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Sand mining threatens Kashmir’s trout industry

Experts warn a wave of rushed approvals for riverbed mining projects will decimate fish populations and jeopardise many jobs in the region
<p>Residents near the Rambi Ara, a tributary of the River Jhelum in Tahab, Jammu and Kashmir, say truckloads of minerals are being extracted from the river every day [image by: ShabirBhat]</p>

Residents near the Rambi Ara, a tributary of the River Jhelum in Tahab, Jammu and Kashmir, say truckloads of minerals are being extracted from the river every day [image by: ShabirBhat]

Fisheries experts from Kashmir have warned that unabated mineral extraction from the valley’s rivers, streams and other water bodies poses a grave threat to its important fish industry.

The Kashmir valley and its Himalayan rivers are famous for trout, Mahaseer and many other fish species, which support a thriving industry and tens of thousands of jobs in the former Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir.

The government may have to soon declare the famous trout fish an endangered species if immediate steps arent taken to stop the unabated extraction of minerals from the rivers and streams of Kashmir,” said Mohammad Nazir Bhat, a resident of Pulwama district in the southern Kashmir.

Bhat, who lives near Rambi Ara, a tributary of the River Jhelum in Tahab, in the west of the state, said he sees people extracting truckloads of minerals from the river nowadays.

Similarly, in central and north Kashmir, contractors are using heavy machinery to extract mineral deposits from the rivers and streams, destroying important fish habitat and breeding grounds.

rainbow trout, Jammu and Kashmir fisheries department
Jammu and Kashmir produces 20,000 tonnes of fish each year [image by: Fisheries Department Jammu and Kashmir]

Sand mining gold rush

Since February, the state government has been auctioning large stretches of riverbeds in Kashmir for mineral extraction. For the first time these contracts have been given to non-local companies, and without proper environmental clearance. This makes the mining illegal. But instead of stopping that, on July 30 the government ordered the “fast-tracking of environmental clearance”.

See: Kashmir now a hotspot of illegal riverbed mining

On August 5, 2019, the Indian government fundamentally altered the aspects of autonomy granted to the disputed region and split the state into two union territories: Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh.

Laws under Article 370 of the Indian Constitution had previously barred non-locals from leasing and renting the mineral blocks in the Indian-administered region.

In the past year the majority of bids on blocks to mine sand and minerals have gone to outside companies and mining has surged.

Fish under threat

This large-scale riverbed mining poses a big threat to the aquatic life and ecosystems of rivers and streams across Kashmir.

Excessive sand mining can disturb river channels, food systems and fish populations. It can even alter the riverbed, force the river to change course, erode banks and lead to flooding.

Fisheries experts warn that outside contractors reportedly use heavy machinery to extract the minerals, destroying fish-breeding grounds and disturbing ecosystems.

Before the revocation of the region’s special status, Kashmiri labourers would extract minerals manually, while non-local contractors have reportedly used machines including JCBs.

Mineral extraction Jammu & Kashmir, Shabir Bhat
Heavy machinery is being used to mine the riverbeds [image by: Shabir Bhat]

Unchecked/unplanned exploitation of land resources in J&K may have far-reaching consequences on our water resources and fish biodiversity, which are very important for maintaining good human health,” said M.H. Balkhi, dean at the Faculty of Fisheries, Sher-e-Kashmir University of Agricultural Science and Technology (SKUAST) Kashmir.

Balkhi said that development schemes must go hand-in-hand with biodiversity conservation in rivers that are home to fish, including commercially important snow trout.

Each such scheme must have an Environment Impact Assessment component for safeguarding aquatic resources and fish biodiversity to maintain a healthy ecosystem,” Balkhi said. 

Mining destroys fish-breeding grounds and reduces fish populations. It also leads to water pollution, which affects the quality of food for the fish, said Balkhi.

F. A. Bhat, an associate professor at SKUAST-Kashmir, said the Kashmir snow trout and other trout species need crystal-clear water and are very sensitive to any kind of pollutants.

See: Pakistan trout farms at risk of financial ruin after pandemic

Most of the fish of Kashmir are bottom feeders and lay eggs on the bottom [of rivers and under boulders]. Mining will surely affect the feeding and breeding grounds of these fish, which will ultimately affect the production of fish,” Bhat said. 

Bhat, who is a snow trout expert, claims that the fish are already getting smaller because of environmental constraints. Three to four decades ago snow trout would reach up to 10 kg, now it is a maximum of 2-3 kg,” he said.

