On a sweltering Mumbai afternoon, fish seller Nayana Patil grabbed an unsold pomfret from her counter, noting the price per kilogram had tripled in the last fortnight.
“Now who will buy it for Rs 1,500?” she asked indignantly, holding the silver fish up by its tail.
As a few customers eyed the fish on display like exhibits in a museum, Patil blamed a sudden spike in Mumbai temperatures for a drop in fish-catch volumes, arguing she should be compensated for her falling income due to the erratic weather.
Fishermen get government handouts after storms cause them losses or harm their boats, while farmers receive aid for crop damage from droughts and floods, Patil, 55, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
“Earlier, women [here] could raise 10 children on their earnings,” she added. “Now we have no money. My mother could not send us to school but she taught us fishing so we could be self-reliant. What do we do now if there are no fish in the sea?”
Mumbai recorded severe heatwave conditions in March, with temperatures 6 degrees Celsius-7 degrees Celsius above normal on at least 10 days, according to weather officials.
Located on the Arabian Sea, a particularly fast-warming part of the Indian Ocean, the city has experienced unseasonal rains, cyclones and extreme heat in the past five years.
The impact of these climate shifts on fish catch volumes is now casting a long shadow on the social status enjoyed for generations by Mumbai’s female fish vendors, who are known as fiercely independent, witty and financially suave.
Last month’s heat was the latest – and the harshest – in a string of challenges they have faced in recent times, from losses owing to fewer fishing days amid fiercer cyclones, to competition from online seafood delivery portals.
The federal government offers insurance to fishers against death and disability, with nearly 2,80,000 covered so far, data from the National Fisheries Development Board shows.
Fish-worker unions say similar insurance against losses to erratic weather is also needed.
Data compiled by the National Fisheries Development Board shows a 52% rise in cyclones over the Arabian Sea in the last two decades, fuelled by a 1.2 degrees Celsius–1.4 degrees Celsius rise in the sea surface temperature.
“The sea is our farm - and we too are climate victims,” said vendor Patil.
Fish migration
India has about 2.8 crore workers in fisheries and related activities, with 70% of all post-fishing activity handled by women, government data shows.
In Mumbai, an estimated 40,000 women fish vendors from the Koli community, the city’s original inhabitants, buy stock from fish traders, then sort, pack and sell it in markets.
In 2020, the total fish catch from India’s seas was about 37 lakh tonnes, up from 32 lakh tonnes in 2012, while that from rivers and estuaries doubled to 1 crore tonnes.
Nonetheless, Pradip Chatterjee, who heads the West Bengal-based National Platform for Small Scale Fish Workers, said its members were struggling because their traditional knowledge and calculations are no longer effective due to abrupt weather shifts.
As well as the ocean warming that has pushed fish to migrate from their native zones to colder waters, stocks have also been depleted by excessive fishing, scientists said.
“Over-fishing even during the breeding season or the use of small mesh nets that catch juvenile fish have compounded the impact of climate change on the fishing community,” said Sunil Mohamed, secretary of the Kerala-based Sustainable Seafood Network of India.
Oil sardines, for example, were once abundant on the southern coasts of Kerala and Karnataka, but are now found slightly north along the shores of Maharashtra and Gujarat.
Similarly, the “bombil” fish – also known by its colonial name, Bombay Duck – was earlier caught along the Mumbai coast but is now found further north in neighbouring districts, said local fishermen. As a result, they must use more fuel to go out into the deep sea amid soaring diesel prices and for a smaller catch.
Devendra Damodar Tandel of Maharashtra Machhimar Kruti Samiti, a fish-workers’ union, said his organisation is mapping losses incurred during the heatwave last month, enlisting a marine researcher and young community members.
Ad-hoc compensation in the wake of cyclones is provided to active fishermen, based on losses of catch and work days and the size of trawler engines, and is a recurring financial burden on state treasuries in the absence of insurance, he noted. But tens of thousands of women – many of them working informally – get no financial help.
Tandel said the only compensation they receive when a cyclone hits is a storage box for fish. “What purpose would that serve?” asked Tandel, who wrote to the local government this week highlighting the injustice.
Less work
Looking around the empty bamboo fish-drying racks at Versova harbour in suburban Mumbai, retired marine scientist and fisherman Sadashiv Raje recalled childhood fishing trips with his father, when they returned with baskets full of “bombil”.
Bombil is as versatile for cooking – crisp-fried or in a tamarind-coconut curry – as for generating employment, he said. Fresh, it sells briskly at fish markets while harbour workers dry it to be stocked and sold throughout the year.
“Earlier, I had work through the month of March but I got seven days last month,” said Malamma Randhi Konalu, who earns Rs 200 a day for hanging up fish on bamboo rods, where they flutter like ribbons in the sea breeze.
In March, the Union government acknowledged the impacts of global warming on India’s marine catch volume, while union leaders said it was time to protect the fishing community from climate-linked losses. Maharashtra fisheries minister Aslam Shaikh did not respond to requests for comment.
Suvarna Chandrappagari, chief executive of the National Fisheries Development Board, which oversees fish-workers’ insurance, said a policy to cover climate-linked losses for aquaculture-bred fish and shrimp would be tested soon.
But a decision on insurance against weather disasters on inland waters or at sea was yet to be made, she added. Other loss-limiting initiatives include sea cages to breed commercially viable fish species and artificial propagation of seaweed, as well as protecting marine harbours from wind gusts by improving infrastructure, she noted.
Campaigner Chatterjee said climate resilience needed to be built across the whole fishing sector, or small-scale and marginalised operators would suffer the most. Shrinking fish catches are already changing how Mumbai’s women fish vendors perceive their income, with some considering quitting the uncertain business or deterring the next generation from taking it up.
Researcher Pranita Harad, who has studied Mumbai’s Koli community, described fish as their “laxmi” (Hindu goddess of wealth).
“For them, fish is not just their main livelihood, but a symbol of their existence,” she said. “If this drop in catch continues, the women will have to move to another profession.”
This article first appeared on Thomson Reuters Foundation News.
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