Huge Milestone as Hauraki Gulf Tīkapa Moana Marine Protection Bill Passes

By Live Ocean
7 October '25
Read time: 4 min
Article Summary​
Main Points

The Hauraki Gulf Tīkapa Moana Marine Protection Bill has passed today, marking a major milestone for ocean health and biodiversity.

Live Ocean co-founders Peter Burling and Blair Tuke hail the Bill as a strong step towards restoring the Gulf’s ecosystems.

The Bill’s passing supports ongoing science and innovation projects in the Gulf, including kelp restoration and marine research.

It’s been a long time coming and a huge amount of work from many people and different areas of the community.  

HGMP Bill Map Oct 2025

Peter Burling and Blair Tuke, champion sailors and co-founders of Live Ocean are calling the passing of the Hauraki Gulf Tīkapa Moana Marine Protection Bill a huge milestone for the Gulf.  

Highlighting the Gulf’s uniqueness and its rich biodiversity has been a key focus for Live Ocean since its inception and the pair are delighted that the area will have greater protection with the introduction of this long-awaited Bill.

“The government’s passing of the Hauraki Gulf Tīkapa Moana Marine Protection Bill is a huge milestone for the Gulf and a moment to celebrate. There’s plenty more work to do to look after this beautiful bit of ocean, but this moves us closer to restoring the health of one of New Zealand’s most precious marine areas. I’m really looking forward to seeing those ecosystems start to thrive with the pressure taken off,” says Blair Tuke, Co-founder Live Ocean.

“It’s been a long time coming and a huge amount of work from many people and different areas of the community.  I’d like to acknowledge and congratulate everyone who has played a part,” he says.

Peter Burling adds, “The Hauraki Gulf Marine Protection Bill is an amazing first step. For me it’s not the complete solution, but it’s a really strong step towards looking after more areas in marine protection and protecting the seafloor.”  

“New Zealand’s ocean space is the 4th largest on the planet, yet less than 1% of that is currently protected, so we have much further to go to protect more of the coastal and deep ocean ecosystems we are guardians of. I hope this can inspire us to think about greater marine protection beyond the Gulf.”

Live Ocean’s push to raise awareness has been through engaging initiatives like Swim4TheGulf in 2023 when open-water swimmer Jono Ridler swum 33 hours, non-stop from Aotea Great Barrier to Campbells Bay, Auckland to draw attention to the declining state of the Gulf.

Joining forces with the Black Foils, New Zealand SailGP team, in June this year Live Ocean collaborated on Foil4TheGulf creating New Zealand’s largest foiling event ever calling for the stalled Bill to progress. 

Live Ocean works to scale up science, innovation and outreach for a healthy ocean, and that includes science partners working in the Gulf on the likes of kelp forest restoration, innovators working on the Caulerpa response, and researchers working to understand our unique population of oceanic manta.

“We’ve been warned for decades of the degradation. People have spoken about it, and we’ve seen it with our own eyes. This is a huge moment for us all – it’s going to give the Gulf a chance to recover, to breathe again and to restore the life that used to be here,” says Hannah Prior, Impact Director, Live Ocean.

Burling and Tuke founded Live Ocean, the marine conservation organisation that backs science, innovation and outreach for a healthy ocean more than five years ago. 

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