Fisheries department helpless

On July 10, the Fisheries Department of Jammu and Kashmir raised its concerns in a letter to the principal secretary of the government’s Department of Fisheries. In the letter, which The Third Pole obtained a copy of, state officials wrote:

The illegal, unscientific and rampant extraction of bed material like sand, Bajri, boulders etc. from these natural water bodies have also led to annihilation, extinction and extermination of fish biota from these habitats due to ecological imbalance without consideration of Environmental Action Plan.

Moreover, the trenches/pools so created by mechanical extraction acts as mortality ditches in which the fish particularly the juveniles get trapped and thus cause substantial damage to the existence of fish species.”

Mohammad Amir Mir, director of the state’s fisheries department, said it has not yet received a response from higher officials.

Livelihoods hit

According to a news report, Jammu and Kashmir produces 20,000 tonnes of fish each year while 93,000 people depend on fisheries for their livelihood in the state.

The state department of fisheries plays an important role in generating employment by establishing fish-rearing units, which require high-quality water.

According to the department, 534 trout units have been established in the private sector. On top of this, 17,398 families earn their livelihood by catching fish.

Brown trout, Jammu & Kashmir fisheries department
There is a thriving industry for brown, snow and rainbow trout, among other important species like Mahaseer and carp [image by: Jammu and Kashmir Fisheries Department]

However, fishers say widespread riverbed mining has destroyed breeding grounds and will prove disastrous for them.

“We are very worried, mining will definitely hit our business,” said Mohammad Shaban, a fisherman from north Kashmir’s Bandipora district.

Mir, the director of fisheries for J&K, claimed that around 1,500 new trout farming units will be established in the next four years under Pradhan Mantri Matsya Sampada Yojana, a scheme to boost fish production and generate employment opportunities.

But this scheme will be greatly affected if riverbed mining activities are not restricted, he said.

According to reports, Ferozpora Tangmarg stream in north Kashmir – where 26 private trout units are operating – is also being auctioned out to sand mining companies.

Trout (snow, brown and rainbow) and other important fish species such as carp are found in streams where mineral extraction is rampant. This includes the Lidder, Sindh, Ferozpur Nallah, Madhumati and Kishenganga Nallahs.

Illegal activities

Under the Jammu and Kashmir Fisheries Act, 2018, all rivers, streams, lakes, ponds, springs, reservoirs, canals etc belong to the union territory.

The act says the department of geology and mining has to consult the fisheries department when issuing permission for mineral extraction. This has not happened, according to the state fisheries department, in its letter of complaint to the principal secretary.

Even after the revocation of special status and subsequent extensions of central laws in J&K, the fisheries act remains in place.

“The act didn’t change [with the union territory status] because we informed the government that we have cold water here in the valley and for that we have our own laws,” Mir said.

Auqib Javeed is a Srinagar-based journalist and tweets @AuqibJaveed

Comments (1)

Being a Fisheries expert in culture and rearing,the closed systems as well as the open waters as classified by the Erstwhile Maharajah Act ,the potential of exploiting these waters for culture and capture has now been diminishing at a faster rate, and presumably whatever fish Fauna existing in these waters is nearing endangers to extinction. As per records e. g., the Schizothorax genus (Kashir Gaad or snow Trout ) comprising of 22 spp. has by now diminished to 4 spp. only .The Glypthorax (ver.. Anur) is rarely seen now in the upper reaches of the cold fresh waters streams. Same is the case with the other spp.
The water bodies have become the main victims of every pollution… whether from the point sources or the non point sources….
The recent mining gold rush as perpetrated by the Mining Deptt and the nods by other allied deptts in exploiting these water bodies not only have been unabatingly exterminated all the possibilities of fish Fauna thrivings or the flora thriving, but have been making these water bodies ailing and dead where the quality parameters of the water have deteriorated to such levels where these polluted waters have acquired lethality of various poisonous entities that enter the food chains and food webs ultimately lead to biomagnification in the human bodies…. Leading to dreadful chronicities of various aliments which can get relieved only after the death of that individual.
The ground waters are the ultimate storage points of these pollutants.
The unabated looting spree of the sand, stones or gravel just for making money cannot never be held proportionate to the ecological losses which these water bodies are paying, ultimately the human beings must give an account for this unwise and unruly methodology adopted for degradation and destruction of these beautiful ,aesthetical ecologies.
The tall talks of the govt in restoring or keeping the glory of these glorious water bodies have just been a paper work. No such an Act has so far been in force after the then last Maharajah of the state. Unless an Act is not enforced these beautiful waters will die out and will also drown the so called human with them in the nearest future. The admin. has been watching like an Ostrich in the desert of madness, where it looks as if there has been no wisdom left in them for assessing the aftermath of such pervasive degeneration and degradation of these ecosystems.

Hikmat o sarmaya duniya ma saf ara hogayae… Dekhtay ha hota ha kis kis ki tamanaoun ka khoon.

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