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Discussion Paper No. 74, March 1996 I.
INTRODUCTION
During the last decade, shrimp aquaculture has become a major sector of fish farming in
terms of space occupied and of market value. Nonetheless, it makes only a very small
contribution towards meeting human needs for food. Shrimp exports bring substantial
foreign exchange to poor countries and may contribute to regional and national short-term
economic growth. Shrimp farming also generates improved incomes for some producers and
labourers. The long-term negative environmental and social implications of commercial
shrimp farming for livelihoods of vulnerable groups in tropical coastal regions where
shrimp aquaculture is developing, however, tend to be neglected by those promoting this
industry.
Fish provide nearly a quarter of the worldwide consumption of animal protein. Taking
into account current population trends, while assuming constant consumption per capita and
the falling productivity of ocean fisheries since the late 1980s, FAO estimates that by
the year 2000 there will be a deficit of 19.6 million tons of fish and other seafood
(Csavas, 1994b:50). Aquaculture primarily meeting local food requirements has received
little support compared to commercial aquaculture, including shrimp farming (FAO, 1995).
Aquaculture development has been heavily promoted and subsidized by international and
national lending agencies that often cite global food security needs as a justification
(Huisman, 1990). This is fallacious for the major portion of shrimp aquaculture which
caters to luxury demand. The shrimp industry has become a main beneficiary of these
subsidies and institutional supports while it is putting at risk the livelihoods and food
security of many coastal populations. The cultivation of shrimp requires large amounts of
natural, financial and technical resources. Countries which have important parts of their
population in need of food, such as India and Bangladesh, are presently becoming the main
areas of expanding coastal shrimp aquaculture. Indeed, the industry is now being promoted
in less developed areas with the support of the host governments and transnational
companies that are often from higher income Asian countries such as Thailand or Taiwan
Province of China. These same enterprises have frequently already exceeded production,
environmental and political acceptance limits in their home countries.
Shrimp are almost exclusively produced for export to meet the demands of high
purchasing power consumers in Japan, the United States and western Europe (Csavas,
1992:15). Consumption in these countries has almost trebled during the last decade, but
with many fluctuations in demand, supply and price. Furthermore, shrimp consumption among
high income groups in rapidly growing Asian countries is also increasing considerably.
Shrimp aquaculture is, however, a rather inefficient way to produce food calories and
proteins as it relies on pellet feeds derived from captured fish for from 25 to 50 per
cent of its content (Primavera, 1994; Randall et al., 1990). Shrimp from intensive farms
are fed about three times their harvested weight. But of the total amount of food
provided, only about 17 per cent is converted into consumable flesh, 15 per cent is
leached or not consumed, 20 per cent is released in faeces and the remaining 48 per cent
is used by the organism for maintenance, moulted shells and metabolism[1] (Primavera, 1994:45).
World aquaculture is overwhelmingly concentrated in Asia. Asian aquaculture of all
kinds produced about 17 million metric tons in 1992, while the rest of the world accounted
for only a little over 2 million metric tons. Almost half of Asian aquacultural production
is from fresh-water. In 1992, crustaceans accounted for only 4.7 per cent of total volume
of Asian aquaculture, while the largest share (48.2 per cent) came from fin-fish mostly
produced inland; seaweed accounted for 31.3 per cent and molluscs 15.7 per cent (Csavas,
1994b:48, figure 3). If coastal aquaculture is considered alone, crustaceans made up 8.2
per cent (Csavas, 1992:figure 9), of which most are shrimp with 750,000 tons produced in
1994 (Rosenberry, 1994b). Shrimp excepted, the greatest part of Asian aquaculture
production remains in domestic markets. Since only the traded part of production enters
the statistics, cultivated fish make up a greater share if self-provisioning could be
estimated.
The trend towards intensive shrimp aquaculture is encouraged by high profits from
farmed shrimp. These profits result in growing economic power of large producers and of
shrimp feed and processing industries. The spread of shrimp production contributes to
decreasing land availability for other activities such as peasant agriculture, grazing,
artisanal fish production, forestry and tourism. It also stimulates sharply rising land
prices in many coastal areas.
