aquaculture growth potential in hondurasthe 5.28 percent annual growth in honduras’ fish export...
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Aquaculture growth potential
in Honduras
WAPI factsheet to facilitate evidence-based policy-making and sector management in aquaculture
December 2019
Preparation of this factsheet
• This factsheet provides data and information to facilitate the assessment of aquaculture growth potential in Honduras.
• Analyses in the factsheet are based on official data and statistics published by FAO and other international or national organizations. The data and statistics, which were the most updated at the time when the factsheet was prepared, may differ from data and statistics used in other WAPI factsheets because of different data sources or different versions of the same datasets.
• The validity and relevance of the results depend on the quality (in terms of timeliness and accuracy) of the underlying data and statistics used in the analyses – see some remarks on data and statistics on Slide 7 and Slide 8.
• Unless noted otherwise, country grouping in this factsheet follows the United Nations M49 standard; under which Mexico belongs to Central America, whereas Northern America includes Canada and the United States of America as well as a few island territories.
• The preparation of the factsheet has benefited from tables and charts generated by various World Aquaculture Performance Indicator (WAPI) modules. Most of these data analysis tools are for FAO internal use, yet some of them are available for test use. Visit the WAPI webpage for more information about WAPI information and knowledge products.
• The factsheet was prepared by Junning Cai, Xiaowei Zhou and Giulia Galli. Alejandro Flores, Dennis Latimer, Audun Lem, Alessandro Lovatelli, Ana Menezes and Xinhua Yuan are acknowledged for their highly valuable review of the factsheet.
• Contact: Junning Cai (FAO Aquaculture Officer); [email protected]; [email protected].
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Highlights (I)
• Geo-location, natural resources, population and incomeHonduras is a lower-middle-income country in Central America with 9.6 million population in 2018 (expected to reach 11.4 million in 2030 and 13.8 million in 2050) and much lower per capita GDP than the world/regional/sub-regional average. Per capita land area, per capita inland water surface area, and per capita coastline length are lower than the world averages, whereas per capita renewable freshwater resources is greater than the world average.
• Food security, nutrition and healthHonduras’ per capita total (i.e. animal and vegetal) protein intake in 2013 was lower than the Central America and world averages. Compared to the world/regional/sub-regional averages, the country underperformed in several nutrition or health indicators, such as “prevalence of undernourishment”, “percentage of children stunted”, and “prevalence of obesity in the adult population”. The country’s 73.8 years of life expectancy at birth in 2017 was higher than the world average yet lower than the sub-regional (Central America) and regional (Latin America and the Caribbean) averages.
• Contribution of fish to food and nutritionHonduras’ fish share in animal protein intake (declined from 4.8 percent in 1993 to 4.6 percent in 2013) was lower than the sub-regional, regional and world averages. In 2013, 77.1 percent of food fish supply came from domestic production, and 71 percent of food fish utilization went to export. Only 19 percent of the increase in food fish supply from domestic resources between 1993 and 2013 went to domestic consumption; the rest 81 percent contributed to the increase in net export.
3
Highlights (II)
• Domestic fish market (fish consumption)The increase in Honduras’ total fish consumption between 1993 and 2013 was driven entirely by population growth, whereas per capita fish consumption declined from 3.42 kg to 3.38 kg. As the only country in Central America with declined per capita fish consumption during 1993–2013, its 3.38 kg per capita fish consumption in 2013 was much lower than the sub-regional, regional and world averages. The shellfish share in the country’s fish consumption (50.7 percent in 2013) was higher than the Central America and world averages.
• Fish tradeHonduras’ fish export exceeded fish import by USD 430 million in 2017, and the fish export price was much higher the fish import price. The contribution of fish to the country’s total export value increased from 3.38 percent in 2005 to 9.11 percent in 2017, whereas the fish share in its total import value declined from 0.33 percent to 0.27 percent.
• Fish exportThe 5.28 percent annual growth in Honduras’ fish export value between 2000 and 2017 was higher than the Central America average. The country’s fish export in 2017 (USD 453 million) was composed primarily of crustaceans and freshwater fishes, including 78.73 percent of marine shrimps/prawns, 10.48 percent of tilapias and 8.1 percent of lobsters.
• Fish importThe 2 percent annual growth in Honduras’ fish import value between 2000 and 2017 was lower than the Central America average. The country’s fish import in 2017 (USD 23 million) was composed primarily of finfish (54.8 percent of marine fishes and 25.2 percent of freshwater fishes) and crustaceans (11.9 percent).
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Highlights (III)
• Total fishery productionHonduras' total fishery production increased from 500 tonnes in 1950 to 72 100 tonnes in 2017 with rapid aquaculture growth yet declined capture fisheries production since the early 1990s. Crustaceans and freshwater fishes accounted for, respectively, 54.2 percent and 41.7 percent of its total fishery production in 2017.
• Capture fisheries productionHonduras’ capture fisheries production declined from 17 915 tonnes in 2000 to 10 600 tonnes in 2017 (the lowest among countries in Central America). The country’s capture fisheries was conducted primarily in marine areas, whereas inland fisheries accounted for less than 1 percent of its capture fisheries production in 2017. The country’s capture fisheries production in 2017 primarily comprised crustaceans (71.6 percent), marine fishes (17.9 percent) and molluscs (7.6 percent), with lobsters accounting for 57.6 percent of its capture fisheries tonnage in 2017.
• Aquaculture productionHonduras’ aquaculture production increased from 10 053 tonnes in 2000 to 61 500 tonnes in 2017 (the 2nd largest in Central America, next only to Mexico); the 11.2 percent annual growth rate during 2000–2017 was higher than that of Central America. The country’s aquaculture share in total fishery production increased from 35.9 percent in 2000 to 85.3 percent in 2017. Its aquaculture production in 2017 was contributed by only two species, whiteleg shrimp (31 500 tonnes; USD 173 million farmgate value) and Nile tilapia (30 000 tonnes; USD 81 million farmgate value), which are two important export commodities of the country.
5
Highlights (IV)
• OutlookFrom the demand-side perspective, fish supply generated by trend aquaculture growth in Honduras would be more than enough to cover the fish demand growth driven by population growth between 2017 and 2030, but would be insufficient to cover the fish demand growth driven by both population growth and an increase in per capita fish consumption to the baseline level of Central America (11.49 kg). Aquaculture in Honduras would need to grow 7.7 percent during 2017–2030 in order to generate enough fish supply to satisfy the fish demand growth driven by both population growth and the higher per capita fish demand.
From the supply-side perspective, Honduras’ share in the world aquaculture production in 2017 was smaller than its share of world total land area, its share of world total renewable water resources and its share of the world population. The country’s share in the world inland aquaculture production was greater than its share of world total inland water surface area, whereas its share of the world marine aquaculture production was less than its share of world total coastline length.
• A bird’s eye view of aquaculture sites and farming systems in HondurasIncluding satellite images of (i) tilapia pond culture in Cortes; (ii) tilapia cage culture in El Cajón Dam; and (iii) shrimp farming near the Gulf of Fonseca.
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Remarks on data and statistics presented in this factsheet
• This factsheet relies on official data and statistics readily available to the public. Some important dimensions such as aquaculture’s contribution to GDP and employment are not evaluated due to the lack of data.
• The less than 5 kg/year per capita fish consumption in Honduras in 2013 reflected the average level for the country as a whole, whereas per capita fish consumption in coastal communities could be much higher.
• Fish consumption statistics presented in this factsheet are apparent fish consumption estimated in the FAO Food Balance Sheet (FBS) – see Slide 24 for more information. Their accuracy is reliance on the quality of the FBS variables used for the estimation. For example, underestimated fish production would tend to result in underestimated apparent fish consumption.
• While the FAO trade statistics indicate that Honduras exported 80 402 tonnes (product weight) of seafood products in 2017 (Slide 40), the FAO production statistics indicate that the country’s total fishery production in 2017 was only 72 100 tonnes (live weight; Slide 51). Such a large discrepancy cannot be entirely explained by transshipments (i.e. re-exports). One possible cause could be underestimated aquaculture and/or fisheries production statistics in Honduras for various reasons (e.g. unaccounted production of IUU fishing). The quality of trade statistics and the comparability of production and trade statistics could also contribute to the discrepancy.
• In any case, more efforts are needed to improve the quality of the FAO data and statistics on aquaculture and fisheries in Honduras – see the next slide for further discussion in this regard.
7
Remarks on Honduras aquaculture statistical data
• Honduras has not been able to report any aquaculture production data to FAO since 2013. A national statistics system for collection of aquaculture production data on a regular basis for dissemination and for reporting to FAO is currently lacking in the country. Some data on marine shrimp farming and tilapia culture reported to FAO may have mixed farmgate harvests together with processed aquaculture products for export, and such mixtures were adjusted by FAO to reflect the “live weight equivalent” volume of production.
• The FAO statistics may have understated the actual aquaculture production in Honduras because of the relatively conservative estimation method adopted by FAO when there was a lack of data formally reported by the country coupled with the lack of data and information from alternative sources.
• Parallel to this WAPI factsheet preparation exercise, additional efforts have been made to investigate the current situation and the progress achieved in aquaculture development in Honduras. The satellite images of aquaculture facilities in both old and new farm sites and their comparison with other openly accessible information indicate that upward adjustments of the FAO statistics on aquaculture production in Honduras may be warranted, especially for tilapia farming in most recent years. Such adjustments may be reflected in the next update of FAO statistics on aquaculture production (expected in March 2020). On-site truth finding and validation exercises are necessary to validate such adjustments.
• There is an urgent need for national capacity development in aquaculture statistics system at several levels, including (i) the legal status, institutionalization and resource allocation; (ii) development of national statistical standards in line with international standards; (iii) adequate and stable staffing plus an effective mechanism for data collection, compilation, storage, dissemination and reporting.
• For further information about FAO statistics on aquaculture production, contact: Xiaowei Zhou (FAO Aquaculture Officer (Statistics); [email protected]).
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Geo-location, natural resources, population and income
9
Honduras: A country in Central America
Image source: @Google 2019.
10
Honduras (2018): 9.6 million population (0.13 percent of world total); a lower-middle-income country in Central America with much lower per capita GDP than the world average (only 22.12 percent) as well as the regional/sub-regional average.
