C
Shivakumar
Chennai:
Fishing
pattern in the state is undergoing change due to the rise in power plants in
the coastal areas, untreated effluents left into the sea and climate change, according to
Thanga Prakasam chief engineer of fisheries department.
Speaking
on the sidelines of the workshop on Tamil Nadu State Environment Policy,
Prakasam told Express on Thursday that there has been a rapid rise in the
migration of fish species due to the rise in temperature in the water currents
due to power plants and untreated effluents.
“Certain
power plants discharge water at high temperature and this causes mortality to
fish. Fisheries should be empowered to have control on the letting out of water
from power plants and major industries,” Prakasam said.
He
said this will have a serious impact on the fishing stock in coming days and
will change the fishing pattern. Currently, the
fish
production in the state during 2010-11 was 4.04 lakh tonnes and accounts for
13.03 per cent of national fish production.
He also
highlighted the need to protect the interest of fishermen of Ramanathapuram
district in Gulf of Mannar Biosphere reserve and Pulicat in Thiruvallur
district like that of Sunderbans region in West Bengal under the Environment
Protection Act 1986.
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