Intensive shrimp farms imply high stocking densities making them very prone to the
propagation of pollution and disease. Hypernutrification and eutrophisation[2] of the ponds contribute to their foul smell and
pollution as do added chemicals to get rid of predators, parasites and infections. This
pollution affects local ecosystems and consequently the health and well-being of local
people.
After a production cycle of about four or five months, shrimp ponds under intensive use
are cleaned and disinfected and the polluted sludge is removed and often disposed of
unsafely. This treatment, however, does not usually suffice to maintain the ponds'
productivity for more than five to ten years (Boromthanarat, 1994, Annex III:12).
Entrepreneurs then move to other areas because of pollution and disease. This mode of
production has been called "rape and run" (Csavas, 1994b). The altered milieu of
these abandoned ponds inhibits the spontaneous regeneration of vegetation and their use
for agriculture, forestry, other aquaculture or related fishing activities. These
abandoned areas do not appear in worldwide estimates of areas used for shrimp farming.
Areas in shrimp ponds for 1993 were estimated to include 962,600 hectares, of which
847,000 hectares were in Asia. In December 1994 these areas in shrimp ponds were estimated
to have increased worldwide to 1,147,300 with 1,017,000 hectares in Asia (Rosenberry, 1993
and 1994a). Globally, areas affected by the industry's practices over the last decade are
probably at least one third larger, or even more if the total infrastructures surrounding
the ponds are taken into account.
A few voices of local people most directly affected by the negative environmental and
social impacts of shrimp farming have from time to time reached the media. The promoters
of shrimp production usually heed them only in so far they jeopardize their immediate
profits. Furthermore, environmental problems related to pollution tend to be addressed
when they affect commercial aquaculture production. For example, aquaculture is highly
dependent on water quality, so that this issue has received considerable attention by
large shrimp producing enterprises. But, the impacts on aquatic biodiversity and natural
resource loss and conversion affecting other land and water uses and users are frequently
ignored both by the industry and public agencies. Aquaculturists and supporting national
and international agencies are primarily concerned with mitigating those impacts that
constrain further expansion of the shrimp industry.
Tropical coastal regions are among the most densely populated areas in the world. The
durable productivity of these often fragile environments, as well as the continued access
by inhabitants to their resources, are essential for maintaining inhabitants' livelihoods
(Hinrichsen, 1994). In comparison to most other non-traditional export crops[3], shrimp aquaculture is developing at an exceptionally
rapid pace. In the communities where commercial shrimp aquaculture has been implanted,
nearly everyone is affected in one way or another. Environmental and social effects often
extend far beyond the villages invaded by shrimp farms. Moreover, the new activities
frequently not only deprive many local people of their traditional access to the land,
water and other resources necessary for sustaining their livelihoods, before alternatives
become available, but they may also severely degrade the surrounding environment.
Conflicts over the control of natural resources inevitably arise when market forces and
public policies make new uses of these resources more commercially profitable than were
traditional ones. Such conflicts are especially acute where customary uses by the groups
exploiting them were primarily for self-provisioning and to supply local markets, while
the new ones are to meet the demands of higher income consumers elsewhere. Even those
groups who retain their traditional access to natural resources may find them less
productive than previously. The levels and qualities of their livelihoods are likely to
deteriorate in the long run.
Social and environmental problems associated with land alienation, technological change
and the commercialization of natural resources and labour are well known. They have been
widely documented and analysed since the enclosures of the English commons in the
seventeenth century in order to increase supplies of cheap wool, mutton and labour to meet
new demands stimulated by the incipient industrial revolution. The recent rapid expansion
of shrimp aquaculture with its attendant contradictory social and environmental
consequences should be viewed in this historical context. It is only one small recent
incident within the broader processes generating social exclusion and environmental
degradation. What has been happening socially and environmentally associated with the
expansion of shrimp farming is in many ways similar to what happened earlier with the
expansion in poor countries of other monocultures, such as banana, cotton, cocoa, tea,
coffee and sugar for sale in world commodity markets. In 1993, shrimp futures were already
being traded in the Minneapolis commodity exchange (Rosenberry, 1993:36), showing clearly
the extent to which shrimp aquaculture has become commercialized.
