Tilapia Invasion Wipes Out Farmed Fish and Prawns as Fishermen Seek Compensation from CP Group
On 4 February, the Thai Department of Fisheries announced the successful development of a genetically modified Blackchin tilapia. The offspring resulting from crosses between this modified tetraploid tilapia and naturally occurring diploid tilapia are sterile. The government hopes this approach will help curb the spread of this African invasive species and reverse the ecological damage it has caused.
Currently, Blackchin tilapia are proliferating across as many as 19 provinces in Thailand, devastating local aquatic ecosystems. Environmental scientists have therefore stated that the spread of the Blackchin tilapia is “the most severe ecological destruction event in Thailand’s history”.

This news has sparked concern among both the public and the scientific community. It raises questions about the ecological impact on native species and habitats when experimentally modified animals with altered chromosomes escape into the wild, underscoring the need for a far more cautious approach.
The Thai government’s approach carries a distinctly ‘fighting fire with fire’ flavour: attempting to combat a naturally occurring invasive species by introducing a genetically modified, artificially sterilised tilapia into the wild. It is worth remembering that the Blackchin tilapia’s original arrival in Thailand from Africa was itself the result of a failed experiment.
According to Thai media reports, CP Food, a subsidiary of the CP Group, imported 2,000 Blackchin tilapia from Ghana in 2010 for breeding trials at its fish farm in the Ampawa district of Samut Songkhram province. To date, this remains the only recorded instance of the species being introduced to Thailand. At the time, CP Food’s trial was designed primarily to enhance disease resistance in commercially farmed Nile tilapia, as well as to test the Blackchin tilapia’s adaptability to brackish water in line with the company’s expanding industrial aquaculture operations.
Although CP Group maintained that the experiment had failed and swiftly shut down the project, sightings of Blackchin tilapia soon emerged in the vicinity of the test farm. Before long, the species had been spotted across numerous Thai provinces, eventually making its way into the waterways of Bangkok itself.
On 13 January 2025, more than 200 community representatives from 19 Thai provinces gathered outside the CP Group headquarters in Bangkok. Acting on behalf of fishers whose livelihoods have been devastated by the proliferation of Blackchin tilapia, they accused the CP Group and its subsidiary, CP Food. Speaking to the press, they stated that over the past decade, the invasive species had triggered the collapse of local ecosystems and severely threatened fishing communities. The demonstrators are calling on the government to intervene and demanding that the CP Group provide compensation for the damages incurred.

I. Tilapia Invasion

Its remarkable adaptability and reproductive capacity mean that once it enters a non-native environment, it can swiftly become an invasive species, wreaking havoc on local ecosystems. In southern China, tilapia is currently the most significant invasive fish species. Close relatives of the black-chinned tilapia—the Nile tilapia and Zill’s tilapia—were introduced to China in 1978 and quickly escaped into natural waterways. Studies show that in certain reaches of the Pearl River basin, tilapia biomass now outweighs that of all other fish species combined.
A similar scenario has unfolded in Thailand. In a petition submitted to the Thai Prime Minister by demonstrators, it was stated: “Black-chinned tilapia have consumed all available food in ponds and natural canals; they prey on plankton and juvenile aquatic creatures. As a result, the shrimp, fish, molluscs and crabs in ponds, along with other aquatic life in natural waterways, have been decimated.”
The fallout from this ecological disruption falls most heavily on independent fishers engaged in traditional capture and aquaculture.
Independent outlet Mongabay cited former shrimp farmer Wanlop Kunjeng of Samut Songkhram province, who recalled that a decade ago, black-chinned tilapia decimated his ponds, forcing him to switch to bass farming—a species large enough to fend off tilapia predation. The drawback, however, is substantially higher upfront costs and a longer payback period compared to shrimp farming.
Lin Zhiguang, Southeast Asia director for GRAIN, an organisation dedicated to supporting smallholders, told Mongabay that the black-chinned tilapia has “undermined traditional coastal shrimp farming systems that require no commercial feed, forcing small-scale operators to adopt intensive, enclosed systems reliant on agribusiness-supplied feed, chemicals and antibiotics”.
Furthermore, unlike other commercial tilapia species, Mongabay cited an environmental scientist from Khon Kaen University who noted that the flesh of the black-chinned tilapia is inferior in flavour, meaning that even when caught, it struggles to find buyers in local markets.
According to figures from the Thai Royal Lawyers Council, fishers have suffered direct economic losses totalling 2.486 billion baht (roughly CNY 533 million), with broader social and ecological damage running into the tens of billions of baht. Even so, these figures likely understate the true toll. “Many have been left drowning in debt or stripped of their land; some have even taken their own lives, particularly in Samut Songkhram.”
In July 2024, the Thai government elevated curbing the black-chinned tilapia infestation to a national priority, allocating a budget of 450 million baht (approximately CNY 97 million) and offering purchase incentives of up to 15 baht per kilogram (around CNY 3) to encourage removal.
The government buyback scheme, however, lasted barely four months, with purchase prices later plummeting to between 3 and 4 baht per kilogram (roughly CNY 0.6–0.8). At that rate, fishers would need to haul in a tonne daily just to break even—a near-impossible feat. Consequently, many abandoned the effort once state purchases ceased.



