The WWF is run at a local level by the following offices...
A growing number of consumers, retailers, suppliers, and governing bodies are requiring seafood to be sustainable.
While this provides an important incentive for the fisheries sector to move towards sustainability, implementing solutions such as best practices, traceability and catch documentation pose many practical challenges - for large fishing industries and small-scale coastal fisheries alike.

© Jürgen Freund / WWF
In addition to the info-sharing and consensus-building outcomes of the biennial meetings, the CTFF is also an ongoing advocacy and communications platform, highlighting progress from CTFF members on delivering elements of the CTFF action plan, monitoring commitments, and providing updates and alerts on key CTFF advocacy points.
What has the CTFF achieved so far?
- Has expanded into a group of over 300 members across a range of sectors including fishing communities, associations, exporters, processors, retailers, scientists, technicians and government managers.
- Was catalytic in developing joint advocacy on bycatch Conservation Management Measures among a large spectrum of tuna exporters, buyers, retailers and fishing companies. Over ten key companies are now signing on and advocating for tougher measures on turtle bycatch mitigation in longline fisheries, leading to a noticeable shift in the debate to "how?" and not "why?".
- Has led to several new pilot projects/partnerships on the water related to fisheries improvement (e.g. bycatch best practices and traceability applications).
- Has cultivated specific policy papers - such as the Coral Triangle circle hook policy brief - which has been formally presented to several governments, demonstrably influencing policy and in some cases leading to new projects (trials) and budget allocation from fishing departments.
CONTACT
Keith Symington
Strategy Leader
WWF Coral Triangle Programme
email