuisine
   if i talk a little bit in detail
   about the fish space what is called
   prehawk
   in in kumar i think very similar to
   the
   the example that cc explained of
   how important how intersect this process
   product to
   the diet of these people especially
   during the
   either lean periods of fishing so the
   dry dry
   seasons which when there's you know the
   fresh fish production is actually very
   low
   people rely a lot on this and very
   similar to
   this example a lot of fish paste
   making happens actually at the peak
   of the the fish catch so
   there are these big nets called back
   die
   die fishing the package that operate on
   one part of the
   and there is an abundance of fish
   catch
   and this is actually then
   processed it's in into different
   varieties but a lot of is actually
   because this is small fish it's
   processed into fish paste
   and this with rice becomes the main
   food for you know especially the rule
   especially for the rule of people
   agricultural communities
   there are also trends changing trends in
   terms of preferences
   for processed fish i won't go into a
   lot of detail but what we are starting
   to notice is that some of the younger
   generations
   perhaps their knowledge on producing
   or making fish processed fish based
   dishes are actually reducing and there
   seems to be also a little bit of trend
   at least in the urban areas
   in cambodia that their preference of
   their food patterns
   perhaps are also changing
   [BEN]
   okay thank you gayathri that's fascinating
   and i'd also like to ask a follow-up
   question about cambodia actually so
   in the presentation that you gave
   it really highlighted the diversity
   of different groups that are
   involved in terms of gender age
   ethnicity
   nationality religion and so i
   wondered if you could comment a bit
   about
   how maybe some different
   sort of groups of people experience
   or
   ascribe or gain value from from dried
   fish in different ways
   [GAYATHRI]
   sure so i mean i could talk about scales
   for example so when i at at one level
   it's it was really difficult to
   segregate differentiate between the
   people who catch
   fish and people who process fish and
   people who actually market fish
   because in certain cases they were all
   the same the same group of people same
   family
   would be doing all of these as well
   this could be for their own consumption
   but they were also marketing
   these products so you know on the one
   hand and these are the people that
   actually live
   on the the water bodies especially in
   these floating villages on the tonlessa
   so so there was this but then when
   you go
   you know a little bit away from these
   main water bodies
   then i think the the consumption
   patterns change because fresh fish was
   then becoming less available
   and therefore dried of processed fish
   was becoming
   you know more important in the diet
   because i think about 75 percent of the
   protein intake of cambodians are
   actually from these aquatic products
   fresh and processed and so
   and we could also observe you know in
   terms of
   groups when you go to the more
   coastal areas
   again interestingly of course obviously
   there is a lot more production happening
   in using products varieties
   from the sea marine products but there
   was also a preference for
   like prahoc for example which is coming
   from the Tonle Sap right
   so it you couldn't actually you know
   even differentiate and save so people
   who live in the coast actually like sea
   fish
   and sea based products they still
   preferred you know some of the
   freshwater products
   products as well
   so these are some of the differences and
   then if i briefly talk about the gender
   dimensions
   most of the processing at least at the
   home home base level
   and the medium the small scale level
   actually managed and run
   by women the slightly larger scale
   processing units were then you know
   gradually being managed by men but a lot
   of the workers were still
   women as tara said there were you know
   gender disparities in terms of wages
   and all that but still we could see a
   very high
   presence of women at all ages from very
   young girls to
   you know grandmothers involved in this
   process
   [BEN]
   okay thank you very much so i'd like
   to stick with that
   theme now actually of freshwater
   versus marine
   coastal versus inland and and moved to
   bangladesh
   and asked mostafa
   can you tell us about the different
   types of value
   that people in bangladesh associate with
   these freshwater and marine fish
   and how they're valued differently in
   different parts of the country perhaps
   [MOSTAFA]
   thank you very much ben can you hear me
   yes thank you okay thank you very much
   you know
   in bangladesh the dried fish sector is
   really huge
   and i don't know how many million people
   are involved with
   the wider value chain from
