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India
prepares for vannamei from Honolulu
India’s
marine industry is planning to introduce
vannamei shrimp, a native species from South
America, to increase production that has
remained stagnant at around 150,000 tonnes
annually.
India produces mainly black tiger shrimp
and processing facilities are running at
only about 30 percent of their capacity.
Asian export rivals, such as Thailand, Vietnam
and Indonesia,
have already introduced this variety and
have seen their production rise.
“India needs to look at alternatives
and the vannamei variety is the best bet,” says
Ravi Reddy, president of the Seafood Exporters
Association of the Tamil Nadu region.
According to Reddy, China produces 650,000
tons every year, Thailand 450,000 tons,
Indonesia 400,000 tons and Vietnam 350,000
tons with over 90% of the total produce
being vannamei shrimp.
Meanwhile, the prices of Indian black tiger
shrimps have dropped by $1-10 (about Rs40-400)
a kg in the last two months.
Vannamei culture, which produces
only medium and small shrimps, has a yield
of 20 tons per hectare, against 2-3 tons
that black tiger variety produces.Coupled
with
the appreciation of the rupee against the
dollar, earnings of shrimp exporters here
have taken a hit.
G. Mohanty, president of the Orissa region
of the Association, says that though Indian
black tiger shrimps are now well accepted
in international markets, the aquaculture
business remains under pressure. A shift
to vannamei could mean higher yields and
lower costs of production, he says.
Vannamei culture, which produces
only medium and small shrimp, has a yield
of around 20
tons per hectare against 2-3 tons that
black tiger variety produces. “ We need
to have big farms for the vannamei variety
but we don’t have them in Orissa,” says
Mohanty.
A.J. Tharakan, national president of the
Association and vice-chairman of the government
trade promotion body, the Marine Products
Development Authority, however, says there
are apprehensions within the industry that
vannamei might not be suitable for Indian
conditions and its introduction may then
contribute to an end to the black tiger
variety. He calls for selective introduction
of the
variety in large farms.
“Around 20 percent of Indian aqua farms are equipped
to go for the vannamei culture,” he
says. “We can also look at the big
unviable and sick farms for this. The rest
can continue with black tiger.”
However, as vannamei is treated as an exotic
variety, it would need government approvals
prior to it being introduced here. For
now, two firms in Nellore, Andhra Pradesh—Sharat
Seafood Pvt. Ltd and BMR Hatcheries Ltd.—have
been allowed to introduce this variety
on an experimental basis. The industry
proposes
to request the government to allow introduction
on a larger scale, says Tharakan.
Prasad Reddy, managing director of Sharat
Seafood, says his company introduced this
variety in 2003 on an experimental basis
and the results have been encouraging.
“Even a yield of three ton per hectare can
be more profitable than a black tiger farm
with the same yield,” he says. “The
company gets its broodstock from Hawaiian
Shrimp Institute at Honolulu, which has
developed disease-free brooders termed
as specific
pathogen free.”
Tharakan is also calling for sufficient
safeguards regarding broodstock, which
must be 100 percent
pathogen-free.
According to him, only those hatcheries
that are run by the marine authority should
be
given permission for broodstock import
as they have the facilities for controlled-seed
production.
“Once the government gives its nod, it should
ensured that no private hatcheries are
allowed to import broodstock,” he says, adding
that the authority can make good broodstock
available in few years.
Source:
www.livemint.com
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