The Environmental Defence Society opposes the Governmentโs decision to press ahead with amendments to the Resource Management Act that severely curtail the ability of regional councils to manage the impacts of fishing on coastal marine biodiversity.
โThis is a direct attack on the ability of local communities to safeguard their coastal environments,โ said EDS Chief Operating Officer Shay Schlaepfer.
โIt gives the fishing industry a long runway to continue destructive practices in areas that should be protected. It is a win for commercial fishing interests and a loss for indigenous biodiversity.
โThe changes effectively mean that regional councils will have to jump through onerous procedural hoops, secure the concurrence of the Ministry for Primary Industries, and wait until the full plan process has concluded before any controls on fishing that seek to maintain indigenous biodiversity can take effect.
โEDS submitted strongly against these changes, arguing they would substantially weaken councilsโ ability to manage the effects of fishing, including habitat destruction and ecosystem degradation, and consequently constrain their ability to fulfil statutory functions to maintain indigenous marine biodiversity.
โThere is already well-established law on the ability of regional councils to impose controls on fishing. The sensible thing would have been to codify this law to provide clarity and certainty. Instead, the Government has chosen to upend that careful legal balance by introducing unnecessary barriers that will make it much harder for councils to act.
โNew Zealandโs marine environment is under increasing pressure, and the Governmentโs approach makes it harder, not easier, to safeguard our coastal ecosystems.
โEDS will continue to advocate for a resource management system that properly protects indigenous marine biodiversity,โ concluded Ms Schlaepfer.


