As East Africa’s oceans change, coastal women build new livelihoods
[July 06, 2026] By
ALLAN OLINGO
MALINDI, Kenya (AP) — The unfinished restaurant is still little more
than concrete walls and wooden beams. As her daughter sweeps away the
last piles of sand, 54-year-old Nuru Mohammed directs women hanging
fishing nets to serve as décor. In a few days, the beachside restaurant
on Kenya’s Indian Ocean coast will open, offering another way to earn a
living.
“For us women, this is hope,” says Mohammed, who for most of her life
was one of the few fisherwomen in Malindi, a town northeast of the port
city of Mombasa. “It will help support many families that have depended
on the ocean for decades.”
Across East Africa’s coast, fisherfolk are increasingly turning to
tourism, ecosystem restoration and other conservation-based businesses,
reinventing their relationship with the sea as climate change,
overfishing and declining ocean health threaten their livelihoods.
In Kenya, women are turning restored mangrove forests into sources of
income through beekeeping and ecotourism. In Tanzania’s Zanzibar
archipelago, fishing communities are protecting coral reefs through
locally managed closures. In Mozambique, sea grass restoration is
creating jobs while reviving marine habitats. Together, these efforts
are redefining resilience, not as leaving the ocean behind, but as
restoring it while building enduring livelihoods.
“Communities that depend on the ocean are also its best stewards,” said
Andreane Martel, project director for a conservation program dubbed
ReSea. “When local people, especially women, lead conservation, they
protect biodiversity while creating more resilient and inclusive
livelihoods.”
Mohammed said she has lost boats to theft and now struggles to compete
with industrial trawlers. A nearby Chinese-owned fish processing
facility reflects the dramatic changes for the industry.
“I can’t compete with that kind of power or scale,” she says.

“It has been tough,” Mohammed says, looking toward the ocean. “I fought
to remain a fisherwoman. But I think it’s a fight I can no longer win.”
Ten kilometers (six miles) away, where the Sabaki River meets the Indian
Ocean, Beatrice Mwanyiro oversees a mangrove nursery and restaurant
built by ReSea, a 30-member women’s self-help group supported by the
Canadian government.
“We have to adapt to the changing times,” Mwanyiro says. “The number of
fish coming into the shallow waters are falling every year. Without
another source of income, we won’t be able to feed our families.”
Mangroves, coral reefs, sea grass meadows and nearshore fisheries
provide food, protect coastlines from storms and store vast amounts of
carbon. But those ecosystems are imperiled by warming oceans, pollution,
habitat loss and overfishing.
Mohamed Somo, a leader of fishermen in Lamu, a UNESCO heritage site,
says boats that used to come in with catches of up to 100 kilograms (220
pounds) of fish now often bring home less than 30 kilograms (66 pounds).
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An unfinished restaurant under construction by a women's group led
by Nuru Mohammed is seen in Sabaki, Malindi, Kenya, on June 15,
2026. (AP Photo/Allan Olingo)
 Kenyan law restricts trawlers to
waters at least 5 nautical miles (9 kilometers) offshore, but
fishers say some vessels routinely operate much closer. The
challenge extends beyond Kenya. Illegal, unreported and unregulated
fishing costs the global economy an estimated $23 billion annually
while threatening marine biodiversity and the food security of
billions who depend on fish as a primary source of protein,
according to the U.N. Food and Agricultural Organization.
“The trawlers fish offshore during the day, but at night they move
into the shallow waters where artisanal fishers work,” Somo says.
“By morning, there’s very little left for us.”
The growing pressure on coastal communities has pushed ocean
conservation higher on the political agenda as communities struggle
for survival and try to protect their ocean economies.
“Coastal communities are on the frontlines of climate change and
declining ocean health, but they are also among the strongest
drivers of resilience,” said Jerry Mang’ena, co-founder and
executive director of Action for Ocean, a Tanzania-based
organization that restores mangroves along its coastline.
“Supporting sustainable livelihoods, from aquaculture and
eco-tourism to ecosystem restoration, helps families adapt while
reducing pressure on the ocean. If we’re serious about protecting
our seas, we must invest in the people who have cared for them for
generations.”
At the recent Our Ocean Conference in Mombasa, conservation groups
urged African governments to ratify the Biodiversity Beyond National
Jurisdiction (BBNJ) Agreement, or “High Seas” treaty, a landmark
U.N. pact establishing marine protected areas in international
waters and fair sharing of marine resources. It entered into force
in January, and as of April had been signed by 145 countries and
ratified by 81.
The outcome of negotiations over additional ratifications of the
treaty could have a profound impact on the lives of fisher people
like Mohammed as they try to build futures that no longer depend
entirely on increasingly uncertain catches.
“The BBNJ Agreement gives African governments a historic opportunity
to protect the high seas and safeguard the future of our fisheries,”
said Aliou Ba, oceans campaign lead at Greenpeace Africa.
“But protecting the ocean also means confronting illegal, unreported
and unregulated fishing that is stripping African waters of marine
life and robbing coastal communities of food and income," he said.
"Governments cannot afford to delay.”
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