MARPOL Annex V Special Areas: Wider Caribbean Region, 19537-19544 [2012-7787]
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 63 / Monday, April 2, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
This rule does not use technical
standards. Therefore, we did not
consider the use of voluntary consensus
standards.
Environment
We have analyzed this rule under
Department of Homeland Security
Management Directive 023–01 and
Commandant Instruction M16475.lD,
which guide the Coast Guard in
complying with the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969
(NEPA) (42 U.S.C. 4321–4370f), and
have concluded that this action is one
of a category of actions that do not
individually or cumulatively have a
significant effect on the human
environment. This rule is categorically
excluded, under figure 2–1, paragraph
(34)(h), of the Instruction. This rule
involves establishing special local
regulations issued in conjunction with a
regatta or marine parade. Under figure
2–1, paragraph (34)(h), of the
Instruction, an environmental analysis
checklist and a categorical exclusion
determination are not required for this
rule.
List of Subjects in 33 CFR Part 100
Marine safety, Navigation (water),
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Waterways.
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, the Coast Guard amends 33
CFR part 100 as follows:
PART 100—SAFETY OF LIFE ON
NAVIGABLE WATERS
1. The authority citation for part 100
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 33 U.S.C. 1233.
2. Add a temporary § 100.35T07–0039
to read as follows:
■
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§ 100.35T07–0039 Special Local
Regulations; Savannah Tall Ships
Challenge, Savannah River, Savannah, GA.
(a) Regulated Areas. The following
regulated areas are established as
special local regulations during the
Savannah Tall Ships Challenge, with
the specific enforcement period for each
of the regulated areas. All coordinates
are North American Datum 1983.
(1) Mooring Zones. All waters of the
Savannah River within 25 yards of
vessels participating in the Savannah
Tall Ships Challenge while such vessels
are moored. These regulated areas will
be enforced from 10:30 a.m. on May 3,
2012 until 3 p.m. on May 7, 2012.
(2) Buffer Zones. All waters of the
Savannah River within 200 yards of
vessels participating in the Savannah
Tall Ships Challenge as they transit
from their mooring locations to the
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staging area. These regulated areas will
be enforced from 11:30 a.m. until 3 p.m.
on May 7, 2012.
(3) Staging Area. All waters within a
one nautical mile radius of position
31°59′30″ N 80°42′55″ W. This regulated
area will be enforced from 11:30 a.m.
until 4:30 p.m. on May 7, 2012.
(b) Definition. The term ‘‘designated
representative’’ means Coast Guard
Patrol Commanders, including Coast
Guard coxswains, petty officers, and
other officers operating Coast Guard
vessels, and Federal, state, and local
officers designated by or assisting the
Captain of the Port Savannah in the
enforcement of the regulated areas.
(c) Regulations. (1) All persons and
vessels are prohibited from entering,
transiting through, anchoring in, or
remaining within the regulated areas
unless authorized by the Captain of the
Port Savannah or a designated
representative.
(2) Persons and vessels desiring to
enter, transit through, anchor in, or
remain within the regulated areas may
contact the Captain of the Port
Savannah by telephone at (912) 652–
4353, or a designated representative via
VHF radio on channel 16, to request
authorization. If authorization to enter,
transit through, anchor in, or remain
within the regulated areas is granted by
the Captain of the Port Savannah or a
designated representative, all persons
and vessels receiving such authorization
must comply with the instructions of
the Captain of the Port Savannah or a
designated representative.
(3) The Coast Guard will provide
notice of the regulated areas, including
the names and mooring locations of the
vessels participating in the Savannah
Tall Ships Challenge and the identities
of the lead safety vessel and the last
safety vessel as the vessels transit to the
staging area, prior to the event by Local
Notice to Mariners, Broadcast notice to
Mariners, and a Maritime Safety and
Security Bulletin. Notice will also be
provided by on-scene designated
representatives.
(d) Enforcement Date. This rule will
be enforced from 10:30 a.m. on May 3,
2012 through 4:30 p.m. on May 7, 2012.
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Dated: March 21, 2012.
J.B. Loring,
Commander, U.S. Coast Guard, Captain of
the Port Savannah.
19537
Table of Contents for Preamble
[FR Doc. 2012–7793 Filed 3–30–12; 8:45 am]
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Coast Guard
33 CFR Part 151
[Docket No. USCG–2011–0187]
RIN 1625–AB76
MARPOL Annex V Special Areas:
Wider Caribbean Region
Coast Guard, DHS.
Final rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
By this final rule, the Coast
Guard amends the list of special areas
in effect under Annex V of the
International Convention for the
Prevention of Pollution from Ships,
1973, as modified by the Protocol of
1978, as amended, to include the Wider
Caribbean Region special area. The
current list of special areas in effect is
outdated because it does not include
this special area, which went into effect
May 1, 2011. This rule will correct the
list of special areas in effect to provide
accurate information to the public.
DATES: This final rule is effective April
2, 2012.
ADDRESSES: Comments and material
received from the public, as well as
documents mentioned in this preamble
as being available in the docket, are part
of docket USCG–2011–0187 and are
available for inspection or copying at
the Docket Management Facility (M–30),
U.S. Department of Transportation,
West Building Ground Floor, Room
W12–140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE.,
Washington, DC 20590, between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays. You may also
find this docket on the Internet by going
to https://www.regulations.gov, inserting
USCG–2011–0187 in the ‘‘Keyword’’
box, and then clicking ‘‘Search.’’
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If
you have questions on this rule, call or
email David Condino, U.S. Coast Guard
Office of Port and Facility Activities;
telephone 202–372–1145, email
David.A.Condino@uscg.mil. If you have
questions on viewing the docket, call
Renee V. Wright, Program Manager,
Docket Operations, telephone 202–366–
9826.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
I. Abbreviations
II. Regulatory History
III. Basis and Purpose
IV. Background
V. Discussion of Comments and Changes
VI. Regulatory Analyses
A. Regulatory Planning and Review
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B. Small Entities
C. Assistance for Small Entities
D. Collection of Information
E. Federalism
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
G. Taking of Private Property
H. Civil Justice Reform
I. Protection of Children
J. Indian Tribal Governments
K. Energy Effects
L. Technical Standards
M. Environment
I. Abbreviations
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ABA American Boating Association
AMI Association of Marina Industries
APHIS Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service
APPS Act to Prevent Pollution from Ships,
Pub. L. 96–478, as amended (33 U.S.C.
1901 et seq.)
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CFV Commercial Fishing Vessel
CLIA Cruise Lines International Association
DHS Department of Homeland Security
FR Federal Register
IMO International Maritime Organization
ISM International Safety Management Code
MARPOL The International Convention for
the Prevention of Pollution from Ships,
1973, as modified by the Protocol of 1978,
as amended
MEPC Marine Environmental Protection
Committee
MISLE Marine Information for Safety and
Law Enforcement
NPRM Notice of proposed rulemaking
OSV Offshore supply vessel
RCP Responsible Carrier Program
RFA Regulatory Flexibility Act
SOLAS International Convention for Safety
of Life at Sea
U.S.C. United States Code
USPS U.S. Power Squadron
WCR Wider Caribbean Region
II. Regulatory History
On August 6, 2009, we published a
notice and request for comments
entitled ‘‘Comment Request on
MARPOL Annex V Wider Caribbean
Region Special Area’’ in the Federal
Register (74 FR 39334). This notice
anticipated the eventual entry into effect
of the Wider Caribbean Region (WCR)
special area, but recognized that no date
had been set by the International
Maritime Organization (IMO). We
received three comments in response to
the notice. Those comments are
addressed in the ‘‘Discussion of
Comments and Changes’’ section below.
On March 22–26, 2010, the Marine
Environmental Protection Committee
(MEPC) of the IMO met at IMO
headquarters in London, England. On
April 12, 2010, the MEPC published
their ‘‘REPORT OF THE MARINE
ENVIRONMENT PROTECTION
COMMITTEE ON ITS SIXTIETH
SESSION’’ (available free at https://docs.
imo.org/, registration required). In that
report, the MEPC set May 1, 2011 as the
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date for the WCR special area to come
into effect.
On April 7, 2011, we published a
notice entitled ‘‘Notice of Entry into
Effect of MARPOL Annex V Wider
Caribbean Region Special Area’’ in the
Federal Register (76 FR 19380). That
notice informed the public of the entry
into effect of the WCR special area on
May 1, 2011.
This Final Rule amends the
regulations in 33 CFR part 151 to reflect
the entry into effect of the WCR special
area. The Coast Guard did not publish
a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
(NPRM) for this amendment. Under 5
U.S.C. 553(b)(B), the Coast Guard finds
that good cause exists for not publishing
an NPRM, because this final rule does
not call for any substantive legal
changes. In short, the rule merely
corrects in the Coast Guard’s regulations
the list of special areas currently in
effect. Under IMO rules, as incorporated
by the Act to Prevent Pollution from
Ships (APPS) and 33 CFR 151.53(b), the
WCR is already in effect under U.S. law.
Further, under 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3), the
Coast Guard finds that, for the same
reasons, good cause exists for making
this rule effective less than 30 days after
publication in the Federal Register.
Good cause exists when publication
would be impracticable, unnecessary, or
contrary to the public interest. 5 U.S.C.
553(b)(B). Publishing an NPRM and
delaying the effective date are
unnecessary because the change being
made is a conforming amendment
required by existing authority—33 CFR
151.53(b)—and because, as explained
infra, an opportunity for public
comment has already been provided.
Also, this rulemaking merely restates
a legal responsibility already in effect
under MARPOL and APPS (33 U.S.C.
1901 et seq.), which is the U.S. authority
implementing MARPOL. Through
APPS, the United States accepts the
IMO process for bringing Annex V
special areas into effect. 33 U.S.C.
1901(a)(5), see also section 1907(a)
(requiring compliance with MARPOL).
Since the United States first accepted
Annex V, another special area, the WCR,
has come into effect through the IMO
process. This rulemaking corrects the
list at 33 CFR 151.53 to accurately list
the special areas currently in effect.
The opportunity for public comment
on the regulations related to APPS,
including the IMO process for bringing
special areas into effect, was provided
in 1989. The original APPS regulations
in 33 CFR parts 151, 155, and 158 were
implemented through a full informal
rulemaking process, including an
Advance Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (53 FR 23884, June 24,
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1988), an Interim Rule with Request for
Comments (54 FR 18384, April 28,
1989), and a Final Rule (55 FR 35986,
September 4, 1990) (APPS rulemaking).
