
New Zealand industry- including aquaculture- could equal Australia in output
New Zealand aquaculture development has been in the news ever since the government agreed to ensure that 20 per cent of all aquaculture development should belong to the country's aboriginal community. Claiming that he speaks for an organization whose members "are drawn from a wide political spectrum but as a union of farmers, we act in the best interests of farmers and farmers", much of Mr. Nicolson's speech was focused on terrestrial farming and mining. However, he also addressed the potential for further aquaculture development in New Zealand;
"20 percent of the diet for 2.6 billion people is fish. Yet going out to sea with nets cannot cope with the demands a growing world population will place upon wild capture. According to Ernst & Young, aquaculture could be worth up to $2.2 billion to the New Zealand economy.
That could be conservative. Norway exports $4.5 billion worth of salmon and trout each year and effectively controls production out of Scotland and Chile. Aquaculture is to Chile what sheep are to New Zealand - nigh on a $3 billion dollar industry - or ten Avatars each and every year. What aquaculture needs are direct policy support and research and development.
Indeed, what farmers of all types need, is a bipartisan commitment to research and development to achieve a sustained spend of three percent of GDP by 2029. Yet in aquaculture trout presents itself as another economic test. Here's a fish that isn't native and is farmed everywhere except here. Moreover it can be farmed in saltwater or fresh yet removing it from the Conservation Act is akin to changing the name of New Zealand.
Protecting the interests of Fish & Game is denying New Zealand an industry that could be worth $US50 million in five years and much more after that. That's only the tip of an iceberg when you factor in several freshwater crayfish farms, the farming of eel, whitebait and our other fish species. It's time for the Government to send some pro-business signals and when you have Sanford, who would start farming trout tomorrow, it's bizarre we are not making the most of our natural and introduced species".
Mr. Nicolson finished his speech with an encouragement for the politicians "to give us the tools and means to harvest them (the resources) responsibly and ethically".
The ACT New Zealand party has 5 representatives in the country's parliament.