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New Zealand needs an "oceans policy" to ensure the right balance between competing commercial interests and the need to safeguard the environment. Photo / Supplied
Take the area of New Zealand, and multiply it by four. Add spectacular mountain ranges, yawning canyons, erupting volcanoes and some of the world's most pristine, untouched and unexplored wilderness.
Now imagine that this area has been recognised as part of New Zealand's natural heritage and has been protected from commercial exploitation by law, forever.
If that sounds like the kind of thing a bunch of conservationists might dream up, that's because it is.
Two years ago, 1.2 million sq km of seabed around New Zealand was set aside as regulated benthic protection areas, or BPAs. These areas - a total of 17 different ones within the country's exclusive economic zone - are protected from all bottom-trawl fishing methods, including dredging. The areas are broadly representative of marine biodiversity in New Zealand waters.
It's hard to appreciate how significant this action was, but consider this - it increased the area of New Zealand's protected seabed from 3 per cent of our exclusive economic zone to 32 per cent overnight.
These areas are a national treasure, something to be proud of. But not many people know they even exist, and I'd venture that a lot fewer would know who was behind them - New Zealand's commercial fishing industry.
Why would the group of people with so much to gain from fishing our deep water work with the Government to ensure it never happens in these places? Well, it makes more sense than you think.
The answer goes to the heart of the way we look at our business. More than any other major natural resource-based industry in New Zealand, our economic destiny is inextricably linked to our environmental practices. To put it bluntly, if we don't look after our resources, we won't have an industry.
We pushed for protection areas because we wanted to find the balance that would allow New Zealand's $1.6 billion a year commercial fishing industry to continue to operate and export, while at the same time responding to concerns about protecting the marine environment. It was the right thing to do.
That's why when I read Anthony Doesburg's comment (Hot prospects in deep water) I felt it needed a response. Mr Doesburg urges Minister Gerry Brownlee to look into the possibility of deep water mining, before "we start ripping up national parks in search of mineral wealth".
On one level that's an understandable position. After all, mining under the sea takes place out of sight, and would undoubtedly cause less public controversy than mining in a national park.
The irony for the seafood industry is that the very area Mr Doesburg is proposing - along the Kermadec arc, which stretches northeast of New Zealand between the Bay of Plenty and Tonga - is within a benthic protected area.

