In Nagayalanka mandal, at the southern tip of Krishna district where the river meets the Bay of Bengal, a 62-year-old farmer named Ramaiah tends to 12 acres of shrimp ponds that earn him more than his rice paddies ever did. His cooperative society — one of over 400 fishermen cooperatives scattered across Andhra Pradesh — negotiated a collective input price for Vannamei shrimp seed that saved each member approximately ₹15,000 per acre per cycle in 2026. I first heard about Nagayalanka’s transformation from a colleague covering rural Andhra, and the numbers stunned me enough to dig deeper.
What I found was not a single success story but an entire economic ecosystem — one where cooperative aquaculture has quietly turned a coastal district into the engine room of India’s ₹52,000 crore shrimp export industry. Krishna district alone accounts for an estimated 30-35% of Andhra Pradesh’s total shrimp output, and the state itself produces roughly 70% of India’s farmed shrimp. Those are not small numbers. They represent a cooperative-driven revolution that most of India has barely noticed.