The Coast Guard held three public
meetings, received public comments,
and responded to all comments
received. The Coast Guard received no
comments on the IMO process for
bringing special areas into effect. There
have been no substantive changes
regarding this process since the APPS
rulemaking and this rulemaking also
does not change that process.
In the 2009 notice and request for
comments, the Coast Guard specifically
requested information on issues that
impact port reception facilities,
commercial vessels, and recreational
vessels operating in the WCR special
area and requested recommendations to
address any issues. We summarize and
respond to those comments in section V
of this document. We did not receive
any additional data or information on
the impacts of the WCR special area.
III. Basis and Purpose
MARPOL consists of 20 articles and
Annexes I–VI. Annex V regulates the
discharge of garbage from ships. The
United States became a party to
MARPOL through APPS, and became a
party to Annex V through section 2101
of the Marine Plastic Pollution Research
and Control Act (Pub. L. 100–220).
MARPOL establishes nine ‘‘special
areas,’’ eight of which apply to Annex
V. In a MARPOL Annex V special area,
the rules on the discharge of garbage are
more restrictive than outside of a
MARPOL Annex V special area.
This final rule modifies 33 CFR
151.53(c) and Appendix A of Part 151
to add the WCR special area to the list
of special areas currently in effect. This
change harmonizes Coast Guard
regulations with MARPOL and clarifies
where the discharge restrictions found
at 33 CFR 151.71 (Operating
Requirements: Discharge of garbage
within special areas) apply.
IV. Background
A MARPOL Annex V special area is
a sea area where the adoption of special
mandatory methods for the prevention
of sea pollution by garbage is required.
The Coast Guard is updating the list of
special areas in effect at 33 CFR
151.53(c) to include the WCR special
area.
A special area under MARPOL Annex
V enters into force when sufficient
parties to MARPOL agree that the
adoption of special mandatory methods
for the prevention of sea pollution by
garbage is required in that area. ‘‘Enters
into force,’’ means that the special area
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is defined and recognized for treaty
purposes. However, the special area
regulations do not apply in that special
area until the special area enters into
effect.
A special area enters into effect on the
date set by the IMO after the IMO
receives sufficient notification from
Member states bordering a special area
of adequate port reception facilities.
This date is the special area’s ‘‘effective
date.’’ In a special area prior to its
effective date, 33 CFR 151.69 (Operating
requirements: Discharge of garbage
outside special areas) applies. In a
special area after its effective date, the
more restrictive requirements of 33 CFR
151.71 (Operating Requirements:
Discharge of garbage within special
areas) apply.
The special area that this rule
addresses is the WCR special area, as
defined in Regulation 5(1)(h) of
MARPOL Annex V and 33 CFR 151.06.
This special area entered into force (but
not effect) on April 4, 1993, as agreed
to by Parties to MARPOL Annex V.
The MEPC decided to set the effective
date after hearing a report, co-sponsored
by 22 WCR Member States, during its
March 2010 meeting that all but three
states (Belize, Jamaica, and Nicaragua)
in the WCR reported that they had
adequate garbage reception facilities in
their ports.1 At that time the three WCR
countries that were not listed as cosponsors of MEPC 60/8/2 reported that
they either were establishing those
facilities or had made arrangements
with neighboring countries.
The special discharge restrictions for
the WCR special area entered into effect
on May 1, 2011 (IMO Circ. Letter No.
3053, April 14, 2010 2). As of May 1,
2011, the discharge of garbage from
vessels in the WCR area is restricted to
the discharge of food wastes only (i.e.,
subject to the restrictions of MARPOL
Annex V, Regulation 5 and 33 CFR
151.71).
The list of special areas currently in
effect at 33 CFR 151.53(c) does not
include the WCR. This list, and
Appendix A to part 151, must be
corrected to provide the maritime
community an accurate list of special
areas currently in effect.
on MARPOL Annex V Wider Caribbean
Region Special Area’’ in the Federal
Register (74 FR 39334). This notice
anticipated the eventual entry into effect
of the WCR special area, even though at
the time of publication no effective date
had been set by the IMO. We received
three letters and three different
comments on the WCR special area.
None of the comments indicated that
the heightened discharge restrictions
coming into effect for the WCR would
result in increased burdens to vessels or
reception facilities.
One commenter brought up the
problem of dry bulk cargo wash-water.
Dry bulk cargo ships are not generally
designed to store wash-water and port
facilities are generally not able to
receive and treat wash-water. Pending a
final decision by IMO, the Coast Guard
supports the current IMO exception to
Annex V for dry cargo wash-water
discharges in special areas. Under IMO
MEPC.1/Circ.675/Rev.1 26 March 2010,
dry cargo residue wash-water is not
considered garbage under Annex V in
the WCR special area and, therefore, is
not a subject of this rulemaking.
One comment expressed the
commenter’s belief that the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act
disincentivizes commercial vessels from
disposing of garbage at a shore facility.
We agree that additional efforts are
necessary to protect the environment
from the discharge of hazardous
materials at sea. However, those efforts
are outside the scope of this rulemaking.
Another comment addressed the
different requirements for reception
facilities for garbage under MARPOL
and U.S. Department of Agriculture,
Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service (APHIS) regulations in titles 7
and 9 of the CFR. Garbage subject to
APHIS regulations is a subset of garbage
regulated under MARPOL. APHIS
regulations relate to foreign plant and/
or animal waste, including galley waste
and any materials that have come in
contact with such waste. Requirements
for APHIS regulated plant and animal
wastes remain unchanged and are not a
subject of this rulemaking.
V. Discussion of Comments and
Changes
As noted above, on August 6, 2009,
we published a notice and request for
comments entitled ‘‘Comment Request
VI. Regulatory Analyses
We developed this rule after
considering numerous statutes and
executive orders related to rulemaking.
Below we summarize our analyses
based on 14 of these statutes or
executive orders.
1 MEPC 60/8/2, IDENTIFICATION AND
PROTECTION OF SPECIAL AREAS AND
PARTICULARLY. SENSITIVE SEA AREAS ‘‘Wider
Caribbean Region’’ as a Special Area under
MARPOL Annex V. A copy is in the docket.
2 A copy of the Circular is in the docket.
A. Regulatory Planning and Review
Executive Orders 12866 (‘‘Regulatory
Planning and Review’’) and 13563
(‘‘Improving Regulation and Regulatory
Review’’) direct agencies to assess the
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19539
costs and benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). Executive Order 13563
emphasizes the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits, of
reducing costs, of harmonizing rules,
and of promoting flexibility. This final
rule has not been designated a
‘‘significant regulatory action’’ under
section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866.
Accordingly, the final rule has not been
reviewed by the Office of Management
and Budget.
A regulatory assessment follows:
Regulatory Changes
Prior to Annex V becoming effective
in the WCR on May 1, 2011, the rules
governing discharge of garbage
applicable to the WCR were found at 33
CFR 151.69. That is, the standards
found at 33 CFR 151.69 define the
regulatory baseline for the 2010 MEPC
actions establishing an effective date for
the WCR as a special area. The final rule
will correct 33 CFR 151 to reflect that
the discharge restrictions for special
areas found at 33 CFR 151.71 apply to
the WCR.
MARPOL Annex V segregates garbage
into the following types:
• Plastics, including synthetic ropes,
fishing nets, and plastic bags;
• Dunnage (i.e. bracing materials),
lining, and packing materials that float;
• Paper, rags, glass, metal, bottles,
crockery and similar refuse;
• Paper, rags, glass, etc., comminuted
or ground;
• Victual waste not comminuted or
ground; and
• Victual waste comminuted or
ground.
Sections 151.69 and 151.71 of 33 CFR
set the rules for each garbage type by
these zones, defined according to
distances from the nearest land: less
than 3 miles, less than 12 miles, less
than 25 miles, and greater than 25 miles.
Below are comparisons of the
restrictions in § 151.69 and § 151.71 by
garbage type:
• Plastics: Both sections prohibit the
discharge of plastics anywhere.
• Dunnage, lining, and packing
materials that float: § 151.69 permits the
discharge of dunnage only in the greater
than 25 miles zone. However, § 151.71
prohibits the discharge of dunnage
anywhere in a special area.
• Paper, rags, glass, etc. and similar
refuse: § 151.69 permits the discharge of
paper etc. only in the 12–25 miles and
greater than 25 miles zones. However,
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§ 151.71 prohibits the discharge of paper
etc. anywhere in a special area.
• Ground paper, rags, glass, etc.:
§ 151.69 permits the discharge of ground
paper etc. outside the less than 3 miles
zone. However, § 151.71 prohibits the
discharge of ground paper etc. in all
zones in a special area.
• Victual Waste: Both sections permit
the discharge of victual waste in the 12–
25 miles and greater than 25 miles
zones.
• Ground Victual Waste: Both
sections permit the discharge of ground
victual wastes in all zones other than
the less than 3 miles zone.
Table VI.1 shows the provisions of
§§ 151.69 and 151.71. The more
restrictive provisions of § 151.71
prohibit the discharge of any materials
other than Victual Waste or Ground
Victual Waste anywhere in the WCR.
TABLE VI.1—COMPARISON OF DISCHARGE RESTRICTIONS IN §§ 151.69 AND 151.71
Miles from nearest land
Material
Section
<3
Plastics ..................................................................................................
Dunnage ................................................................................................
Paper, etc ..............................................................................................
Ground Paper, etc .................................................................................
Victual Waste ........................................................................................
Ground Victual Waste ...........................................................................
As the table shows, the differences
between §§ 151.69 and 151.71, which
identify the changes applicable to any
special area after its effective date as
established by the IMO, are these
additional prohibitions:
• Dunnage in the greater than 25
miles zone;
• Paper, etc. in the 12–25 mile zone
and greater than 25 miles zone; and
• Ground paper etc. in the 3–12 mile,
12–25 mile, and greater than 25 miles
zones.
In the Background section we
described how, at the March 2010
meeting, the IMO’s MEPC set the
§ 151.69
§ 151.71
§ 151.69
§ 151.71
§ 151.69
§ 151.71
§ 151.69
§ 151.71
§ 151.69
§ 151.71
§ 151.69
§ 151.71
.......
.......
