Revision of Marine Reserves legislation announced
30 January 2002
Media Statement
Revision of Marine Reserves legislation announced
Conservation Minister Sandra Lee today announced that a Bill overhauling the Marine Reserves Act would be the most significant advance in conservation legislation within the last 10 years, when it is introduced to Parliament this year.
Ms Lee said that the Marine Reserves Bill 2002 will help give effect to the New Zealand Biodiversity Strategy by providing a new purpose for marine reserves focussing on the protection of marine biodiversity.
“Currently the legislation only provides for the protection of marine areas for scientific study. The Bill will enable the preservation and protection of marine areas for the conservation of marine biodiversity,” Ms Lee said.
“Marine reserves have proven to be extremely effective ways of protecting and restoring marine life. They generally enjoy strong public support and local critics of specific proposals have often been won over as the benefits of marine protection are realised.
“Enabling people to enjoy marine reserves without causing harm will be a key provision in the bill. It will also allow marine reserves to be established in the Exclusive Economic Zone, whereas they can currently only be set up inside the 12 nautical mile limit.
“The Bill will also streamline the process of applying for and approving reserves. Currently, the process is too cumbersome and takes too long.
"The new system for creating marine reserves will be rigorous and will provide for substantial public participation. Reasonable time limits will be set for each stage of the application process."
Ms Lee said the Bill would specify that indigenous marine life within marine reserves would enjoy complete protection with all new marine reserves being ‘no-take’ areas.
The only ministerial consent required for the establishment of marine reserves would be that of the Minister of Conservation. Consultation will be required with the Ministers of Fisheries, Energy, Transport, and with the Minister of Foreign Affairs for reserve proposals in the open ocean.
The matters considered by the Conservation Minister would include those currently considered by the Minister of Fisheries.
Ms Lee said she was hopeful that decisions on up to 12 marine reserve applications could be made within the next 18 months. She said the Department of Conservation would have five applications ready for decision-making by July. These would proceed under the existing legislation.
Ms Lee said staff at DOC, the Ministry of Fisheries and the Ministry for the Environment were also developing, with the involvement of other key interest groups, a marine protected areas strategy that will co-ordinate marine conservation measures.
“The benefits of marine reserves are being increasingly recognised internationally with a notable research article in Science magazine last year demonstrating that fisheries in the Caribbean and Florida have become more productive since marine reserves were established in adjacent areas”, said Ms Lee.
"Once introduced, the Marine Reserves Bill will be referred to a parliamentary select committee for consideration and public submissions will be called for."
ENDS
Background Information
Why the
Marine Reserves Act was reviewed
The review was prompted
by four main problems with the current Act:
- The purpose
does not reflect the objectives of the New Zealand
Biodiversity Strategy, nor does it reflect the main reason
people now propose and value reserves for is their marine
life;
- It provides no guidelines for how Treaty
obligations would be met;
- It does not include
appropriate linkages with recent marine management
legislation; and
- Some timeframes and processes are
vague or not specified which has contributed to significant
delays in having decisions made on reserve
applications.
DOC distributed 5400 discussion documents (Tapui Taimoana: Reviewing the Marine Reserves Act 1971), held 32 hui and public meetings, and received 259 submissions.
The submission analysis is available on DOC’s
web site at www.doc.govt.nz
under
“Whats-New”.
Co-ordinating with the Oceans Policy
process
The Government’s long term goals, outcomes,
objectives and targets for marine biodiversity are set out
in the New Zealand Biodiversity Strategy (NZBS). This was
developed to give effect to the International Convention on
Biological Diversity. One of the priority actions in the
NZBS is to “Review the Marine Reserves Act 1971 to better
provide for the protection of marine biodiversity, including
extending its jurisdiction to protect marine biodiversity
within and beyond the 12 mile limit”.
The NZBS also identified the need for an overarching, co-ordinated marine management regime. This is being developed through the Oceans Policy. Cabinet established a group of Ministers to be responsible for managing the successful development of the Oceans Policy. These Ministers are also responsible for co-ordinating operational reviews, including that of the Marine Reserves Act, in a way that is consistent with the successful development of the Oceans Policy. These Ministers considered key issues in the Marine Reserves Act review.
Proposed new purpose and principles
- New purpose focusing on
biodiversity
The purpose will be to: Preserve and protect
marine areas for the conservation of marine biodiversity.
Reserves will focus on sites that are:
(a)
Representative examples of the full range of marine
communities and ecosystems that are common or
widespread;
(b) Outstanding, rare, distinctive, or
internationally or nationally important.
