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10/02/2015: RMS Disease may lead to shortfall in the Indian seafood industry next year

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After record production of farmed vannamei shrimps, which helped boost India's seafood exports in the current fiscal year, the industry is expecting a shortfall next year because of the risks from a disease that some farms have reported in recent weeks, The Economic Times reports.

Seafood exports for the nine months through December 2014 grew 14 percent in value, said industry executives though official figures are yet to be out. India's marine products exports between April and December are estimated to be close to Rs 250 billion (US$4 billion). In the fiscal year ended March 2014, export totaled at Rs 302.13 billion (US$4.85 billion).
 

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/industry/cons-products/food/rms-disease-may-lead-to-shortfall-in-the-seafood-industry-next-year/articleshow/46180448.cms

Apart from a drop in prices due to slackening of demand, what is worrying the industry is the stray incidents of the disease - running mortality syndrome (RMS) - in the shrimp farms in Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu, which are the major producers of this variety of shrimp, one of the top earners in the seafood export basket.

"Though we may be able to harvest the crop, the survival rate will be affected. We will be able to assess the damage only in the harvest for 2015-16," said Muthukaruppan, president of the Society of Aquaculture Professionals.

"This year's harvest has already been over and the production of shrimps could be near 350,000 tonnes, an all-time-high," he said.

The disease is apparently not as destructive as early mortality syndrome (EMS), which devastated shrimp farms in Thailand and other countries in Southeast Asia last year, triggering a global shortage of shrimps. That, however, had benefited Indian exporters.

The disease was observed in local farms only in the past few months, said Muthukaruppan. 


"We export a lot of farmed shrimps. We have heard about RMS but the details of the disease are not known yet," said Premachandra Bhat, MD of Mangala Marine Exim.

The Marine Products Export Development Authority (MPEDA) has yet to assess the impact of the disease, since it is a comparatively new occurrence. It is the seeding time in the farms now and the cleaning of the ponds and filling will take some time.

"Since it is the stocking time, we will know about the results only one or two months later. It (occurrence of the disease) could be possibly because of use of cheaper locally- produced broodstock instead of the imported ones. The farms mainly depend on imported vannamei broodstock, which is pathogen free," said Anwar Hashim, managing director of Abad Exports.

Meanwhile, because of the fall in shrimp prices, exporters say the country's total seafood export may fall short of the targeted US$6 billion despite an increase in volume.

"It could be near last year's figure. The prices of shrimp of 40 count have dropped from a level of Rs530 (US$8.51) a kg to Rs370 (US$5.94). Indonesia is our chief competitor," Bhat said.

Muthukaruppan said more farmers are evincing interest in black tiger shrimp, which fetches premium price in the world market, because of the disease threat and the low price of vannamei.

Read the article HERE.

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