Clinic and Environmental Law Institute Submit Comments on Proposed Regulations to Implement the Fishery Management Plan for Regulating Offshore Aquaculture in the Gulf of Mexico
The comments make several concrete recommendations, including that NMFS should (1) develop a scientific basis for determining maximum sustainable yield and optimum yield; (2) consider the full range of impacts when conducting project reviews; (3) expand and increase monitoring and reporting requirements; (4) expand the range of available remedial actions; (5) require short-term aquaculture permits for novel systems; (6) require that wild broodstock must be collected for each individual spawning event and that all juveniles are first generation descendents; and (7) expand site selection and financial assurance requirements.
The comments are based on a white paper, Offshore Aquaculture Regulation Under the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act, that the Emmett Clinic, ELI and the Ocean Foundation issued last year.