In a recent landmark achievement for Ghana’s Blue Economy, the Fisheries Commission and the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) have hosted a high-profile graduation ceremony at the Pilot Aquaculture Centre (PAC) in Tano-Odumase.
The event marked the successful completion of a six-month intensive training program under the Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) Aquaculture Farmer Field School. Thirty-eight fish farmers and eight facilitators emerged from the program not just as graduates, but as the frontline defense against the global threat of drug-resistant pathogens in the food chain.
“The initiative aimed to demonstrate that aquaculture production can be sustainably carried out without the use of antimicrobials through the application of improved farm management and biosecurity practices. This forms part of a broader national initiative that has trained over 360 farmers”
Fisheries Commission
As Ghana aggressively scales up its domestic fish production to reduce import dependency, the safety and export-readiness of its tilapia and catfish have become non-negotiable.
According to the Commission, proving that high-yield aquaculture can be achieved without the “crutch” of antimicrobials, safeguards Ghanaian fish products meeting the most stringent international sanitary standards, and clears the path for export development.
The core of the six-month program was a rigorous, hands-on “Experimental vs. Control” methodology, where participants did not merely study theory but managed two distinct pond systems.

The “experimental” pond was governed by strict Best Management Practices (BMPs) and high-level biosecurity, while the “control” pond followed conventional, chemical-dependent practices. The results were undeniable: the bio-secure ponds produced healthier fish, suffered significantly lower mortality rates, and delivered higher yields than those relying on traditional antimicrobial interventions.
The Commission revealed that this “Tano-Odumase model,” is now the blueprint for the industrialization of the aquaculture sector – replacing expensive and potentially harmful chemical inputs with precise management and biosecurity protocols. The farmers are seeing a direct reduction in operational costs and an increase in profit margins.
Scaling Success
The graduation of this latest cohort brings the total number of AMR-trained practitioners in Ghana to over 360. This scaling effort represents a significant evolution of a strategy that began in 2019 within the poultry sector and was formally extended to aquaculture in 2024.
In 2026, under the leadership of the Fish Health Unit, the program has reached a level of operational maturity where it can now be rolled out across all 16 regions. The Ministry of Fisheries and Aquaculture Development (MoFAD) views the Farmer Field School as an essential tool for Institutional Capacity Building.
For the government, training facilitators alongside farmers creates a self-sustaining ecosystem of expertise.
These graduates are now tasked with returning to their respective communities to act as “Bio-Security Ambassadors,” teaching their peers that the secret to a successful harvest lies in the quality of the water, the precision of the feed, and the integrity of the environment – not in a bottle of antibiotics.

The strategic importance of the AMR program was highlighted as extending far beyond the borders of the Ashanti Region. As Ghana prepares to dominate the regional fish market under the AfCFTA, the “bio-secure” label is becoming a major competitive advantage.
With international markets increasingly rejecting products with detectable antimicrobial residues, institutionalizing these practices is the Commission’s way of “future-proofing” the industry, ensuring that Ghanaian aquaculture products are never barred from high-value global markets due to safety concerns.
The ceremony at Tano-Odumase concluded with a formal presentation of certificates, attended by senior stakeholders from the FAO and the Fisheries Commission. These certificates are “licences to lead,” in a new era of responsible fisheries and they signal that the future of Ghanaian agriculture is smart, safe, and sustainable.
The era of chemical-dependent farming is being phased out, replaced by a sophisticated, management-led industrial revolution that begins in the ponds of Tano-Odumase.
With the graduation of the 2026 AMR cohort, the Fisheries Commission has successfully demonstrated that “green” and “growth” are not mutually exclusive. The Feed Ghana Programme is now anchored by a network of highly skilled farmers who understand that protecting the health of the consumer is the most effective way to protect the health of their business.
Under the current industrial mandate, aquaculture is no longer a subsistence activity – it is a high-tech, bio-secure industry capable of powering the nation’s economic recovery.

As these 38 new graduates return to their farms, they carry with them the “Tano-Odumase blueprint,” for success. The challenge now is for the Ministry to ensure that the infrastructure for biosecurity – from high-quality fingerlings to digital monitoring tools – is accessible to all.
If the success of the Pilot Aquaculture Centre is replicated across the nation, Ghana will not only achieve fish self-sufficiency but will become the African leader in sustainable, AMR-free aquaculture.
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