Key Points

The Government of India has launched a comprehensive marine fishing village validation initiative under the PMMSY scheme. This two-week exercise involves mapping and geo-referencing 3,500 marine fishing villages across 13 coastal states and union territories. Advanced mobile technology will enable real-time data collection about fishing communities and their infrastructure. The census will provide critical insights to design targeted development interventions for marine fishing populations.

Key Points: PMMSY Marine Census 2025 Launches Nationwide Fishing Village Mapping

  • CMFRI leads nationwide marine fishing village geo-referencing project
  • 100+ officials mapping 3,500 villages across 13 coastal states
  • VyAS-NAV mobile app enables real-time data collection
  • Census aims to support targeted fisheries community development
2 min read

PM Matsya Sampada Yojana: Nationwide validation of marine fishing villages begins

Government initiates comprehensive marine fishing village validation using advanced geospatial technology for nationwide socio-economic fisheries development

"An accurate and updated frame of marine fishing villages is essential - Neetu Kumari Prasad, Joint Secretary, Department of Fisheries"

Kochi, July 18

In a preparatory step for the 5th Marine Fisheries Census (MFC-2025), the Department of Fisheries under the Ministry of Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying on Friday launched a nationwide validation and geo-referencing of marine fishing villages through ICAR-Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute (CMFRI).

MFC-2025 is being undertaken under the Pradhan Mantri Matsya Sampada Yojana (PMMSY), with CMFRI serving as the nodal agency for implementation across India.

This two-week-long exercise aims to establish an accurate and updated frame of marine fishing villages across India's coastline and island territories, laying the foundation for the comprehensive household-level enumeration across 3,500 villages in 13 coastal States and UTs scheduled in November-December 2025.

Over 100 officials from CMFRI and the Fishery Survey of India (FSI) will visit every marine fishing village to verify its status, delineate boundaries, and compile an updated village frame.

This exercise will be conducted using VyAS-NAV (Village-Jetty Appraisal Navigator), a custom-built mobile application developed by CMFRI to enable real-time, geo-referenced data collection.

"An accurate and updated frame of marine fishing villages is essential to ensure the success of the household-level enumeration," said Neetu Kumari Prasad, Joint Secretary, Department of Fisheries.

In collaboration with state fisheries departments and local administrative bodies, census teams will assess each village's dependence on marine fishing and allied activities, estimate the number of marine fisher households, and geotag village boundaries.

The data will feed into a GIS-enabled MFC dashboard, supported by a robust online backup system and a two-tier supervision framework at district and state levels to ensure data integrity.

Dr Grinson George, Director of CMFRI, said that the teams will also identify and shortlist local community members to be trained as enumerators for the household phase.

Neetu Kumari Prasad said that the census would generate granular data on socio-economic conditions, livelihood dependencies, and infrastructure gaps, enabling the Government to design targeted interventions for the sustainable development of marine fishing communities.

The census will gather demographic and livelihood data of fishing communities, and infrastructure details including fishing vessels, gears, harbours, fish landing centres, processing units and cold storage facilities.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Shreya B
As someone from coastal Karnataka, I've seen how fishing villages struggle. Hope this census leads to real benefits - not just another government survey that gathers dust. The geo-tagging is a good move though.
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Arjun K
Good initiative but implementation is key. Last time many fishermen complained they weren't properly counted. Hope they involve local communities properly this time. The two-tier supervision sounds promising.
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Priya S
My uncle is a fisherman in Kerala. They desperately need cold storage facilities - fish spoil so quickly! Hope this data helps get them proper infrastructure. The GIS dashboard sounds very high-tech for government work 👏
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Nikhil C
While the initiative is good, I'm concerned about data privacy. What safeguards are in place for fishermen's personal information? Also hope they consider climate change impacts on fishing communities in their planning.
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Meera T
This is much needed! Fishing communities are the backbone of our coastal economy but often neglected. The training of local enumerators is smart - they understand ground realities better than outsiders.

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