Marine Directorate | |
Type: | Directorate |
Preceding1: | Scottish Fisheries Protection Agency |
Preceding2: | Fisheries Research Service |
Preceding3: | Scottish Government |
Jurisdiction: | Scotland and Scottish waters |
Headquarters: | Victoria Quay, Leith, Edinburgh |
Employees: | 700 (2016) |
Budget: | £64.7 million (2019-2020)[1] |
Minister1 Name: | Mairi Gougeon MSP |
Minister1 Pfo: | Cabinet Secretary for Rural Affairs, Land Reform and Islands |
Minister2 Name: | Màiri McAllan MSP |
Minister2 Pfo: | Cabinet Secretary for Wellbeing Economy, Fair Work and Energy |
Chief1 Name: | Roy Brannen[2] |
Chief1 Position: | Director-General Net Zero[3] |
Chief2 Name: | Annabel Turpie |
Chief2 Position: | Director of Marine |
Parent Department: | Net Zero Directorates |
Website: | Marine Directorate |
The Scottish Government's Marine Directorate (Gaelic; Scottish Gaelic: Cùisean Mara na h-Alba) is a directorate of the Scottish Government responsible for managing Scotland's seas and freshwater fisheries along with delivery partners NatureScot and the Scottish Environment Protection Agency.[4]
From April 2009 until June 2023, the directorate was known as Marine Scotland.
The Marine Directorate provides management and research of devolved responsibilities such as:
The Marine Directorate was established on 1 April 2009,[14] merging two executive agencies (Fisheries Research Services and the Scottish Fisheries Protection Agency) and the Scottish Government marine and fishery policy divisions.
The Marine Directorate has around 700 staff, covering a range of professions including scientists, sea fishery officers, sailors, policy, administrative and professional/ technical staff.[15]
Staff are located across Scotland[16] including :
The Marine Directorate operates two main research vessels which are fitted with a wide range of deployment and recovery facilities for fishing gear and equipment, scientific and environmental sensors, and data gathering systems:[19]
Additionally, MRV Temora (launched: 1992, length: 10 meters, max speed: 10 knots) is used for sampling as part of the Long Term Climate Change Monitoring Programme.[20]
The Marine Directorate operates three Marine Protection Vessels (MPVs):[21]
The Marine Directorate owns two Reims Cessna F-406 Caravan II aircraft for aerial surveillance, operated by Airtask.[21] [22]
The Marine Directorate operates the UK Fisheries Monitoring Centre (UKFMC), on behalf of the four UK fisheries administrations. The UKFMC acts as the UK single-point-of-contact for manual reporting of ERS, VMS and other EU/national fisheries schemes.[23]
Annabel Turpie is Director of the Marine Directorate. The Director's Office provides corporate services such as business management, communications, information quality, data management, statistics, socio-economic and geographic analysis.
The Compliance division monitors and enforces marine and sea fishing laws in Scottish waters. It reports as appropriate to the Scottish prosecuting authorities and provides intelligence on fishing activity in the seas around Scotland.[24]
The Marine Directorate's Science division undertakes research and provides scientific and technical advice to the Scottish Government (and the UK and European Union authorities) on a number of marine and fisheries issues including aquaculture and fish health, freshwater fisheries, sea fisheries and the marine ecosystem in Scotland's seas.[25]
The Marine Directorate's Planning & Policy division covers three main policy areas and the Licensing Operations Team (LOT).
The Marine Directorate is involved in marine spatial planning at both at a national and regional level.[26] Scotland's Marine Atlas was published in 2011 [27] as a baseline assessment, with Scotland's first National Marine Plan published in 2015.[28] The information from the Atlas and National Marine Plan is available through maps.marine.gov.scot(NMPi) and marine.gov.scot portals. These portals form part of the Marine Scotland Open Data Network which contributes towards Marine Scotland's INSPIRE and open data obligations[29]
The Scottish Government is developing plans for offshore wind, wave and tidal energy in Scottish waters. The Marine Directorate will explore how offshore wind, wave and tidal energy can contribute to meeting Scotland's target of generating the equivalent of 100% of electricity demand from renewable sources and also seek to maximise the contribution of these technologies to achieving a low-carbon economy.[30]
The Marine Directorate follows a strategy for Marine Nature Conservation in Scotland's Seas[31] based on the three pillars of species conservation, site protection, and wider seas policies and measures. Work continues on a Marine Protected Area network with 30 nature conservation MPAs designated in 2014.[32]
The Marine Directorate Licensing Operations team is a central point-of-contact for activities such as depositing or removing objects or substances from the seabed; construction or alteration works, dredging; depositing or using explosives.[33]
The ARF division handles policy areas covering Aquaculture, Salmon & Recreational Fisheries, Fishery Grants, Post-EU Referendum (Brexit) and the Crown Estate in Scotland.
The Sea Fisheries division handles policy areas covering Access to Sea Fisheries, EU Quota Negotiations and Discards, Inshore Fisheries and Coastal Communities, and International Fisheries and Environmental Interactions.