Motto | "To reduce poverty and hunger by improving fisheries and aquaculture" |
---|---|
Formation | 1975 |
Type | Nonprofit research organization |
Purpose | Research |
Headquarters | Penang, Malaysia |
Region served
|
Worldwide |
Membership
|
FishBase Consortium |
Parent organization
|
Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research |
Website | Worldfishcenter.org |
Remarks | Formerly the International Center for Living Aquatic Resources Management (ICLARM). |
WorldFish is an international, nonprofit research organization with headquarters in Penang, Malaysia, and offices in Asia, Africa, and the Pacific. WorldFish’s mission is to harness the potential of fisheries and aquaculture to reduce poverty and hunger in developing countries.
WorldFish is a member of the Consortium of International Agricultural Research Centers (CGIAR), a global agriculture research partnership for a food secure future.
Working in partnership with private and public sectors and civil society, WorldFish uses its scientific expertise in fisheries and aquaculture to promote sustainable, evidence-based development solutions and policy recommendations that support the Millennium Development Goals. All services and solutions developed by the Center are international public goods that are made freely available to all.
WorldFish has introduced innovative technologies and practices that are brought to scale through a network of partners. The Center works on a breeding program to develop the Abbassa strain of Nile Tilapia that helped increase aquaculture productivity and improve food security for millions of Egyptians.
In Bangladesh, WorldFish trained and supported thousands of rural farmers by helping them improve the productivity of their homestead ponds and gardens.
WorldFish has been recognized with a Tech Museum Award, several World Bank Development Marketplace Awards, and the World Food Prize.
WorldFish is committed to meeting two key development challenges: 1) Improving the livelihoods of those who are poor and vulnerable in places where fisheries and aquaculture can make a difference and 2) achieving large scale, environmentally sustainable, increases in supply and access to fish at affordable prices for poor consumers in developing countries.
To meet these challenges WorldFish focuses its expertise and research in the following areas:
WorldFish is one of the 15 specialized research centers of the Consortium on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR), and is also an implementing partner for the CGIAR Research Program on Aquatic Agricultural Systems (AAS). This research program aims to reduce poverty and improve food security for people whose livelihoods depend on aquatic agricultural systems.