.......
.......
.......
.......
.......
.......
.......
.......
.......
.......
No
No
No
No
No
No
No
No
No
No
No
No
3–12
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
effective date for the WCR special area
as May 1, 2011. At that meeting, the
United States (and 21 other WCR
countries) reported to the IMO that they
had adequate port reception facilities at
ports and terminals bordering the WCR.
However, the United States had
adequate port reception facilities
established years before the 2010
meeting; the Coast Guard began issuing
MARPOL Annex V Certificates of
Adequacy (certification that a facility
may receive garbage in compliance with
MARPOL and APPS) in 2001. Other
WCR countries party to MARPOL have
been ready since March 2010 or earlier.
12–25
No ................
No ................
No ................
No ................
No ................
No ................
Yes ..............
No ................
No ................
No ................
Yes ..............
Yes ..............
No ................
No ................
No ................
No ................
Yes ..............
No ................
Yes ..............
No ................
Yes ..............
Yes ..............
Yes ..............
Yes ..............
>25
No.
No.
Yes.
No.
Yes.
No.
Yes.
No.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Current Industry Practice
The Coast Guard estimates that the
IMO’s action does not impose an
additional burden on the U.S. maritime
community. We evaluated the vessels
transiting the WCR by different sectors
(cruise line, commercial fishing vessel,
other commercial vessel, and
recreational vessel) and then researched
waste management rules and practices
in each sector to establish a baseline of
current practices. Table VI.2
summarizes the results of our findings
for each sector.
TABLE VI.2—SUMMARY OF CURRENT INDUSTRY PRACTICE BY SECTOR
Garbage type
Sector
Dunnage
Cruise Lines ....................................
Commercial Fishing Vessels ...........
Other Commercial Vessels .............
Recreation vessels ..........................
Paper
Ground paper
Current practice ............................
Not relevant to this sector ............
Current practice and inspections
Not relevant to this sector ............
Current practice ............................
Current practice ............................
Current practice and inspections
Current practice and education
programs.
Current practice.
Not relevant to this sector.
Current practice and inspections.
Not relevant to this sector.
Below we present our findings for
each sector.
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1. Cruise Line Sector
The cruise line sector is international
in scope and its vessels are subject to
the provisions of MARPOL. In June
2001, the International Council of
Cruise Lines and its members adopted a
set of practices and procedures entitled
‘‘Cruise Industry Waste Management
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Practices and Procedures.’’ 3 Currently,
the vessels of the cruise industry are
subject to many regulatory regimes,
including U.S. laws and regulations;
state regulations that may be more strict
than U.S. laws, including Florida; 4 the
International Convention for Safety of
Life at Sea (SOLAS); the International
3 Ibid,
p. 6.
site of the Cruise Lines International
Association, https://www2.cruising.org/industry/
environment.cfm.
4 Web
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Safety Management Code (ISM); and
MARPOL.
The Cruise Lines International
Association (CLIA) in 2010 published a
document ‘‘CLIA at 35: Steering a
Sustainable Course’’ 5 that describes its
environmental policies. Part II, ‘‘Waste
Management,’’ states that CLIA’s Waste
5 Cruise Lines International Association, https://
www.cruising.org/vacation/news/press_releases/
2010/09/celebrating-its-35th-year-clia-releases-newenvironmental-report.
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Management Procedures and Policies
are incorporated in their members’
safety management systems. The
document also describes on-board
recycling, trash, and garbage
management procedures. These include
numerous points on the vessel for the
collection of recyclable materials from
passengers and crew, on-board
compacting and storage of aluminum,
on-board shredding of paper and
cardboard, and the grinding and
discharge of food wastes in compliance
with MARPOL.
In general, cruise ships are fitted with
on-board recycling systems for many
materials, other materials are
incinerated or brought ashore, and the
only solid waste discharged at sea is
food waste of either the Victual Waste
or Ground Victual Waste type. We
concluded that the cruise line sector is
currently compliant with the current
MARPOL regulations, the APPS, and
other U.S. laws. As this final rule will
only add the references to the MARPOL
restrictions to the CFR, the Coast Guard
estimates that there will be no
additional costs to this sector.
2. Commercial Fishing Vessel Sector
We compared Annex V restrictions to
the characteristics of commercial fishing
vessels (CFVs). As noted in Table VI.1,
Annex V increased the discharge
restrictions for the Dunnage, Paper, and
Ground Paper types in special areas.
With respect to the Dunnage type,
CFVs, as single-purpose vessels, carry
supplies and equipment related to their
fishing operations. They do not carry
general cargo or bracing, lining, or other
materials included in the Dunnage type
that are used in freight ships. Thus, the
special area restrictions of Annex V,
prohibiting the discharge of Dunnage
anywhere in the WCR, will not impact
CFVs operating out of U.S. ports in the
WCR.
CFVs operating out of U.S. ports in
the WCR typically engage in short
voyages with small crews. This means
that they will not generate large waste
streams, obviating the need for a
specialized paper grinder or shredder
like those found on cruise ships. Also,
a grinder or shredder would take up
space that would otherwise be used for
the vessel’s fishing operations. Because
U.S. CFVs operating in the WCR do not
generate ground paper, we believe that
the Annex V restrictions on Ground
Paper will not result in additional
compliance costs for them.
The Annex V restrictions on the Paper
type will apply to CFVs. Under the less
stringent standards found at § 151.69,
discharge of Paper is permitted if greater
than 12 miles from the nearest land. As
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mentioned above, CFV operations
consist of short voyages, returning to the
same port they left from to deliver their
catch. Our previously cited research
also indicates that any Paper waste is
produced in the galley primarily,
commingled and packaged with victual
and other waste, and disposed of when
returned to home port. Although Annex
V prohibits the discharge of Paper waste
throughout the WCR, our assessment is
that Paper waste on CFVs is currently
being commingled with other garbage.
The Coast Guards estimates that this
final rule will not affect current
behavior or result in additional costs to
this sector.
3. Other Commercial Vessels
This sector is comprised of
commercial vessels other than the cruise
ships and commercial fishing vessels
(‘‘other commercial vessels’’). The other
commercial vessels sector includes both
foreign-flag and U.S.-flag vessels that
transit or operate in the WCR. With
regard to foreign-flag vessels, they are
engaged in international transits and
may transit the other special areas that
have been in effect longer than the
WCR. For that reason, we conclude that
they are already complying with Annex
V restrictions and that the WCR coming
into effect will not impose any
additional costs to them.
To identify the other U.S.-flag
commercial vessels that will be affected
by the final rule, we extracted from the
Marine Information for Safety and Law
Enforcement (MISLE) database
information about the U.S.-flag vessels
as of September 2011. We used the
SOLAS certificate documentation to
identify the subset of such vessels that
have international capability. The
resulting population of U.S.-flag other
commercial vessels is dominated by
offshore supply vessels (OSVs), towing
vessels, and freight ships. The
population also includes specialty oil
service and passenger vessels. OSVs
includes vessels supporting near-coastal
and harbor work. The towing vessel
sector is diverse and includes some
vessels that work exclusively in inland
waters, some vessels that work in the
intracoastal waterways and some vessels
that remain within 3 miles of land.
We analyzed the characteristics of this
population of other commercial vessels
with respect to existing regulatory
requirements and we found that all of
these vessels are subject to one or more
compliance regimes. All of these vessels
are in at least one of the following
categories: (1) Coast Guard inspected
vessels, or (2) uninspected vessels
which have voluntarily adopted an
audit-based safety management system
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19541
(SMS) such as the IMO’s International
Safety Management Code (ISM) or the
American Waterways Operator’s
Responsible Carrier Program (RCP).
Below, we discuss the garbage
management requirements under these
compliance regimes and summarize our
findings.
Coast Guard Inspected Vessels
Coast Guard inspected vessels are
already required to comply with the
requirements of MARPOL. Under 33
CFR 151.61, the Coast Guard may
inspect any ‘‘ship subject to inspection’’
for compliance with the APPS
regulations. APPS regulations include
the waste management plan
requirements of 33 CFR 151.57. Section
151.57 requires compliance with
MARPOL and waste management plans
for vessels in a defined group; that
group includes all of the inspected
vessels in the other commercial vessels
population. Compliance with these
requirements is part of the Coast Guard
safety and security inspection regime.
Vessels With Audit-Based Safety
Management Systems
All of the vessels which are not
subject to Coast Guard inspection, but
are part of the other commercial vessels
population, have voluntarily adopted
one of the two major audit-based safety
management system (SMS): Either the
IMO’s International Safety Management
Code (ISM), or the American Waterways
Operator’s Responsible Carrier Program
(RCP). Both the ISM and the RCP
require that ships adhere to applicable
laws and regulations, including
MARPOL Annex V. Each regime also
includes requirements relating to
sanitation. For example, the RCP’s
section II.D, ‘‘Environmental Policy and
Procedures,’’ 6 requires each vessel to
have procedures and documentation for
garbage disposal, handling of waste oil,
sanitary systems and handling of
sewage. Similarly, the ISM Code states
that one of its objectives is ‘‘avoidance
of damage to the environment, in
particular to the marine environment
and to property,’’ 7 and that a ship’s
safety management system should
‘‘assess all identified risks to its ships,
personnel and the environment and
establish appropriate safeguards.’’
Each company subject to the ISM or
RCP documents the specific processes
and policies its vessels will follow to
comply with all of the applicable SMS’s
6 American Waterways Operators, https://
www.americanwaterways.com/commitment_safety/
RCP.pdf.
7 International Maritime Organization, https://
www.imo.org/ourwork/humanelement/
safetymanagement/pages/ismcode.aspx.
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 63 / Monday, April 2, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
requirements. Both the ISM and the RCP
use third-party auditors to ensure that
the vessels and company policies are in
compliance with the applicable safety
regimes. Thus, these compliance
regimes ensure that ships adhere to
current federal rules, including
MARPOL Annex V and APPS, as well
as additional regime-specific sanitation
and garbage management procedures.
sroberts on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES
Summary of Findings
We conclude that these commercial
vessels currently meet the garbage
management requirements of the final
rule. The Coast Guard therefore
estimates that there will be no
additional costs to these vessels.
4. Recreational Vessels
As described earlier in this section,
the passing of the effective date of the
WCR special area increased the
restrictions on the discharge of the
Dunnage, Ground Paper, and Paper
types. The Dunnage type would not
apply to recreational vessels, because
they do not carry containers or other
general cargo that would require the
bracing and lining materials that
comprise this garbage type.
