Welcome   Sponsored By
Subscribe | Register | Advertise | Newsletter | About us | Contact us
Bruce Hearn

Industry pioneer, serial innovator, accountant and community leader. Since obtaining one of the country’s first commercial marine farming licences, Bruce Hearn has been an important contributor to the evolution of the industry both on and off the water. After six years as a director of Aquaculture New Zealand he was elected last year to serve as the organisation’s Chairman.





Seafood New Zealand: 'Fisheries And Aquaculture – So Much In Common'
Tuesday, October 15, 2024

In a world where most of the public don’t differentiate between where mussels and monkfish come from, how can fishing and aquaculture learn from each other, and even work together for better outcomes?

The Aquaculture New Zealand Conference is always a big and busy event. Around 450 people get together, usually in Nelson, and spirits are often high, but perhaps never more so than this year. At the opening on Wednesday this week, Chairman Bruce Hearn started his address by saying that if you’d told him even a year ago that the sector would soon get twenty year extensions on existing marine farming permits, he would have thought you were putting gin on your weetbix. But here we are. 

Bruce also said there is a need for a spirit of collaboration. We like that sentiment

Let’s think about some of the many things our sibling industries of fishing and aquaculture have in common.

Firstly, most of our large fishing companies are also our large aquaculture companies. Talley’s (fishing and mussels), Sealord (fishing and salmon (in Australia)), Sanford (fishing, mussels and salmon) and Moana (fishing and oysters).  Plenty of the smaller operators also have interests in both areas, too.

Then there’s the marine permits that Bruce talked about. Both fishing and aquaculture have more experience than they would like in being wound up in red tape for years at a time. Everyone would acknowledge the need for sensible legislation that protects environments and people. But in fishing, we are concerned about regulatory overlap, when two or three bits of different legislation try to do what one act could do more efficiently. Both fisheries and aquaculture are vulnerable to the impacts of RMA decisions. At Seafood New Zealand, we think the Fisheries Act is the appropriate place to manage fisheries.

Bruce Hearn, Chairman Aquaculture New Zealand -->

Both fishing and aquaculture are populated by people who love the ocean and have an appetite for entrepreneurial risk. In fishing, we are at the mercy of the seasons, ocean currents, climate change impacts and many other factors. These same things impact aquaculture too and anyone involved in either industry needs a high tolerance for risk and change.

Both industries need money. To enable the growth we are capable of we will need capital investment. The question of where this can come from was addressed by Oceans and Fisheries Minister Shane Jones in his Conference opening speech. He spoke of his plans to visit Singapore soon and his intention to promote New Zealand as an investment destination, particularly when it comes to food production.

Another financial commonality is costs. Cost increases have hit almost every part of New Zealand’s business landscape.  Nelson Mayor Nick Smith urged Conference attendees to open their pockets while in town – hospitality has been doing it tough at the Top of the South (as it has across the country). Both our aquaculture and fishing sectors face increased costs in everything from fuel to nets. It’s tough out there and the saying “survive till 2025” is now morphing into “survive through 2025.”

If the investment and red tape questions can be addressed, we will be better placed to do this.

Then there are the social licence issues. We may both be industries that bring people beautiful, healthy food, but we are both under attack from a variety of groups. Fishing in New Zealand may suffer more of these slings and arrows, but aquaculture is far from immune. Carl Carrington, CEO of New Zealand King Salmon, gave an uplifting presentation (with his GM Aquaculture Grant Lovell) about their plans for open ocean salmon farming. The Blue Endeavour project is now seriously underway after facing red tape and objections for years. Carl never takes social licence for granted and he reminded delegates that if they get complacent, they only need to look to British Columbia where open-net pen farming has been banned. That decision has been estimated to cost up to 6,000 jobs. 

This sort of conflict exercises minds in both industries. Both are filled with people who want to do the right thing (and yes, sure there are also some people who are less good at working with communities and with nature, but they are the exception, not the rule). 

We see many opportunities to learn from each other and work together. Our shared interest is the ocean and the desire to create jobs and feed people. There is no good guy and less good guy. There should be no favourites. We can all contribute to growing New Zealand’s exports, focusing on good science and supporting each other’s efforts. This can be practical. For example, Seafood New Zealand will soon be presenting to the Foreign Affairs and Trade Select Committee on the technical barriers to trade that affect both industries. It makes sense to collaborate in this way. The power of coordination and speaking with one voice, where appropriate, cannot be underestimated.

Bruce, we love what you say about the spirit of collaboration – thank you. In our small, oceanic country (to loosely quote the Minister) the more we can work together, the better.


 Email Print


Andres Loubet Jambert
Chairman and Co-Founder of FIS

Bruce Hearn
10/15/2024
Seafood New Zealand: 'Fisheries And Aquaculture – So Much In Common'

Read article
   
Andres Loubet Jambert
1/8/2024
Opinion with proposal | Argentine Crisis and the 'Time to Contribute'

Read article
   
ITF International Transport Workers' Federation
2/25/2023
Overfishing in the Southwest Atlantic is a threat to local fishermen and the ecosystem

Read article
   
Dr. Cesar Augusto Lerena
11/15/2022
The foreign occupies and exploits the Southwest Atlantic

Read article
   
Dr. Eduardo Pucci
8/4/2021
Marine Protected Areas on the High Seas

Read article
   
Ian Urbina
5/27/2021
China's aggressive fishing in the world depredates the oceans globally

Read article
   
Andres Loubet Jambert
5/26/2021
AMPB Agujero Azul: The non-solution to a serious problem

Read article
   
Dr. Eduardo Pucci
4/26/2021
Opras expressed absolute rejection of initiatives to grant port access to foreign fishing vessels ...