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Country/area
Population (2018)1 GDP per capita (2018)2
Million Share of world total (%) Current USDRatio to world
average (%)
Belize 0.4 0.01 5 038 44.90
Costa Rica 5.0 0.07 12 093 107.77
El Salvador 6.4 0.08 4 059 36.17
Guatemala 17.2 0.23 4 549 40.54
Honduras 9.6 0.13 2 482 22.12
Mexico 126.2 1.65 9 684 86.30
Nicaragua 6.5 0.08 2 029 18.08
Panama 4.2 0.05 15 576 138.80
Central America 175.5 2.30 8 497 75.72
Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) 642 8.42 8 503 75.77
Developing regions 6 364 83.39 5 372 47.87
World 7 631 100.00 11 222 100.00
Data sources: 1. UN World Population Prospects (2019 Revision). 2. Total GDP from IMF World Economic Outlook Database (October 2019) divided by
population from UN World Population Prospects (2019 Revision). Country groupings based on the UN M49 Standard.
Honduras: 0.08 percent of world land area (including inland water surface area), 0.03 percent of world inland water surface area, 0.10 percent of world coastline length < 0.13 percent of world population; 0.17 percent of world total renewable water resources > 0.13 percent of world population
Data sources: 1. FAO. 2016. AQUASTAT Main Database – Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO). Website accessed on 16 May 2019. 2. FAOSTAT Land Cover database (updated June 2019; CCI_LC ). 3. The World Factbook, Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), United States of America. Web accessed on 20 May 2019. Coastline length of the world equal to the sum of coastline length of 265 countries and territories listed in the data source. Notes: “Total country area” for 2013-2017; “Surface area of inland water bodies” for 2015; “Coastline length” for 2019; “Total renewable water resources” for 2013-2017. 12
Land and water resources
Country/area
Total country area
(excluding coastal waters)1
Surface area of
inland waterbodies2Coastline length3
Total renewable
water resources1
km2
Share of
world total
(%)
km2
Share of
world total
(%)
kmShare of world
total (%)Billion m3/year
Share of
world total
(%)
Belize 22 970 0.02 493 0.01 386 0.05 22 0.04
Costa Rica 51 100 0.04 285 0.01 1 290 0.16 113 0.21
El Salvador 21 040 0.02 458 0.01 307 0.04 26 0.05
Guatemala 108 890 0.08 1 317 0.04 400 0.05 128 0.23
Honduras 112 490 0.08 1 116 0.03 823 0.10 92 0.17
Mexico 1 964 380 1.46 15 848 0.46 9 330 1.16 462 0.84
Nicaragua 130 370 0.10 10 214 0.30 910 0.11 165 0.30
Panama 75 420 0.06 1 113 0.03 2 490 0.31 139 0.25
Central America 2 486 660 1.85 30 845 0.90 1 147 2.10
Latin America and the
Caribbean20 423 660 15.23 306 507 8.93 19 204 35.08
Developing regions 82 607 378 61.60 1 371 378 39.93 39 730 72.58
World 134 108 230 100.00 3 434 349 100.00 805 942 100.00 54 737 100.00
Honduras (2018): The 3rd most populated country in Central America, next to Guatemala and Mexico
Data source: United Nations World Population Prospects (2019 revision). Note: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Population Module; see Template 1 in the WAPI prototype for examples (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en).
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0.45.0 6.4
17.29.6
126.2
6.5 4.20.5
5.5 6.8
21.2
11.4
140.9
7.4 4.9
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
Belize Costa Rica El Salvador Guatemala Honduras Mexico Nicaragua Panama
Tota
l po
pu
lati
on
(m
illio
n)
Population prospects in Central America
2018 2030
Honduras (2015–2030): 2.3 million more people in 2030 than in 2015 (1.53 percent annual growth), with increasing percentage of urban population and slightly declined female ratio in population.
Data source: United Nations World Population Prospects (2019 revision); United Nations World Urbanization Prospects (2019 revision). Note: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Population Module; see Template 1 in the WAPI prototype for examples (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en).
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50.07 50.04 50.01 49.9955.17 58.36 61.42 64.31
9.19.9
10.711.4
2015 2020 2025 2030
Honduras
Percentage of females (%) Percentage of urban population (%) Total population (million)
Food security, nutrition
and health
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Honduras (1993 versus 2013): Per capita total protein intake increased from 54.9 g/day in 1993 to 64.9 g/day in 2013; the share of animal protein in total protein increased from 29.3 percent to 35.8 percent, and the share of fish & seafood increased from 1.4 percent to 1.6 percent.
Data source: FAOSTAT Food Balance Sheets (January 2018; www.fao.org/faostat/en/#data/FBS). Note: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Consumption Module (WAPI-FISHCSP); see Figure 1.5 in WAPI-FISHCSP v.2018.1 for an example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Food items contributing less than 0.05 percent of animal protein may not be labelled.
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Vegetal products
64.2%
Animal products
35.8%Cereals46.3%
Pulses & oilcrops11.7%
Vegetables & fruits3.8%
Other vegetal products
2.5%
Meat17.8%
Milk & eggs15.4%
Fish & seafood1.6%
Other animal products
1.0%
Honduras (2013)
Per capita total protein
(2013):64.9 g/day
Vegetal products
70.7%
Animal products
29.3%
Cereals53.2%
Pulses & oilcrops11.3%
Vegetables & fruits4.3%
Other vegetal products
1.9%
Meat9.5%
Milk & eggs17.2%
Fish & seafood1.4%
Other animal products
1.2%
Honduras (1993)
Per capita total protein
(1993):54.9 g/day
Honduras (2013): Total protein intake (64.9 g/day) lower than the Central America and world averages; the animal share in total protein (35.8 percent) lower than the Central America and world averages; the fish share in total protein (1.6 percent) lower than the Central America and world averages.
Data source: FAOSTAT Food Balance Sheets (January 2018; www.fao.org/faostat/en/#data/FBS). Note: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Consumption Module (WAPI-FISHCSP); see Figure 1.5 in WAPI-FISHCSP v.2018.1 for an example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Food items contributing less than 0.05 percent of animal protein may not be labelled.
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Vegetal products
60.4%
Animal products
39.6%
Cereals39.1%
Pulses & oilcrops
8.7%
Vegetables & fruits
7.4%Other vegetal
products5.1%
Meat17.9%
Other animal products
1.6%
World (2013)
Per capita total protein
(2013):81.2 g/day
Vegetal products
64.2%
Animal products
35.8%Cereals46.3%
Pulses & oilcrops11.7%Vegetables &
fruits3.8%
Other vegetal products
2.5%
Meat17.8%
Milk & eggs15.4%
Fish & seafood1.6%
Other animal products
1.0%
Honduras (2013)
Per capita total protein
(2013):64.9 g/day
Vegetal products
55.8%
Animal products
44.2%
Cereals39.5%
Pulses & oilcrops10.4%
Vegetables & fruits3.7%
Other vegetal products
2.3%
Meat21.5%
Milk & eggs16.9%
Fish & seafood3.2%
Other animal products
2.5%
Central America (2013)
Per capita total protein
(2013):82.5 g/day
Honduras (mid 2010s): 15.3 percent of the population (1.4 million people) undernourished; 22.7 percent of children stunted; 19.4 percent of adults obese; and 17.8 percent of reproductive-age women anaemic.
Data source: FAOSTAT – Suite of Food Security Indicators (updated on 16 October 2018).Note: LAC = Latin America and the Caribbean. Constructed by the FAO WAPI Food Security Module; see Template 2 in the WAPI prototype for examples (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en).
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Honduras, 15.3
Honduras, 22.7
Honduras, 19.4
Honduras, 17.8
Central America, 6.3
Central America, 16.6
Central America, 26.6
LAC, 6.1
LAC, 11.4
LAC, 24.1
World, 10.8
World, 24.9
World, 13.2
World, 32.8
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35
Prevalence of undernourishment (%;2015_2017)
Percentage of children under 5 yearsof age who are stunted (%; 2012)
Prevalence of obesity in the adultpopulation (18 years and older; %;
2016)
Prevalence of anaemia amongwomen of reproductive age (15-49
years; %; 2016)
Food security and nutrition status in Honduras
Honduras (2017): 73.8 years of life expectancy at birth (76.3 for female and 71.2 for male), higher than the world average yet lower than the regional and sub-regional averages.
Data source: Country-level data from the World Bank World Development Indicators (WDI), downloaded on 8 May 2019; United Nations World Population Prospects (2019 revision) used to calculate life expectancy at the regional level. Note: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Human Health Module (including calculation of life expectancy at the regional/global level); see Template 3 in the WAPI prototype for examples (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en).
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Honduras, 73.8
Honduras, 76.3
Honduras, 71.2
Central America, 76.7
Central America, 79.3
Central America, 74.1
LAC, 75.7
LAC, 78.9
LAC, 72.6
Developing regions, 70.8
Developing regions, 72.8
Developing regions, 68.9
World, 72.2
World, 74.4
World, 70.1
Life expectancyat birth, total(years, 2017)
Life expectancyat birth, female
(years, 2017)
Life expectancyat birth, male(years, 2017)
Life expectancy in Honduras
Contribution of fish to
food and nutrition
20
Honduras (2013): Fish contribution to animal protein intake (4.6 percent) was lower than the Central America and world averages.
Data source: FAOSTAT Food Balance Sheets (January 2018; www.fao.org/faostat/en/#data/FBS). Note: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Consumption Module (WAPI-FISHCSP); see Figure 1.5 in WAPI-FISHCSP v.2018.1 for an example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Food items contributing less than 0.05 percent of animal protein may not be labelled.
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Meat45.3%
Milk & eggs34.3%
Fish & seafood16.3%
Bovine meat11.0%
Pigmeat14.5%
Mutton & goat meat
2.2%
Poultry meat16.1%
Other meat1.5%
Milk25.6%
Eggs8.7%
Finfish13.7%
World (2013)
Animal protein intake
(2013): 32.1 g/capita/day
Meat49.7%Milk & eggs
43.0%
Fish & seafood
4.6%
Bovine meat13.6%
Pigmeat7.7%
Poultry meat28.2%
Milk36.9%
Eggs6.1%
Finfish3.3%
Shellfish1.2%
Others2.8%
Honduras (2013)
Animal protein intake
(2013): 23.2 g/capita/day
Meat48.7%
Milk & eggs38.2%
Fish & seafood
7.4%
Bovine meat15.0%
Pigmeat10.2%
Mutton & goat meat
0.8%
Poultry meat21.9%
Other meat0.8%
Milk26.2%
Eggs12.1%
Finfish5.5%
Shellfish1.8%
Others5.7%
Central America (2013)
Animal protein intake
(2013): 36.4 g/capita/day
Honduras (2013): Animal protein intake lower than the Central America, LAC, Developing regions and world averages; so was the fish share in animal protein.