   catching fish bringing to the drying
   yard and then processing
   so it's really huge and what we found in
   the
   main sector in some of the landing
   centers we found that whatever
   and although we have some major spaces
   like
   bombay duck ribbon fish and some
   anchovies
   but there are also some other
   ethnic thing like we have
   oyster and other things are dried and
   known as petty
   only the ethnic tribal community on
   jungle
   and also we have one fermented product
   in the marine sector called nakti
   and it is only eaten by the ethnic
   tribal people
   and so these are really
   regarding the value the many people and
   their
   food nutrition and livelihood depends on
   the marine dried
   sector and there are also there are
   times there are season in the year
   people only have access to dried fish
   for that for their protein
   and this is really cheap and people can
   afford and
   accessible to them and when it comes to
   the
   free shorter things there are
   several a few of these spaces are really
   very important like the birds
   the purity is very important all over
   the
   north and northeastern part of the
   country and
   hundreds and thousands of tons of
   footage are dried and also the
   fermented product the chair power sedum
   mainly made from
   putty initially it used to be made only
   from putty but
   last i think 15-20 years
   at the footage diversity under threat
   and
   both the demand and price are
   increasing so people started to ferment
   marine ngop by santa and
   so this this is huge value chain and
   what we found that
   not only the people in bangladesh are
   eating those things also there are
   i think several hundred thousand peoples
   in the overseas
   the bangladeshi diaspora they also they
   are very fond of those
   both the dried and fermented products
   so those are going to overseas
   and
   there are also market oriented actually
   where i was born and brought up i i
   didn't eat any
   dried fish in my bollywood i didn't know
   anything about the
   dried fishing in that part of bangladesh
   but as i
   came to my municipal study and later i
   involved with start with that i found
   that the sector is
   really really huge and many people
   if you see we found the people in cox's
   bazar
   even their fresh fish but still they
   would like to eat the
   dried precipitation sometimes when some
   people go to other places
   they bring some gift and that that must
   be the
   dried grease or convented fish so these
   things are really huge having said that
   this is going on for i don't know
   hundreds of years but it's still
   what i found that the government
   policymakers
   are sort of like they're very oblivious
   with the secret they just
   don't actually don't know or visualize
   how big the sector is and what are the
   pros and cons of the sector what will be
   the problem what are the problems and
   what are the prospects of the sector
   so and what i feel that through this
   drive is matter project it's a long
   project and hopefully
   the way we are working the and as we
   the biologists are involved with the
   anthropology sociology so hopefully
   there will be much more and much clearer
   visualization of dried fish in bangladesh
   thank you very much
   [BEN]
   thank you very much it's a really nice
   overview of the the situation in
   bangladesh so
   kind of following on from the from
   the last part of your question there
   i'd like to ask anupama
   actually how does dried fish
   figure in state policy and development
   activities in the area that you've been
   working
   and what what actions
   do you think could help to support dried
   fish value chains to create more
   positive
   values
   [ANUPAMA]
   yes in sri lanka actually
   no any national policies for related
   with the dried fish
   but policy oriented researchers many of
   a number of policy oriented researchers
   can be
   available so under different
   categories such as a
   production market channel and
   market strategies and nutrient and
   quality standard values these types of
   things
   so we can actually we should extract
   these
   information from these researchers and
   we can
   develop national policy for this
   related with the dried fish industry
   yes i think this is the way we can do
   this
   okay thank you and so based on the based
   on the kind of research that you've been
   conducting so far
   do you have some ideas about what what
   kind of policies might be
   effective to sort of bring out the
   the best of the
   values of the sector
   actually i think the
   when we compare with the fish organized
   dried fish organization fish
   organizations are more strong but
   dried fish organizations are not like
   that so therefore we can do something
   to increase and expand of this dried
   fish processing and trading
   organizations and increasing their
   voices within fisheries sector
   as well we can actually we can do this