With respect to Ground Paper, Coast
Guard experience indicates that
recreational vessels do not have space
for a specialized shredder or grinder to
process the materials in the Ground
Paper type. Instead, this material is
commingled with other garbage types.
Our assessment then is that the Ground
Paper type is not relevant to the
recreational vessel sector.
The remaining garbage type that has
a new restriction in the WCR is Paper.
Once the WCR special area came into
effect, ships were prohibited from
discharging Paper anywhere in the
WCR. Before the WCR special area came
in to effect, such discharge was allowed
12 miles or more from the nearest land.
To address pollution on the
waterways, which may be from either
shoreside or vessel sources, the
recreational boating community is
actively engaged in education, which
we refer to as ‘‘clean water/marina
programs,’’ collectively. These programs
are focused on comprehensive waste
management actions and already
incorporate the restrictions of Annex V.
The list below summarizes some of the
programs pursued by leading
recreational boating organizations:
• BoatU.S. Foundation: The BoatU.S.
Foundation promotes safety and clean
water. Its clean water program, called
‘‘Stash the Trash’’, advises boaters to
know and follow the applicable laws
and regulations, throw no trash of any
kind overboard, return everything to
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land that they take out to sea, and pick
up trash on the waters and in marinas.8
• U.S. Power Squadron (USPS): The
USPS has a national Environmental
Committee, whose goals include
educating boaters about applicable laws,
regulations, and good environmental
management practices; and promoting
activities to clean up waterways.9
• Association of Marina Industries
(AMI): The AMI’s Clean Marina program
‘‘is a voluntary compliance program that
stresses environmental and managerial
best management practices that exceed
regulatory requirements * * * A typical
Clean Marina program will have
components that cover marina [siting]
and design considerations, marina
management, emergency planning,
petroleum control, sewage and gray
water, waste containment and disposal,
storm water management, habitat and
species protection and boater
education.’’ 10 Florida,11 Louisiana,12
and Texas 13 have Clean Marina
programs that are sponsored by state
agencies.
• American Boating Association
(ABA): The Clean Trash Discharge part
of the ABA’s Clean Boating program
includes information about the Marine
Plastic Pollution Research and Control
Act and MARPOL Annex V, and
advocates proper stowage of all articles
and return of everything taken aboard.14
For the recreational boater, the
application of increased restrictions in
the WCR, by itself, is narrow, because it
only affects the Paper type in the two
farthest zones. Moreover, because clean
water/marina programs are already
advocating the practices consistent with
the increased restrictions described in
33 CFR 151.71, we conclude that the
publication of this final rule will not
require recreational boaters to learn or
adopt any new behavior. The Coast
Guard estimates that there will be no
additional costs to the owners of
recreational vessels.
Summary
In both the commercial and
recreational sectors, we estimate current
garbage and waste management
practices are already consistent with the
changes enacted by IMO. These include
8 BoatU.S. Foundation, https://www.boatus.com/
foundation/cleanwater/stashtrash.asp.
9 U.S. Power Squadron, https://www.usps.org/
national/envcom/.
10 Association of Marina Industries, https://
marinaassociation.org/government/clean-marina.
11 State of Florida, https://www.dep.state.fl.us/
cleanmarina/.
12 State of Louisiana, https://dnr.louisiana.gov
(enter clean marinas in the search tool).
13 State of Texas, https://www.cleanmarinas.org/.
14 American Boating Association, https://
www.americanboating.org/clean.asp.
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recycling on the larger vessels and
stowage and onshore disposal for
vessels of all sizes and types. In
summary, the Coast Guard estimates
that there will be no additional costs to
the public by this final rule.
Benefits
Without the promulgation of this final
rule, discrepancies between the CFR
and the requirements found in the APPS
and MARPOL would continue and
provide inconsistent information to
operators of industrial and recreational
vessels that transit the WCR.
The primary benefit of this rule is to
provide consistent information on
MARPOL Annex V special area
requirements in order to increase the
regulated community’s awareness of the
requirements. The secondary benefit is
more efficient regulations through
greater consistency between U.S.
domestic regulations and MARPOL
Annex V.
B. Small Entities
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980
(RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601–612, as amended,
requires federal agencies to consider the
potential impact of regulations on small
entities during rulemaking. However,
when an agency is not required to
publish an NPRM for a rule, the RFA
does not require the agency to prepare
a regulatory flexibility analysis. The
Coast Guard was not required to publish
an NPRM for this rule for the reasons
stated in Section II, ‘‘Regulatory
History.’’ Therefore, the Coast Guard is
not required to publish a regulatory
flexibility analysis.
C. Assistance for Small Entities
Under section 213(a) of the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996 (Pub. L. 104–121),
we want to assist small entities in
understanding the rule so that they can
better evaluate its effects on them and
participate in the rulemaking. The Coast
Guard will not retaliate against small
entities that question or complain about
this rule or any policy or action of the
Coast Guard.
Small businesses may send comments
on the actions of federal employees who
enforce, or otherwise determine
compliance with, federal regulations to
the Small Business and Agriculture
Regulatory Enforcement Ombudsman
and the Regional Small Business
Regulatory Fairness Boards. The
Ombudsman evaluates these actions
annually and rates each agency’s
responsiveness to small business. If you
wish to comment on actions by
employees of the Coast Guard, call 1–
888–REG–FAIR (1–888–734–3247).
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D. Collection of Information
This rule does not call for any new
collections of information, as defined by
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501–3520).
E. Federalism
A rule has implications for federalism
under Executive Order 13132,
Federalism, if it has a substantial direct
effect on the States, on the relationship
between the national government and
the States, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government. We have
analyzed this rule under that Order.
States do not have the authority to
regulate special areas under MARPOL
Annex V, including the Wider
Caribbean Region special area.
Therefore, we have determined that the
final rule does not have implications for
federalism.
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (2 U.S.C. 1531–1538) requires
federal agencies to assess the effects of
their discretionary regulatory actions. In
particular, the Act addresses actions
that may result in the expenditure by a
State, local, or tribal government, in the
aggregate, or by the private sector of
$100,000,000 (adjusted for inflation) or
more in any one year. Though this rule
will not result in such an expenditure,
we do discuss the effects of this rule
elsewhere in this preamble.
G. Taking of Private Property
This rule will not cause a taking of
private property or otherwise have
taking implications under Executive
Order 12630, Governmental Actions and
Interference with Constitutionally
Protected Property Rights.
H. Civil Justice Reform
This rule meets applicable standards
in sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2) of Executive
Order 12988, Civil Justice Reform, to
minimize litigation, eliminate
ambiguity, and reduce burden.
sroberts on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES
I. Protection of Children
We have analyzed this rule under
Executive Order 13045, Protection of
Children from Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks. This rule is not
an economically significant rule and
does not create an environmental risk to
health or risk to safety that may
disproportionately affect children.
J. Indian Tribal Governments
This rule does not have tribal
implications under Executive Order
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16:37 Mar 30, 2012
Jkt 226001
13175, Consultation and Coordination
with Indian Tribal Governments,
because it does not have a substantial
direct effect on one or more Indian
tribes, on the relationship between the
Federal Government and Indian tribes,
or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities between the Federal
Government and Indian tribes.
K. Energy Effects
We have analyzed this rule under
Executive Order 13211, Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use. We have
determined that it is not a ‘‘significant
energy action’’ under that order because
it is not a ‘‘significant regulatory action’’
under Executive Order 12866 and is not
likely to have a significant adverse effect
on the supply, distribution, or use of
energy. The Administrator of the Office
of Information and Regulatory Affairs
has not designated it as a significant
energy action. Therefore, it does not
require a Statement of Energy Effects
under Executive Order 13211.
L. Technical Standards
The National Technology Transfer
and Advancement Act (NTTAA) (15
U.S.C. 272 note) directs agencies to use
voluntary consensus standards in their
regulatory activities unless the agency
provides Congress, through the Office of
Management and Budget, with an
explanation of why using these
standards would be inconsistent with
applicable law or otherwise impractical.
Voluntary consensus standards are
technical standards (e.g., specifications
of materials, performance, design, or
operation; test methods; sampling
procedures; and related management
systems practices) that are developed or
adopted by voluntary consensus
standards bodies. This rule does not use
technical standards. Therefore, we did
not consider the use of voluntary
consensus standards.
M. Environment
We have analyzed this rule under
Department of Homeland Security
Management Directive 023–01 and
Commandant Instruction M16475.lD,
which guide the Coast Guard in
complying with the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42
U.S.C. 4321–4370f), and have concluded
that this action is one of a category of
actions that do not individually or
cumulatively have a significant effect on
the human environment. This rule is
categorically excluded under section
2.B.2, figure 2–1, paragraph (34)(a) of
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19543
the Instruction and under section 6(b) of
the ‘‘Appendix to National
Environmental Policy Act: Coast Guard
Procedures for Categorical Exclusions,
Notice of Final Agency Policy’’ (67 FR
48244, July 23, 2002). This rule involves
regulations which are editorial or
procedural, in that the regulatory
change merely restates an alreadyexisting obligation in a more convenient
place. Accordingly, paragraph 34(a) of
the Instruction applies. This rule also
involves regulations mandated by
Congress in APPS; congressionally
mandated regulations designed to
improve or protect the environment are
excluded under section 6(b) of the
Appendix. An environmental analysis
checklist and a categorical exclusion
determination are available in the
docket where indicated under
ADDRESSES.
List of Subjects in 33 CFR Part 151
Administrative practice and
procedure, Oil pollution, Penalties,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Water pollution control.
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, the Coast Guard amends 33
CFR part 151 as follows:
PART 151—VESSELS CARRYING OIL,
NOXIOUS LIQUID SUBSTANCES,
GARBAGE, MUNICIPAL OR
COMMERCIAL WASTE, AND BALLAST
WATER
1. The authority citation for part 151
continues to read:
■
Authority: 33 U.S.C. 1321, 1902, 1903,
1908; 46 U.S.C. 6101; Pub. L. 104–227 (110
Stat. 3034); Pub. L. 108–293 (118 Stat. 1063),
Sec. 623; E.O. 12777, 3 CFR, 1991 Comp. p.
351; DHS Delegation No. 0170.1, sec. 2(77).
