Consultation on plan to transform and improve inshore finfish fisheries management
19 November 2019
Fisheries New Zealand has begun public consultation on a new Draft National Inshore Finfish Fisheries Plan, which will
guide the management of these important fisheries for the next five years.
Director of Fisheries Management, Stuart Anderson says New Zealand’s inshore finfish resources are important to all of
us. “They provide customary, recreational and economic benefits and managing these precious resources is important work.
We want our inshore fisheries to remain healthy and sustainable, now and into the future.”
“The draft Plan aims to transform and improve how inshore finfish fisheries are managed, driving innovation and
advancing ecosystem based fisheries management.”
“Fisheries management is changing – it needs to provide greater participation and transparency in management and
decision making, be more responsive and improve our environmental performance. Increased participation for tangata
whenua and stakeholders at national, regional, and local levels is a central theme throughout the Plan.”
The Plan focuses on five key areas:
• Managing individual stocks – standardising approaches to monitoring and managing fish stocks that share similar characteristics.
• Enhancing benefits for all users – engaging sectors to customise the management of specific fish stocks to enhance the benefits they obtain.
• Enabling integrated multi-stock management – in fisheries where several different fish stocks are caught together, we will manage those stocks in an integrated
way.
• Improved local fisheries – ensure tangata whenua and communities benefit from their local fisheries resources by engaging them in local area
management.
• Improving environmental performance – reducing the impacts of fishing and land-based effects to improve the health of the marine environment.
“We all have a stake in the way our fisheries are manged and I encourage tangata whenua, stakeholders and members of the
public to engage in the consultation process and put forward their views on the Draft Plan,” says Stuart Anderson.
The consultation documents and information on the process, including deadlines for submissions, can be found on
Fisheries New Zealand’s website at https://www.fisheries.govt.nz/news-and-resources/consultations/draft-national-inshore-finfish-fisheries-plan/
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