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Marine Bill

Marine and Coastal Access Bill

The purpose of the Bill is to: improve and simplify arrangements for managing marine development and protecting the marine environment and biodiversity, including a new planning system for the marine area, and provide greater recreational access to the English coast.

The main elements of the Bill are:
. Establish a Marine Management Organisation for the waters around England and the UK offshore area;

. Introduce a new marine planning system, with long-term objectives for the marine area around the UK, and subsequently the creation of more detailed local marine plans;

. Streamline the law on licensing marine development so that, as far as possible, only one licence is needed for each development;

. Provide powers to designate marine conservation zones and to protect those zones from damaging activities;

. Strengthen and modernise the licensing and management of marine, migratory, freshwater and shellfish fisheries, including creating new Inshore Fisheries and Conservation Authorities and introducing a scheme to manage live fish movement;

. Streamline and modernise enforcement powers for fisheries and nature conservation, providing a civil sanctions scheme for licensing and nature conservation offences and an administrative penalty scheme for domestic fisheries offences;

. Secure a long-distance route around the coast of England including beaches, cliffs, rocks and dunes, with public access for coastal walking and other recreational activities.

The main benefits of the Bill are:
. Greater confidence and economic benefits for marine developers through simplification of the legislative framework and faster planning decisions with greater transparency and less uncertainty, and a reduction in administrative burdens by reducing the number of bodies that business needs to deal with;

. Improved ability to take quick, tough action to protect marine species and habitats, strengthened fisheries and environmental management arrangements to allow more effective action to conserve ecosystems, and the tools we need to meet our international marine conservation obligations;

. More efficient use of marine resources, taking account of current usage and potential future demand, with better opportunities for all stakeholders to help shape the way in which our seas are managed;

. More effective delivery, regulation and enforcement in the marine area by bringing together functions in the Marine Management Organisation;

. Flexible, proportionate and targeted marine licensing provisions will ensure that activities with little or no adverse impact on the environment, marine heritage or other legitimate uses of the sea do not attract the regulatory burden of the full licensing process;

. Greater recreational opportunities from increased public access to the Eng

Marine Bill
Territorial Extent
United Kingdom
Theme
Securing Britain's Future Prosperity
Related Documents
A Marine Bill has been published in draft (3 April) for pre-legislative scrutiny. A joint Committee of the House of Commons and the House of Lords has been established to scrutinise the draft Bill. Details of how to contribute evidence to that Committee can be found at www.parliament.uk/bills/draftbills.cfm. The Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Select Committee will also undertake pre-legislative scrutiny of the coastal access part of the Bill. Details of how to contribute to their inquiry can be found at http://www.parliament.uk/parliamentary_committees/environment_food_and _rural_affairs/efra_draft_marine_bill.cfm. Comments on the draft Marine Bill can also be sent directly to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs by 26 June - details at www.defra.gov.uk/marine, or alternatively, you can comment below.