Subpart A—Implementation of
MARPOL 73/78 and the Protocol on
Environmental Protection to the
Antarctic Treaty as It Pertains to
Pollution From Ships
§ 151.53
[Amended]
2. Amend § 151.53(c) by adding the
words ‘‘Wider Caribbean Region, the’’
before the word ‘‘Mediterranean’’;
adding the word ‘‘the’’ before the word
‘‘Baltic’’; and adding a comma after the
word ‘‘Gulfs.’’
■
3. Revise Appendix A to §§ 151.51
through 151.77 to read as follows:
■
Appendix A to §§ 151.51 Through
151.77—Summary of Garbage
Discharge Restrictions
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 63 / Monday, April 2, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
All vessels except fixed or floating platforms and associated vessels
Garbage type
Outside special areas
(33 CFR 151.69)
Plastics—includes synthetic ropes
and fishing nets and plastic bags.
Dunnage, lining and packing materials that float.
Disposal prohibited (33 CFR
151.67).
Disposal prohibited less than 25
miles from nearest land and in
the navigable waters of the U.S.
Disposal prohibited less than 12
miles from nearest land and in
the navigable waters of the U.S.
Disposal prohibited less than 3
miles from nearest land and in
the navigable waters of the U.S.
Disposal prohibited less than 12
miles from nearest land and in
the navigable waters of the U.S.
Disposal prohibited less than 3
miles from nearest land and in
the navigable waters of the U.S.
Paper, rags, glass, metal bottles,
crockery and similar refuse.
Paper, rags, glass, etc. comminuted
or ground 1.
Victual waste not comminuted or
ground.
Victual waste
ground 1.
comminuted
or
Mixed garbage types 4 ....................
See Note 4 ...................................
Fixed or floating
platforms &
assoc. vessels 3
(33 CFR 151.73)
areas 2
In special
(33 CFR 151.71)
Disposal prohibited
151.67).
Disposal prohibited
151.71)..
(33
CFR
(33
CFR
Disposal prohibited
151.67).
Disposal prohibited.
(33
CFR
Disposal prohibited
151.71).
(33
CFR
Disposal prohibited.
Disposal prohibited
151.71).
(33
CFR
Disposal prohibited.
Disposal prohibited less than 12
miles from nearest land.
Disposal prohibited.
Disposal prohibited less than 12
miles from nearest land, except
in the Wider Caribbean Region
special area, where disposal is
prohibited less than 3 miles
from nearest land.
See Note 4 ...................................
Disposal prohibited less than 12
miles from nearest land and in
the navigable waters of the
U.S.
See Note 4.
Note 1: Comminuted or ground garbage must be able to pass through a screen with a mesh size no larger than 25 mm. (1 inch) (33 CFR
151.75).
Note 2: Special areas under Annex V are the Mediterranean, Baltic, Black, Red, and North Seas areas, the Gulfs area, and the Wider Caribbean Region. (33 CFR 151.53).
Note 3: Fixed or floating platforms and associated vessels includes all fixed or floating platforms engaged in exploration, exploitation or associated offshore processing of seabed mineral resources, and all ships within 500m of such platforms.
Note 4: When garbage is mixed with other harmful substances having different disposal or discharge requirements, the more stringent disposal restrictions shall apply.
Dated: March 16, 2012.
J.G Lantz,
Director of Commercial Regulations and
Standards, U.S. Coast Guard.
DATES:
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Part 165
[Docket No. USCG–2011–0254]
RIN 1625–AA11
Regulated Navigation Area, Zidell
Waterfront Property, Willamette River,
OR
Coast Guard, DHS.
Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Coast Guard is
establishing a Regulated Navigation
Area (RNA) at the Zidell Waterfront
Property located on the Willamette
River in Portland, Oregon. This RNA is
necessary to preserve the integrity of an
engineered sediment cap as part of an
Oregon Department of Environmental
Quality (DEQ) required remedial action.
This RNA will prohibit activities that
could disturb or damage the engineered
sediment cap.
sroberts on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES
SUMMARY:
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15:38 Mar 30, 2012
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Comments and material
received from the public, as well as
documents mentioned in this preamble
as being available in the docket, are part
of docket USCG–2011–0254 and are
available online by going to https://
www.regulations.gov, inserting USCG–
2011–0254 in the ‘‘Keyword’’ box, and
then clicking ‘‘Search.’’ This material is
also available for inspection or copying
at the Docket Management Facility (M–
30), U.S. Department of Transportation,
West Building Ground Floor, Room
W12–140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE.,
Washington, DC 20590, between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If
you have questions on this rule, call or
email BM1 Silvestre Suga III, Waterways
Management Division, Coast Guard
Sector Columbia River, telephone 503–
240–9319, email
Silvestre.G.Suga@uscg.mil. If you have
questions on viewing the docket, call
Renee V. Wright, Program Manager,
Docket Operations, telephone 202–366–
9826.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
ADDRESSES:
[FR Doc. 2012–7787 Filed 3–30–12; 8:45 am]
ACTION:
This rule is effective May 2,
2012.
Regulatory Information
On August 8, 2011, we published a
notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM)
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
titled Regulated Navigation Area, Zidell
Waterfront Property, Willamette River,
OR, in the Federal Register (76 FR
48070). We received no comments on
the proposed rule. There were no
requests made for a public meeting
regarding this rule and none were held.
No other documents have been
published for this rulemaking.
Basis and Purpose
The Zidell Waterfront Property is
placing an engineered sediment cap
over contaminated sediments adjacent
to the west bank of the Willamette River
between approximate river miles 13.5
and 14.2 as part of an Oregon
Department of Environmental Quality
(DEQ) required remedial action.
Geographically this location starts at
approximately the west bank of the
Marquam Bridge and continues
southerly, along the west bank of the
Willamette River to the North end of
Ross Island.
The engineered sediment cap is
designed to be compatible with normal
port operations, but could be damaged
by other maritime activities including
anchoring, dragging, dredging,
grounding of large vessels, deployment
of barge spuds, etc. Such damage could
disrupt the function or impact the
effectiveness of the cap to contain the
underlying contaminated sediment and
shoreline soil in these areas. As such,
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 63 (Monday, April 2, 2012)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 19537-19544]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-7787]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Part 151
[Docket No. USCG-2011-0187]
RIN 1625-AB76
MARPOL Annex V Special Areas: Wider Caribbean Region
AGENCY: Coast Guard, DHS.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: By this final rule, the Coast Guard amends the list of special
areas in effect under Annex V of the International Convention for the
Prevention of Pollution from Ships, 1973, as modified by the Protocol
of 1978, as amended, to include the Wider Caribbean Region special
area. The current list of special areas in effect is outdated because
it does not include this special area, which went into effect May 1,
2011. This rule will correct the list of special areas in effect to
provide accurate information to the public.
DATES: This final rule is effective April 2, 2012.
ADDRESSES: Comments and material received from the public, as well as
documents mentioned in this preamble as being available in the docket,
are part of docket USCG-2011-0187 and are available for inspection or
copying at the Docket Management Facility (M-30), U.S. Department of
Transportation, West Building Ground Floor, Room W12-140, 1200 New
Jersey Avenue SE., Washington, DC 20590, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays. You may also find this
docket on the Internet by going to https://www.regulations.gov,
inserting USCG-2011-0187 in the ``Keyword'' box, and then clicking
``Search.''
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If you have questions on this rule,
call or email David Condino, U.S. Coast Guard Office of Port and
Facility Activities; telephone 202-372-1145, email
David.A.Condino@uscg.mil. If you have questions on viewing the docket,
call Renee V. Wright, Program Manager, Docket Operations, telephone
202-366-9826.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents for Preamble
I. Abbreviations
II. Regulatory History
III. Basis and Purpose
IV. Background
V. Discussion of Comments and Changes
VI. Regulatory Analyses
A. Regulatory Planning and Review
[[Page 19538]]
B. Small Entities
C. Assistance for Small Entities
D. Collection of Information
E. Federalism
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
G. Taking of Private Property
H. Civil Justice Reform
I. Protection of Children
J. Indian Tribal Governments
K. Energy Effects
L. Technical Standards
M. Environment
I. Abbreviations
ABA American Boating Association
AMI Association of Marina Industries
APHIS Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
APPS Act to Prevent Pollution from Ships, Pub. L. 96-478, as amended
(33 U.S.C. 1901 et seq.)
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CFV Commercial Fishing Vessel
CLIA Cruise Lines International Association
DHS Department of Homeland Security
FR Federal Register
IMO International Maritime Organization
ISM International Safety Management Code
MARPOL The International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution
from Ships, 1973, as modified by the Protocol of 1978, as amended
MEPC Marine Environmental Protection Committee
MISLE Marine Information for Safety and Law Enforcement
NPRM Notice of proposed rulemaking
OSV Offshore supply vessel
RCP Responsible Carrier Program
RFA Regulatory Flexibility Act
SOLAS International Convention for Safety of Life at Sea
U.S.C. United States Code
USPS U.S. Power Squadron
WCR Wider Caribbean Region
II. Regulatory History
On August 6, 2009, we published a notice and request for comments
entitled ``Comment Request on MARPOL Annex V Wider Caribbean Region
Special Area'' in the Federal Register (74 FR 39334). This notice
anticipated the eventual entry into effect of the Wider Caribbean
Region (WCR) special area, but recognized that no date had been set by
the International Maritime Organization (IMO). We received three
comments in response to the notice. Those comments are addressed in the
``Discussion of Comments and Changes'' section below.
On March 22-26, 2010, the Marine Environmental Protection Committee
(MEPC) of the IMO met at IMO headquarters in London, England. On April
12, 2010, the MEPC published their ``REPORT OF THE MARINE ENVIRONMENT
PROTECTION COMMITTEE ON ITS SIXTIETH SESSION'' (available free at
https://docs.imo.org/, registration required). In that report, the MEPC
set May 1, 2011 as the date for the WCR special area to come into
effect.
On April 7, 2011, we published a notice entitled ``Notice of Entry
into Effect of MARPOL Annex V Wider Caribbean Region Special Area'' in
the Federal Register (76 FR 19380). That notice informed the public of
the entry into effect of the WCR special area on May 1, 2011.