Data source: FAOSTAT Food Balance Sheets (January 2018; www.fao.org/faostat/en/#data/FBS). Note: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Consumption Module (WAPI-FISHCSP); see Figure 2.5a in WAPI-FISHCSP v.2018.1 for an example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en).
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Honduras Central America
-10
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
0 20 40 60 80 100
Fish
sh
are
in a
nim
al p
rote
in
(%)
Animal protein intake in 2013 (g/capita/day)
African countries
Countries in the Americas
Asian countries
European countries
Oceania countries
Bubble size: populationCoordinate origin: world average
Contribution of fish to animal protein
Country/area
Per capita protein intake
in 2013 (g/capita/day) Fish share
(%)Fish
products
Animal
products
World 5.2 32.1 16.3
Developing regions 4.8 26.0 18.4
Latin America and the
Caribbean (LAC)2.8 42.8 6.5
Central America 2.7 36.4 7.4
Belize 3.5 29.0 12.2
Costa Rica 3.7 41.0 9.0
El Salvador 2.1 25.3 8.4
Guatemala 0.4 17.8 2.2
Honduras 1.1 23.2 4.6
Mexico 3.1 40.7 7.6
Nicaragua 1.3 21.2 6.3
Panama 5.0 41.7 11.9
Honduras (1993 versus 2013): Fish contribution to animal protein intake declined from 4.8 percent to 4.6 percent between 1993 and 2013.
Data source: FAOSTAT Food Balance Sheets (January 2018; www.fao.org/faostat/en/#data/FBS). Note: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Consumption Module (WAPI-FISHCSP); see Figure 1.5 in WAPI-FISHCSP v.2018.1 for an example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Food items contributing less than 0.05 percent of animal protein may not be labelled.
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Meat32.4%
Milk & eggs58.7%
Fish & seafood
4.8%
Bovine meat12.5%
Pigmeat4.8%
Mutton & goat meat0.1%
Poultry meat15.0%
Other meat0.1%Milk
50.2%
Eggs8.4%
Finfish1.3%
Shellfish3.5%
Others4.2%
Honduras (1993)
Animal protein intake
(1993): 16.1 g/capita/day
Meat49.7%Milk & eggs
43.0%
Fish & seafood
4.6%
Bovine meat13.6%
Pigmeat7.7%
Poultry meat28.2%
Milk36.9%
Eggs6.1%
Finfish3.3%
Shellfish1.2%
Others2.8%
Honduras (2013)
Animal protein intake
(2013): 23.2 g/capita/day
Honduras (2013): 78 961 tonnes domestic fish production – 3 tonnes for non-food use = 78 958 tonnes food fish (99.996 percent of the production); 78 958 tonnes domestic food fish production (77.1 percent of food fish supply) + 14 239 tonnes food fish import (13.9 percent of food fish supply) + 9 250 tonnes inventory depletion (9.0 percent of food fish supply) = 102 447 tonnes food fish supply available for utilization = 72 698 tonnes food fish export (71.0 percent of food fish utilization) + 29 748 tonnes (food) fish consumption (29.0 percent of food fish utilization).
Data source: FAO Food Balance Sheets of fish and fishery products, 1961–2013, published through FishStatJ (November 2017; www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Consumption Module (WAPI-FISHCSP); see Figure 5.1 in WAPI-FISHCSP v.2018.1 for an example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Numbers may not add up exactly due to rounding.
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78 961
3 14 239
9 250
72 698
29 748
0
20 000
40 000
60 000
80 000
100 000
120 000
Domestic production Domestic productionfor non-food uses
Food fish import Inventory depletion Food fish export Domestic consumption
TON
NES
FISH & SEAFOOD SUPPLY AND UTILIZATION IN HONDURAS (2013)
Import13.9%
Domestic food fish production
77.1%
Inventory decrease
9.0%
Food fish supply (2013): 102 447 tonnes
Non-food uses
0.004%Food fish99.996%
Domestic production (2013): 78 961 tonnes
Export71.0%
Consumption29.0%
Food fish utilization (2013): 102 447 tonnes
Honduras (1993–2013):
• Food fish supply from domestic sources
increased from 28 634 tonnes in 1993
to 88 208 tonnes in 2013, increased by
59 574 tonnes.
• 81 percent of the 59 574 tonnes of food
fish supply growth helped increase net
export from 10 193 tonnes to 58 460
tonnes (increased by 48 267 tonnes).
• The rest 19 percent helped increase
total fish consumption from 18 442
tonnes to 29 748 tonnes (increased by
11 307 tonnes).
• Total fish consumption growth (2.42
percent a year during 1993–2013) was
slightly slower than its population
growth (2.48 percent a year), resulting
in a small decline in per capita fish
consumption from 3.42 kg to 3.38 kg.
Data source: FAO Food Balance Sheets of fish and fishery products, 1961–2013, published through FishStatJ (November 2017; www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Consumption Module (WAPI-FISHCSP); see Figure 5.2 in WAPI-FISHCSP v.2018.1 for an example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Numbers may not add up exactly due to rounding.
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18 442 29 748
10 193
58 460
3.42 3.38
28 634
88 208
Fish & seafood supply and utilization in Honduras (1993–2013)
Net export (export minus import) of food fish (live weight; tonne)
Total fish consumption (live weight; tonne)
Per capita fish consumption (live weight; kg)
Food fish supply from domestic sources (production plus stock depletion minus non-food uses) (live weight; tonne)
Domestic fish market
(fish consumption)
26
Honduras (1993–2013): Total fish consumption increased from 18 442 tonnes to 29 748 tonnes, driven entirely by population growth (from 5.39 million to 8.8 million); whereas per capita fish consumption declined slightly between 1993 and 2013.
Data sources: FAO Food Balance Sheets (FBS) of fish and fishery products, 1961–2013, published through FishStatJ (November 2017; www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). United Nations World Population Prospects (2019 revision; https://esa.un.org/unpd/wpp/Download/Standard/Population). Note: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Consumption Module (WAPI-FISHCSP) (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Per capita consumption equal to total consumption (from FAO FBS) divided by population (from United Nations population prospect).
27
3.42 1.85 3.27 4.26 4.43 2.79 3.89 2.80 3.32 1.88 2.71 2.35 4.75 4.34 4.16 2.84 2.34 2.55 4.13 3.38 3.38
5.39 5.55 5.71 5.87 6.05 6.22 6.40 6.57 6.75 6.93 7.11 7.28 7.46 7.63 7.81 7.98 8.15 8.32 8.48 8.64 8.80
18.442
10.269
18.644
25.05326.783
17.378
24.876
18.393
22.418
12.994
19.25517.110
35.42333.107 32.526
22.668
19.03521.202
35.056
29.211 29.748
1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Honduras
Per capita fish consumption (kg) Population (million) Total fish consumption (thousand tonnes)
Honduras (1993 versus 2013) : The only Central American country with declined per capita fish consumption during the period; the slight decline from 3.42 kg to 3.38 kg representing 0.1 percent annual decline during the period, as compared to the 1.3 percent annual growth in Central America and the 1.7 percent growth in the world.
Data sources: FAO Food Balance Sheets (FBS) of fish and fishery products, 1961–2013, published through FishStatJ (November 2017; www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). United Nations World Population Prospects (2019 revision) (https://esa.un.org/unpd/wpp/Download/Standard/Population). Note: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Consumption Module (WAPI-FISHCSP); see Figure 3.3 in WAPI-FISHCSP v.2018.1 for an example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Per capita fish consumption equal to total consumption (from FAO FBS) divided by population (from United Nations PopulationProspect 2017).
28
Status and trend of per capita fish consumption
Country/area
Per capita fish
consumption (kg/year)Annual
growth (%)1993 2013
World 14.28 19.87 1.7
Developing regions 11.38 18.84 2.6
Latin America and the
Caribbean (LAC)8.39 10.25 1.0
Central America 8.91 11.49 1.3
Belize 11.05 13.22 0.9
Costa Rica 5.89 13.27 4.1
El Salvador 2.33 6.86 5.6
Guatemala 0.80 2.81 6.5
Honduras 3.42 3.38 -0.1
Mexico 10.90 13.60 1.1
Nicaragua 1.05 5.91 9.0
Panama 13.49 14.09 0.2
14.3
23.2
8.4
8.9
18.1
5.3
7.2
10.9
17.7
3.8
3.42
13.8
19.9
21.9
10.3
11.5
13.3
9.7
8.4
13.6
22.4
6.7
3.38
5.6
World
Northern America
LAC
Central America
Chile
Brazil
Ecuador
Mexico
Peru
Colombia
Honduras
Cuba
Per capita fish consumption (kg) in LAC countries with the greatest aquaculture production in 2017
1993 2013
Honduras (1993 versus 2013): Per capita fish consumption decreased from 3.42 kg in 1993 to 3.38 kg in 2013, driven primarily by the decrease in shellfish consumption whose share in fish consumption declined from 75.9 percent to 50.7 percent; in contrast, per capita finfish consumption increased from 0.82 kg to 1.67 kg, reflecting increases in both freshwater & diadromous fishes (from 0.05 kg to 0.39 kg) and marine fishes (from 0.78 kg to 1.27 kg).
29
Finfish, 1.67 , 49.3%
Shellfish, 1.71 , 50.7%
Freshwater & diadromous
fishes, 0.39 , 11.7%
Marine fishes,
1.27 , 37.6%
Crustaceans, 1.63 , 48.3%
Shell molluscs, 0.08 , 2.3%
Cephalopods, 0.01 , 0.1%
Honduras (2013)
Fish & seafood consumption (2013): 3.38
kg/capita/year
Finfish, 0.82 , 24.1%
Shellfish, 2.59 , 75.9%
Freshwater & diadromous fishes,
0.05 , 1.4%
Marine fishes, 0.78 , 22.7%
Crustaceans, 1.76 , 51.5%
Shell molluscs, 0.67 , 19.6%
Cephalopods, 0.16 , 4.8%
Honduras (1993)
Fish & seafood consumption (1993): 3.42
kg/capita/year
Data sources: FAO Food Balance Sheets (FBS) of fish and fishery products, 1961–2013, published through FishStatJ (November 2017; United Nations World Population Prospects (2019 revision). Note: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Consumption Module (WAPI-FISHCSP); see Figure 3.3 in WAPI-FISHCSP v.2018.1 for an example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Per capita fish consumption equal to total consumption (from FAO FBS) divided by population (from United Nations Population Prospect 2017).
