24 September 2008 Media Statement
Bill to help aquaculture development passes
Environment Minister Trevor Mallard has welcomed the passage of the Aquaculture Legislation Amendment Bill which is
aimed at improving the operation and development of the aquaculture industry in New Zealand.
"The Aquaculture Legislation Amendment Bill passed by parliament today clarifies the policy intent of the aquaculture
reforms by ensuring that applications for the occupation of the coastal marine area for aquaculture activities cannot be
made unless they relate to aquaculture management areas in operative regional coastal plans," Trevor Mallard said.
"The issues with existing legislation arose from a May 2006 decision of the Environment Court, in the case of SMW
Consortium Limited v Tasman District Council.
" By correcting problems with the current law and improving operation for businesses, iwi and local government, the
aquaculture industry will be better placed to grow and contribute to New Zealand’s economic growth," Trevor Mallard
said.
The Aquaculture Legislation Amendment Bill amends the Resource Management Act 1991, the Fisheries Act 1996, the Maori
Commercial Aquaculture Claims Settlement Act 2004 and the Aquaculture Reform (Repeals and Transitional Provisions) Act
2004.
Currently worth over $300 million to the New Zealand economy, the aquaculture industry is the fastest growing sector of
New Zealand’s seafood industry, and there is an industry strategy in place for that to rise to a billion dollars by
2025.
Trevor Mallard said another bill, the Aquaculture Legislation Amendment Bill (No 2), will have its first reading in
parliament later this week.
The Aquaculture Legislation Amendment Bill (No 2) will amend legislation to facilitate the creation of new aquaculture
management areas, address issues relating to invited private plan changes, enable experimental aquaculture, provide for
aquaculture agreements in transitional processes under the old Fisheries legislation, support environmental monitoring
and other technical amendments relating to the 2004 aquaculture reforms.
The bill will also give certainty to the invited private plan change (IPPC) process which is emerging as the preferred
means for councils to progress the development of aquaculture management areas.
ENDS