Rajshahi, July 16: A fish development project is being implemented in Rajshahi division aimed at boosting production of fish along with enhancing its productivity and habitat development.The four-year project titled “Fisheries Development Project in Rajshahi Division” is being implemented in 65 Upazilas in all eight districts of the division involving around Taka 47.47-crore since late last year, said Kamrul Hassan, Director of the project.
Being implemented by the Department of Fisheries (DoF), the project is intended to protect the endangered fish species through establishing 50 new fish sanctuaries and renovating 150 other existing ones.
The project has been undertaken to boost production of fish along with enhancing its productivity and habitat development through establishing 1,860 demonstration farms and 80 beel nurseries after re-excavation of those.
Kamrul Hassan said generating more scopes of improving living and livelihood conditions and poverty reduction of the marginalized population, employment generation for the youths and transferring modern technologies among the fishermen are the ultimate goals of the project.
Around 2,000 distressed fishermen will be engaged in various alternative income generation activities in phases for reducing overfishing in the natural water bodies besides employment generation for them with the ultimate goal of improving their socio-economic condition.
Training, seminar and workshop are being arranged for the beneficiary farmers in 1,472 batches for transferring modern technologies among them and the current promotional activities are being progressed through social distancing and other safety precautions amid the Covid-19 pandemic.
A total of 240 Kuchia demonstration farms will be established for making the ethnic minority people self-reliant through boosting the production of Kuchia.
480 farms for demonstration of various small fish species including Shing, Magur, Gulsha and Pabda while 480 farms for demonstrating Koi, Tilapia and Pungus will be set up for production expansion of the tasty and high market valued fish species.
The project has also provision of 180 cage and pen fish farming demonstrations for the best uses of the open water bodies through promoting cage fish culture coupled with capacity development of the people living alongside the river banks.
As a result of establishing new sanctuaries and renovation of the existing ones, production of the native fish species will be enhanced side by side with revitalizing the endangered ones.
Requisite number of beel nurseries will be established for boosting fish production to meet up the gradually mounting protein demands. Fish production will be enhanced to five to six tonnes per hectare through infrastructure development in natural water bodies together with transferring of modern technologies among the farmers.
In phases, 62,000 beneficiary fishermen will be imparted training on modern fish farming technologies aimed at building their capacities.
Project Director Kamrul Hassan mentioned that climate change, employment generation, biodiversity conservation and sustainable uses of updated technologies are the main challenges towards implementation of the project.
He also said the project is intended to protect the endangered fish species through installation of fish sanctuaries and habitats.
Upon successful implementation by December 2022, the project, as a whole, will play a vital role towards improvement of the fisheries sector leading to mitigate the adverse impact of the COVID-19 pandemic besides achieving the sustainable development goals.