- No fishing to ensure effective protection
Marine reserves will not allow
fishing of any kind.
Ways of allowing some take were
looked into but were considered impractical.
Experience
in NZ and internationally is that “no-take” reserves provide
significantly better protection for marine life, and are a
better way to increase abundance, diversity and
productivity.
Marine reserves will therefore provide the
“top end” of biodiversity protection in the sea, similar to
national parks and ecological areas on land.
- Reserves in the EEZ
Marine reserves will now be able to be set up in
the EEZ as well as the territorial sea.
Any reserves in
the EEZ will reflect New Zealand’s rights and obligations
under international law.
- People able to use reserves
People will be free to use and enjoy reserves as far as possible for recreational, scientific, educational, and matauranga Maori (Maori traditional knowledge) purposes, where this does not compromise the conservation of marine biodiversity.
- Historic heritage
Marine reserves will
not be set up specifically to protect marine archaeological
or historic sites, or waahi tapu.
Providing protection
for such sites will be included in policy development work
for the Oceans Policy.
- Marine reserves and other marine protected areas
A combination of tools will be used to
achieve the NZBS target of protecting 10% of New Zealand’s
marine environment by 2010.
Marine reserves would protect
outstanding, rare, distinctive, nationally or
internationally important sites, and sites that together
would include examples of the full range typical marine
ecosystems.
Appropriate mechanisms under other laws,
such as closed fishing areas under the Fisheries Act, would
add other typical sites to make up the 10% target, and to
help achieve an effective network.
Recognising Treaty obligations
- Treaty section
The Conservation Act currently requires that the Department must give effect to the principles of the Treaty when administering and interpreting the Marine Reserves Act. The new Bill will include a Treaty section.
- Customary fishing
The Minister of Conservation will be required to take account of the effects of a proposed reserve on customary fishing and the relationship of tangata whenua with the site, among other factors. The Minister of Fisheries must be consulted on the possible implications for customary fishing and the Fisheries Deed of Settlement.
- Consult-ation with tangata whenua
The Bill will require tangata whenua to be
consulted from an early stage of developing reserve
proposals, and formally once an application is
notified.
- Manage-ment
There will be clear requirements for tangata whenua and the local community to be represented on any reserve committees.
An improved
application process
- Removing barriers
Barriers to who can apply for reserves will be removed. Instead, the Bill will contain criteria that an application must meet before it would be notified for consultation.
- Meetings
After submissions are made, meetings will be held to seek to resolve concerns.
- Time limits
Reasonable time limits will be set for each stage of consultation and decision-making.
- Indepen-dent report
If DOC is the applicant, an independent audit of the process must also be sought.
- Minister’s decision-making process
There will be a more streamlined and robust decision-making process, and clear accountability will be with the Minister of Conservation.
The public consultation process, and a requirement for the Minister to formally consult with the Ministers of Fisheries, Energy, Transport, and Foreign Affairs, will provide the Minister with information on potential implications of a proposed reserve.
The Minister
will then have to decide whether the proposed reserve was
consistent with the Act, whether it was in the public
interest; and whether there was an adverse effect that would
warrant the reserve not being approved.
The issues to be
considered will include customary fishing and the
relationship of tangata whenua with the site, commercial and
recreational fishing, other recreational activities,
economic use and development, adjacent interests in land,
navigation rights, scientific study, education and
matauranga moana (Maori traditional knowledge of the
sea).
The Ministers of Fisheries and Transport will no
longer be required to agree to a reserve application before
it can be approved.
The matters considered by the
Conservation Minister would include those currently
considered by the Minister of Fisheries.
Managing
marine reserves
- Public involvement
DOC will manage reserves in most circumstances. However there will be more and clearer opportunities for local involvement in management.
This will include:
- A clear process for
establishing Reserve Committees to provide advice and
develop management plans. These committees will include
representatives of tangata whenua, the local community, and
organisations with a particular interest in the
reserve.
- Allowing the day to day management of reserves
to be devolved to others in certain circumstances.
- Concession system
A concession system, similar to that
used in land reserves, will be phased in over two years.
This will allow the environmental effects of various
activities to be properly monitored and managed.
Concessions won’t affect the public’s right to free
access to reserves.
- Reviews
The Bill will include a
process for revoking reserve status.
It will be similar
to that for scientific and nature reserves on land, and
require the Minister to be satisfied that the reserve no
longer meets the purpose of the Act.
When a marine reserve is set up, the Minister may also require a review to be done after 25 years of whether the reserve continues to meet its objectives.
ENDS