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For Applicants | Focus Areas | RDMA Priority Countries / Rapid Assessment of Pelagic Fish Stocks
in the Sulu-Sulawesi Seas


Applicant Resources

Eligible Countries:

  • Burma
  • Cambodia
  • Indonesia
  • Laos
  • Malaysia
  • The Philippines
  • Thailand
  • Vietnam

Additional Criteria for Applicants:

Please see Section VI of the Solicitation for General Eligibility requirements.

Objectives:


USAID’s Regional Development Mission for Asia (RDMA) has identified over-harvesting, including illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing, as a leading threat to marine biodiversity, sustainable fisheries, and food security in Southeast Asia. Overharvesting and IUU fishing are leading to declines in abundance, size, biodiversity, and distribution of economically important marine species, particularly tuna and other pelagic fish. These declining fisheries - which are also threatened by climate change, habitat degradation, and other stresses - remain fundamental to the health, nutrition, and food security of Southeast Asian people. Rapidly assessing the current state of marine resource availability in the Sulu-Sulawesi Sea is a critical first step in reversing the decline of local fisheries.

In support of USAID’s Oceans and Fisheries Partnership, as announced by Secretary of State John Kerry in August, PEER will support research projects which help generate strong data and evidence around adaptation approaches in the fisheries sector, with the goal of increasing the resilience of people, places, and livelihoods associated with the marine resources of the Sulu-Sulawesi Seas. Projects must include collaboration with the Coral Triangle Initiative for Coral Reefs, Fisheries and Food Security (CTI-CFF) and the Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center (SEAFDEC) whose goal is to conserve marine biodiversity and manage the fisheries potential of the Southeast Asia and Pacific region.

Proposals should utilize robust analytical approaches, and clearly target critical information gaps to inform decision-making. Research proposals may address critical knowledge gaps in areas including (but not limited to):
  • Sustainable fishing yields
  • Managing fish stocks
  • Adaptation approaches in the fisheries sector
  • Combating overharvesting and IUU
  • Regional marine resources/food security
  • Habitat degradation
  • Biodiversity in the context of climate change and natural disasters
Regional collaborations among institutions in eligible countries are strongly encouraged. Building a stronger knowledge base to inform decision-making will enable resilience of communities and the ecosystems upon which they depend. Proposals should therefore have plans to encourage the uptake of information produced through the PEER activity, particularly through the Oceans and Fisheries Partnership and other relevant regional and bilateral USAID activities.