   using policies
   and yes i think this is very helpful
   to uh making policies
   [BEN]
   okay thank you very much
   i'd i'd like to ask invite now shalika
   to answer answer a question
   so is there anything that you've learned
   in your research so far with with dfm
   that's
   challenged your expectations about dried
   fish
   yes actually there is a lot of
   challenges for dry pitch processors and
   traders
   [SHALIKA]
   in the sri lanka relating to the
   technology
   lab utilization market opportunities
   there is no proper market opportunities
   there are
   no proper lab utilization technique
   and there is no proper dry fish
   association in sri lanka
   also rome there is no good
   connection between trader and processor
   and there is no
   better raw material supply and most of
   the dried fish
   production production technique
   or value addition technique all the
   things are
   comparatively very low low low
   standard
   and that especially i have to
   mention there is no strong
   technology utilization and dry fish
   processor association in sri lanka
   these things are mainly affected
   economic strength of the
   dried fish processor and other value
   chain actors
   in android which industry in sri lanka
   these things
   challenges
   [BEN]
   okay thanks very much so similar kind of
   challenges to the ones that anupama
   highlighted there about the sort of
   lack of organization and the lack of
   voice for people in the dry fish
   sector
   okay so
   maybe now we can have a just a wider
   question for the
   for the group that anyone can answer
   if they'd like
   so have you
   identified any changes that are taking
   place
   in the way that dried fish is valued in
   in any of your study areas
   so how how are the values associated
   with
   dried fish changing over time
   would anyone like to
   volunteer to answer that so see it
   please go ahead
   [SISIR]
   sorry i could not complete my last one
   also but it's okay
   i think dried face this is a very
   interesting
   sector now with the the changing kind of
   the dom structure
   so so if we if we look at the whole
   fisheries sector and its influence in
   dry fish and the value associated to it
   by different stakeholders though the
   small scale
   fishers associate values as they used to
   do it because it is emanating from their
   historical and cultural perspective
   identity issues however
   in the value chain other actors are
   looking at it very differently
   now if i say in the
   east coast of west bengal and and
   yeah and orisa i see there is a lot of
   policy in partisan culture fisheries and
   and and there are a place-based
   fisheries like
   this place is like very good for
   shrimp cultivation
   so so specific emphasis on species
   alters the whole management and kind of
   catch dynamics
   into the systems and that is creating
   lot
   more changes in the sea space itself and
   with the relationship with the
   fishing phasing systems and
   the issue is that now people are getting
   the same
   input for poultry feed for fish female
   for many others so bm structure is
   changing
   in in that sense the the whole
   dynamics within the fishing community is
   changing earlier people used to drive
   for
   per food all the fishers coming dry for
   food and there is a
   psychological and social kind of
   attachment to this kind
   now there are segments within that and
   now i see in my
   in the village i am working in so there
   are few
   new kind of a system is emerging
   where
   one big big
   people having big net big boats
   they're consolidating at that some are
   consolidating for fish feed some are
   consolidating for face mold
   some are still going for particular
   food things but the problem is that
   market
   dynamics is market system is not that
   organized in that way
   so that people who are into this dried
   fish sun drying and everything
   at times losing out so that's a major
   tension happening
   at the community level and there is
   change happening in the
   face chain and in terms of value
   i think with the the kind of
   transportation with the kind of
   competition within the space and the
   kind of auctioning systems
   and the trade systems are changing now
   peace are getting also changed exchanged
   within this
   among the people like orissa is giving a
   lot of fish to bangladesh in terms of
   shrimp
   we are getting lot more hilsa and
   those kind of from bangladesh
   from from here so
   so dragon wheat fish kind of a dynamics
   also changing
   so there are a lot more change happening
   at that space and
   there are also policy impetus is
   like orisa is a space
   you are aware that world faces work
   that
   we are now bringing nutrition and
   dried fish together into a
   midday ml and kind of social
   protection programs
   and their new new actors like ssgs are
   coming up so there is a traditional
   fisher communities and their association
