Targets

Three types of targets have been incorporated in the regional NRM plan:

Aspirational Targets:

Long term (~ 50+ years) targets that reflect the regional community's vision, goals and desires for the status of natural resources as may be experienced by the region's future generations. Aspirational targets are valuable in terms of guiding current NRM planning and provide an important context for setting measurable and achievable targets in the shorter term.

Resource Condition Targets:

Specific and time bound targets to be set for the medium term (10-20 years) and may relate to an absolute improvement in resource condition or decreases in the rate of degradation and can be expressed in numbers or percentage terms. These targets must be pragmatic and achievable, and will need to be developed iteratively including through social, economic and environmental cost-benefit analysis.

Management Action Targets :

Short term (1-5 years) targets that relate mainly to management actions or capacity building. These targets will help progress management actions toward meeting resource conditions or toward the establishment of resource condition targets.

Due to biodiversity elements and processes underpinning many other natural assets of the region, discussion of various biodiversity values and threats are also referred to in other sections, including Land and Soils (pests and weeds), Coastal and Marine (coastal wetlands) and Surface Water (aquatic weeds, water quality).