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Tasmanian salmon aquaculture faces toughest regulatory review in a decade

A parliamentary inquiry is examining whether the industry's expansion should be capped.

By Tasmania Daily · Published 27 June 2026 at 12:35 am Updated

2 min read

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Tasmanian salmon aquaculture faces toughest regulatory review in a decade
Photo: Photo by Unsplash

The Tasmanian parliamentary inquiry into salmon aquaculture has entered its final stage, with the Joint Standing Committee on Primary Industries having received more than 200 submissions from industry operators, environmental organisations, traditional fishing communities, tourism businesses, and members of the public who collectively represent the breadth of Tasmanian opinion on whether the industry's expansion should continue, be capped, or be significantly reduced.

The inquiry has been the most contentious political debate in Tasmania for several years, as the competing economic interests — the salmon industry employs approximately 5,000 people and generates $1 billion annually in export revenue — and environmental concerns about the impact of expanded lease areas on Macquarie Harbour, Storm Bay, and the Huon Estuary have generated sustained public debate and significant media coverage nationally and internationally.

Tasmanian Salmon Growers Association chief executive Luke Martin said the industry remained committed to working within a science-based regulatory framework, noting that both Huon Aquaculture and Tassal had made significant investments in environmental management and monitoring that had reduced the industry's impact on the marine environment relative to historical levels.

Environmental groups including the Bob Brown Foundation and Environment Tasmania have called for a moratorium on any new lease approvals until the inquiry's findings are implemented and independently verified, arguing that the current expansion trajectory is inconsistent with the environmental carrying capacity of the approved growing areas.

The committee is expected to report by September 2026, with recommendations that will shape the industry's regulatory framework for the following decade.

This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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