Read article
   
Andres Loubet Jambert
9/20/2020
Malvinas-Falkland and the owners of the truth

Read article
   
Marie Christine Monfort
2/22/2019
Boosting women in seafood and ending gender inequality. A call to the seafood community: time for commitment and change is now!

Read article
   
   

Lenguaje
FEATURED EVENTS
  
TOP STORIES
CCG vessel seizes fishing boat for illegal operations and violent resistance in Yellow Sea
China On Saturday, a Chinese Coast Guard (CCG) vessel intercepted a fishing boat involved in illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing activities in the central Yellow Sea. The boat's 17-member cre...
Foreign crew on New Zealand fishing vessels: approval in principle
New Zealand Changes to Fishing Crew Visa Caps Bring Relief to New Zealand’s Seafood Sector Employers can apply for an Approval in Principle to recruit 7 or more foreign crew for work on...
EU committed to conclusion of global agreement on plastic as final negotiations start
European Union It wants the new treaty to address the adverse impacts of plastic pollution on the environment and human health. The Commission is participating in the final negotiations on the Global Plastics T...
Senegalese Tuna Fishery Earns MSC Certification, a Historic First for West Africa
Senegal A Senegalese tuna fishery, represented by Compagnie Africaine de Pêche au Sénégal S.A. (CAPSEN)—a subsidiary of Dongwon Industries—and the Senegalese-founded Grand Bleu...
 

Maruha Nichiro Corporation
Nichirei Corporation - Headquarters
Pesquera El Golfo S.A.
Ventisqueros - Productos del Mar Ventisqueros S.A
Wärtsilä Corporation - Wartsila Group Headquarters
ITOCHU Corporation - Headquarters
BAADER - Nordischer Maschinenbau Rud. Baader GmbH+Co.KG (Head Office)
Inmarsat plc - Global Headquarters
Marks & Spencer
Tesco PLC (Supermarket) - Headquarters
Sea Harvest Corporation (PTY) Ltd. - Group Headquarters
I&J - Irvin & Johnson Holding Company (Pty) Ltd.
AquaChile S.A. - Group Headquarters
Pesquera San Jose S.A.
Nutreco N.V. - Head Office
CNFC China National Fisheries Corporation - Group Headquarters
W. van der Zwan & Zn. B.V.
SMMI - Sunderland Marine Mutual Insurance Co., Ltd. - Headquarters
Icicle Seafoods, Inc
Starkist Seafood Co. - Headquearters
Trident Seafoods Corp.
American Seafoods Group LLC - Head Office
Marel - Group Headquarters
SalMar ASA - Group Headquarters
Sajo Industries Co., Ltd
Hansung Enterprise Co.,Ltd.
BIM - Irish Sea Fisheries Board (An Bord Iascaigh Mhara)
CEFAS - Centre for Environment, Fisheries & Aquaculture Science
COPEINCA ASA - Corporacion Pesquera Inca S.A.C.
Chun Cheng Fishery Enterprise Pte Ltd.
VASEP - Vietnam Association of Seafood Exporters & Producers
Gomes da Costa
Furuno Electric Co., Ltd. (Headquarters)
NISSUI - Nippon Suisan Kaisha, Ltd. - Group Headquarters
FAO - Food and Agriculture Organization - Fisheries and Aquaculture Department (Headquarter)
Hagoromo Foods Co., Ltd.
Koden Electronics Co., Ltd. (Headquarters)
A.P. Møller - Maersk A/S - Headquarters
BVQI - Bureau Veritas Quality International (Head Office)
UPS - United Parcel Service, Inc. - Headquarters
Brim ehf (formerly HB Grandi Ltd) - Headquarters
Hamburg Süd Group - (Headquearters)
Armadora Pereira S.A. - Grupo Pereira Headquarters
Costa Meeresspezialitäten GmbH & Co. KG
NOAA - National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Headquarters)
Mowi ASA (formerly Marine Harvest ASA) - Headquarters
Marubeni Europe Plc -UK-
Findus Ltd
Icom Inc. (Headquarter)
WWF Centroamerica
Oceana Group Limited
The David and Lucile Packard Foundation
Ajinomoto Co., Inc. - Headquarters
Friosur S.A. - Headquarters
Cargill, Incorporated - Global Headquarters
Benihana Inc.
Leardini Pescados Ltda
CJ Corporation  - Group Headquarters
Greenpeace International - The Netherlands | Headquarters
David Suzuki Foundation
Fisheries and Oceans Canada -Communications Branch-
Mitsui & Co.,Ltd - Headquarters
NOREBO Group (former Ocean Trawlers Group)
Natori Co., Ltd.
Carrefour Supermarket - Headquarters
FedEx Corporation - Headquarters
Cooke Inc. - Group Headquarters
AKBM - Aker BioMarine ASA
Seafood Choices Alliance -Headquarter-
Austevoll Seafood ASA
Walmart | Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (Supermarket) - Headquarters
New Japan Radio Co.Ltd (JRC) -Head Office-
Gulfstream JSC
Marine Stewardship Council - MSC Worldwide Headquarters
Royal Dutch Shell plc (Headquarter)
Genki Sushi Co.,Ltd -Headquarter-
Iceland Pelagic ehf
AXA Assistance Argentina S.A.
Caterpillar Inc. - Headquarters
Tiger Brands Limited
SeaChoice
National Geographic Society
AmazonFresh, LLC - AmazonFresh

Copyright 1995 - 2024 Seafood Media Group Ltd.| All Rights Reserved.   DISCLAIMER