Shri Prakash Javadekar, Minister
for Environment, Forests and Climate Change has congratulated the Clam
Governing Council of Ashtamudi Lake in Kerala for becoming the first Marine
Stewardship Council certified fishery in India. He was speaking at the Press
Conference in New Delhi today (7.11.2014).
Elaborating further Shri Javadekar said, Ashtamudi
Estuary showcases to the world that development and environment protection go
hand in hand and participatory approach at the local
level in managing biodiversity is an important aspect of it. The achievement of MSC
certification would mean that implementation of measures to ensure valuable
resource was not overfished and its ecosystem was protected. Shri Javadekar
further added that this achievement also opens up the scope for other fisheries
in India to work towards MSC certification, which would enhance conservation
and sustainability of the resource, while providing greater economic returns.
The Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) is
an international non-profit organization set up to help transform the seafood
market to a sustainable basis. The MSC runs the only certification and eco-labeling
programme for wild-capture fisheries. Ashtamudi short neck clam fishery is only
the third fishery in Asia to have received the recognition.
Background:
·
Ashtamudi
Lake, a Ramsar Wetland of international importance, is the second largest
estuarine system in Kerala.
·
The
clam fishery in Ashtamudi dates back to 1981 and supports the livelihoods of
around 3000 fisherpersons involved in collection, cleaning processing and
trading clams.
·
The
growth of Ashtamudi’s commercial fishery was driven by demand from Vietnam,
Thailand and Malaysia in the 1980s and 1990s. By 1991, the catch peaked at
10,000 tonnes a year, but declined 50 percent in 1993 due to overfishing.
·
Closed
season fishing and mesh size restrictions for nets were introduced, along with
a minimum export size and a prohibition on mechanical clam fishing. These
measures showed immediate effects, and clam fishery has sustained landings of
around 10,000 tonnes a year for the past decade.
·
Globally,
over 11 percent of the annual global harvest of wild capture fisheries is
engaged in the MSC programme. Certified fisheries currently land over seven
million metric tonnes of seafood annually – close to eight percent of the total
harvest from wild capture fisheries. Worldwide, more than 19,500 seafood
products, which can be traced back to the certified sustainable fisheries, bear
the blue MSC ecolabel.
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