II. What responsibility should the CP Group bear?

In 2017, affected community fishers and fish farmers lodged a complaint with Thailand’s National Human Rights Commission, seeking redress and government intervention.
CP Foods, however, denied any responsibility for the environmental crisis. They stated that while the company did import black-chinned tilapia from Ghana in December 2010 for research purposes, the fish grew weak and died within a month, prompting the project’s cancellation. The company subsequently disposed of all the fish using approved methods and forwarded samples and documentation to the Department of Fisheries.
However, the committee overseeing the complaint reported that CP Foods failed to comply with the biosafety regulations stipulated by the Department of Fisheries. They noted, “The company failed to submit written reports on the test results and mortality of the black-chinned tilapia, which breached the standards and conditions of the non-native aquatic species permit.”
Despite multiple investigations by the Thai government since then, the origin of the black-chinned tilapia has yet to be officially determined, leaving affected fishers unable to hold CP Foods accountable or seek compensation.
In July 2024, the BioThai Foundation, a Thai non-profit organisation dedicated to biodiversity and sustainable agriculture, announced it would pursue legal action to hold the corporation accountable. Withoon Lienchamroon, a trustee of the foundation, told the Bangkok Post: “The government has been spending taxpayers’ money to resolve this issue, which is unfair to us. We need to see those responsible face legal consequences.”

A gathering held on 13 January this year reiterated demands for compensation through legal action, and called on the government to identify those responsible for the ecological catastrophe. An open letter issued following the gathering noted that CP Foods reported profits of 7.3 billion baht (approximately RMB 1.56 billion) in the third quarter of 2024 alone. They argued that, as a publicly listed company, CP Group “should redistribute a portion of its profits to society to address issues such as the black-chinned tilapia infestation”.
III. Will a response be forthcoming?
Having read aloud an open letter to CP Group and presented their demands to the government, the demonstrators marched from the CP Group headquarters towards government offices and parliament. Ahead of the provincial delegates’ return home, Wongcharoen told reporters: “If they continue to sit in silence and inaction, people from 19 provinces will soon mobilise for our rights—and we will bring tonnes of black jaw tilapia to the steps of the government buildings.” To date, however, beyond announcing the success of the tetraploid tilapia trials, the Thai government has offered little further response.
Even under the most favourable conditions, ecological restoration will prove far more arduous and protracted than securing accountability and compensation, and the black jaw tilapia is unlikely to be “eradicated” as hoped. A Thai fisheries expert told the BBC: “The trouble with invasive species is that, once they take hold, they are exceptionally difficult to eradicate.”
Thai independent outlet HaRDstories cited a warning from a senior aquatic ecologist at the Mekong River Commission: Without systematic action to address the crisis, the Mekong Delta and Singapore could well be under threat within the next five years.
It is clear that this protracted conflict—between communities and corporations, and between humanity and the natural world—over the black jaw tilapia is far from over.
In a statement of solidarity, MASIPAG wrote that “corporate greed and a disregard for both ecological integrity and community welfare fuelled this environmental catastrophe”. Given that a handful of invasive species can trigger such profound and irreversible consequences, will those with short-term horizons finally draw the necessary lessons? Without robust mechanisms to hold perpetrators accountable, secure compensation, and restore damaged environments, and without stringent oversight of similar breeding trials, ecological catastrophes driven by profit will remain an unavoidable reality.

❸The Cabinet must form a national committee and provincial-level working groups to eradicate the blackchin tilapia, restore ecosystems, and help farmers and other impacted parties recover their livelihoods. The committee and working groups must set 2026 as the target for complete eradication and allocate the necessary budget accordingly.
❹ Once the investigation concludes and responsible parties are identified, the government must bring legal charges and initiate court proceedings. Those at fault must provide compensation and cover the losses, ensuring that remediation costs do not fall on Thai taxpayers.
References
https://bkktribune.com/cpf-accused-of-breeding-blackchin-fish-since-first-fish-import/
https://bkktribune.com/series-of-legal-action-taken-in-blackchin-tilapia-fish-invasion-case/

Editor: Wang Hao
