Document ID: chunk:federal_register_of_legislation:F2025L00287:reg:3:p9
Version: federal_register_of_legislation:F2025L00287
Segment Type: reg
Provision Reference: reg 3 (pt 9/276)
Character Range: 30372–33243

management programs and locations to which they apply.
Estimates of total costs over five years (best estimates with ranges to incorporate uncertainty in cost predictions) are:
    * Norfolk Island National Park: $54,217,963 (range: $39,235,600 to $82,376,763)
    * public reserves: $16,551,581 (range: $11,922,670 to $25,470,962)
    * other land: $13,884,341 (range: $9,534,594 to $21,314,373).
Approximately 64% of costs would be associated with management in the national park, 20% with management in public reserves and 16% with management on other land (Table 34). This reflects the size of the park relative to public reserves, and the wider ranging and/or more ambitious management targets that have been set for the park in comparison with other types of land.
Of the different programs, restoration of native vegetation was estimated to be the most resource intensive, representing over 50% of the total budget. Rodent control was the next most expensive ongoing program, at 15% of the total.
The bulk of costs identified are for on-ground management (78.5% of the total), but resources will also be required for other actions, including planning and coordination, monitoring, research, education and training.
The cost figures are estimates of what it would cost to fully implement the plan. They do not indicate the budget that will be available; nor do they represent a commitment by any organisation to provide any element of the budget. Relevant organisations should use this plan to prioritise actions to protect species and enhance their recovery.

Structure of the plan
This plan is presented in seven parts.
Part 1 presents the purpose and scope, the legislative context, and a description of the Norfolk Island Group, including an introduction to the threatened species addressed in this plan.
Part 2 outlines the past, current and likely future pressures on threatened species and biodiversity in the Norfolk Island Group and presents an assessment of risks associated with those pressures.
Part 3 presents the results of a review of the previous recovery plan and an analysis of the adequacy of management that was being undertaken in 2021 when development of the new plan began.
Part 4 covers the logic and conceptual underpinning of the plan, management planning, including the species and management targets for the next ten years, and the management programs and actions to be implemented to achieve those targets.
Part 5 covers implementation, including governance, and a summary of the methods and results of an analysis to estimate the costs of delivering the plan.
Part 6 contains detailed species profiles for each of the threatened species, including a summary of the actions outlined in this plan to guide their management. Profiles are also included for some of the region's most significant seabirds, some of which are listed as marine