All pain and no gain: Factors impacting local and regional sustainability due to COVID-19 pandemic with respect to the Indian marine fisheries

Monitoring frameworks under a non-disaster scenario can be helpful to identify the various socio-technical constraints of local and regional origin which influence the economics and resources management of marine fisheries. However, local-scale manifestations of regional/global changes due to the ra...

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Main Authors: Sudip Kumar Kundu, Harini Santhanam
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-01-01
Series:Current Research in Environmental Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666049021000621
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spelling doaj-8ab5077fe9834939a7a208b8b94044292021-08-28T04:48:44ZengElsevierCurrent Research in Environmental Sustainability2666-04902021-01-013100086All pain and no gain: Factors impacting local and regional sustainability due to COVID-19 pandemic with respect to the Indian marine fisheriesSudip Kumar Kundu0Harini Santhanam1National Institute of Advanced Studies, IISc Campus, Bengaluru 560012, India; Manipal Academy of Higher Education, Manipal, Karnataka 576104, IndiaNational Institute of Advanced Studies, IISc Campus, Bengaluru 560012, India; Corresponding author.Monitoring frameworks under a non-disaster scenario can be helpful to identify the various socio-technical constraints of local and regional origin which influence the economics and resources management of marine fisheries. However, local-scale manifestations of regional/global changes due to the rapid onset of a disaster scenario may lead to unprecedented distortion of the market demand-supply value chains for the fisheries sector at shorter temporal scales. The global pandemic of COronaVIrus Disease (COVID-19) provided a unique short, temporal window to study the evolution of socio-economic challenges to sustainable fishing in the Bay of Bengal (BoB), India. The present study provides a detailed multi-source assessment of the factors that lead to massive complications of market disruption beginning with a public curfew on 22nd March 2020, followed by a nationwide complete lockdown of 54 days beginning from 25th March 2020, indicating an “all-pain no-gain” scenario for the fishers. Aggravating factors as a cessation of food services, and the restriction of exports of perishable commodities indicated negative spin-offs for allied activities sectors such as food processing due to low or negligible demand. The present investigation also indicated that as part of rehabilitation, policies related to overfishing are necessary to promote sustainable fishing practices in the BoB region in a post-pandemic period. New policy frameworks must consider the community-centric factors which facilitated the alleviation of the impacts of anthropogenic activities related to fishing and the slow restoration of the demand-supply chain, with long-term benefits for natural resources sustenance and to aid marine conservation efforts.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666049021000621Marine fisheryIndian fisheriesCOVID-19LockdownSupply chainSDG 14
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sudip Kumar Kundu
Harini Santhanam
spellingShingle Sudip Kumar Kundu
Harini Santhanam
All pain and no gain: Factors impacting local and regional sustainability due to COVID-19 pandemic with respect to the Indian marine fisheries
Current Research in Environmental Sustainability
Marine fishery
Indian fisheries
COVID-19
Lockdown
Supply chain
SDG 14
author_facet Sudip Kumar Kundu
Harini Santhanam
author_sort Sudip Kumar Kundu
title All pain and no gain: Factors impacting local and regional sustainability due to COVID-19 pandemic with respect to the Indian marine fisheries
title_short All pain and no gain: Factors impacting local and regional sustainability due to COVID-19 pandemic with respect to the Indian marine fisheries
title_full All pain and no gain: Factors impacting local and regional sustainability due to COVID-19 pandemic with respect to the Indian marine fisheries
title_fullStr All pain and no gain: Factors impacting local and regional sustainability due to COVID-19 pandemic with respect to the Indian marine fisheries
title_full_unstemmed All pain and no gain: Factors impacting local and regional sustainability due to COVID-19 pandemic with respect to the Indian marine fisheries
title_sort all pain and no gain: factors impacting local and regional sustainability due to covid-19 pandemic with respect to the indian marine fisheries
publisher Elsevier
series Current Research in Environmental Sustainability
issn 2666-0490
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Monitoring frameworks under a non-disaster scenario can be helpful to identify the various socio-technical constraints of local and regional origin which influence the economics and resources management of marine fisheries. However, local-scale manifestations of regional/global changes due to the rapid onset of a disaster scenario may lead to unprecedented distortion of the market demand-supply value chains for the fisheries sector at shorter temporal scales. The global pandemic of COronaVIrus Disease (COVID-19) provided a unique short, temporal window to study the evolution of socio-economic challenges to sustainable fishing in the Bay of Bengal (BoB), India. The present study provides a detailed multi-source assessment of the factors that lead to massive complications of market disruption beginning with a public curfew on 22nd March 2020, followed by a nationwide complete lockdown of 54 days beginning from 25th March 2020, indicating an “all-pain no-gain” scenario for the fishers. Aggravating factors as a cessation of food services, and the restriction of exports of perishable commodities indicated negative spin-offs for allied activities sectors such as food processing due to low or negligible demand. The present investigation also indicated that as part of rehabilitation, policies related to overfishing are necessary to promote sustainable fishing practices in the BoB region in a post-pandemic period. New policy frameworks must consider the community-centric factors which facilitated the alleviation of the impacts of anthropogenic activities related to fishing and the slow restoration of the demand-supply chain, with long-term benefits for natural resources sustenance and to aid marine conservation efforts.
topic Marine fishery
Indian fisheries
COVID-19
Lockdown
Supply chain
SDG 14
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666049021000621
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