Fisheries Quota Management and Coastal Policy




NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE

5 MAY

1563

Quota Management Area 8

Target species BAR 1 BCO 8 FLA 2 GUR 8 SPO 8 WAR 8
Bycatch species Method(s) BPT, BT BLL BPT, BT BPT, BT SN
HPB 8 1.45
MOK 1 - - 0.50 0.57
RCO 8 - 0.17 0.40 - 0.23
SCH 8 0.66 - 1.32 0.67 0.75
SPO 8 - - - - 1.13
TAR 8 7.15 - - - - -
TRE 7 3.95 - - - - -

Quota Management Area 9

Target species SNA 8 SNA 8 TRE 7 TRE 7
Bycatch species Method(s) BPT, BT BLL, DL, HL, TL BPT, BT
● BAR 7 0.09 - - -
FLA 1 0.80 - - -
GUR 1 0.34 0.34 0.91 0.91
JDO 1 1.11 - - -
RCO 1 0.13 0.13 0.36 -
SPO 1 0.67 0.67 - -
SCH 1 0.45 - 1.20 1.20
TAR 1 1.01 - 2.71 -
TRE 7 0.37 - - -

Dated this 28th day of April 1994.

B. D. SHALLARD, Acting Deputy Group Director, MAF Fisheries.

  • S.R. 1986/267
  • S.R. 1990/214
    go3239

Conservation

Resource Management Act 1991

Notice of the Issue of the New Zealand Coastal Policy Statement 1994

Pursuant to Section 52 of the Resource Management Act 1991

Pursuant to section 52 (3) (a) of the Resource Management Act 1991, I, Denis Anson Marshall, Minister of Conservation, hereby issue the New Zealand Coastal Policy Statement 1994.

General Principles for the Sustainable Management of New Zealand’s Coastal Environment

The purpose of the New Zealand Coastal Policy Statement is set out in section 56 of the Resource Management Act which states:

The purpose of a New Zealand coastal policy statement is to state policies in order to achieve the purpose of this Act in relation to the coastal environment of New Zealand.

The purpose of the Resource Management Act is set out in section 5 of the Act which states:

(1) The purpose of this Act is to promote the sustainable management of natural and physical resources.

(2) In this Act, “sustainable management” means managing the use, development, and protection of natural and physical resources in a way, or at a rate, which enables people and communities to provide for their social, economic, and cultural wellbeing and for their health and safety while:

(a) sustaining the potential of natural and physical resources (excluding minerals) to meet the reasonably foreseeable needs of future generations;

(b) safeguarding the life-supporting capacity of air, water, soil, and ecosystems; and

(c) avoiding, remedying, or mitigating any adverse effects of activities on the environment.

Section 5 cannot be read in isolation from the rest of Part II of the Act, namely Sections 6, 7 and 8, as set out below.

6. Matters of National Importance

In achieving the purpose of this Act, all persons exercising functions and powers under it, in relation to managing the use, development, and protection of natural and physical resources, shall recognise and provide for the following matters of national importance:

(a) The preservation of the natural character of the coastal environment (including the coastal marine area), wetlands, and lakes and rivers and their margins, and the protection of them from inappropriate subdivision, use, and development;

(b) The protection of outstanding natural features and landscapes from inappropriate subdivision, use, and development;



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✨ LLM interpretation of page content

🌾 Fisheries Bycatch Trade-Off Notice (continued from previous page)

🌾 Primary Industries & Resources
28 April 1994
Fisheries, Bycatch, Trade-Off, Regulations, Quota Management
  • B. D. Shallard, Acting Deputy Group Director, MAF Fisheries

🏛️ Issue of the New Zealand Coastal Policy Statement 1994

🏛️ Governance & Central Administration
Resource Management Act, Coastal Policy, Sustainable Management
  • Denis Anson Marshall, Minister of Conservation