Honduras (2013): Species composition in fish consumption was quite different from that of Central America and the world pattern; Honduras’ 50.7 percent shellfish share in fish consumption was much higher than the Central America and world averages.
30
Finfish, 14.72 , 74.8%
Shellfish, 4.95 , 25.2%
Freshwater & diadromous fishes,
7.50 , 38.1%
Marine fishes, 7.22 , 36.7%
Crustaceans, 1.85 , 9.4%
Shell molluscs, 2.57 , 13.1%
Cephalopods, 0.52 , 2.7%
World (2013)
Fish & seafood consumption (2013): 19.87
kg/capita/year
Finfish, 1.67 , 49.3%
Shellfish, 1.71 , 50.7%
Freshwater & diadromous
fishes, 0.39 , 11.7%
Marine fishes,
1.27 , 37.6%
Crustaceans, 1.63 , 48.3%
Shell molluscs, 0.08 , 2.3%
Cephalopods, 0.01 , 0.1%
Honduras (2013)
Fish & seafood consumption (2013): 3.38
kg/capita/year
Finfish, 8.82 , 77.7%
Shellfish, 2.52 , 22.3%
Freshwater & diadromous
fishes, 2.71 , 23.9%
Marine fishes, 6.10 , 53.8%
Crustaceans, 1.67 , 14.7%
Shell molluscs, 0.50 , 4.4%
Cephalopods, 0.36 , 3.2%
Central America (2013)
Fish & seafood consumption (2013): 11.49
kg/capita/year
Data sources: FAO Food Balance Sheets (FBS) of fish and fishery products, 1961–2013, published through FishStatJ (November 2017; United Nations World Population Prospects (2019 revision). Note: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Consumption Module (WAPI-FISHCSP); see Figure 3.3 in WAPI-FISHCSP v.2018.1 for an example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Per capita fish consumption equal to total consumption (from FAO FBS) divided by population (from United Nations Population Prospect 2017).
Fish trade
31
Honduras (2005–2017): Status and trends of fish trade
Data source: FAO. 2019. Fishery and Aquaculture Statistics. Global fisheries commodities production and trade 1976–2017 (FishStatJ) (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Trade Module; see Templates 45–47 in the WAPI prototype for examples (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Includes all aquatic commodities recorded in the data source. CIF = Cost, insurance and freight; FOB = Free on board.
32
-
1.0
2.0
3.0
4.0
5.0
6.0
7.0
0
50 000
100 000
150 000
200 000
250 000
300 000
350 000
400 000
450 000
500 000
2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 2017
USD
/kg
ton
nes
or
USD
100
0
Honduras: Exports of aquatic products
Export quantity (product weight; tonnes)
Export value (USD 1 000; FOB)
Export price (USD/kg; FOB)
-
1.0
2.0
3.0
4.0
5.0
6.0
7.0
0
5 000
10 000
15 000
20 000
25 000
30 000
2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 2017
USD
/kg
ton
nes
or
USD
100
0
Honduras: Imports of aquatic products
Import quantity (product weight; tonnes)
Import value (USD 1 000; CIF)
Import price (USD/kg; CIF)
Honduras (2005–2017): Fish export >> fish import (similar to the pattern in Central America with different extent); fish export price >> fish import price (similar to the pattern in Central America with different extent).
Data source: FAO. 2019. Fishery and Aquaculture Statistics. Global fisheries commodities production and trade 1976–2017 (FishStatJ) (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Trade Module; see Templates 45–47 in the WAPI prototype for examples (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en).Includes all aquatic commodities recorded in the data source. CIF = Cost, insurance and freight; FOB = Free on board.
33
-
1.0
2.0
3.0
4.0
5.0
6.0
7.0
0
20 000
40 000
60 000
80 000
100 000
2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 2017
USD
/kg
ton
nes
Honduras (aquatic products)
Export quantity (product weight; tonnes)
Import quantity (product weight; tonnes)
Export price (USD/kg; FOB)
Import price (USD/kg; CIF)
-
1.0
2.0
3.0
4.0
5.0
6.0
7.0
0
100 000
200 000
300 000
400 000
500 000
600 000
2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 2017
USD
/kg
ton
nes
Central America (aquatic products)
Export quantity (product weight; tonnes)
Import quantity (product weight; tonnes)
Export price (USD/kg; FOB)
Import price (USD/kg; CIF)
Honduras (2005–2017): Large, increasing fish trade surplus since 2011; the USD 430 million fish trade surplus in 2017 accounting for more than one third of the USD 1.14 billion fish trade surplus in Central America.
Data source: FAO. 2019. Fishery and Aquaculture Statistics. Global fisheries commodities production and trade 1976–2017 (FishStatJ) (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en).
Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Trade Module; see Templates 45–47 in the WAPI prototype for examples (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Includes all aquatic commodities recorded in the data source. CIF = Cost, insurance and freight; FOB = Free on board.
34
429 541
0
100 000
200 000
300 000
400 000
500 000
2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 2017
USD
100
0
Honduras (aquatic products trade balance)
Export value (USD 1 000; FOB)
Import value (USD 1 000; CIF)
Trade balance (USD 1 000)
1 140 439
0
500 000
1 000 000
1 500 000
2 000 000
2 500 000
3 000 000
2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 2017
USD
100
0
Central America (aquatic products trade balance)
Export value (USD 1 000; FOB)
Import value (USD 1 000; CIF)
Trade balance (USD 1 000)
Honduras (2005–2017): Fish as an important export commodity with its share in the total export value of all commodities increased from 3.38 percent to 9.11 percent; whereas the import share declined from 0.33 percent to 0.27 percent.
Data source: Data on export or import value from FAO. 2019. Fishery and Aquaculture Statistics. Global fisheries commodities production and trade 1976–2017 (FishStatJ) (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en/). Fish share in total export or import calculated from UN Comtrade data (https://comtrade.un.org/data; accessed on 27 September 2019).Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Trade Module; see Templates 45-47 in the WAPI prototype for examples (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en).
35
14 893
19 224 21 298
26 148 29 366
23 006
0.33
0.29
0.36
0.31
0.35
0.27
2005 2007 2009 2011 2015 2017
Honduras: fish share in total import value
Aquatic products import value (USD 1 000)
Share of aquatic product in import value of all commodities (%)
188 459 186 934 170 550 144 222
395 309 452 547
3.38
7.66 7.55
4.12
9.44 9.11
2005 2007 2009 2011 2015 2017
Honduras: fish share in total export value
Aquatic products export value (USD 1 000)
Share of aquatic product in export value of all commodities (%)
Fish export
36
Honduras (2000–2017): USD 453 million of aquatic products export in 2017; the 5.28 percent annual growth rate during 2000–2017 was higher than Central America’s 3.16 percent annual growth.
Data source: FAO. 2019. Fishery and Aquaculture Statistics. Global fisheries commodities production and trade 1976–2017 (FishStatJ) (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en).
Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Trade Module; see Templates 45-47 in the WAPI prototype for examples (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Includes all aquatic commodities recorded in the data source.
37
Honduras, 452 547 , 5.28
Central America, 2 546 396 , 3.16
- 20
- 10
0
10
20
30
40
50
100 1 000 10 000 100 000 1 000 000 10 000 000 100 000 000
An
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th o
f aq
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s ex
po
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20
00 t
o 2
017
(%)
Aquatic products export value in 2017 (thousand USD)
Status and trends of aquatic product export (2000–2017)
African countries Countries in the Americas Asian countries European countries Oceania countries
Bubble: population
Honduras (2000 versus 2017): Aquatic commodities export increased from USD 189 million in 2000 to USD 453 million in 2017 with increased species diversification; the share of freshwater fishes increased from 4.1 to 10.5 percent.
Data source: FAO. 2019. Fishery and Aquaculture Statistics. Global fisheries commodities production and trade 1976–2017 (FishStatJ) (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en).
Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Trade Module; see Templates 45-47 in the WAPI prototype for examples (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Includes all aquatic commodities recorded in the data source. Species groups less than 0.05 percent of the total value not labelled in the charts.
38
Finfish10.8%
Shellfish87.8%
Marine fishes0.3%
Freshwater fishes10.5%
Diadromous fishes0.1%
Crustaceans87.0%
Molluscs0.8%
Miscellaneous aquatic animals
1.4%
Honduras (2017)
Aquatic products
export value: 452 547
thousand USD
Finfish4.7%
Shellfish95.3%
Marine fishes0.1%
Freshwater fishes4.1%
Diadromous fishes0.4%
Crustaceans94.0%
Molluscs1.3%
Honduras (2000)
Aquatic products
export value: 188 693
thousand USD
Honduras (2017): The USD 453 million of total export of aquatic products was composed of 10.8 percent of finfish (primarily freshwater fishes) and 87.8 percent of shellfish (primarily crustaceans); the species composition is quite different from the Central America and worldpatterns
Data source: FAO. 2019. Fishery and Aquaculture Statistics. Global fisheries commodities production and trade 1976–2017 (FishStatJ) (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en).
Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Trade Module; see templates 45-47 in the WAPI prototype for examples (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Includes all aquatic commodities recorded in the data source. Species groups less than 0.05 percent of the total value not labelled in the charts.
39
Finfish63.8%
Shellfish34.7%
Others1.5%
Marine fishes41.8%
Freshwater fishes3.4%
Diadromous fishes18.6%
Crustaceans23.9%
Molluscs10.8%
Miscellaneous aquatic animals
0.6%
Miscellaneous aquatic animal
products0.1%
Aquatic plants0.7%
World (2017)
Aquatic products
export value: 158 102 263
thousand USD
Finfish10.8%
Shellfish87.8%
Marine fishes0.3%
Freshwater fishes10.5%
Diadromous fishes0.1%
Crustaceans87.0%
Molluscs0.8%
Miscellaneous aquatic animals
1.4%
Honduras (2017)
Aquatic products
export value: 452 547
thousand USD
Finfish38.3%
Shellfish58.5%
Others3.1%
Marine fishes33.5%
Freshwater fishes4.4%
Diadromous fishes0.4%
Crustaceans53.8%
Molluscs4.7%
Miscellaneous aquatic animals
2.9%
Miscellaneous aquatic animal
products0.1%
Aquatic plants0.1%
Central America (2017)
Aquatic products
export value: 2 546 396
thousand USD
Honduras (2017): Marine shrimps and prawns were the largest seafood export commodity, followed by tilapias and lobsters.
