Indian shrimp industry sails in troubled waters after Trump tariffs

*
Trump's tariffs could hit
*
Even lower tariff rate of 10% spooks Indian exporters
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Stressed Indian shrimp farmers complain of lower prices
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By
GANAPAVARAM,
But
Farmers are seeing demand dry up amid the uncertainty as exporters have cut offer prices by a tenth since the tariffs.
"We are suffering huge losses," said
"We don't know who can resolve our price issues," added Raju, one of several families in the state's remote village of Ganapavaram grappling with dwindling sales to exporters.
Many also face high payments for shrimp feed and rentals for the land where the saline ponds have been set up.
"I am not sure how I will sustain prices," said another farmer, 60-year-old Uppalapati Nagaraju, adding that he had been entirely unaware of the concept of tariffs.
"Had I known, I would not have started my cultivation."
In the face of erratic demand from exporters, he now regrets having begun shrimp cultivation just 15 days before the tariff news. Although Trump has delayed the 26% rate until July, even the current rate of 10% has made exporters skittish.
Shrimp formed the major component, with the 300,000 farmers
of Andhra Pradesh contributing the most to industry supplies,
accounting for 92% of
Industry representatives have joined a state government
panel weighing the impact of tariffs and looking for ways to
boost exports to other countries, such as
But the exporters fear
Yet Ecuadorean producers, with
Although U.S. consumers have fuelled growth in the area of
processed shrimp,
JOURNEY OF 40 DAYS
Reuters visited one Indian factory where shrimp was washed and machine sorted automatically by size before a manual quality check by workers in masks and gloves. Then a conveyor belt whisked the seafood away to be quick-frozen.
Thousands of tons of frozen shrimp leave Andhra Pradesh each
year on a voyage that usually takes 40 days to arrive at ports
in
The chief of
"Ten percent is high, we exporters operate on a 3% to 4%
margin," said Kumar, president of the
"It's game over" for the Indian industry if the tariff rate of 26% takes effect in July, said one shrimp exporter, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
He was in talks with U.S. clients who did not want to fully absorb the 10% tariff, he said, pointing to the risk of earning no profit if he had to sell 130 shipping containers already packed.
In
"We have built long-lasting and deep relations with
suppliers over the years," said
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