After two weeks of negotiations between more than 50 countries, the Fifth Session of the Intergovernmental Conference (IGC) ended last Friday without establishing a High Seas Treaty — once again leaving more than two-thirds of the global ocean unprotected. But important progress was also made, which the Only One community of supporters has helped push for. World leaders are closer than ever before to finalizing the treaty, and there’s reason to be optimistic that the next negotiation will be the last step in the nearly two-decades–long process. We can’t let up the pressure now, and we need you with us! Can you help build momentum for the coalition to protect the High Seas by sharing our petition with your network? We’re just shy of our goal of 75,000 signatures.
Add your name to the open letter urging New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Luxon to reverse the rash, last-minute decision to allow harmful commercial fishing in high protection areas in the treasured Hauraki Gulf.
The Hauraki Gulf / Tīkapa Moana is on the brink of ecological collapse.
Overfishing, habitat loss, pollution, and the effects of poorly planned urban development have led to a 57% decline in key fish stocks, a 67% decline in seabirds, and a 97% decline in whales and dolphins in the Gulf. Scallop and crayfish populations are functionally extinct in some areas.
The creation of new marine protected areas (MPAs) in the Hauraki Gulf is critical to protecting and restoring its environment, while also supporting the communities and industries that depend on the Gulf for their livelihoods.
The Hauraki Gulf Marine Protection Bill seeks to extend 2 marine reserves and establish 5 new seafloor protection areas and 12 high protection areas in the Hauraki Gulf, acknowledging customary rights within seafloor protection areas and high protection areas.
The Bill is the result of years of collaborative work between tangata whenua, environmental groups, commercial and recreational fishers and others involved in the SeaChange process that began in 2013.
In June, the Environment Select Committee unanimously agreed to advance the Bill, with no substantive changes to the high protection areas.
Now, the future of Hauraki Gulf is at risk because the Government has made the decision to amend the Bill to allow a type of fishing known as ring-netting to take place in the new high protection areas — zones explicitly designed to exclude both commercial and recreational fishing and provide a safe haven for marine life to recover.
Allowing commercial fishing to occur in these high protection areas completely undermines the purpose of the Bill — to restore the health and mauri of the Gulf — ultimately depriving future generations of the ability to enjoy this treasured place.
Sign our open letter calling on Prime Minister Christopher Luxon to reverse this rash, last-minute change to the Hauraki Gulf Marine Protection Bill.