Honduras' aquatic products export in 2017
Top 10 export species groups in terms of quantity Top 10 export species groups in terms of value
ISSCAAP groupsProduct weight
(tonnes)
Share of Honduras'
total exportof all aquatic commodities
(%)
Share of world export of the same
speciesgroup (%)
ISSCAAP groupsFOB value
(USD 1 000)
Share of Honduras'
total exportof all aquatic commodities
(%)
Share of world export of the same
speciesgroup (%)
1. Shrimps, prawns 66 931 83.25 2.08 1. Shrimps, prawns 356 307 78.73 1.30
2. Tilapias and other cichlids 8 632 10.74 1.68 2. Tilapias and other cichlids 47 437 10.48 2.87
3. Lobsters, spiny-rock lobsters 1 806 2.25 0.78 3. Lobsters, spiny-rock lobsters 36 669 8.10 0.83
4. Miscellaneous marine crustaceans 1 039 1.29 0.64 4. Sea-urchins and other echinoderms 5 740 1.27 0.77
5. Marine fishes not identified 732 0.91 0.01 5. Miscellaneous marine molluscs 3 518 0.78 0.42
6. Sea-urchins and other echinoderms 475 0.59 1.09 6. Marine fishes not identified 987 0.22 0.00
7. Miscellaneous aquatic invertebrates 338 0.42 0.60 7. Miscellaneous marine crustaceans 694 0.15 0.13
8. Miscellaneous marine molluscs 247 0.31 0.18 8. Miscellaneous aquatic invertebrates 507 0.11 0.20
9. Salmons, trouts, smelts 76 0.09 0.00 9. Salmons, trouts, smelts 249 0.06 0.00
10. Miscellaneous coastal fishes 73 0.09 0.02 10. Miscellaneous freshwater fishes 219 0.05 0.01
Others 53 0.07 Others 220 0.05
Aquatic products 80 402 100.00 0.20 Aquatic products 452 547 100.00 0.29
Data source: FAO. 2019. Fishery and Aquaculture Statistics. Global fisheries commodities production and trade 1976–2017 (FishStatJ) (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en).
Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Trade Module; see Templates 45-47 in the WAPI prototype for examples (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Includes all aquatic commodities recorded in the data source. FOB = Free on board; ISSCAAP = International Standard Statistical Classification of Aquatic Animals and Plants.
40
Honduras (2017): Top 10 commodities in fish export (in terms of quantity).
Data source: FAO. 2019. Fishery and Aquaculture Statistics. Global fisheries commodities production and trade 1976–2017 (FishStatJ) (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en).
Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Trade Module; see Templates 45-47 in the WAPI Prototype for examples (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en).Includes all aquatic commodities recorded in the data source. Nei = not elsewhere included. Product less than 0.05 percent of the total may not be labeled.
41
65 226
7 742
1 625
1 340
1 039
564
387
374
326
206
1 573
1. Shrimps and prawns, other than coldwater, even smoked, frozen
2. Tilapia fillets, fresh or chilled
3. Shrimps, prawns live, for breeding and other purposes
4. Rock lobsters (Jasus spp.), meat or tails, frozen
5. Crustacean meal, nei
6. Tilapia fillets, frozen
7. Fish waste, nei
8. Rock lobster and other sea crawfish (Palinurus, Panulirus, Jasus), whole, frozen
9. Tilapias, fresh or chilled
10. Jellyfish preparations
Other species
ton
nes
Honduras' top-10 fish export products (2017; in terms of quantity)
81.1%
9.6%
2.0%1.7%
1.3% 0.7% 0.5%
2.0%
Honduras (2017): Top 10 commodities in fish export (in terms of value).
Data source: FAO. 2019. Fishery and Aquaculture Statistics. Global fisheries commodities production and trade 1976–2017 (FishStatJ) (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en).
Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Trade Module; see Templates 45-47 in the WAPI prototype for examples (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Includes all aquatic commodities recorded in the data source. Nei = not elsewhere included. Product less than 0.05 percent of the total may not be labeled.
42
352 754
45 006
30 063
5 642
2 928
2 111
1 965
1 807
1 733
1 704
6 834
1. Shrimps and prawns, other than coldwater, even smoked, frozen
2. Tilapia fillets, fresh or chilled
3. Rock lobsters (Jasus spp.), meat or tails, frozen
4. Rock lobster and other sea crawfish (Palinurus, Panulirus, Jasus), whole, frozen
5. Shrimps, prawns live, for breeding and other purposes
6. Sea-cucumber, live, fresh or chilled
7. Miscellaneous molluscs, other than live, fresh or chilled, nei
8. Sea-cucumber, other than live, fresh or chilled
9. Sea-cucumber, prepared or preserved
10. Tilapia fillets, frozen
Other species
tho
usa
nd
USD
Honduras' top-10 fish export products (2017; in terms of value)
77.9%
9.9%
6.6%
1.2%0.6% 0.5%
1.5%
Fish import
43
Honduras (2000–2017): USD 23 million of aquatic products import in 2017; the 2.01 percent annual growth rate (2000–2017) was much lower than that of Central America.
Data source: FAO. 2019. Fishery and Aquaculture Statistics. Global fisheries commodities production and trade 1976–2017 (FishStatJ) (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Note: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Trade Module; see Templates 45-47 in the WAPI prototype for examples (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Includes all aquatic commodities recorded in the data source.
44
Honduras, 23 , 2.01
Central America, 1 406 , 11.26
- 20
- 10
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
0 1 10 100 1 000 10 000 100 000
An
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20
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017
(%)
Aquatic products import value in 2017 (million USD)
Status and trends of aquatic products import (2000-2017)
African countries Countries in the Americas Asian countries European countries Oceania countries
Bubble: population
Honduras (2000 versus 2017): Aquatic commodities import increased from USD 16 million in 2000 to USD 23 million in 2017 with a significant change in the species composition.
Data source: FAO. 2019. Fishery and Aquaculture Statistics. Global fisheries commodities production and trade 1976–2017 (FishStatJ) (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en).
Note: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Trade Module; see Templates 45-47 in the WAPI prototype for examples (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Includes all aquatic commodities recorded in the data source. Species groups less than 0.05 percent of the total value not labelled in the charts.
45
Finfish83.4%
Shellfish16.5%
Marine fishes54.8%
Freshwater fishes25.2%
Diadromous fishes3.4%
Crustaceans11.9%
Molluscs4.7%
Aquatic plants0.1%
Honduras (2017)
Aquatic products
import value: 23 006
thousand USD
Finfish27.4%
Shellfish72.5%
Marine fishes26.9%
Freshwater fishes0.3%
Diadromous fishes0.3%
Crustaceans71.5%
Molluscs1.0%
Honduras (2000)
Aquatic products
import value: 16 395
thousand USD
Honduras (2017): The USD 23 million aquatic commodities import in 2017 was composed of primarily 83.4 percent finfish and16.5 percent shellfish; the species composition was similar to Central American’s yet less diverse than the world pattern.
Data source: FAO. 2019. Fishery and Aquaculture Statistics. Global fisheries commodities production and trade 1976–2017 (FishStatJ) (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en).
Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Trade Module; see Templates 45-47 in the WAPI prototype for examples (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Includes all aquatic commodities recorded in the data source. Species groups less than 0.05 percent of the total value not labelled in the charts.
46
Finfish66.9%
Shellfish31.3%
Others1.8%
Marine fishes45.0%
Freshwater fishes3.0%
Diadromous fishes18.9%
Crustaceans21.5%
Molluscs9.8%
Miscellaneous aquatic animals
0.7%
Miscellaneous aquatic animal
products0.1%
Aquatic plants1.0%
World (2017)
Aquatic products
import value: 148 605 591
thousand USD
Finfish83.4%
Shellfish16.5%
Marine fishes54.8%
Freshwater fishes25.2%
Diadromous fishes3.4%
Crustaceans11.9%
Molluscs4.7%
Aquatic plants0.1%
Honduras (2017)
Aquatic products
import value: 23 006
thousand USD
Finfish79.0%
Shellfish19.7%
Others1.3%
Marine fishes45.8%
Freshwater fishes21.5%
Diadromous fishes11.7%
Crustaceans14.2%
Molluscs5.5%
Miscellaneous aquatic animals
0.1%
Aquatic plants1.3%
Central America (2017)
Aquatic products
import value: 1 405 957
thousand USD
Honduras (2017): Marine fishes not identified, herrings/sardines/anchovies and tilapias were the top 3 species groups in the country’s aquatic products import.
Honduras' aquatic products import in 2017Top 10 import species groups in terms of quantity Top 10 import species groups in terms of value
ISSCAAP groupsProduct weight
(tonnes)
Share of Honduras'
total import of aquatic
products (%)
Share of world
import of the same species
group (%)
ISSCAAP groupsCIF value
(USD 1 000)
Share of Honduras'
total import of aquatic
products (%)
Share of world
import of the same species
group (%)
1. Marine fishes not identified 4 864 38.52 0.06 1. Marine fishes not identified 5 653 24.57 0.03
2. Herrings, sardines, anchovies 3 785 29.98 0.12 2. Herrings, sardines, anchovies 5 329 23.16 0.12
3. Tilapias and other cichlids 1 129 8.94 0.22 3. Tilapias and other cichlids 3 827 16.63 0.23
4. Shrimps, prawns 844 6.68 0.03 4. Shrimps, prawns 2 619 11.38 0.01
5. Miscellaneous freshwater fishes 799 6.33 0.07 5. Miscellaneous freshwater fishes 1 964 8.54 0.06
6. Tunas, bonitos, billfishes 790 6.26 0.02 6. Tunas, bonitos, billfishes 1 594 6.93 0.01
7. Squids, cuttlefishes, octopuses 245 1.94 0.01 7. Salmons, trouts, smelts 768 3.34 0.00
8. Salmons, trouts, smelts 67 0.53 0.00 8. Squids, cuttlefishes, octopuses 695 3.02 0.01
9. Mussels 49 0.39 0.01 9. Mussels 343 1.49 0.04
10. Miscellaneous marine crustaceans 21 0.17 0.01 10. Crabs, sea-spiders 80 0.35 0.00
Others 34 0.27 Others 134 0.58
Aquatic products 12 627 100.00 0.03 Aquatic products 23 006 100.00 0.01
Data source: FAO. 2019. Fishery and Aquaculture Statistics. Global fisheries commodities production and trade 1976–2017 (FishStatJ) (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en).
Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Trade Module; see Templates 45-47 in the WAPI prototype for examples (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Includes all aquatic commodities recorded in the data source. CIF = Cost, insurance and freight; ISSCAAP = International Standard Statistical Classification of Aquatic Animals and Plants.
47
Honduras (2017): Top 10 commodities in fish import (in terms of quantity).
Data source: FAO. 2019. Fishery and Aquaculture Statistics. Global fisheries commodities production and trade 1976–2017 (FishStatJ) (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Trade Module; see Templates 45-47 in the WAPI prototype for examples (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Includes all aquatic commodities recorded in the data source. The acronym nei refers to not elsewhere included. Share less than 0.05 percent may not be labeled.
48
3 749
3 418
1 154
714
669
581
433
421
275
196
1 017
1. Sardines, sardinellas, brisling or sprats, prep. or pres., not minced, nei
2. Fishmeals, nei
3. Fish body oils, nei
4. Catfish fillets, frozen
5. Tunas prepared or preserved, not minced, nei
6. Shrimps, prawns live, for breeding and other purposes
7. Tilapia fillets, fresh or chilled
8. Tilapia fillets, frozen
9. Tilapias, fresh or chilled
10. Fish live, nei
Other species
ton
nes
Honduras' top-10 fish import products (2017; in terms of quantity)
29.7%
27.1%9.1%
5.7%
5.3%
4.6%
3.4%
3.3%2.2% 1.6%
8.1%
Honduras (2017): Top 10 commodities in fish import (in terms of value).
Data source: FAO. 2019. Fishery and Aquaculture Statistics. Global fisheries commodities production and trade 1976–2017 (FishStatJ) (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Fish Trade Module; see Templates 45-47 in the WAPI Prototype for examples (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Includes all aquatic commodities recorded in the data source. Nei = not elsewhere included. Share less than 0.05 percent may not be labeled.
49
5 266
3 709
1 933
1 576
1 512
1 424
1 144
1 033
847
555
4 007
1. Sardines, sardinellas, brisling or sprats, prep. or pres., not minced, nei
2. Fishmeals, nei
3. Tilapia fillets, fresh or chilled
4. Catfish fillets, frozen
5. Fish body oils, nei
6. Tilapia fillets, frozen
7. Tunas prepared or preserved, not minced, nei
8. Shrimps, prawns live, for breeding and other purposes
9. Shrimps and prawns, live, fresh or chilled, nei
10. Shrimps and prawns, other than coldwater, even smoked, frozen
Other species
tho
usa
nd
USD
Honduras' top-10 fish import products (2017; in terms of value)
22.9%
16.1%
8.4%6.9%6.6%
6.2%
5.0%
4.5%
3.7%
2.4%
17.4%
Total fishery production
50
Honduras (1950–2017): Total fishery production increased from 500 tonnes to 72 100 tonnes; rapid aquaculture growth together with declined capture fisheries production since the early 2000s.
Data source: FAO Global Fishery and Aquaculture Production Statistics v2019.1.0, published through FishStatJ (March 2019; www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Total Fishery Production Module; see Figure 5.1 in the FAO WAPI Aquaculture Production Module (WAPI-AQPRN v.2018.1) for a similar example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Production covers all species measured in tonnage.
51
1950, 500 1960, 1 700 1970, 5 000 1980, 6 636
1990, 19 541 2000, 27 968
2010, 39 584
2017, 72 100
0
10 000
20 000
30 000
40 000
50 000
60 000
70 000
80 000
90 000
195
01
951
195
21
953
195
41
955
195
61
957
195
81
959
196
01
961
196
21
963
196
41
965
196
61
967
196
81
969
197
01
971
197
21
973
197
41
975
197
61
977
197
81
979
198
01
981
198
21
983
198
41
985
198
61
987
198
81
989
199
01
991
199
21
993
199
41
995
199
61
997
199
81
999
200
02
001
200
22
003
200
42
005
200
62
007
200
82
009
201
02
011
201
22
013
201
42
015
201
62
017
Live
wei
ght
(to
nn
es)
Status and trend of aquaculutre and fisheries production in Honduras (1950-2017)
Capture (Honduras) Aquaculture (Honduras) Total (Honduras)
Honduras (2000 versus 2017): Total fishery production increased from 27 968 tonnes in 2000 to 72 100 tonnes in 2017; the share of freshwater fishes increased from 7 percent to 41.7 percent, whereas the share of marine fishes decreased from 21.4 percent to 2.6 percent.
Data source: FAO Global Fishery and Aquaculture Production Statistics v2019.1.0, published through FishStatJ (March 2019; www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Total Fishery Production Module; see Figure 1.5 in the FAO WAPI Aquaculture Production Module (WAPI-AQPRN v.2018.1) for a similar example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Production covers all species measured in tonnage. Species accounting for less than 0.05 percent of total production not labelled in the charts.
52
Finfish44.4%
Shellfish55.3%
Marine fishes2.6%
Freshwater fishes41.7%
Crustaceans54.2%
Molluscs1.1%
Miscellaneous aquatic animals
0.3%
Honduras (2017)
Total fishery production
(2017):72 100tonnes
Finfish28.4%
Shellfish71.5%
Marine fishes21.4%
Freshwater fishes7.0%
Crustaceans48.1%
Molluscs23.4%
Miscellaneous aquatic animals
0.1%
Honduras (2000)
Total fishery production
(2000):27 968tonnes
Honduras (2017): Finfish (primarily freshwater fishes) accounted for 44.4 percent of total fishery production; shellfish (primarily crustaceans) accounted for 55.3 percent; the species composition was significantly different from that of Central America and the world pattern.
Data source: FAO Global Fishery and Aquaculture Production Statistics v2019.1.0, published through FishStatJ (March 2019; www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Total Fishery Production Module; see Figure 1.5 in the FAO WAPI Aquaculture Production Module (WAPI-AQPRN v.2018.1) for a similar example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Production covers all species measured in tonnage. Species accounting for less than 0.05 percent of total production not labelled in the charts.
53
Finfish64.4%
Shellfish19.0%
Other species16.7%
Freshwater fishes26.9%
Diadromous fishes3.7%
Crustaceans7.4%
Molluscs11.5%
Miscellaneous aquatic animals
0.7%
Aquatic plants16.0%
World (2017)
Total fishery production
(2017):205 580 364
tonnes
Finfish44.4%
Shellfish55.3%
Marine fishes2.6%
Freshwater fishes41.7%
Crustaceans54.2%
Molluscs1.1%
Miscellaneous aquatic animals
0.3%
Honduras (2017)
Total fishery production
(2017):72 100tonnes
Finfish72.6%
Shellfish24.6%
Other species
2.8%
Marine fishes59.7%
Freshwater fishes12.0%
Diadromous fishes0.9%
Crustaceans17.1%
Molluscs7.5%
Miscellaneous aquatic animals
2.4%
Aquatic plants0.4%
Central America (2017)
Total fishery production
(2017):2 441 782
tonnes
Capture fisheries production
54
Honduras (2000–2017): Capture fisheries production declined from 17 915 tonnes to 10 600 tonnes; the country’s capture fisheries production in 2017 was the lowest in Central America.
Data source: FAO Global Fishery and Aquaculture Production Statistics v2019.1.0, published through FishStatJ (March 2019; www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Capture Fisheries Production Module; see Figure 3.3 in the FAO WAPI Aquaculture Production Module (WAPI-AQPRN v.2018.1) for a similar example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Production covers all species measured in tonnage.
55
30 322 35 163 9 590
39 203 17 915
1 349 763
22 519
227 596
120 529
14 750 51 280
16 694 10 600
1 637 381
50 926 143 673
0
200 000
400 000
600 000
800 000
1 000 000
1 200 000
1 400 000
1 600 000
1 800 000
Belize Costa Rica El Salvador Guatemala Honduras Mexico Nicaragua Panama
Live
wei
ght
(to
nn
es)
Capture fisheries production in Honduras and other countries in Central America
2000 2017
Honduras (2000 versus 2017): Capture fisheries production declined from 17 915 tonnes in 2000 to 10 600 tonnes in 2017 with marine capture accounting for nearly its entire capture fisheries production.
Data source: FAO Global Fishery and Aquaculture Production Statistics v2019.1.0, published through FishStatJ (March 2019; www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Capture Fisheries Production Module; see Figure 1.5 in the FAO WAPI Aquaculture Production Module (WAPI-AQPRN v.2018.1) for a similar example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Production covers all species measured in tonnage. Marine areas including coastal areas. Share less than 0.05 percent may not be labeled.
56
Marine areas99.1%
Inland waters0.9%
Marine fishes17.9%
Crustaceans71.6%
Molluscs7.6%
Miscellaneous aquatic animals
1.9%
Freshwater fishes0.9%
Honduras (2017)
Capture production
(2017): 10 600tonnes
Marine areas99.7%
Inland waters0.3% Marine fishes
33.4%
Crustaceans29.6%
Molluscs36.6%
Miscellaneous aquatic animals
0.1%
Freshwater fishes0.3%
Honduras (2000)
Capture production
(2000): 17 915tonnes
Honduras (2017): Inland fisheries accounted for 0.9 percent of the country’s capture fisheries production in 2017; the share was much lower than the Central America and world averages.
Marine areas87.3%
Inland waters12.7%
Diadromous fishes1.6%
Marine fishes70.8%
Crustaceans6.7%
Molluscs6.4%
Aquatic plants1.2%
Freshwater fishes11.3%
World (2017)
Capture production
(2017): 93 633 741
tonnes
Data source: FAO Global Fishery and Aquaculture Production Statistics v2019.1.0, published through FishStatJ (March 2019; www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Capture Fisheries Production Module; see Figure 1.5 in the FAO WAPI Aquaculture Production Module (WAPI-AQPRN v.2018.1) for a similar example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Production covers all species measured in tonnage. Marine areas including coastal areas. Share less than 0.05 percent may not be labeled.
