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India’s Fisheries & Aquaculture

Kartavya Desk Staff

Source: TH

Subject: Economy

Context: World Fisheries Day 2025 highlighted India’s rapid rise in fisheries and aquaculture and the FAO’s call for renewed commitment to “India’s Blue Transformation”.

• The FAO representative noted that despite India becoming the world’s 2nd-largest aquaculture producer, sustainability gaps and ecosystem pressures require urgent policy strengthening.

About India’s Fisheries & Aquaculture:

Trends / Data:

Rapid Output Growth (1980s → 2023): India’s total aquatic production rose from 44 million tonnes (1980s) to 17.54 million tonnes (2022–23), reflecting a seven-fold expansion driven mainly by inland aquaculture.

India as Global Aquaculture Leader: According to FAO SOFIA 2024, India contributed 23 million tonnes of aquatic animals, becoming the world’s 2nd-largest aquaculture producer after China.

Shrimp & Marine Export Strength: Marine products exports increased 08%, from bn (Oct 2024) to bn (Oct 2025), driven by high-value shrimp aquaculture and better value-addition.

Inland Aquaculture Driving Growth: Between 2013–14 and 2024–25, total fish output doubled from 96 lakh tonnes to 195 lakh tonnes, with inland fisheries alone growing 140%, becoming India’s key production engine.

Sectoral Base & Livelihood Footprint: India sustains 30 million livelihoods, with 3,477 coastal fishing villages producing 72% of national output, showing high dependence on coastal ecosystem stability.

Opportunities For India:

Global Seafood Market Expansion: India’s competitive labour, strong shrimp sector, and GST cuts (12%→5% on key fish products) create a cost advantage for expanding presence in markets like the U.S., EU, and East Asia.

Blue Economy Potential Through EEZ Rules: New Sustainable Harnessing of EEZ Rules (2025) open deep-sea fishing opportunities for Fish Farmer Producer Organisations, unlocking underutilised high-value pelagic stocks.

Digital Governance for Traceability: Platforms like ReALCraft, NFDP and the National Traceability Framework can help India meet global compliance norms, improving export premiums and reducing rejection risks.

Climate-Resilient Aquaculture Models: FAO-supported projects in Andhra Pradesh demonstrate climate-resilient pond systems that reduce footprint, offering models for replication across other coastal States.

Women-Centric Growth Opportunities: Schemes under PMMSY provide 60% assistance to women, enabling their entry into value-addition, retail fish kiosks, and processing units—strengthening inclusive sectoral growth.

Initiatives Taken:

PM Matsya Sampada Yojana (PMMSY): With ₹20,312 crore outlay (2020–26), PMMSY created 730 cold storages, 26,348 transport facilities, 6,410 kiosks, boosting national logistics and reducing post-harvest loss.

Climate-Resilient Coastal Fishermen Villages: 100 existing coastal villages are being upgraded into Climate-Resilient CFVs, adding cyclone-resilient housing, early warning systems, and livelihood diversification support.

EEZ Sustainable Harnessing Rules, 2025: Rules provide priority access to cooperatives for deep-sea fishing, introduce a digital Access-Pass via ReALCraft, and ban destructive practices to protect marine biodiversity.

Marine Fisheries Census 2025: Using VyAS-NAV, BHARAT, SUTRA apps, the census geo-references 2 million households across 5,000 villages, creating real-time socio-economic datasets for targeted policy.

Fisheries Infrastructure Development (FIDF): FIDF (₹7,522 crore corpus) finances ports, cold chains and aquaculture parks; 178 projects worth ₹6,369 crore were approved by July 2025 with interest subvention support.

Challenges Associated:

Overfishing & Stock Decline: Intensive coastal fishing and juvenile catch deplete nearshore stocks, reducing availability of species like sardines and mackerel across Western and Eastern coasts.

Habitat Degradation & Pollution: Seagrass loss, coastal sedimentation, and harbour pollution undermine nursery grounds, reducing recruitment of commercially valuable species in high-density coasts.

IUU Fishing Pressure: Illegal and unregulated fishing vessels frequently operate beyond permitted zones, bypassing catch reporting and undermining fair access for small-scale fishers.

Post-Harvest Losses & Poor Cold Chains: Despite improvements, India still loses 15–20% of fish post-harvest, lowering export quality due to gaps in hygienic handling, grading, and value-addition practices.

Limited Access to Credit & Insurance: Small-scale fishers face difficulty obtaining boat repair loans, affordable insurance, and working capital despite PM-MKSSY incentives, restricting technological upgrades.

Way Ahead:

Strengthen Science-Based Stock Management: Adopt zone-wise stock assessments, seasonal closures, and mesh-size regulation to restore declining coastal stocks and align with FAO’s ecosystem-based approaches.

Expand Deep-Sea Fisheries Capacity: Modernise cooperative-owned vessels, promote onboard cold storage, and expand training for deep-sea navigation to shift pressure away from overfished coastal waters.

Build National Traceability & Certification Systems: Implement the National Framework on Traceability across exporters, landing sites, and hatcheries to meet EU/U.S. standards and increase export competitiveness.

Strengthen Aquaculture Biosecurity: Enforce hatchery certification, disease-free seed systems, and water quality monitoring to reduce disease outbreaks and enhance productivity in inland aquaculture.

Invest in Climate-Resilient Infrastructure: Upgrade harbours with smart-harbour guidelines, cyclone-resilient structures, early warning systems, and climate-adaptive pond designs to reduce climate vulnerability.

Conclusion:

India’s fisheries and aquaculture are entering a transformative phase marked by rapid growth, digital governance, and global market expansion. Sustained policy reforms, climate-resilient practices, and science-driven management can convert this momentum into long-term sectoral stability. With inclusive support for small fishers and strong institutional backing, India can lead a resilient and globally competitive blue economy.

Can aquaculture help India meet its nutrition and livelihood goals simultaneously? What are the critical gaps in India’s aquaculture supply chain?

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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