Reports
Future-ready Growth in APEC: Unlocking New Drivers and Fortifying Resilience
The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) is a regional economic forum established in 1989 to leverage the growing interdependence of the Asia-Pacific.
The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) is a regional economic forum established in 1989 to leverage the growing interdependence of the Asia-Pacific.
APEC ensures that goods, services, investment and people move easily across borders. Members facilitate this trade through faster customs procedures at borders; more favorable business climates behind the border; and aligning regulations and standards across the region.
APEC ensures that goods, services, investment and people move easily across borders. Members facilitate this trade through faster customs procedures at borders; more favorable business climates behind the border; and aligning regulations and standards across the region.
APEC works to help all residents of the Asia-Pacific participate in the growing economy.
APEC works to help all residents of the Asia-Pacific participate in the growing economy.
Capacity building projects play an important role in helping translate APEC's goals into reality.
Capacity building projects play an important role in helping translate APEC's goals into reality.

Reports
•December 2025
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Published Under
SOM Steering Committee on Economic and Technical Cooperation (SCE), Ocean and Fisheries Working Group (OFWG)
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Pages
20
Marine small pelagic fisheries play a vital role in supporting APEC developing economies by creating jobs, sustaining coastal livelihoods, and contributing to nutrition and food security. However, stock declines—driven by overfishing and climate change—highlight the need for stronger management measures. Although electronic fishing logbooks generate extensive data, these are rarely used for policymaking and mainly serve statistical reporting.
This project aims to develop a decision support system (DSS) that uses fisheries-dependent data collected directly from commercial activities, including fishing effort, catch volume, species composition, and basic biological information. Data sources include logbooks, observers, monitoring systems, interviews, and vessel surveys. Improving the use of digital fisheries data will help clarify stock status, reduce uncertainty, and strengthen responses to economic and food-security risks. By enhancing data quality and analytical capacity, the project supports efforts to combat IUU fishing, improve traceability, and inform sustainable small pelagic fisheries management across the APEC region.