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Coastal management in NSW: An update

Coastal management in NSW: An update

Advice on legislation or legal policy issues contained in this paper is provided for use in parliamentary debate and for related parliamentary purposes. This paper is not professional legal opinion.
Briefing Paper No. 07/1998 by Stewart Smith
  • The coast remains the focus of economic development and growth for the State. Over 80 percent of the State's population lives in a local government area adjacent to the coast. The coast is a finite resource. We cannot extend it or create more of it. There are many competing interests for coastal resources, including tourism, mining, ports, environment protection, agriculture, mariculture and population growth. How to manage these competing and often conflicting interests has troubled governments for some considerable time (page 1).
  • Coastal development is controlled by provisions of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979 (page 3). The NSW Government Coastal Policy, released in November 1997, also guides what development is permissible in the coastal zone (page 4).
  • An important consideration in coastal zone management is how to define the coast. The NSW Coastal Policy defines the coast as the following (page 5):
  • three nautical miles seaward of the mainland and offshore islands;
  • one kilometre landward of the open coast high water mark;
  • a distance of one kilometre around: all bays, estuaries, coastal lakes, lagoons and islands; and tidal waters of coastal rivers to the limit of mangroves, as defined by NSW Fisheries (1985) maps, or the tidal limit whichever is closer to the sea;
  • with the line on the maps being taken to the nearest cadastral boundary and/or easily recognisable physical boundary, in consultation with local councils.
  • With the above definition, the 1997 Coastal Policy is more comprehensive than the previous policy, which did not include coastal lakes and estuaries unless nominated by local councils.
  • This paper canvasses two main issues: Commonwealth involvement in the coastal zone and the coordination of planning in the coastal zone. A significant new Commonwealth program is the Natural Heritage Trust, with $1.25 billion available from the part sale of Telstra. From this Trust, $125 million has been allocated to the Coast and Clean Seas program, which will provide for the conservation, sustainable use and repair of Australia's coastal and marine environments (page 10).
  • However, the role of the Commonwealth in regards to environmental protection and participation in environmental issues is under review. It is proposed that the Commonwealth government will only become involved in environmental assessment if a proposal may have a significant impact on a matter of national environmental significance. In regards to the management and protection of the marine and coastal environment, it is proposed that the trigger' will be tightly defined to cover all activities that may have a significant impact on the environment in Commonwealth waters. It will not cover activities impacting solely on waters under State jurisdiction (page 11).
  • The management of the coast is fraught with difficulty. Recommendations from three reports are discussed (pages 11-14). The 1997 NSW Coastal Policy recognises that no single government organisation is responsible for the management of the coast. The Policy document states that the Policy is an attempt by Government to better coordinate the management of the coast by identifying, in a single document, the State's various management policies, programs and standards as they apply to a defined coastal zone. The various policies and programs have as their basis legislation from several government departments, and are often implemented by local councils or the community either in partnership with the State Government or independently (page 15).
  • The newly established Coastal Council will monitor and review the implementation of the Coastal Policy and report on this through its annual report. The Policy notes that the Committee will not be a policeman', but it will have a role in ensuring that all parties responsible for the implementation of the policy perform this role effectively. The Committee will have a review role in ensuring that major rezonings and major new developments in the coastal zone are consistent with the ecological sustainable development principles on which the Policy is based.