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APPENDIX 3
Project Document No 3

A. PROJECT TITLE

Regional study project of the fishery resources of Lakes Idi Amin and Mobutu Sese Seko.

B. LENGTH OF PROJECT: 5 years

C. HEADQUARTERS

The project's main stations will be at Kasenyi for Lake Mobutu and at a site in Uganda still to be chosen for Lake Idi Amin. Support stations will be Vitshumbi for Lake Idi Amin (Zaire) and a site still to be chosen in Uganda.

D. OBJECTIVES

D1. Development objectives

D2. Immediate objectives

E. JUSTIFICATION OF THE REGIONAL PROJECT

It is believed that the fishery resources of Lake Idi Amin are already being exploited at maximum level and that a danger of overexploitation of stocks exists.

Although overexploitation has not yet been observed on Lake Mobutu, fisheries there are expanding rapidly, creating an urgent need for precise data on potential yield. The difference between the maximum (21,000 t/year) and the maximum (33,000 t/year) estimates is so great that this data is inadequate as a basis for a rational program of resource management. A scientific research project would be of great value to both lakes. The results would provide guidelines for future decisions concerning the development and organization of fishing activities.

F. STRATEGY AND BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE PROJECT

A project whose objective is to define water conditions as well as evaluate fish stocks and their movements cannot confine its activities to one part of the lake only. This study must be extended to both lakes in their entirety including their tributaries and shores.

Consequently, scientific research must be conducted in close collaboration with regional agencies. There must be permanent contact and teamwork collaboration as a group among all the institutions involved in this study.

For Lake Idi Amin, the institutions are the following:

For Lake Mobutu, the same institutions are concerned, with the exception of IZCN (Zaire) and the UNP and QUEENP (Uganda).

Periodic meetings of these national authorities for the purpose of discussing the organization and management of this study should be arranged within the framework of Regional Fisheries Project RAF/87/099.

Organizing the research outlined in this document should simply be considered a proposal; addressed to the Committee to be formed by the FAO project, for the reason that the mission is familiar with existing conditions in Zaire but not with those in Uganda.

The mission's proposals are the following:

  1. There should be a single project covering both lakes. This would reduce costs (the research boat alone represents a heavy investment) and has the advantage of creating a homogeneous team of experts and staff accustomed to working together. At the end of the first phase, the research boat and other mobile equipment can be transported to the second lake to be studied.

  2. It is our opinion that the project should be executed in two phases, the first at Lake Mobutu where the necessary infrastructures, offices, mechanics workshop, equipment storehouses, etc, created for the Lake Mobutu Project already exist, and the project can begin its activities immediately. The infrastructures and equipment mentioned will probably be integrated with other proposed for the fishery development project (if this project is funded).

  3. The project is expected to operate for 5 years. The first phase will last 3 years, the second, 2 years. The first six months of the first phase will be used for placing orders and fitting out the main project station at Kasenyi and the support station in Uganda. Taking the extensive area of the lake into account, research should be completed within 30 months. Six months before the end of the first phase, the equipment needed for the second phase at Lake Idi Amin should be ordered.

The Lake Idi Amin study should be completed within two years. The headquarters for this second phase of the project will be located in Uganda, and the support station will be established in Vitshumbi

4.   Scientific research will center around the following1:

4.1. Limnology

4.2. Study of the principal commercial species

This research will include:

1 “Fishery Management Study in the Queen Elizabeth National Park” by I. Dunn; April 1989, p.17

G. PROJECT RESOURCES

G1. Government resources

G2. External resources

Personnel and training

Administrative support personnel

Four secretarial positions are planned for the duration of the project.

Equipment

Regarding equipment, it should be taken into account that the mission is unfamiliar with the situation existing in Uganda. It is therefore possible that actual costs may be lower than those estimated here:

 Durable equipment (US $) 
  1Cheverton type research boat completely equipped, 100 hp diesel motor, sonar, radar, radiotelephone400,000
  4aluminium boats (for 2 main stations and 2 secondary stations)25,000
  240 hp outboard motors10,000
  425 hp outboard motors15,000
  1sonar6,000
  1sonograph5,000
  1soldering machine2,000
  2generators (1 for main station, 1 for secondary station)40,000
  2electric pumps (1 for main station, 1 for secondary station10,000
  4typewriters1,300
other supplies and equipment for both offices10,000
12radio-telephones6,000
  6airconditioners (4 for main station, 2 for secondary station)4,000
  2freezers (500 litre capacity) 1 for main station, 1 for secondary station8,000
  6scales (4 for main station, 2 for secondary station)5,000
  1hydraulic winch10,000
  2vehicles 4×4 (pick-ups) and spare parts50,000
  2Renault4 type vehicles and spare parts30,000
meteorology equipment3,000
  3computers (2 for main station, 1 for secondary station)5,000
equipment for limnological analysis (1 main station, 1 secondary station)8,000
laboratory equipment (1 main station, 1 secondary station)8,000
fishing equipment20,000
furnishings/equipment for 5 lodgings50,000
equipment for mechanical workshop and for minor boat repairs30,000
   
 Infrastructures (US $) 
   
  4offices, dimension: 400 m2 at US $ 100 per m240,000
10lodgings (4 headquarters × 2 headquarters; and 1 at each of 2 stations) 1,000 m2 at US $ 100 per m2100,000
  2fuel stations with 20,000 litre reservoirs headquarters40,000
  2fuel stations with 10,000 litre reservoirs (stations)25,000
  2equipment storehouses (headquarters) 200 m2 at US $ 80 per m216,000
  2equipment storehouses (stations) 140 m2 at US $ 80 per m211,000
  2mechanical workshops (1 per headquarters) 160 m2 at US $ 80 per m213,000
consumable inputs: fuel, oil, gasoline370,000

BUDGET FOR INTERNATIONAL CONTRIBUTION (in US $)

 Total19901991199219931994
 M/HUS $M/HUS $M/HUS $M/HUS $M/HUS $M/HUS $
Personnel            
Stock evaluation expert60 448 35012 89 67012  89 67012  89 67012  89 67012 89 670
Biostatistics expert60 448 35012  89 67012  89 67012  89 67012  89 67012 89 670
Consultants  8   96 000   3  36 000  1 12 000  3  36 000 1  12 000
SUB-TOTAL  992 700  179 340 215 340 191 340 215 340 191 340
Official travel  114 000   20 000  25 000   22 000  25 000   22 000
Administrative support    34 000    6 000    7 000    7 000    7 000    7 000
Consumable inputs  370 000   50 000  80 000   80 000   80 000   80 000
Durable equipment  767 300 667 300     100 000  
Infrastructures  245 000 122 000     123 000  
     60 000    15 000   30 000   15 000  
     44 000   10 000    8 000    8 000   10 000   8 000
SUB-TOTAL 1 634 300    875 300 135 000 147 000 360 000 117 000  
Miscellaneous (10% of total)  260 000  100 000  30 000   20 000 100 000  10 000
GRAND TOTAL 2 887 000    1 154 640   380 340 358 340 675 340 318 340

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