Dr. Sumaila is a University Killam Professor at the University of British Columbia’s (UBC) Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries and UBC’s School of Public Policy and Global Affairs. Prof. Nils Chr. Stenseth from the University of Oslo (Norway) and the University of Agder (Norway) has also been awarded a 2023 Science Medal.
“This award is a reconfirmation of the importance of focus, hard work, determination and persistence. If you just keep pushing in a collaborative fashion, ultimately your community—and in some cases even the world—will notice,” says Dr. Sumaila. “I am particularly grateful for this award because it underscores the vital nature of an interdisciplinary approach to economics.”
Dr. Sumaila’s interest in the environment started early in life when his grandfather used to say that people should “walk as if the ground feels pain,” which Dr. Sumaila believes is a sophisticated interpretation of environmentalism. His specific interest in the ocean and fisheries was picked in Norway, where he received his Ph.D. (Economics) from the University of Bergen.
Prof. Sumaila is one of the world’s most innovative researchers on the future of the oceans. A Canada Research Chair (Tier I) in Interdisciplinary Ocean and Fisheries Economics, he is also Director of the Fisheries Economics Research Unit and co-Director of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC)-funded “Solving the Sustainability Challenges at the Food-Climate-Biodiversity Nexus” (Solving-FCB) Partnership. Among his other distinctions, Dr. Sumaila has won several prestigious awards, including the 2023 Tyler Prize for Environmental Achievement and the 2022 RSC Miroslaw Romanowski Medal for Scientific Work Relating to Environmental Problems; the 2021 SSHRC Impact Award, Partnership Category; and the 2017 Volvo Environment Prize. He was inducted into the Fellowship of the Royal Society of Canada in 2019 and named an AAAS Fellow and an Elliott Trudeau Foundation Fellow in 2023. He served on the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering and Mathematics (NASEM) Committee on Quantifying US Contribution to Ocean Plastic Pollution, and he is currently serving on another NASEM Committee on Assessing Equity in the Distribution of Fisheries Management Benefits. He was inducted into the Fellowship of the Royal Society of Canada in 2019 and was named a Hokkaido University Ambassador in 2016; a distinguished International Professor. at the National University of Malaysia; an International Scientific Advisory Board Member, the Beijer Institute; the Stockholm Resilience Centre and serves as Chair of the International Scientific Advisory Board of the World Bank Africa Centre of Excellence in Coastal Resilience. He is co-Editor in Chief of the Nature affiliated npj Ocean Sustainability journal, and serves on several journal editorial boards, including those of Science Advances, Environmental & Resource Economics, and Marine Policy.
His research integrates social, economic and fisheries sciences to build novel pathways towards sustainable fisheries. Focusing on bioeconomics, marine ecosystem valuation and the analysis of global issues such as fisheries subsidies, IUU (illegal, unreported and unregulated) fishing and the economics of high seas and deep seas fisheries, his work has challenged today’s approaches to marine governance, generating exciting new ways of thinking about our relationship to the marine biosphere. This includes his ‘fish bank’ concept for the high seas that has the potential to significantly advance ocean conservation on a global scale, and using “intergeneration discount rates” for natural resource projects.
“Dr. Sumaila’s works are making immense impacts towards securing ocean health and the wellbeing of human communities through research, education and engagement at the highest level. He is truly an inspiration for our students and colleagues at the University of British Columbia on many different fronts,” said Dr. William Cheung, professor and Director of the Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries. “The Albert l Grand Medal is another important and well-deserved recognition of Dr. Sumaila’s contributions to ocean sustainability.”
“Dr. Sumaila doesn’t just sit in his ivory tower thinking great thoughts. He directly impacts the realm he studies as well as making tangible impacts at the university,” said Dr. Allison Macfarlane, professor and Director of the School of Public Policy and Global Affairs. “He is working all the time towards a more equitable, just, and sustainable world. Rashid is a model for us all.”
Dr. Sumaila says he loves waking up each day thinking of how best to contribute to ensuring that we bequeath a healthy ocean teeming with life, to our children and grandchildren so they, too, can have the option to do the same. Thus, achieving what he calls Infinity Fish.
Dr. Sumaila will receive the Science Medal in the presence of His Serene Highness Prince Albert II of Monaco during a ceremony to be held at the Musée océanographique de Monaco on November 22, 2023.
Tags: Awards, FERU, Monaco, Rashid Sumaila, Solving FCB