This Final Rule amends the regulations in 33 CFR part 151 to
reflect the entry into effect of the WCR special area. The Coast Guard
did not publish a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) for this
amendment. Under 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B), the Coast Guard finds that good
cause exists for not publishing an NPRM, because this final rule does
not call for any substantive legal changes. In short, the rule merely
corrects in the Coast Guard's regulations the list of special areas
currently in effect. Under IMO rules, as incorporated by the Act to
Prevent Pollution from Ships (APPS) and 33 CFR 151.53(b), the WCR is
already in effect under U.S. law. Further, under 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3),
the Coast Guard finds that, for the same reasons, good cause exists for
making this rule effective less than 30 days after publication in the
Federal Register.
Good cause exists when publication would be impracticable,
unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest. 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B).
Publishing an NPRM and delaying the effective date are unnecessary
because the change being made is a conforming amendment required by
existing authority--33 CFR 151.53(b)--and because, as explained infra,
an opportunity for public comment has already been provided.
Also, this rulemaking merely restates a legal responsibility
already in effect under MARPOL and APPS (33 U.S.C. 1901 et seq.), which
is the U.S. authority implementing MARPOL. Through APPS, the United
States accepts the IMO process for bringing Annex V special areas into
effect. 33 U.S.C. 1901(a)(5), see also section 1907(a) (requiring
compliance with MARPOL). Since the United States first accepted Annex
V, another special area, the WCR, has come into effect through the IMO
process. This rulemaking corrects the list at 33 CFR 151.53 to
accurately list the special areas currently in effect.
The opportunity for public comment on the regulations related to
APPS, including the IMO process for bringing special areas into effect,
was provided in 1989. The original APPS regulations in 33 CFR parts
151, 155, and 158 were implemented through a full informal rulemaking
process, including an Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (53 FR
23884, June 24, 1988), an Interim Rule with Request for Comments (54 FR
18384, April 28, 1989), and a Final Rule (55 FR 35986, September 4,
1990) (APPS rulemaking). The Coast Guard held three public meetings,
received public comments, and responded to all comments received. The
Coast Guard received no comments on the IMO process for bringing
special areas into effect. There have been no substantive changes
regarding this process since the APPS rulemaking and this rulemaking
also does not change that process.
In the 2009 notice and request for comments, the Coast Guard
specifically requested information on issues that impact port reception
facilities, commercial vessels, and recreational vessels operating in
the WCR special area and requested recommendations to address any
issues. We summarize and respond to those comments in section V of this
document. We did not receive any additional data or information on the
impacts of the WCR special area.
III. Basis and Purpose
MARPOL consists of 20 articles and Annexes I-VI. Annex V regulates
the discharge of garbage from ships. The United States became a party
to MARPOL through APPS, and became a party to Annex V through section
2101 of the Marine Plastic Pollution Research and Control Act (Pub. L.
100-220). MARPOL establishes nine ``special areas,'' eight of which
apply to Annex V. In a MARPOL Annex V special area, the rules on the
discharge of garbage are more restrictive than outside of a MARPOL
Annex V special area.
This final rule modifies 33 CFR 151.53(c) and Appendix A of Part
151 to add the WCR special area to the list of special areas currently
in effect. This change harmonizes Coast Guard regulations with MARPOL
and clarifies where the discharge restrictions found at 33 CFR 151.71
(Operating Requirements: Discharge of garbage within special areas)
apply.
IV. Background
A MARPOL Annex V special area is a sea area where the adoption of
special mandatory methods for the prevention of sea pollution by
garbage is required. The Coast Guard is updating the list of special
areas in effect at 33 CFR 151.53(c) to include the WCR special area.
A special area under MARPOL Annex V enters into force when
sufficient parties to MARPOL agree that the adoption of special
mandatory methods for the prevention of sea pollution by garbage is
required in that area. ``Enters into force,'' means that the special
area
[[Page 19539]]
is defined and recognized for treaty purposes. However, the special
area regulations do not apply in that special area until the special
area enters into effect.
A special area enters into effect on the date set by the IMO after
the IMO receives sufficient notification from Member states bordering a
special area of adequate port reception facilities. This date is the
special area's ``effective date.'' In a special area prior to its
effective date, 33 CFR 151.69 (Operating requirements: Discharge of
garbage outside special areas) applies. In a special area after its
effective date, the more restrictive requirements of 33 CFR 151.71
(Operating Requirements: Discharge of garbage within special areas)
apply.
The special area that this rule addresses is the WCR special area,
as defined in Regulation 5(1)(h) of MARPOL Annex V and 33 CFR 151.06.
This special area entered into force (but not effect) on April 4, 1993,
as agreed to by Parties to MARPOL Annex V.
The MEPC decided to set the effective date after hearing a report,
co-sponsored by 22 WCR Member States, during its March 2010 meeting
that all but three states (Belize, Jamaica, and Nicaragua) in the WCR
reported that they had adequate garbage reception facilities in their
ports.\1\ At that time the three WCR countries that were not listed as
co-sponsors of MEPC 60/8/2 reported that they either were establishing
those facilities or had made arrangements with neighboring countries.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ MEPC 60/8/2, IDENTIFICATION AND PROTECTION OF SPECIAL AREAS
AND PARTICULARLY. SENSITIVE SEA AREAS ``Wider Caribbean Region'' as
a Special Area under MARPOL Annex V. A copy is in the docket.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The special discharge restrictions for the WCR special area entered
into effect on May 1, 2011 (IMO Circ. Letter No. 3053, April 14, 2010
\2\). As of May 1, 2011, the discharge of garbage from vessels in the
WCR area is restricted to the discharge of food wastes only (i.e.,
subject to the restrictions of MARPOL Annex V, Regulation 5 and 33 CFR
151.71).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ A copy of the Circular is in the docket.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The list of special areas currently in effect at 33 CFR 151.53(c)
does not include the WCR. This list, and Appendix A to part 151, must
be corrected to provide the maritime community an accurate list of
special areas currently in effect.
V. Discussion of Comments and Changes
As noted above, on August 6, 2009, we published a notice and
request for comments entitled ``Comment Request on MARPOL Annex V Wider
Caribbean Region Special Area'' in the Federal Register (74 FR 39334).
This notice anticipated the eventual entry into effect of the WCR
special area, even though at the time of publication no effective date
had been set by the IMO. We received three letters and three different
comments on the WCR special area. None of the comments indicated that
the heightened discharge restrictions coming into effect for the WCR
would result in increased burdens to vessels or reception facilities.
One commenter brought up the problem of dry bulk cargo wash-water.
Dry bulk cargo ships are not generally designed to store wash-water and
port facilities are generally not able to receive and treat wash-water.
Pending a final decision by IMO, the Coast Guard supports the current
IMO exception to Annex V for dry cargo wash-water discharges in special
areas. Under IMO MEPC.1/Circ.675/Rev.1 26 March 2010, dry cargo residue
wash-water is not considered garbage under Annex V in the WCR special
area and, therefore, is not a subject of this rulemaking.
One comment expressed the commenter's belief that the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act disincentivizes commercial vessels from
disposing of garbage at a shore facility. We agree that additional
efforts are necessary to protect the environment from the discharge of
hazardous materials at sea. However, those efforts are outside the
scope of this rulemaking.
Another comment addressed the different requirements for reception
facilities for garbage under MARPOL and U.S. Department of Agriculture,
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) regulations in
titles 7 and 9 of the CFR. Garbage subject to APHIS regulations is a
subset of garbage regulated under MARPOL. APHIS regulations relate to
foreign plant and/or animal waste, including galley waste and any
materials that have come in contact with such waste. Requirements for
APHIS regulated plant and animal wastes remain unchanged and are not a
subject of this rulemaking.
VI. Regulatory Analyses
We developed this rule after considering numerous statutes and
executive orders related to rulemaking. Below we summarize our analyses
based on 14 of these statutes or executive orders.
A. Regulatory Planning and Review
Executive Orders 12866 (``Regulatory Planning and Review'') and
13563 (``Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review'') direct agencies
to assess the costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives
and, if regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that
maximize net benefits (including potential economic, environmental,
public health and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity).
Executive Order 13563 emphasizes the importance of quantifying both
costs and benefits, of reducing costs, of harmonizing rules, and of
promoting flexibility. This final rule has not been designated a
``significant regulatory action'' under section 3(f) of Executive Order
12866. Accordingly, the final rule has not been reviewed by the Office
of Management and Budget.
A regulatory assessment follows:
Regulatory Changes
Prior to Annex V becoming effective in the WCR on May 1, 2011, the
rules governing discharge of garbage applicable to the WCR were found
at 33 CFR 151.69. That is, the standards found at 33 CFR 151.69 define
the regulatory baseline for the 2010 MEPC actions establishing an
effective date for the WCR as a special area. The final rule will
correct 33 CFR 151 to reflect that the discharge restrictions for
special areas found at 33 CFR 151.71 apply to the WCR.
MARPOL Annex V segregates garbage into the following types:
Plastics, including synthetic ropes, fishing nets, and
plastic bags;
Dunnage (i.e. bracing materials), lining, and packing
materials that float;
Paper, rags, glass, metal, bottles, crockery and similar
refuse;
Paper, rags, glass, etc., comminuted or ground;
Victual waste not comminuted or ground; and
Victual waste comminuted or ground.
Sections 151.69 and 151.71 of 33 CFR set the rules for each garbage
type by these zones, defined according to distances from the nearest
land: less than 3 miles, less than 12 miles, less than 25 miles, and
greater than 25 miles.
Below are comparisons of the restrictions in Sec. 151.69 and Sec.
151.71 by garbage type:
Plastics: Both sections prohibit the discharge of plastics
anywhere.
Dunnage, lining, and packing materials that float: Sec.
151.69 permits the discharge of dunnage only in the greater than 25
miles zone. However, Sec. 151.71 prohibits the discharge of dunnage
anywhere in a special area.
Paper, rags, glass, etc. and similar refuse: Sec. 151.69
permits the discharge of paper etc. only in the 12-25 miles and greater
than 25 miles zones. However,
[[Page 19540]]
Sec. 151.71 prohibits the discharge of paper etc. anywhere in a
special area.
Ground paper, rags, glass, etc.: Sec. 151.69 permits the
discharge of ground paper etc. outside the less than 3 miles zone.
However, Sec. 151.71 prohibits the discharge of ground paper etc. in
all zones in a special area.
