Dashboard: Women in the Blue Economy – GridInsight Solutions

Women in the Blue Economy

A situational analysis, key findings, and strategic recommendations on the role of women in the blue economy of East and Southern Africa.

$300B
Generated for Africa (2019)
49M
Jobs Supported in Africa
>70%
of Fish Processing Jobs Held by Women
Women working at a bustling coastal fish market in Africa.

Situational Analysis & Regional Trends

The blue economy, defined as the sustainable use of ocean and inland water resources, is a vital engine for Africa’s growth. Women are crucial contributors but often remain marginalized. They dominate fish processing and trade and are emerging as entrepreneurs in coastal tourism and renewable energy. However, they face structural barriers, including discriminatory norms and limited access to high-value assets like boats, licenses, and credit, risking their exclusion from the benefits of a growing blue economy.

Participation Rates

Small-Scale Fisheries
50%
Processing & Trade
70%

Action Plan (Research Objectives)

  • Map the blue economy sectors in ESA.
  • Assess women’s participation rates in employment and entrepreneurship.
  • Identify gender gaps, barriers, and climate risks affecting women.
  • Review enabling policies, investments, and gender-responsive laws.
  • Highlight best practices and scalable models through case studies.
  • Recommend targeted policies and programs for stakeholders.

Gender-Responsive Legal & Policy Frameworks

While continental strategies like the AU’s Agenda 2063 mention inclusive growth, gender is often treated as a cross-cutting issue without specific targets. Many national laws lack clauses to protect women’s rights, and their representation in management committees is minimal. However, promising examples like Malawi’s Fisheries Act (2020), which legally reserves seats for women, are emerging.

Infrastructure, Finance & Key Barriers

Women’s progress is limited by a lack of access to credit and essential infrastructure like cold storage, modern processing kits, and safe market spaces. The digital divide also restricts access to market information. Targeted investments in shared facilities (e.g., solar dryers, ice-making machines) and “blue-specific” micro-loans are proving to be effective investment opportunities.

Best Practices from the ESA Region

Solar panels set up for a community project.

Technology Adoption

Women’s cooperatives in Kenya and Ghana are using solar-powered dryers and aquaponics to add value and reduce spoilage.

A group of women in a cooperative meeting.

Cooperative Models

Groups that pool resources to buy equipment or form savings groups demonstrate strong collective agency and resilience.

A pristine coastline in a marine protected area.

Conservation Livelihoods

In Madagascar and South Africa, women are included in Marine Protected Area management, creating new income via eco-tourism.

A woman working with fish at a market.

Fisheries & Aquaculture

Current Status: Women are 30-40% of the workforce in capture fisheries (mostly shore-based) and 50-70% in post-harvest processing. They make up about a third of aquaculture workers in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Opportunity: Move up the value chain by leveraging technology like solar dryers and cold storage to reduce dependency on brokers and increase profits. There is also potential to formalize and expand their roles in aquaculture pond management and fingerling production.

70%

Post-Harvest Workforce

Women constitute up to 70% of the post-harvest fisheries workforce.

A woman selling crafts at a coastal tourist market.

Marine Trade & Coastal Tourism

Current Status: Women dominate local seafood trade, with some markets seeing up to 80% female vendors. In tourism, they run small guesthouses, craft businesses, and cultural tours.

Opportunity: Develop niche, high-value tourism products, such as the women-led dhow-riding cooperative in Zanzibar. Training in marketing, financial literacy, and eco-tourism can help scale their businesses from community-based to formal enterprises.

80%

Seafood Vendors

In some local markets, up to 80% of seafood vendors are women.

Renewable Energy & Blue Technology

Current Status: Women are early adopters of accessible technologies like solar pumps for aquaponics and solar dryers for fish preservation.

Opportunity: Scale successful pilot projects and provide training in digital literacy to help women access e-commerce platforms and market information, overcoming the digital gender gap. Promote women’s entry into technical roles in emerging sectors like marine renewable energy through targeted education.

A woman using a tablet device in a rural setting.

Institutionalize Gender in Policies

Adopt quotas for women in management bodies and mandate gender impact assessments for all blue economy projects.

Expand Access to Finance & Assets

Develop gender-sensitive financial products and invest in women-centric infrastructure like cold storage.

Build Capacity and Skills

Offer tailored training in technical skills (aquaculture, sustainable fishing) and entrepreneurial skills (financial literacy, marketing).

Promote Climate Resilience

Design adaptation programs that explicitly target coastal women by diversifying their livelihoods and securing tenure.

Leverage Digital Technologies

Implement programs to close the gender digital divide through training and promoting affordable internet access.

Invest in Gender-Disaggregated Data

Support continuous data collection to monitor women’s participation and inform evidence-based policymaking.