The United States is India’s biggest overseas seafood market, with an export revenue share of 34.53% (in USD). In the last five years, however, India suffered a loss of $500 million after the U.S. ban on its export of wild-caught shrimp, as reported by the Marine Products Export Development Authority (MPEDA).
The ban was imposed in 2019 on the grounds that Indian trawler vessels were not using Turtle Excluder Devices (TEDs) and that the TEDs in use did not meet the U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) standards. A Turtle Excluder Device is a simple grid of deflector bars installed before the cod end (narrow end) of a trawl net at an angle leading upward or downward into an escape opening. Small animals such as shrimp will slip through the bar spacing and are retained in the net, while large fish and mammals are prevented entry, allowing them to escape through the opening. This also allows air-breathing marine turtles to avoid capture and subsequent death from prolonged entrapment in the trawl net.
Under Section 609 of the U.S. public law, wild-caught shrimp or products from wild-caught shrimp harvested with commercial fishing technology that may adversely affect protected sea turtle species may not be imported into the U.S.
Wild-caught shrimp fetches double the price in international markets, and hence, the ban had a huge impact on India’s seafood export revenue. According to the information provided by MPEDA to Mongabay India, the ban has reduced the unit value of wild-caught shrimp exported to other markets from $9.87/kg to $5.68/kg (42% drop). The ban is causing a loss of Rs. 4,500 crores every year, as per official communication from MPEDA.
Sea turtles are a protected species in India under Schedule I of the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972. As per the Marine Fishing Regulation Acts (MFRAs) in most maritime states, the usage of TED is mandatory for fishing nets of mechanised trawler vessels to allow for the escape of bycatch sea turtles. However, real-world implementation has been limited, leading to a ban after inspections by the U.S. officials in 2018 and 2019 on behalf of their Seafood Import Monitoring Program (SIMP).
As a signatory to the 1995 Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) Code of Conduct, India is bound to conduct research, develop appropriate devices and practices, and implement regulatory measures for the protection of endangered sea turtles. Now, five years after the ban, MPEDA and ICAR – Central Institute of Fisheries Technology (ICAR-CIFT) have designed and built an indigenous TED, which has received the approval and recommendation of the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
Crafting superior devices to prevent turtle bycatch
In 2019, the U.S. rejected the Turtle Excluder Device used in Indian trawl vessels primarily because it didn’t adhere to the U.S. NOAA specifications. Following the ban, under a project commissioned by MPEDA, ICAR-CIFT worked with the U.S. to gain approval for their indigenous TED. “We fine-tuned and improved our TED to achieve their standards. We then took it to America for a dive evaluation,” shares M. P. Remesan, principal scientist and head, Fishing Technology Division, ICAR-CIFT. “There they suggested some improvements, which we incorporated, and then demonstrated it at the CIFT research facility in Kochi in February 2024, when they visited and gave their approval.”
The Central Institute of Fisheries Technology reports that the dive evaluation of the TED revealed excellent sealing of the escape opening, ensuring no shrimp catch loss. “Remarkably, the catch obtained was clean as the TED with two floats lifted the cod end above the sea bed, which had a washing effect on the cod end,” adds Remesan. MPEDA has initiated onboard field trials in Odisha using the U.S. NOAA-approved design, and “results have been very positive, showing comparatively less catch loss, better appearance of the catch, reduced waste materials in the cod end, and successful escape of turtles,” the organisation shared in a statement to Mongabay India.
ICAR-CIFT had initially adopted the U.S. recommended dimensions to suit Indian conditions, increasing the bar spacing of the TED from four inches (101.6 mm) to 145 mm, but received strong pushback from the US NOAA. “Our main purpose was to reduce catch loss. We increased the bar spacing from ∼100mm to 145mm to let in more fish. But NOAA pushed back saying, if the bar spacing is too big, small turtles can go inside. But such an incident has never happened, we’ve not seen small turtles captured in trawl nets anywhere in India,” says Remesan.
Fishers sometimes get big fish or species like rays during trawling, which they are reluctant to lose, says Remesan. He thinks the reversion to a four-inch bar spacing TED can be a cause for concern for fishers. “In a temperate country like the U.S. where there is only shrimp trawling, four-inch spacing is more than adequate, but in a multispecies fishery like ours, our people want other fish too. They don’t want to lose anything, be it shrimp, fish, or squid. So, when we reduce bar spacing, our people won’t like it,” he explains.
However, CIFT had to comply with the U.S. recommendation and reversed the bar spacing of their indigenous TED to four inches, which essentially prevents entry of larger fish species such as rays.
Trawlers and turtles
Trawling is India’s most important fishing sector, contributing about 52% of the total marine fish production in the country. In 2022, the estimated average annual fish catch from trawlers was about 2.027 million tonnes. While bottom trawling is an efficient fishing technique for demersal populations such as shrimp, the non-selective nature of trawl nets results in a large number of non-target resources being captured, including protected and endangered species such as sea turtles.
“The incidental capture of turtles in trawl nets is a cause for concern,” Remesan says. “It happens mostly on the east coast, in Odisha. But it is not like we can say there is no turtle bycatch in other parts of India,” he adds.
According to Peter Mathias, president, All Kerala Fishing Boat Owners’ Association, India’s western coast has a very limited population of sea turtles. “In Kerala, on the western coast in general, the presence of turtles is very low. At the same time, they are present in huge numbers in Odisha and West Bengal,” he says, adding: “The rough seas of Kerala, rampant shore erosion, and the wide presence of seawalls means that there are very few open places for these turtles to breed. Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute (CMFRI) studies have shown this, too…