Victual Waste: Both sections permit the discharge of
victual waste in the 12-25 miles and greater than 25 miles zones.
Ground Victual Waste: Both sections permit the discharge
of ground victual wastes in all zones other than the less than 3 miles
zone.
Table VI.1 shows the provisions of Sec. Sec. 151.69 and 151.71.
The more restrictive provisions of Sec. 151.71 prohibit the discharge
of any materials other than Victual Waste or Ground Victual Waste
anywhere in the WCR.
Table VI.1--Comparison of Discharge Restrictions in Sec. Sec. 151.69 and 151.71
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Miles from nearest land
Material Section ----------------------------------------------------------------
<3 3-12 12-25 >25
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Plastics..................... Sec. 151.69... No.............. No.............. No............. No.
Sec. 151.71... No.............. No.............. No............. No.
Dunnage...................... Sec. 151.69... No.............. No.............. No............. Yes.
Sec. 151.71... No.............. No.............. No............. No.
Paper, etc................... Sec. 151.69... No.............. No.............. Yes............ Yes.
Sec. 151.71... No.............. No.............. No............. No.
Ground Paper, etc............ Sec. 151.69... No.............. Yes............. Yes............ Yes.
Sec. 151.71... No.............. No.............. No............. No.
Victual Waste................ Sec. 151.69... No.............. No.............. Yes............ Yes.
Sec. 151.71... No.............. No.............. Yes............ Yes.
Ground Victual Waste......... Sec. 151.69... No.............. Yes............. Yes............ Yes.
Sec. 151.71... No.............. Yes............. Yes............ Yes.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As the table shows, the differences between Sec. Sec. 151.69 and
151.71, which identify the changes applicable to any special area after
its effective date as established by the IMO, are these additional
prohibitions:
Dunnage in the greater than 25 miles zone;
Paper, etc. in the 12-25 mile zone and greater than 25
miles zone; and
Ground paper etc. in the 3-12 mile, 12-25 mile, and
greater than 25 miles zones.
In the Background section we described how, at the March 2010
meeting, the IMO's MEPC set the effective date for the WCR special area
as May 1, 2011. At that meeting, the United States (and 21 other WCR
countries) reported to the IMO that they had adequate port reception
facilities at ports and terminals bordering the WCR. However, the
United States had adequate port reception facilities established years
before the 2010 meeting; the Coast Guard began issuing MARPOL Annex V
Certificates of Adequacy (certification that a facility may receive
garbage in compliance with MARPOL and APPS) in 2001. Other WCR
countries party to MARPOL have been ready since March 2010 or earlier.
Current Industry Practice
The Coast Guard estimates that the IMO's action does not impose an
additional burden on the U.S. maritime community. We evaluated the
vessels transiting the WCR by different sectors (cruise line,
commercial fishing vessel, other commercial vessel, and recreational
vessel) and then researched waste management rules and practices in
each sector to establish a baseline of current practices. Table VI.2
summarizes the results of our findings for each sector.
Table VI.2--Summary of Current Industry Practice by Sector
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Garbage type
Sector ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dunnage Paper Ground paper
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cruise Lines..................... Current practice......... Current practice........ Current practice.
Commercial Fishing Vessels....... Not relevant to this Current practice........ Not relevant to this
sector. sector.
Other Commercial Vessels......... Current practice and Current practice and Current practice and
inspections. inspections. inspections.
Recreation vessels............... Not relevant to this Current practice and Not relevant to this
sector. education programs. sector.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Below we present our findings for each sector.
1. Cruise Line Sector
The cruise line sector is international in scope and its vessels
are subject to the provisions of MARPOL. In June 2001, the
International Council of Cruise Lines and its members adopted a set of
practices and procedures entitled ``Cruise Industry Waste Management
Practices and Procedures.'' \3\ Currently, the vessels of the cruise
industry are subject to many regulatory regimes, including U.S. laws
and regulations; state regulations that may be more strict than U.S.
laws, including Florida; \4\ the International Convention for Safety of
Life at Sea (SOLAS); the International Safety Management Code (ISM);
and MARPOL.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Ibid, p. 6.
\4\ Web site of the Cruise Lines International Association,
https://www2.cruising.org/industry/environment.cfm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Cruise Lines International Association (CLIA) in 2010 published
a document ``CLIA at 35: Steering a Sustainable Course'' \5\ that
describes its environmental policies. Part II, ``Waste Management,''
states that CLIA's Waste
[[Page 19541]]
Management Procedures and Policies are incorporated in their members'
safety management systems. The document also describes on-board
recycling, trash, and garbage management procedures. These include
numerous points on the vessel for the collection of recyclable
materials from passengers and crew, on-board compacting and storage of
aluminum, on-board shredding of paper and cardboard, and the grinding
and discharge of food wastes in compliance with MARPOL.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Cruise Lines International Association, https://www.cruising.org/vacation/news/press_releases/2010/09/celebrating-its-35th-year-clia-releases-new-environmental-report.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In general, cruise ships are fitted with on-board recycling systems
for many materials, other materials are incinerated or brought ashore,
and the only solid waste discharged at sea is food waste of either the
Victual Waste or Ground Victual Waste type. We concluded that the
cruise line sector is currently compliant with the current MARPOL
regulations, the APPS, and other U.S. laws. As this final rule will
only add the references to the MARPOL restrictions to the CFR, the
Coast Guard estimates that there will be no additional costs to this
sector.
2. Commercial Fishing Vessel Sector
We compared Annex V restrictions to the characteristics of
commercial fishing vessels (CFVs). As noted in Table VI.1, Annex V
increased the discharge restrictions for the Dunnage, Paper, and Ground
Paper types in special areas.
With respect to the Dunnage type, CFVs, as single-purpose vessels,
carry supplies and equipment related to their fishing operations. They
do not carry general cargo or bracing, lining, or other materials
included in the Dunnage type that are used in freight ships. Thus, the
special area restrictions of Annex V, prohibiting the discharge of
Dunnage anywhere in the WCR, will not impact CFVs operating out of U.S.
ports in the WCR.
CFVs operating out of U.S. ports in the WCR typically engage in
short voyages with small crews. This means that they will not generate
large waste streams, obviating the need for a specialized paper grinder
or shredder like those found on cruise ships. Also, a grinder or
shredder would take up space that would otherwise be used for the
vessel's fishing operations. Because U.S. CFVs operating in the WCR do
not generate ground paper, we believe that the Annex V restrictions on
Ground Paper will not result in additional compliance costs for them.
The Annex V restrictions on the Paper type will apply to CFVs.
Under the less stringent standards found at Sec. 151.69, discharge of
Paper is permitted if greater than 12 miles from the nearest land. As
mentioned above, CFV operations consist of short voyages, returning to
the same port they left from to deliver their catch. Our previously
cited research also indicates that any Paper waste is produced in the
galley primarily, commingled and packaged with victual and other waste,
and disposed of when returned to home port. Although Annex V prohibits
the discharge of Paper waste throughout the WCR, our assessment is that
Paper waste on CFVs is currently being commingled with other garbage.
The Coast Guards estimates that this final rule will not affect current
behavior or result in additional costs to this sector.
3. Other Commercial Vessels
This sector is comprised of commercial vessels other than the
cruise ships and commercial fishing vessels (``other commercial
vessels''). The other commercial vessels sector includes both foreign-
flag and U.S.-flag vessels that transit or operate in the WCR. With
regard to foreign-flag vessels, they are engaged in international
transits and may transit the other special areas that have been in
effect longer than the WCR. For that reason, we conclude that they are
already complying with Annex V restrictions and that the WCR coming
into effect will not impose any additional costs to them.
To identify the other U.S.-flag commercial vessels that will be
affected by the final rule, we extracted from the Marine Information
for Safety and Law Enforcement (MISLE) database information about the
U.S.-flag vessels as of September 2011. We used the SOLAS certificate
documentation to identify the subset of such vessels that have
international capability. The resulting population of U.S.-flag other
commercial vessels is dominated by offshore supply vessels (OSVs),
towing vessels, and freight ships. The population also includes
specialty oil service and passenger vessels. OSVs includes vessels
supporting near-coastal and harbor work. The towing vessel sector is
diverse and includes some vessels that work exclusively in inland
waters, some vessels that work in the intracoastal waterways and some
vessels that remain within 3 miles of land.
We analyzed the characteristics of this population of other
commercial vessels with respect to existing regulatory requirements and
we found that all of these vessels are subject to one or more
compliance regimes. All of these vessels are in at least one of the
following categories: (1) Coast Guard inspected vessels, or (2)
uninspected vessels which have voluntarily adopted an audit-based
safety management system (SMS) such as the IMO's International Safety
Management Code (ISM) or the American Waterways Operator's Responsible
Carrier Program (RCP). Below, we discuss the garbage management
requirements under these compliance regimes and summarize our findings.
Coast Guard Inspected Vessels
Coast Guard inspected vessels are already required to comply with
the requirements of MARPOL. Under 33 CFR 151.61, the Coast Guard may
inspect any ``ship subject to inspection'' for compliance with the APPS
regulations. APPS regulations include the waste management plan
requirements of 33 CFR 151.57. Section 151.57 requires compliance with
MARPOL and waste management plans for vessels in a defined group; that
group includes all of the inspected vessels in the other commercial
vessels population. Compliance with these requirements is part of the
Coast Guard safety and security inspection regime.
Vessels With Audit-Based Safety Management Systems
All of the vessels which are not subject to Coast Guard inspection,
but are part of the other commercial vessels population, have
voluntarily adopted one of the two major audit-based safety management
system (SMS): Either the IMO's International Safety Management Code
(ISM), or the American Waterways Operator's Responsible Carrier Program
(RCP). Both the ISM and the RCP require that ships adhere to applicable
laws and regulations, including MARPOL Annex V. Each regime also
includes requirements relating to sanitation. For example, the RCP's
section II.D, ``Environmental Policy and Procedures,'' \6\ requires
each vessel to have procedures and documentation for garbage disposal,
handling of waste oil, sanitary systems and handling of sewage.
Similarly, the ISM Code states that one of its objectives is
``avoidance of damage to the environment, in particular to the marine
environment and to property,'' \7\ and that a ship's safety management
system should ``assess all identified risks to its ships, personnel and
the environment and establish appropriate safeguards.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ American Waterways Operators, https://www.americanwaterways.com/commitment_safety/RCP.pdf.
