The National Regulatory Cost Burden on US aquaculture farms

IF 2.3 3区 农林科学 Q2 FISHERIES Journal of The World Aquaculture Society Pub Date : 2025-03-17 DOI:10.1111/jwas.70005
Carole R. Engle, Jonathan van Senten, Shraddha Hegde, Ganesh Kumar, Charles Clark, Noah Boldt, Gary Fornshell, Bobbi Hudson, Eric J. Cassiano, Matthew A. DiMaggio
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Abstract

Many government regulations have improved environmental and social quality of life in the United States, but others have resulted in negative consequences that exceed their benefits to society. This study estimated the total annual cost of regulatory compliance and lost revenue for US aquaculture. The total annual regulatory cost was $196 million (in 2023 USD), which accounted for 9%–30% of total annual costs, one of the top five costs of aquaculture production. Regulatory costs result in disproportionately greater per-unit costs of production on smaller-scale farms. Total annual lost revenue was $807 million (36% of total sales value), which resulted from lost sales and thwarted expansion opportunities from regulatory actions that either closed access to existing markets, forced reduced scales of production, or prevented attempts to expand production to meet existing demand for the farm's products. Accounting for multiplier effects, lost economic contributions were $1.4 billion annually, with >8000 jobs lost nationally from farms alone, not including associated supply chain partners. Well-designed regulations made use of best available science, participatory approaches to rule-making, sunset clauses for removal of outdated regulations, and market-based approaches. Pathways identified to improve regulatory efficiency included: (1) sunset clauses for each rule; (2) reward incentives (i.e., reduced testing frequency for farms with records of compliance) (3) standardized fish health testing requirements of sample size, farm-wide rather than lot testing, testing the most susceptible species/life stages; (4) non-lethal, multi-pathogen testing methods; (5) farm compensation for reverse externalities of avian predation; (6) appropriate risk management by experts to manage aquatic invasive species and pathogens; (7) training in aquaculture science, current farm practices, and appropriate, consistent, regulatory actions; (8) engagement with independent experts and producers throughout rule-making; (9) establishment of transparent appeals processes for farmers; (10) concurrent, not sequential review of permit requests by agencies; (11) long-term aquaculture literacy programs; and (12) an efficient, streamlined permitting and regulatory framework for mariculture.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
7.10%
发文量
69
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of the World Aquaculture Society is an international scientific journal publishing original research on the culture of aquatic plants and animals including: Nutrition; Disease; Genetics and breeding; Physiology; Environmental quality; Culture systems engineering; Husbandry practices; Economics and marketing.
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