CM Chandrababu Urges FM Sitharaman to Stabilise Shrimp Feed Costs
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Chief Minister's Office of Andhra Pradesh announced on Friday, 17 July 2026 that Chief Minister Nara Chandrababu Naidu has formally written to Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, urging the Centre to take policy action to stabilise raw material prices used in shrimp feed manufacturing, citing a severe impact on the state's aquaculture sector and marine export earnings.
Context
In his communication to the Finance Minister, CM Naidu highlighted that between January and April 2026, shrimp feed input prices surged sharply, pushing production costs up by more than 20 per cent. He cited specific commodity price movements: fish meal rose from Rs 1.55 lakh per tonne to Rs 2.40 lakh per tonne, fish oil climbed from Rs 2.80 lakh per tonne to Rs 4.40 lakh per tonne, and soya lecithin jumped from Rs 68,000 per tonne to Rs 1.10 lakh per tonne. The Chief Minister stated that these cost escalations are directly hurting aquaculture farmers and undermining the competitiveness of seafood exports.
Policy Backdrop
Andhra Pradesh accounts for a significant share of India's total shrimp production and is a major contributor to the country's marine product exports. The aquaculture sector in the state supports millions of livelihoods spanning farmers, labourers, processing centres, exporters, hatcheries, and feed manufacturers. The Centre's Pradhan Mantri Matsya Sampada Yojana (PMMSY), launched in 2020, was designed to modernise fisheries and strengthen aquaculture value chains, but recurring global volatility in feed ingredient prices has continued to strain the sector's economics.
India's seafood export industry remains exposed to international price fluctuations in critical feed inputs such as fish meal and soy derivatives, a structural vulnerability that state governments have repeatedly flagged to the Centre across successive administrations.
Stakeholders and Impact
CM Naidu urged the Finance Minister to promote the domestic market for shrimp and aquaculture products, facilitate the formation of Farmer Producer Organisations (FPOs), and support market linkages for aqua farmers. He also called for backing domestic branding, processing, and retail price integration, alongside creating a mechanism to insulate the sector from global demand fluctuations. The Chief Minister requested that an institutional framework be designed specifically to address these structural challenges.
Additionally, CM Naidu requested that the National Fisheries Development Board (NFDB) release funds to establish the Andhra Pradesh Prawn Producers Coordination Committee with a corpus fund of Rs 100 crore. This proposed body would serve as a coordinating platform for prawn farmers across the state.
What's Next
The Centre's response to the corpus fund request through the NFDB will be closely watched, as will any fisheries-related provisions in the next Union Budget or revisions to PMMSY guidelines. If the Centre acts on the stabilisation request, it could set a precedent for policy-level intervention in aquaculture input pricing, with implications for other coastal shrimp-producing states as well. The establishment of the Andhra Pradesh Prawn Producers Coordination Committee could also reshape how the state's prawn farming community engages with markets and policy institutions going forward.