57
Marine areas99.1%
Inland waters0.9%
Marine fishes17.9%
Crustaceans71.6%
Molluscs7.6%
Miscellaneous aquatic animals
1.9%
Freshwater fishes0.9%
Honduras (2017)
Capture production
(2017): 10 600tonnes
Marine areas91.6%
Inland waters8.4%
Diadromous fishes0.6%
Marine fishes70.8%
Crustaceans8.7%
Molluscs8.2%
Miscellaneous aquatic animals
2.9%
Aquatic plants0.4%
Crustaceans0.2%
Freshwater fishes8.2%
Central America (2017)
Capture production
(2017): 2 045 833
tonnes
Honduras (2000 versus 2017): Crustaceans accounted for 71.6 percent of capture production in 2017, followed by marine fishes (17.9 percent) and molluscs (7.6 percent); the share of crustaceans increased between 2000 and 2017; whereas that of marine fishes declined.
Data source: FAO Global Fishery and Aquaculture Production Statistics v2019.1.0, published through FishStatJ (March 2019; www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Capture Fisheries Production Module; see Figure 1.5 in the FAO WAPI Aquaculture Production Module (WAPI-AQPRN v.2018.1) for a similar example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Production covers all species measured in tonnage. Share less than 0.05 percent may not be labeled.
58
Finfish18.9%
Shellfish79.2%
Other species
1.9%
Marine fishes17.9% Freshwater
fishes0.9%
Crustaceans71.6%
Molluscs7.6%
Miscellaneous aquatic animals
1.9%
Honduras (2017)
Capture production
(2017): 10 600tonnes
Finfish33.7%
Shellfish66.1%
Other species
0.1%
Marine fishes33.4%
Freshwater fishes0.3%
Crustaceans29.6%
Molluscs36.6%
Miscellaneous aquatic animals
0.1%
Honduras (2000)
Capture production
(2000): 17 915tonnes
Honduras (2017): Capture fisheries production in 2017 was composed of 18.9 percent finfish (primarily marine fishes) and 79.2 percent shellfish (primarily crustaceans); the species composition was significantly different from that of Central America and the world pattern.
Finfish84.3%
Shellfish14.0%
Other species
1.7%
Marine fishes70.9%
Freshwater fishes11.3%
Diadromous fishes2.1%
Crustaceans7.3%
Molluscs6.8%
Aquatic plants1.2%
World (2017)
Capture production
(2017): 93 633 741
tonnes
Data source: FAO Global Fishery and Aquaculture Production Statistics v2019.1.0, published through FishStatJ (March 2019; www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Capture Fisheries Production Module; see Figure 1.5 in the FAO WAPI Aquaculture Production Module (WAPI-AQPRN v.2018.1) for a similar example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Production covers all species measured in tonnage. Share less than 0.05 percent may not be labeled.
59
Finfish79.6%
Shellfish17.1%
Other species
3.3%
Marine fishes70.8%
Freshwater fishes8.2%
Diadromous fishes0.6%
Crustaceans8.9%
Molluscs8.2%
Miscellaneous aquatic animals
2.9%
Aquatic plants0.4%
Central America (2017)
Capture production
(2017): 2045833 tonnes
Finfish18.9%
Shellfish79.2%
Other species
1.9%
Marine fishes17.9%
Freshwater fishes0.9%
Crustaceans71.6%
Molluscs7.6%
Miscellaneous aquatic animals
1.9%
Honduras (2017)
Capture production
(2017): 10 600tonnes
Honduras (2017): Top 10 ISSCAAP groups in capture fisheries production in terms of quantity.
Data source: FAO Global Fishery and Aquaculture Production Statistics v2019.1.0, published through FishStatJ (March 2019; www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Capture Fisheries Production Module; see Figure 1.2 in the FAO WAPI Aquaculture Production Module (WAPI-AQPRN v.2018.1) for a similar example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). ISSCAAP = International Standard Statistical Classification of Aquatic Animals and Plants; more information about ISSCAAP groups can be found at www.fao.org/tempref/FI/DOCUMENT/cwp/handbook/annex/AnnexS2listISSCAAP2000.pdf. Share less than 0.05 percent may not be labeled.
60
6 101
1 900
1 450
800
100
100
100
39
10
1. Lobsters, spiny-rock lobsters
2. Marine fishes not identified
3. Shrimps, prawns
4. Abalones, winkles, conchs
5. Miscellaneous aquatic invertebrates
6. Miscellaneous freshwater fishes
7. Sea-urchins and other echinoderms
8. Crabs, sea-spiders
9. Miscellaneous marine molluscs
ton
nes
Top 10 ISSCAAP groups in Honduras' capture fisheries production, 2017
57.6%17.9%
13.7%
7.5%0.9%
0.9%0.9% 0.4%
0.1%
Honduras (2017): Top10 ASFIS species items in capture fisheries production in terms of quantity.
Data source: FAO Global Fishery and Aquaculture Production Statistics v2019.1.0, published through FishStatJ (March 2019; www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Capture Fisheries Production Module; see Figure 1.2 in the FAO WAPI Aquaculture Production Module (WAPI-AQPRN v.2018.1) for a similar example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). ASFIS = Aquatic Sciences and Fisheries Information System; more information about ASFIS species items can be found at www.fao.org/fishery/collection/asfis/en. Nei = not elsewhere included. Share less than 0.05 percent may not be labeled.
61
6 100
1 900
1 450
800
100
100
100
39
10
1
1. Caribbean spiny lobster
2. Marine fishes nei
3. Penaeus shrimps nei
4. Stromboid conchs nei
5. Freshwater fishes nei
6. Jellyfishes nei
7. Sea cucumbers nei
8. Marine crabs nei
9. Marine molluscs nei
10. Tropical spiny lobsters nei
ton
nes
Top 10 ASFIS species items in Honduras' capture fisheries production, 2017
57.5%17.9%
13.7%
7.5%0.9%
0.9% 0.9% 0.4%
0.1%
Aquaculture production
62
Honduras (2000–2017): Aquaculture production tonnage grew 11.2 percent a year during 2000–2017; the growth rate was higher than that of Central America.
Data source: FAO Global Fishery and Aquaculture Production Statistics v2019.1.0, published through FishStatJ (March 2019; www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Aquaculture Production Module (WAPI-AQPRN); see Figure 2.1 in WAPI-AQPRN v.2018.1 for a similar example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Production covers all species measured in tonnage.
63
Honduras, 61 500 , 11.2
Central America, 395 950 , 9.2
- 20
- 10
0
10
20
30
40
50
0 1 10 100 1 000 10 000 100 000 1 000 000 10 000 000 100 000 000
An
nu
al g
row
th r
ate
of
aqu
acu
ltu
re p
rod
uct
ion
qu
anti
ty
fro
m 2
000
to 2
017
(%)
Aquaculture production in 2017 (tonnes)
Status and trend of aquaculture growth in Honduras from a global perspective (2000-2017)
African countries Countries in the Americas Asian countries European countries Oceania countries
Bubble size: population
Honduras (2000 versus 2017): The 2nd largest fish farming country in Central America (next to Mexico) with its aquaculture production tonnage increased from 10 053 tonnes in 2000 to 61 500 tonnes in 2017.
Data source: FAO Global Fishery and Aquaculture Production Statistics v2019.1.0, published through FishStatJ (March 2019; www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Aquaculture Production Module (WAPI-AQPRN); see Figure 3.3 in WAPI-AQPRN v.2018.1 for a similar example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Production covers all species measured in tonnage.
64
3 630 9 708
261 3 963 10 053
53 918
5 435 1 779 1 163
20 820 8 000
26 360
61 500
243 307
24 899 9 900
0
50 000
100 000
150 000
200 000
250 000
300 000
Belize Costa Rica El Salvador Guatemala Honduras Mexico Nicaragua Panama
Live
wei
ght
(to
nn
es)
Aquaculture production in Honduras and other countries in Central America
2000 2017
Honduras (2000–2017): Aquaculture’s share in total fishery production tonnage increased from 35.9 percent in 2000 to 85.3 percent in 2017.
Data source: FAO Global Fishery and Aquaculture Production Statistics v2019.1.0, published through FishStatJ (March 2019; www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Note: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Aquaculture Production Module (WAPI-AQPRN); see Figure 5.1 in WAPI-AQPRN v.2018.1 for a similar example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Production covers all species measured in tonnage.
65
10
1317
2427
49
55 55
47
29 28
50 52 53
62
55 53
62
18 22
16 17 18 21 23
17 14 12 12 11 12 12
9 11 11 11
35.9 37.5
51.857.6
60.6
70.0 71.176.7 76.9
69.9 69.5
81.8 81.1 81.8
87.783.7 83.4 85.3
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Honduras: aquaculture's share in total fishery production
Aquaculture production (thousand tonnes) Capture fisheries production (thousand tonnes)
Share of aquaculture in total fish production (%)
Honduras (2000 versus 2017): Aquaculture primarily comprised freshwater fish farming in inland waters and crustacean farming in marine/coastal areas; the share of inland aquaculture increased between 2000 and 2017.
Data source: FAO Global Fishery and Aquaculture Production Statistics v2019.1.0, published through FishStatJ (March 2019; www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Aquaculture Production Module (WAPI-AQPRN); see Figure 1.5 in WAPI-AQPRN v.2018.1 for a similar example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Production covers all species measured in tonnage. Species group less than 0.05 percent of total production may not be labelled.
66
Marine areas81.1%
Inland waters18.9%
Crustaceans81.1%
Freshwater fishes18.9%
Honduras (2000)
Aquaculture production
(2000):10 053tonnes
Marine areas51.2%
Inland waters48.8%
Crustaceans51.2%
Freshwater fishes48.8%
Honduras (2017)
Aquaculture production
(2017): 61 500 tonnes
Honduras (2017): Aquaculture production tonnage in 2017 split almost evenly between inland aquaculture of freshwater fishes and marine aquaculture of crustaceans; the species composition in both inland and marine aquaculture was much less diversified than that of Central America and the world pattern.
Marine areas56%
Inland waters
44%
Diadromous fishes4.0%
Marine fishes2.5%
Crustaceans4.7%
Molluscs15.3%
Aquatic plants28.4%
Crustaceans2.8%
Diadromous fishes1.1%
World (2017)
Aquaculture production
(2017): 111 946 623
tonnes
Data source: FAO Global Fishery and Aquaculture Production Statistics v2019.1.0, published through FishStatJ (March 2019; www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Aquaculture Production Module (WAPI-AQPRN); see Figure 1.5 in WAPI-AQPRN v.2018.1 for a similar example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Production covers all species measured in tonnage. Species group less than 0.05 percent of total production may not be labelled.
