Introduction
India is the 2nd largest fish producer globally, with inland fisheries contributing over 70% of total output. Despite its potential for livelihood diversification and nutritional security, the sector remains constrained by systemic bottlenecks.
Potential of Inland Fisheries
- Livelihood generation: Supports millions of small and marginal farmers, fishers, and women in allied activities.
- Nutritional security: Provides affordable protein and micronutrients.
- Resource utilisation: Harnessing ponds, tanks, reservoirs, and wetlands (e.g., Amrit Sarovars).
- Export earnings: Growing aquaculture (especially shrimp) boosts foreign exchange.
Structural Gaps in Value Chain Infrastructure
- Post-harvest losses: Inadequate cold storage, ice plants, and processing facilities.
- Poor market linkages: Dominance of intermediaries reduces fishers’ share in final price.
- Logistics constraints: Weak transportation and lack of integrated supply chains.
- Quality standards: Limited compliance with global sanitary and phytosanitary norms.
Institutional and Governance Challenges
- Fragmented governance: Overlap between fisheries, agriculture, and rural development departments.
- Limited access to credit and insurance for small producers.
- Weak extension services: Poor dissemination of scientific aquaculture practices.
- Data and regulation gaps: Inadequate monitoring of inland water resources and stocking practices.
Implications
- Underutilisation of resources and low productivity.
- Income instability for fish farmers.
- Missed opportunities in exports and value addition.
Way Forward
- Strengthening infrastructure: Cold chain, processing units, and digital marketplaces.
- Institutional convergence: Better coordination under schemes like PM Matsya Sampada Yojana (PMMSY).
- Promoting FPOs/cooperatives to enhance bargaining power.
- Capacity building and technology adoption (RAS, biofloc systems).
Conclusion
Unlocking inland fisheries requires bridging infrastructure and governance gaps, enabling it to become a key driver of rural transformation, income growth, and food security.