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India News Updated Jun 9, 2026

National Workshop Charts Path to Boost India's Seafood Exports to $30 Billion

A two-day National Workshop on Seafood Exports was held in Visakhapatnam to enhance India's seafood exports. Union Minister Piyush Goyal called for achieving USD 30 billion in exports within five years through value addition and sustainability. Other ministers highlighted the need for processing, branding, and technology adoption. Stakeholders discussed challenges like disease management and logistics to improve global competitiveness.

National workshop discusses value addition, sustainability and market access to boost seafood exports

New Delhi, June 9

A two-day National Workshop on Seafood Exports held in Visakhapatnam focused on measures to enhance India's seafood exports through value addition, sustainability, improved market access, innovation and infrastructure development.

The workshop, organised by the Department of Commerce in collaboration with the Department of Fisheries and the Ministry of Food Processing Industries (MoFPI) on June 5-6, brought together policymakers, industry representatives, exporters, processors, researchers, startups and aquaculture farmers to deliberate on strengthening the seafood export ecosystem.

Addressing the inaugural session, Union Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal said India's marine products exports have increased by nearly 70 per cent in value terms over the last decade and noted that the country currently accounts for around 4 per cent of global seafood trade. He called upon stakeholders to work collectively towards achieving seafood exports of USD 30 billion within the next five years through value addition, branding, quality enhancement, sustainability and diversification of export markets.

Goyal also stressed the need to increase the share of value-added seafood products, including ready-to-eat and ready-to-cook offerings, and encouraged exporters to leverage market access opportunities arising from India's recently concluded Free Trade Agreements covering 38 countries.

Union Minister of Food Processing Industries Chirag Paswan highlighted the potential for value addition in the seafood sector and stressed the need to move from "volume to value" and "produce to product" through greater focus on processing, branding, technology adoption and market diversification.

Union Minister for Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying Rajiv Ranjan Singh said fish production in India increased from 95.8 lakh tonnes in 2012-13 to nearly 198 lakh tonnes in 2024-25. He added that India's seafood exports reached approximately Rs 73,890 crore (USD 8.46 billion), with frozen shrimp continuing to be the country's leading seafood export item.

During interactive and technical sessions, stakeholders discussed challenges related to disease management, rising input costs, logistics, cold-chain development, certification, traceability and sustainability standards. Discussions also focused on export promotion, deep-sea fisheries, diversification of export opportunities and the potential for a Production Linked Incentive (PLI) framework for the seafood sector.

The workshop concluded with a shared commitment to strengthen sustainability, traceability, value addition, export infrastructure and market access to enhance India's global competitiveness in seafood exports.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Kavya N

The focus on traceability and sustainability is long overdue. European markets are increasingly demanding eco-certifications and we've been losing out to Vietnam and Thailand because of lax standards. Hope this workshop leads to concrete action, not just another government meeting with photo ops. Maharashtra's fisheries sector could benefit immensely if we streamline certification processes.

James A

Interesting to see India's seafood sector growing. I work in food import in the US and Indian shrimp is already popular here, but there's concern about antibiotic residues. The workshop's emphasis on certification and quality control is crucial. Also, the move towards ready-to-cook products makes sense for busy American consumers. Would love to see more Indian brands in US supermarkets beyond the generic frozen shrimp bags.

Pranav D

Good intentions but ground reality is different. Small-scale fishermen in Kerala are struggling with rising diesel costs and declining catches due to overfishing. The PLI framework sounds nice but will it reach the actual fisherfolk or just benefit large exporters? Also, deep-sea fishing needs better safety regulations after those recent tragedies off the coast. Sustainability starts with protecting our traditional fishing communities. 🐟

Siddhartha F

The jump from 95 lakh tonnes to 198 lakh tonnes in fish production is impressive. But we need to address disease outbreaks in aquaculture - white spot syndrome alone has devastated many shrimp farmers in Odisha. Glad to see disease management was discussed. Hope the government provides subsidized diagnostic services and better biosecurity training. Also, value addition doesn't mean just fancy packaging; we need actual R&D for product innovation.

N Neha E

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