   and there is a government promoted
   sg and those kind of networks coming in
   investment
   is coming in so there are changes
   happening in that so
   there are good and therefore there are
   also there are kind of muddy waters
   at that level
   so so now there are a lot of
   there is a space for look at all these
   issues
   and see how the traditional officers
   and this kind of institutional
   arrangements can work together
   for a for a better kind of economic and
   social
   value at the community level
   [BEN]
   okay thank you very much so that's a
   really
   interesting pattern there with
   sort of the the drive the policy
   drive towards aquaculture sort of
   contributing to this
   competition for for fishes food
   and the changing dynamics associated
   with that we're coming towards the
   end of the session but i see
   tara has a hand up so
   if you'd like to give a quick comment
   tara
   and then then we will close the session
   [TARA]
   yeah no i think i just have a very quick
   comment i think i almost
   endorsed what you know said but i my
   point is this like in order to think
   about a policy
   solution to understand the
   changing structure of you know
   dry fit sector we need to really look at
   the fisheries sector in general
   you know not a piecemeal sort of an
   approach would
   do any good to dry fish as a as a sub
   sector we need to really rethink
   reimagine
   how we look at fisheries development per
   se as a
   you know as as a currency in the world
   market so that you can make more and
   more foreign exchange
   using the newer technologies
   whether it is aquaculture or mariculture
   or blue revolution or whatever it is but
   i think we are just looking at
   fisheries as just a currency
   which which can enhance the national i
   think that has to
   completely change even to make the dried
   fish
   values different yeah that's all thank
   you
   [BEN]
   thank you tara so really advocating for
   a sort of food systems approach
   to to understanding
   fish as a whole and that where where
   dried fish fits into that
   i don't know whether we're allowed to
   to go over but i see
   a hand apples over mustafa derek do
   we do we have time for another
   another response i'm not in charge
   actually
   so i would ask ratana what
   whether we have to have a hard cap or
   whether we can go on for a few more
   minutes
   rather are you still there
   i would say let's just keep going then
   if we don't have five minutes i think
   they say
   okay there we go yeah thanks okay
   so maybe then a last
   comment from from mustafa and then
   some
   quick sort of closing closing remarks
   [MOSTAFA]
   thank you very much i just would like to
   point out on things in a recent
   actually study experiment we found that
   microplastics in our dried fish and
   it's it's not a very little amount it's
   large amount of microplastics
   present in all the dried fish
   we analyzed so this is could be a
   new area and i would like to ask the
   partner countries if
   they have any idea what about the
   microplastic in their product and also
   other chemicals if they can
   and they would like to see how it's
   going on using the because microplastics
   is a big problem global problem and in
   the marine
   and in the freshwater sector in the
   fresh piece there are microplastics so
   like the same microplastics when it
   comes to that right product
   it become concentrated actually three to
   four times so
   if you if you would like to see your
   product
   and the microplastic in them please you
   can have some
   even some small studies to to find out
   the microplastic
   your new product thank you very much
   [BEN]
   yeah thank you very much that's a
   an emerging
   trend and quite a quite a worrying one
   um
   that we're starting to see
   so i'll just take a minute to to
   summarize if i can
   i think this has been a really
   fascinating discussion
   it just really underlines what a
   what an incredibly interesting
   subject this is
   there are just so so many angles
   that to explore
   i think something comes through
   really clearly from all of the
   the presentations is diversity
   diversity in terms of the the products
   produced the geographies involved the
   different groups of people
   the different sets of values
   that are derived from dried fish
   and then also i think something that
   came through really nicely in
   one of the the first presentations from
   from from west bengal is
   so the the need for really
   transdisciplinary
   research such as i think dfm is is
   helping to
   to bring together to to understand
   this diversity and make sense of it
   across scales across multiple sites
   and so i
   i think this is yeah sort of sort of
   uh
   evidence that we're kind of moving
   moving slowly towards this this goal and
   hopefully by the end of the project we
   will have a
   a much more complete
   sort of understanding of this this whole
   fascinating world