Sundarbans mangrove crackdown: Bengal targets 1,600 acres of illegal fish farms
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The West Bengal Forest Department has launched an immediate crackdown on illegal brackish water fisheries spread across roughly 1,600 acres of Sundarbans mangrove land in South 24 Parganas and North 24 Parganas districts, ordering their closure and the replanting of mangroves on illegally occupied land. The farms, according to the department, were established during the previous All India Trinamool Congress (TMC) government by clearing protected mangrove plantations.
Minister's Directive and Timeline
State Forest Minister Manoj Oraon has personally directed department officials to begin identifying the illegal aquaculture operations, shut them down with police assistance, and restore the cleared zones with mangrove cover. A step-by-step process — covering identification, closure, and replanting — has been set with a completion target of November 2025.
'Such illegal brackish water fisheries are scattered over around 1,600 acres. The state forest department will work closely with the district administration in the process of bringing these areas back to their original form, filled with mangrove plantations,' Oraon said. He added that both the forest department and district authorities would maintain close monitoring going forward to prevent any recurrence.
Why Mangroves Matter in the Sundarbans
Environmentalists have welcomed the crackdown, describing the Sundarbans mangroves as a critical natural buffer against cyclones and super-cyclones along the West Bengal coast. The destruction of these plantations, they argue, directly increases the vulnerability of coastal communities to extreme weather events — a risk that has grown more acute as cyclonic activity in the Bay of Bengal intensifies. Notably, the Sundarbans mangrove belt is also a UNESCO World Heritage Site, making its degradation a matter of international conservation concern.
Broader Crackdown Under the New Government
Since the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led state government under Chief Minister Suvendu Adhikari assumed office, authorities have moved against multiple illegal constructions in the Sundarbans region. Earlier this month, a café named 'Aranyer Kule' — owned by Imran Molla, son of former TMC legislator Saokat Molla — was demolished in the Moukhali area under Jibantala police station in South 24 Parganas. The structure had been built illegally on the banks of the Matla River.
Scale and Next Steps
The majority of the 1,600 acres of affected land falls within the South 24 Parganas portion of the Sundarbans. Officials have not yet disclosed the number of individual fish farm operators involved or the quantum of legal action planned against them. The department's immediate priority is completing a full survey before enforcement and replanting operations begin in earnest. How the affected aquaculture operators — many of whom may be local fisherfolk — are rehabilitated remains an open question that the government has not yet addressed publicly.