New patterns of agro-industrial production and distribution are being increasingly
stimulated by technological and organizational innovations. Their social and environmental
impacts, however, are variable from one place and time to another. These impacts depend
principally upon institutions and polices at all levels no matter whether these
agro-industrial revolutions in production and marketing are "green" or
"blue" (concerning aquaculture). Good research and informed debates are needed
to help to generate political pressures for institutional and policy reforms that would
enable the industry to be controlled in its expansion and become more sustainable socially
and environmentally than it appears to be at present.
Care must be used in generalizing from fragmentary and unprecise national data as well
as from a few case studies about the social and environmental implications of shrimp
production. Published FAO production and trade statistics often do not separate cultivated
from captured shrimp. The data concerning production trends are mostly generated for and
by the industry itself. Bob Rosenberry, one of the industry's principal authorities on
production and marketing trends, warns of margins of error of from 20 per cent to 40 per
cent (Rosenberry, 1993:52). The reader should keep in mind that the estimates cited below
are only rough approximations.
Each local situation is to some extent unique in both its social and ecological
contexts. Even using similar technologies, intensive shrimp production in one situation
may cause intrusion of salt-water into fresh-water aquifers, while in another place the
fresh-water may be promptly replenished. Changing configurations of the coastline and
ocean currents may result in wider damage when ponds are constructed or mangroves removed
in some cases than in others. Pollution from shrimp ponds may contaminate drinking water
in some places but in others it may not. Serious pollution from urban sewage and industry
may soon force shrimp enterprises to move to new pristine areas in some places, but may
not affect them as much as self-pollution from the ponds in others. Such limitations
should be kept in mind when interpreting the tentative conclusions and suggestions that
emerge from this partial review of the literature.
The social and environmental implications of shrimp cultivation seem to have been
insufficiently or inadequately scrutinized by independent researchers. The available data
concerning shrimp aquaculture reflect this paucity of critical studies. Production
increases and export earnings are well publicized, but local socio-economic losses and
environmental degradation affecting the well-being of coastal populations seldom appear in
the balance sheets.
This paper looks at interrelated social and environmental impacts of shrimp aquaculture
that have been largely neglected. We attempt a critical analysis based on available data
and a few case studies appearing in the literature. The reader should keep in mind the
many limitations of the present paper. It is based on information we were able to find
from Geneva. Data were frequently partial, fragmentary, descriptive and probably not very
comparable. We have merely attempted to place available materials in an analytical
framework that links environmental with social issues, as well as to indicate gaps that
call for further research.
After this introduction, we look at the recent rapid expansion of shrimp aquaculture
with emphasis on Asia. A third section attempts to identify the principal actors of the
shrimp industry from cultivation through processing, trading and consumption stages,
including its financial and official supporters. A fourth section describes how the shrimp
industry is displacing, suppressing or exploiting existing and potential alternative
productive activities. We examine environmental impacts such as mangrove destruction,
pollution and other forms of land and water degradation. The interrelated negative social
and environmental impacts this kind of development entails are often referred to as
"externalities". We scrutinize them critically to assess their importance for
those most affected. We suggest that the shrimp industry's expansion often builds on
existing inequalities and generates new ones. We raise questions about who seems to be
benefiting and who seems to be losing and about which actors bear what kind of risks and
detrimental impacts.
A fifth section looks more broadly at the roles that market forces, institutions,
policies and official discourse play in the growth of the shrimp industry and its social
and environmental impacts. The partial remedial actions private and public social actors
are attempting in order to mitigate or remedy negative consequences of the industry are
assessed critically. Finally, a short appendix proposes directions for further research on
social and environmental issues related to the expansion of shrimp aquaculture. Such
studies could contribute in particular to better use of tropical coastal resources for
meeting present and future food, employment and income needs of local people, while taking
into account the foreign exchange requirements of developing countries.
Footnotes
1. Based on a study conducted in 1992 on 4,500 hectares of
intensive farms in the Philippines producing between 3 and 6 metric tons per hectare per
crop, with two crops per year.
2. Hypernutrification results from an excess load of nutrients
(nitrogen, phosphorus and ammonia) in the water. Eutrophisation is the consequent increase
in organic matter and decrease in dissolved oxygen. The latter often leads to
phytoplankton blooms.
3. Flower production is an export cash crop that has a
comparable growth rate. |