Ministry of Fisheries (New Zealand) explained

Agency Name:Ministry of Fisheries
Nativename:Te Tautiaki i nga tini a Tangaroa
Formed:1995
Dissolved:2012
Superseding:Ministry for Primary Industries
Jurisdiction:New Zealand

The Ministry of Fisheries (Māori: Te Tautiaki i nga tini a Tangaroa), also known by its acronym MFish, was a state sector organisation of New Zealand whose role is ensuring the sustainable utilisation of fisheries. It was merged into the Ministry of Primary Industries in April 2012. Its purpose was conserving, using, enhancing and developing New Zealand's fisheries resources.

History

The Ministry of Fisheries was established as a stand-alone agency in 1995, after a major governmental review of fisheries legislation, as well as ongoing reforms in the New Zealand State Sector. Previously, responsibility for fisheries belonged to New Zealand Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry (MAF), which later became New Zealand's Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry when the Ministry of Forestry merged with the remaining Ministry of Agriculture in 1998. Under the Fifth National Government, the Ministry of Fisheries was merged back into MAF from 1 July 2011, and then into the Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) in 2012.

The subsequent Labour-led government has announced it would break up MPI and has re-established the portfolio of Minister of Fisheries. However, MPI was not disestablished; instead, it was restructured with Fisheries New Zealand established as a new business group within the larger agency.[1]

Responsibilities

The Ministry was primarily responsible for fisheries management within New Zealand's 200-2NaN-2 Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ). It aimed to ensure that fisheries are sustainably used within a healthy aquatic ecosystem.[2] MFish also undertook fisheries research to provide information needed to determine how many fish and other marine organisms (of various species) could be safely taken while ensuring the sustainability of the resource.

See also

Notes

1. Budget 2008/09 (excl GST) MFish Facts and Figures.
2. Staff (March 2008)(FTEs) MFish Facts and Figures.
3. Web site: Ministry of Fisheries . Research: Links . 2008-09-30 .

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mackenzie. Dene. 2017-12-14. Govt confirms MPI restructure. 2020-11-02. Otago Daily Times Online News. en.
  2. Web site: Fishing and aquaculture | MPI - Ministry for Primary Industries. A New Zealand Government Department.