67
Marine areas65.8%
Inland waters34.2%
Marine fishes2.3%
Crustaceans59.5%
Molluscs4.0%
Miscellaneous aquatic animals
0.1%
Diadromous fishes2.7%
Freshwater fishes31.5%
Central America (2017)
Aquaculture production
(2017): 395 950 tonnes
Marine areas51.2%
Inland waters48.8%
Crustaceans51.2%
Freshwater fishes48.8%
Honduras (2017)
Aquaculture production
(2017): 61 500 tonnes
Honduras (2000 versus 2017): Aquaculture production was composed of only freshwater fishes and crustaceans; the share of freshwater fishes increased from 18.9 percent to 48.8 percent between 2000 and 2017.
Data source: FAO Global Fishery and Aquaculture Production Statistics v2019.1.0, published through FishStatJ (March 2019; www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Aquaculture Production Module (WAPI-AQPRN); see Figure 1.5 in WAPI-AQPRN v.2018.1 for a similar example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Production covers all species measured in tonnage. Species group less than 0.05 percent of total production may not be labelled.
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Finfish18.9%
Shellfish81.1%
Freshwater fishes18.9%
Crustaceans81.1%
Honduras (2000)
Aquaculture production
(2000):10 153tonnes
Finfish48.8%
Shellfish51.2%
Freshwater fishes48.8%
Crustaceans51.2%
Honduras (2017)
Aquaculture production
(2017): 61 500 tonnes
Honduras (2017): Less species diversified aquaculture in Honduras compared to Central America and the world.
Finfish47.7%
Shellfish23.1%
Other species29.2%
Marine fishes2.8%
Freshwater fishes39.9%
Diadromous fishes5.0%
Crustaceans7.5%
Molluscs15.5%
Miscellaneous aquatic animals
0.8%
Aquatic plants28.4%
World (2017)
Aquaculture production
(2017): 111 946 623
tonnes
Data source: FAO Global Fishery and Aquaculture Production Statistics v2019.1.0, published through FishStatJ (March 2019; www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Aquaculture Production Module (WAPI-AQPRN); see Figure 1.5 in WAPI-AQPRN v.2018.1 for a similar example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Production covers all species measured in tonnage. Species group less than 0.05 percent of total production may not be labelled.
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Finfish36.5%
Shellfish63.5%
Other species
0.1%
Marine fishes2.3%
Freshwater fishes31.5%
Diadromous fishes2.7%
Crustaceans59.5%
Molluscs4.0%
Miscellaneous aquatic animals
0.1%
Central America (2017)
Aquaculture production
(2017): 395 950 tonnes
Finfish48.8%
Shellfish51.2%
Freshwater fishes48.8%
Crustaceans51.2%
Honduras (2017)
Aquaculture production
(2017): 61 500 tonnes
Honduras (2017): Aquaculture production in 2017 contributed by only two species.
Data source: FAO Global Fishery and Aquaculture Production Statistics v2019.1.0, published through FishStatJ (March 2019; www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/fishstatj/en). Notes: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Aquaculture Production Module (WAPI-AQPRN); see Figure 1.2 in WAPI-AQPRN v.2018.1 for a similar example (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en). Species item less than 1 percent of total production may not be labelled in the pie chart. ASFIS = Aquatic Sciences and Fisheries Information System; more information about ASFIS species items can be found at www.fao.org/fishery/collection/asfis/en. Nei = not elsewhere included.
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31 500
30 000
1. Whiteleg shrimp
2. Nile tilapia
ton
nes
Aquaculture production tonnage in Honduras by species, 2017
51%49%
173 250
81 300
1. Whiteleg shrimp
2. Nile tilapia
tho
usa
nd
USD
Aquaculture production value in Honduras by species, 2017
68%
32%
Outlook
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Honduras (2010–2050): Population is expected to reach 13.8 million in 2050 (5.5 million more than the 2010 level) with the share of urban population increased from 51.89 percent to 73.92 percent.
Data sources: United Nations World Population Prospects (2019 revision); United Nations World Urbanization Prospects (2018 revision). Note: Constructed by the FAO WAPI Population Module; see Template 1 in the WAPI prototype for examples (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en).
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50.12 50.04 49.99 49.97 49.9551.89 58.36 64.31 69.45 73.92
8.3
9.9
11.412.8
13.8
2010 2020 2030 2040 2050
Honduras
Percentage of females (%) Percentage of urban population (%) Total population (million)
Honduras (2018–2024): USD 2 482 per capita GDP in 2018 was much lower than the Central America average; its GDP per capita is expected to rise to USD 2 876 in 2024 (the 2.48 percent annual growth rate lower than Central America’s 3.41 percent growth).
Data sources: Calculated by total GDP from IMF World Economic Outlook Database (October 2019) divided by population from UN World Population Prospects (2019 Revision). Note: Constructed by the FAO WAPI GDP Module (including calculation of GDP indicators at the regional/global level); see Template 4 in the WAPI prototype for examples (www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/software/wapi/en).
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2 482 2 509 2 555 2 620 2 696 2 783 2 876
8 497 8 733 8 989 9 303 9 636 9 996 10 393
2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024
GDP per capita (current USD)
Honduras Central America
Honduras (2017–2030): Aquaculture growth potential from a demand-side perspective
• Given the 3.38 kg baseline per capita fish consumption, 38 698 tonnes of fish will be needed to satisfy the demand of the country’s 11.449 million populationin 2030, which is 6 828 tonnes higher than the 31 870 tonnes of baseline fish demand in 2017.
• Honduras’ aquaculture production increased from 52 436 tonnes in 2012 to 61 500 tonnes in 2017. Following the linear 5-year trend during 2012-2017,aquaculture production would reach 73 290 tonnes in 2030, which is 11 790 tonnes higher than the baseline level in 2017.
• The 11 790 tonnes of extra fish supply generated by the trend aquaculture growth, if directed to the domestic market, would be more than enough to coverthe 6 828 tonnes of extra fish demand driven by population growth.
• However, the 11 790 tonnes of trend aquaculture growth would be insufficient to cover the 99 693 tonnes of extra fish demand in 2030 driven by bothpopulation growth and an increase of Honduras’ per capita fish demand to the baseline level of Central America (i.e. 11.49 kg); and the shortage would be87 903 tonnes.
• As compared to its 3.2 percent annual growth during 2012–2017, aquaculture in Honduras would need to grow 7.7 percent during 2017–2030 in order togenerate enough fish supply to satisfy the fish demand growth driven by both population growth and higher per capita fish demand, given that all the fishsupply growth is directed to the domestic market.
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Honduras: Fish & seafood Baseline (2017)
Projection to 2030
Population growth onlyPopulation growth + higher per
capita fish demand
Year 2030
Year 2030
compared to
baseline
Year 2030
Year 2030
compared to
baseline
1. Per capita fish demand (kg/capita/year) 3.38 3.38 - 11.49 8.11
2. Population (thousand) 9 429 11 449 2 020 11 449 2 020
3. Total fish demand (tonnes) 31 870 38 698 6 828 131 563 99 693
4. Fish supply from aquaculture (tonnes) 61 500 73 290 11 790 73 290 11 790
5. Supply-demand gap (tonnes) 4 962 - 87 903Notes: Fish & seafood includes finfish, crustaceans, molluscs and miscellaneous aquatic animals. 1. The 2013 level of per capita fish consumption in Honduras (3.38 kg) and Central America (11.49 kg)
treated as the baseline and the higher benchmark, respectively. 2. Population data from UN World Population Prospects (2019 revision). 3. Equal to (1) x (2). 4. Aquaculture production in 2017 from FAO
Global Fishery and Aquaculture Production Statistics v2019.1.0, published through FishStatJ (March 2019). Aquaculture production in 2030 projected based on the 5-year linear trend of aquaculture
production during 2012-2017. 5. Equal to (4) - (3).
Honduras (2017): Aquaculture growth potential from a supply-side perspective
• Honduras' share in world aquaculture production in 2017(0.05 percent) is:
• Smaller than its share of world total land area(including inland water surface) (0.08 percent).
• Smaller than its share of world total renewable waterresources (0.17 percent).
• Smaller than its share in the world population (0.13percent).
• Honduras' share in world inland aquaculture productionin 2017 (0.06 percent) is greater than its share of worldtotal inland water surface area (0.03 percent).
• Honduras' share in world marine aquaculture productionin 2017 (0.05 percent) is smaller than its share of worldtotal coastline length (0.1 percent).
Honduras (2017)
Share of
world total
(%)
Total country area (excluding coastal waters)1 0.08
Surface area of inland waterbodies2 0.03
Coastline length3 0.10
Total renewable water resources1 0.17
Population4 0.13
Aquaculture production (all areas)5 0.05
Aquaculture production (inland waters)5 0.06
Aquaculture production (marine areas)5 0.05
Data sources: 1. FAO. 2016. AQUASTAT Main Database – Food and Agriculture
Organization of the United Nations (FAO). Website accessed on 16 May 2019.
2. FAOSTAT Land Cover database (updated June 2019; CCI_LC ). 3. The World
Factbook, Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), United States of America. Website
accessed on 20 May 2019. Coastline length of world equal to the sum of coastline
length of 265 countries and territories listed in the data source. 4. United Nations
World Population Prospects (2019 revision). 5. FAO Global Fishery and Aquaculture
Production Statistics v2019.1.0, published through FishStatJ (March 2019).
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A bird’s eye view of farm sites and farming systems
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Development of tilapia pond aquaculture near Las Marias, Cortes, Honduras (2002–2019)
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January 2019October 2002
June 2012
A large-scale tilapia hatchery with rows of nursing hapas installed in earthen ponds for fingerling production in southern Cortes, Honduras
January 2019
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Tilapia cage aquaculture in El Cajón Dam (around 250 floating cages)
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Tilapia aquaculture in El Cajón Dam: mostly HDPE cages (close to 20 meters in diameter) equipped with aerators
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A chain of tilapia cages in El Cajón Dam
Gulf of Fonseca: the major shrimp farming area in Honduras82
Marine shrimp farming in mangrove areas, Los Guatales (near the Gulf of Fonseca), July 2019
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