Shrimp Sector Export Earnings Reach TK 2,025 Crore

Industry: Agriculture & Livestock, Fisheries

Satkhira, a coastal district in Bangladesh, plays a significant role in the country’s shrimp exports, accounting for a major portion. Annual shrimp exports from Satkhira range between Tjk 2.5 to 3 thousand crore. In the financial year 2023-24, the district’s shrimp sector saw a boost, with earnings reaching 2 thousand 25 crore rupees, up by at least 150 crore from the previous year. Saltwater shrimp farming, mainly of different species including bagda, lump, deer, chaka, and chembi, is prominent in six upazilas of Satkhira. In the 2023-24 season, 59,000 saltwater shrimps were cultivated, yielding 27,000 tons, leading to increased export earnings. Despite challenges such as post-Covid production losses and tarnishing of Bangladeshi shrimp reputation by unscrupulous traders, the sector remains promising. The government is actively supporting shrimp farmers to ensure continuity in production and exports, including through training programs.

Source for more details:

Related News

Farmers Bear the Most Risk in Agri Chain

May 22, 2025

A recent Bangladesh Bank study reveals that farmers are the primary risk-takers in the agricultural value chain, especially for essential items like rice, potatoes, onions, eggs, and broiler chicken. Conducted across 14 districts, the study attributes price increases mainly to supply shortfalls caused by seasonal factors, reduced cultivation areas, floods, and pest attacks. Unlike intermediaries who secure fixed margins, farmers face fluctuating profits or losses depending on market conditions.

Maize Output Hits 68.84 Lakh Tonnes In FY2023–24

May 21, 2025

In FY2023–24, Bangladesh produced 68.84 lakh tonnes of maize from 6.42 lakh hectares, with FY2024–25 targets set at 71.60 lakh tonnes from 6.51 lakh hectares. Despite high yields of 35–45 maunds per bigha (1 maund ≈ 37 kg), farmers in districts like Lalmonirhat and Rangpur face falling prices—now Tk 28–29 per kg, down by Tk 2–3 from last year—while production costs rose to Tk 11–13 per kg or Tk 14,000–16,000 per bigha.

Tea Exports Surge 58% in 2024

May 13, 2025

Bangladesh's tea exports jumped 57.55% in 2024, reaching 2.45 million kilograms and generating Tk45.96 crore in revenue. This marks a strong recovery from previous years when export volumes had dropped below 1 million kgs.

NAC Bets on Nano Fertilisers and Exports for Growth

April 20, 2025

National AgriCare (NAC), a leading Bangladeshi agrochemical and seed company, plans to invest Tk400 crore across agro, pharmaceuticals, seeds, food, and pesticides by 2027, creating 2,000 new jobs. Tk180 crore will go to its pharmaceutical division, One Pharma, which aims to expand medicine exports to 10 new countries, including Algeria.

Agri Loan Disbursement Falls 6.6%

April 7, 2025

After interest rates were liberalized in May 2024, agricultural loan rates surged to 15–18%, up from a previous cap of 8%, resulting in a notable decline in disbursements. In the first eight months of the current fiscal year, banks disbursed Tk 22,126 crore in agricultural loans, which is Tk 1,565 crore or 6.60% less than the same period last year.

Women-Led SMEs Boost Bangladesh’s Poultry Sector

March 9, 2025

The expansion of women-led SMEs is strengthening Bangladesh’s poultry industry by boosting employment, production, and market competitiveness. On International Women's Day 2025, the Bangladesh Poultry Industries Central Council (BPICC) and the US Soybean Export Council (USSEC) highlighted the need to support women entrepreneurs and ensure adequate nutrition for their sustained contributions.

Related News

Farmers Bear the Most Risk in Agri Chain

May 22, 2025

A recent Bangladesh Bank study reveals that farmers are the primary risk-takers in the agricultural value chain, especially for essential items like rice, potatoes, onions, eggs, and broiler chicken. Conducted across 14 districts, the study attributes price increases mainly to supply shortfalls caused by seasonal factors, reduced cultivation areas, floods, and pest attacks. Unlike intermediaries who secure fixed margins, farmers face fluctuating profits or losses depending on market conditions.

Maize Output Hits 68.84 Lakh Tonnes In FY2023–24

May 21, 2025

In FY2023–24, Bangladesh produced 68.84 lakh tonnes of maize from 6.42 lakh hectares, with FY2024–25 targets set at 71.60 lakh tonnes from 6.51 lakh hectares. Despite high yields of 35–45 maunds per bigha (1 maund ≈ 37 kg), farmers in districts like Lalmonirhat and Rangpur face falling prices—now Tk 28–29 per kg, down by Tk 2–3 from last year—while production costs rose to Tk 11–13 per kg or Tk 14,000–16,000 per bigha.

Tea Exports Surge 58% in 2024

May 13, 2025

Bangladesh's tea exports jumped 57.55% in 2024, reaching 2.45 million kilograms and generating Tk45.96 crore in revenue. This marks a strong recovery from previous years when export volumes had dropped below 1 million kgs.

NAC Bets on Nano Fertilisers and Exports for Growth

April 20, 2025

National AgriCare (NAC), a leading Bangladeshi agrochemical and seed company, plans to invest Tk400 crore across agro, pharmaceuticals, seeds, food, and pesticides by 2027, creating 2,000 new jobs. Tk180 crore will go to its pharmaceutical division, One Pharma, which aims to expand medicine exports to 10 new countries, including Algeria.

Agri Loan Disbursement Falls 6.6%

April 7, 2025

After interest rates were liberalized in May 2024, agricultural loan rates surged to 15–18%, up from a previous cap of 8%, resulting in a notable decline in disbursements. In the first eight months of the current fiscal year, banks disbursed Tk 22,126 crore in agricultural loans, which is Tk 1,565 crore or 6.60% less than the same period last year.

Women-Led SMEs Boost Bangladesh’s Poultry Sector

March 9, 2025

The expansion of women-led SMEs is strengthening Bangladesh’s poultry industry by boosting employment, production, and market competitiveness. On International Women's Day 2025, the Bangladesh Poultry Industries Central Council (BPICC) and the US Soybean Export Council (USSEC) highlighted the need to support women entrepreneurs and ensure adequate nutrition for their sustained contributions.

BUSINESSMONITOR

Connect with


Dont Have Account? Please register Here