Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 48— - NATIONAL AQUACULTURE POLICY, PLANNING, AND DEVELOPMENT › § 2803
Create a National Aquaculture Development Plan within eighteen months after September 26, 1980. The Secretaries must start consulting no later than six months after September 26, 1980 with the Secretary of Commerce, the Secretary of the Interior, other federal officials, States, regional fishery management councils, and aquaculture industry representatives. They must also let the public give comments while the plan is being made. The plan must list aquatic species that look promising for commercial farming. It must recommend public and private actions to help those species reach their potential, such as research, technical help, demonstrations, education, and training. It must cover things like farm design and operation, water quality, use of wastes, feeds and nutrition, biology and disease control, processing and markets, production and quality control, and seed supply. It should include research on aquaculture’s effects in estuaries and other waters and study legal or regulatory barriers. The plan must set timelines for each action and say which Secretary or group will carry out each task. The Secretaries must review and update the plan as needed. They must also keep an ongoing assessment of the industry, listing its size, the institutions involved, species being farmed and their development status, promising regions and markets, federal programs that support aquaculture, and barriers to growth.
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Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 2803
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73