The fisheries department has adopted a more guarded approach. Rather than wait for other countries to suspend seafood exports from Pakistan, the department wants to recoup the lost markets by turning to alternative strategies. The time is ripe perhaps for value-addition options. To explore and find these, we ought to first develop a research and development wing through the assistance of the Pakistan Agricultural Research Council and some of the country’s major universities. For this purpose, some hefty funds will be required — the kind that could sustain quality research. The fisheries sector needs to be fitted with the latest technological equipment if it aspires to improve and fetch top dollar in foreign exchange earnings. The sector would also profit enormously from potential investors and entrepreneurs from Japan and China.
Investment in aquaculture and shrimp farming ought to be promoted at all levels. There are equally important tasks to be undertaken such as promoting joint ventures between foreign and local investors in the fisheries sector and enforcing quality management and establishing regulatory framework to promote the fisheries sector. None of these goals can be achieved until an enabling environment is created in collaboration with the government amid greater coordination between national and provincial authorities on aquaculture and shrimp farming.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 10th, 2018.
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