23/11/2005
- A network of Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) in Australia’s
South-east Marine Region will be integrated with the fisheries
management changes in the region as part of a $220 million
national fisheries structural adjustment programme, the
Minister for the Environment and Heritage, Senator Ian
Campbell announced today.
Senator Campbell said urgent changes were being introduced
in the management of key Commonwealth fisheries in the
region and these were being integrated with the development
of an MPA network to ensure sustainable use of the marine
environment.
“The industry should not face uncertainty, so the Australian
Government will offer one combined assistance package
for fisheries to adjust to the changes,” Senator Campbell
said.
“The package comprises a $150 million fishing concession
buy-out across a number of fisheries, including several
operating in the South-east Marine Region, plus several
complementary elements that will be delivered nationally.”
The other measures will include funding for business advice,
fisheries management fee relief and assistance for land-based
businesses most directly affected in regional ports.
“The Government’s actions will protect examples of the
unique marine environment from within an area of ocean
of about two million square kilometres off Tasmania, Victoria,
southern New South Wales and eastern South Australia,”
Senator Campbell said. The Government will finalise the
south-east MPA network by the end of March 2006, and the
MPAs will be declared as marine reserves under the Environment
Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999.
Structural adjustment assistance would be open to both
Australian and State Government licensed fishermen whose
fishing effort would be displaced by the declaration of
Commonwealth MPAs.
“The Government will release a draft MPA network for the
south-east shortly and continue consultations with key
stakeholder groups early in 2006,” Senator Campbell said.
“The consultation will allow the MPA boundaries to be
refined to ensure we are getting the best possible conservation
outcomes while minimising unnecessary impacts on industry.”
He said the need to accelerate MPA development in the
south-east to accommodate the fisheries management changes
had altered the MPA development process, but that the
guidelines for MPA identification would remain the same.
“The March deadline for finalising MPAs is necessary to
ensure affected fishermen are able to participate in the
fisheries management concession buy-out with full knowledge
of their future operating environment,” Senator Campbell
said.
MPA development in other regions will occur as part of
the updated regional marine planning process, with the
provisions of adjustment assistance to address the impacts
of displaced fishing to be considered on a case-by-case
basis. |