Puducherry Aims to Become India's Premier Marine Export Gateway

Lieutenant Governor K. Kailashnathan stated that Puducherry has the strategic potential to evolve into a major marine export gateway for India. He emphasized that increasing the value derived from each kilogram of fish, rather than just the catch volume, is crucial for fisher prosperity. Modern infrastructure like cold chains, upgraded landing centers, and export facilities are needed for better market realization. The vision leverages Karaikal's unique harbor and strong women's fish cooperatives, supported by central government schemes.

Key Points: Puducherry's Potential as India's Marine Export Hub

  • Strategic coastal advantages
  • Focus on value addition over catch volume
  • Need for modern cold chain & infrastructure
  • Women's cooperatives as a national model
  • Integration with central schemes like PMMSY
2 min read

Puducherry has potential to emerge as major marine gateway of India: L-G Kailashnathan

Lt. Governor outlines plan to transform Puducherry into a major marine economy through value addition and modernized fisheries infrastructure.

"Karaikal... places Puducherry in a strong position to become a major export gateway - Lt. Governor K. Kailashnathan"

Puducherry, Feb 12

Puducherry Lieutenant Governor K. Kailashnathan on Thursday said the union territory has the potential to emerge as a major marine export gateway of India and evolve into a model marine economy, provided it strengthens value addition and modernises fisheries infrastructure.

Inaugurating a two-day international workshop on 'Marine Fisheries Value Chain in the Bay of Bengal Region: Puducherry as Destination', he highlighted the UT's strategic advantages -- its coastline, port connectivity, skilled human resources and expanding processing ecosystem.

"Karaikal, the only harbour-centric production and processing hub on India's East Coast, places Puducherry in a strong position to become a major export gateway, especially when nearly 97 per cent of the country's exports move through ports," he said.

The workshop is jointly organised by the Bay of Bengal Programme Inter-Governmental Organisation (BOBP-IGO) and the Government of Puducherry, in association with the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), ICAR-Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute and the National Fisheries Development Board, among others.

Emphasising income security for fishers, the Lieutenant Governor said merely increasing the fish catch would not ensure prosperity.

"If the income of the fishing community is to rise, the value derived from each kilogram of fish must increase," he noted.

He underlined the need for modern cold chain systems, ice plants, upgraded fish landing centres, certification mechanisms and export-oriented infrastructure to ensure better price realisation in domestic and global markets.

Kailashnathan said the Puducherry government, in collaboration with the Centre, is implementing reforms through schemes such as the Pradhan Mantri Matsya Sampada Yojana (PMMSY), focusing on harbour development, safety equipment, fishermen's insurance, GPS support, deep-sea fishing promotion and training for women's self-help groups.

Highlighting community strength, he described Puducherry's women fish cooperatives as a national model.

Women play a vital role in fish drying, processing and production of value-added items, and require enhanced credit access, skill training and market linkages, he said.

The workshop brings together international experts, policymakers, researchers, cooperatives and industry leaders to chart a comprehensive strategy for upgrading the marine fisheries value chain across the Bay of Bengal region.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Shreya B
Glad to see the mention of women's cooperatives. Our fisherwomen are the backbone of the processing sector but often don't get the credit or financial support. Hope the skill training and market linkages they're talking about actually reach the ground level.
R
Rahul R
Good plans on paper, but execution is everything. We've heard similar promises before. The PMMSY scheme needs to be implemented transparently without delays. The fishermen need the safety equipment and insurance yesterday, not after another workshop.
P
Priyanka N
Modern cold chains and certification are so important for export quality. This can help our seafood compete globally and get better prices. Hope they also focus on sustainable fishing practices to protect our marine resources for the future.
D
David E
Interesting read. Developing a specialized marine gateway could significantly streamline India's export logistics. The international collaboration with FAO and BOBP is a positive sign for adopting global best practices.
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Aman W
As someone from the region, I welcome this. But they must ensure the local fishing community benefits first. Development shouldn't mean big corporations taking over and pushing out the traditional fishermen. Their income security is paramount.

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