Appendix 8 - Securing our fishing future package
Element
|
Cost*
|
Fishing Concession
Buyback (Business Exit Assistance)
The Australian
Government will be running a one-off, voluntary tender process to encourage
individual fishing businesses to exit the industry. It will be a competitive
process with a capped budget to reduce excess fishing capacity in those
fisheries that are either subject to overfishing, or are assessed as being at
significant risk of future overfishing due to excess capacity.
While licence holders
in all Commonwealth-only fisheries (except the southern blue fin tuna fishery
which is internationally managed) will be able to tender, the main target
fisheries are:
- the
Southern and Eastern Scalefish and Shark Fishery (excluding the Great Australian
Bight Fishery, which is not subject to overfishing);
- the
Eastern Tuna and Billfish Fishery; and
- the
Bass Strait Central Zone Scallop Fishery.
Funding has also been
set aside to assist the Northern Prawn Fishery with a transition to a
management system based on output controls should the industry choose to do
so. Commonwealth and State fishers affected by the declaration of Marine
Protected Areas in the South East marine region will also be eligible for
business exit assistance.
|
$149m
|
Onshore and Related
Assistance Programme
Up to $30m will be
available for a number of assistance measures under this programme including:
- grants
to help restructure businesses directly related to the fishing industry (e.g.
marine suppliers, fish processors and ship chandlers) who are severely
impacted by the reduction in fishing activity.
- grants
of $5,000 and $3,000 each will be paid to skippers and crew respectively who
lose employment due to the fishing reductions to help offset the costs of job
seeking, retraining and/or relocation.
- up
to $1,500 each will be available to fishing businesses and directly affected
onshore businesses to offset the costs of obtaining professional business
advice on their best options under the package.
|
$30m
|
Fishing Communities
Programme
Up to $20m will be
available for a grants programme to work with local business partners to fund
projects capable of generating local economic activity and opportunities in
communities that have been affected by the reduction in fishing activity.
|
$20m
|
AFMA Levy Subsidy
For those remaining in the industry, a
$15 million subsidy for AFMA fisheries management fees will be brought in for
3 years on a reducing scale, commencing 2006-07. A further $6 million will be
will be directed towards improved science, compliance and data collection to
ensure improved management outcomes.
|
$21m
|
GRAND TOTAL
|
$220m
|
*includes administration
costs
Source: Minister
for the Environment and Heritage, Senator the Hon I Campbell & Minister for Fisheries, Forestry and Conservation,
Senator I Macdonald, 'Government acts for a sustainable fishing future', Joint
Media Release, 23
November 2005.
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