The Tuvaluans, Semi Saaga and Foe Taalava, were trolling off Fuafatu on Funafuti in February when their lines got tangled up in their propellor.
After failing to restart or get help via radio, the pair set off the personal locator beacon in their donated Grab Bag.
That sent a signal to search and rescue authorities in New Zealand who informed the Tuvaluan authorities who managed to pick the men up after 15 hours adrift.
The director general of the Pacific Community (SPC), Colin Tukuitonga, said the successful rescue was testament to the Tuvalu government embracing the Grab Bag initiative.
Each Grab Bag contains a personal locator beacon, strobe light, compact medical kit, a signalling mirror and whistle, a rescue laser and sea rescue streamer, a marine handheld VHF radio, a sea anchor, three manual inflatable lifejackets, a directional compass and two emergency thermal blankets.
“Tuvalu is the poster boy, because they have on a number of bags per small boat. They have exceeded themselves. We gave them EU money to buy 30 bags and they went off and bought 128 themselves.
“So we are really pleased with this,” Tukuitonga said.
Tukuitonga said small-scale fisheries were a lifeline for many Pacific Island communities and it was vital that safety at sea was observed.
The Grab Bags cost $1200 each but he said the price was cheap compared to the cost of mobilising an air search and rescue mission – and priceless in their ability to save lives.
“The facilitation role played by the Tuvalu Fisheries Department needs to be highlighted as they ensured a fair distribution of bags between islands and importantly provided training to the bag recipients on how to be safe at sea and efficiently use the Grab Bag items in case of an emergency,” SPC Fisheries Development adviser Michel Blanc said. - RNZI