Pisciculture farmers have a reason to smile. For, the days of fishing in troubled waters seem to be fading. As this fiscal is coming to a close, about 30,000 pisciculture farmers, who incurred heavy losses in 2002 to 2004, have posted about Rs 12,000 profit per acre. |
They cultivated about six lakh tonnes of fish from tanks, spread over one lakh acres in villages along the border of Krishna and West Godavari districts, and made a business of Rs 2,500 crore. |
However, during the two adverse years, the small farmers, drowned in irrecoverable losses and unable to bear a massive investment of Rs 80,000 per acre, vanished from fish farming. |
The middle-class farmers barely managed fish cultivation this year. Their earnings just equalled the amounts they paid as advance lease and interest. So it was a no-loss, no-gain business for them. |
The small farmers could earn Rs 12,000 advance lease per acre by giving their tanks on lease to other farmers and private companies. |
However, it was the big farmers and corporate companies, controlling 60 per cent of fish cultivation, who made huge profits. Individual farmers now control only 40 per cent of fish farming. |
Pisciculture Farmers' Consortium president M V S Nagi Reddy told Business Standard that farmers realised profits mainly because of the significant fall in feed rates. The production for 2004-05 declined as small farmers were eliminated, he said, adding that the farmers netted about one lakh tonnes less fish than what they usually produced. |
But, the rate at Rs 29 per kg had been fairly good for most of the year, though it fell to Rs 28 recently. The slump in consumer demand during 2003-04 and 2002-03 had been compensated by the scare created among consumers by bird flu. |
Consumers did not touch chicken for three to four months and the situation only favoured the fish market, boosting the per kg rate along with sales. |
The release of water from Nagarjuna Sagar too helped the fish farmers. |
Though things are looking bright at the moment, Reddy fears a crisis in water supply during the ensuing kharif and a crash in fish price below Rs 28 per kg in the coming days may hit the business. Fish feed rates may also rise, he said. |
A rupee decrease in fish price would deprive farmers of Rs 4,000 per acre. The price is now Rs 28, a rupee less than this year's average of Rs 29. Another two-rupee decrease in fish price would make farmers go bankrupt again. |
The number of farmers may also go up in 2005-06 as their counterparts have made profits this fiscal. This would boost production and push down fish prices. If a farmer wants to make profits in fish rearing now, he should raise the culture in at least 10 acres, he said. |
Reddy also urged for more help from the government. The fish farmers pay two types of taxes, one under agriculture and another under industry. |
Their plea to place the sector in one of them has fallen on deaf ears. They still continue to harvest cheaply priced fish rich in high proteins, he said. |