\7\ International Maritime Organization, https://www.imo.org/ourwork/humanelement/safetymanagement/pages/ismcode.aspx.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Each company subject to the ISM or RCP documents the specific
processes and policies its vessels will follow to comply with all of
the applicable SMS's
[[Page 19542]]
requirements. Both the ISM and the RCP use third-party auditors to
ensure that the vessels and company policies are in compliance with the
applicable safety regimes. Thus, these compliance regimes ensure that
ships adhere to current federal rules, including MARPOL Annex V and
APPS, as well as additional regime-specific sanitation and garbage
management procedures.
Summary of Findings
We conclude that these commercial vessels currently meet the
garbage management requirements of the final rule. The Coast Guard
therefore estimates that there will be no additional costs to these
vessels.
4. Recreational Vessels
As described earlier in this section, the passing of the effective
date of the WCR special area increased the restrictions on the
discharge of the Dunnage, Ground Paper, and Paper types. The Dunnage
type would not apply to recreational vessels, because they do not carry
containers or other general cargo that would require the bracing and
lining materials that comprise this garbage type.
With respect to Ground Paper, Coast Guard experience indicates that
recreational vessels do not have space for a specialized shredder or
grinder to process the materials in the Ground Paper type. Instead,
this material is commingled with other garbage types. Our assessment
then is that the Ground Paper type is not relevant to the recreational
vessel sector.
The remaining garbage type that has a new restriction in the WCR is
Paper. Once the WCR special area came into effect, ships were
prohibited from discharging Paper anywhere in the WCR. Before the WCR
special area came in to effect, such discharge was allowed 12 miles or
more from the nearest land.
To address pollution on the waterways, which may be from either
shoreside or vessel sources, the recreational boating community is
actively engaged in education, which we refer to as ``clean water/
marina programs,'' collectively. These programs are focused on
comprehensive waste management actions and already incorporate the
restrictions of Annex V. The list below summarizes some of the programs
pursued by leading recreational boating organizations:
BoatU.S. Foundation: The BoatU.S. Foundation promotes
safety and clean water. Its clean water program, called ``Stash the
Trash'', advises boaters to know and follow the applicable laws and
regulations, throw no trash of any kind overboard, return everything to
land that they take out to sea, and pick up trash on the waters and in
marinas.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ BoatU.S. Foundation, https://www.boatus.com/foundation/cleanwater/stashtrash.asp.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
U.S. Power Squadron (USPS): The USPS has a national
Environmental Committee, whose goals include educating boaters about
applicable laws, regulations, and good environmental management
practices; and promoting activities to clean up waterways.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ U.S. Power Squadron, https://www.usps.org/national/envcom/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Association of Marina Industries (AMI): The AMI's Clean
Marina program ``is a voluntary compliance program that stresses
environmental and managerial best management practices that exceed
regulatory requirements * * * A typical Clean Marina program will have
components that cover marina [siting] and design considerations, marina
management, emergency planning, petroleum control, sewage and gray
water, waste containment and disposal, storm water management, habitat
and species protection and boater education.'' \10\ Florida,\11\
Louisiana,\12\ and Texas \13\ have Clean Marina programs that are
sponsored by state agencies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ Association of Marina Industries, https://marinaassociation.org/government/clean-marina.
\11\ State of Florida, https://www.dep.state.fl.us/cleanmarina/.
\12\ State of Louisiana, https://dnr.louisiana.gov (enter clean
marinas in the search tool).
\13\ State of Texas, https://www.cleanmarinas.org/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
American Boating Association (ABA): The Clean Trash
Discharge part of the ABA's Clean Boating program includes information
about the Marine Plastic Pollution Research and Control Act and MARPOL
Annex V, and advocates proper stowage of all articles and return of
everything taken aboard.\14\
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\14\ American Boating Association, https://www.americanboating.org/clean.asp.
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For the recreational boater, the application of increased
restrictions in the WCR, by itself, is narrow, because it only affects
the Paper type in the two farthest zones. Moreover, because clean
water/marina programs are already advocating the practices consistent
with the increased restrictions described in 33 CFR 151.71, we conclude
that the publication of this final rule will not require recreational
boaters to learn or adopt any new behavior. The Coast Guard estimates
that there will be no additional costs to the owners of recreational
vessels.
Summary
In both the commercial and recreational sectors, we estimate
current garbage and waste management practices are already consistent
with the changes enacted by IMO. These include recycling on the larger
vessels and stowage and onshore disposal for vessels of all sizes and
types. In summary, the Coast Guard estimates that there will be no
additional costs to the public by this final rule.
Benefits
Without the promulgation of this final rule, discrepancies between
the CFR and the requirements found in the APPS and MARPOL would
continue and provide inconsistent information to operators of
industrial and recreational vessels that transit the WCR.
The primary benefit of this rule is to provide consistent
information on MARPOL Annex V special area requirements in order to
increase the regulated community's awareness of the requirements. The
secondary benefit is more efficient regulations through greater
consistency between U.S. domestic regulations and MARPOL Annex V.
B. Small Entities
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601-612, as
amended, requires federal agencies to consider the potential impact of
regulations on small entities during rulemaking. However, when an
agency is not required to publish an NPRM for a rule, the RFA does not
require the agency to prepare a regulatory flexibility analysis. The
Coast Guard was not required to publish an NPRM for this rule for the
reasons stated in Section II, ``Regulatory History.'' Therefore, the
Coast Guard is not required to publish a regulatory flexibility
analysis.
C. Assistance for Small Entities
Under section 213(a) of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996 (Pub. L. 104-121), we want to assist small
entities in understanding the rule so that they can better evaluate its
effects on them and participate in the rulemaking. The Coast Guard will
not retaliate against small entities that question or complain about
this rule or any policy or action of the Coast Guard.
Small businesses may send comments on the actions of federal
employees who enforce, or otherwise determine compliance with, federal
regulations to the Small Business and Agriculture Regulatory
Enforcement Ombudsman and the Regional Small Business Regulatory
Fairness Boards. The Ombudsman evaluates these actions annually and
rates each agency's responsiveness to small business. If you wish to
comment on actions by employees of the Coast Guard, call 1-888-REG-FAIR
(1-888-734-3247).
[[Page 19543]]
D. Collection of Information
This rule does not call for any new collections of information, as
defined by the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3520).
E. Federalism
A rule has implications for federalism under Executive Order 13132,
Federalism, if it has a substantial direct effect on the States, on the
relationship between the national government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and responsibilities among the various levels of
government. We have analyzed this rule under that Order. States do not
have the authority to regulate special areas under MARPOL Annex V,
including the Wider Caribbean Region special area. Therefore, we have
determined that the final rule does not have implications for
federalism.
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (2 U.S.C. 1531-1538)
requires federal agencies to assess the effects of their discretionary
regulatory actions. In particular, the Act addresses actions that may
result in the expenditure by a State, local, or tribal government, in
the aggregate, or by the private sector of $100,000,000 (adjusted for
inflation) or more in any one year. Though this rule will not result in
such an expenditure, we do discuss the effects of this rule elsewhere
in this preamble.
G. Taking of Private Property
This rule will not cause a taking of private property or otherwise
have taking implications under Executive Order 12630, Governmental
Actions and Interference with Constitutionally Protected Property
Rights.
H. Civil Justice Reform
This rule meets applicable standards in sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2)
of Executive Order 12988, Civil Justice Reform, to minimize litigation,
eliminate ambiguity, and reduce burden.
I. Protection of Children
We have analyzed this rule under Executive Order 13045, Protection
of Children from Environmental Health Risks and Safety Risks. This rule
is not an economically significant rule and does not create an
environmental risk to health or risk to safety that may
disproportionately affect children.
J. Indian Tribal Governments
This rule does not have tribal implications under Executive Order
13175, Consultation and Coordination with Indian Tribal Governments,
because it does not have a substantial direct effect on one or more
Indian tribes, on the relationship between the Federal Government and
Indian tribes, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities
between the Federal Government and Indian tribes.
K. Energy Effects
We have analyzed this rule under Executive Order 13211, Actions
Concerning Regulations That Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use. We have determined that it is not a ``significant
energy action'' under that order because it is not a ``significant
regulatory action'' under Executive Order 12866 and is not likely to
have a significant adverse effect on the supply, distribution, or use
of energy. The Administrator of the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs has not designated it as a significant energy
action. Therefore, it does not require a Statement of Energy Effects
under Executive Order 13211.
L. Technical Standards
The National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (NTTAA) (15
U.S.C. 272 note) directs agencies to use voluntary consensus standards
in their regulatory activities unless the agency provides Congress,
through the Office of Management and Budget, with an explanation of why
using these standards would be inconsistent with applicable law or
otherwise impractical. Voluntary consensus standards are technical
standards (e.g., specifications of materials, performance, design, or
operation; test methods; sampling procedures; and related management
systems practices) that are developed or adopted by voluntary consensus
standards bodies. This rule does not use technical standards.
Therefore, we did not consider the use of voluntary consensus
standards.
M. Environment
We have analyzed this rule under Department of Homeland Security
Management Directive 023-01 and Commandant Instruction M16475.lD, which
guide the Coast Guard in complying with the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321-4370f), and have concluded that this
action is one of a category of actions that do not individually or
cumulatively have a significant effect on the human environment. This
rule is categorically excluded under section 2.B.2, figure 2-1,
paragraph (34)(a) of the Instruction and under section 6(b) of the
``Appendix to National Environmental Policy Act: Coast Guard Procedures
for Categorical Exclusions, Notice of Final Agency Policy'' (67 FR
48244, July 23, 2002). This rule involves regulations which are
editorial or procedural, in that the regulatory change merely restates
an already-existing obligation in a more convenient place. Accordingly,
paragraph 34(a) of the Instruction applies. This rule also involves
regulations mandated by Congress in APPS; congressionally mandated
regulations designed to improve or protect the environment are excluded
under section 6(b) of the Appendix. An environmental analysis checklist
and a categorical exclusion determination are available in the docket
where indicated under ADDRESSES.
List of Subjects in 33 CFR Part 151
Administrative practice and procedure, Oil pollution, Penalties,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Water pollution control.
For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Coast Guard amends
33 CFR part 151 as follows:
PART 151--VESSELS CARRYING OIL, NOXIOUS LIQUID SUBSTANCES, GARBAGE,
MUNICIPAL OR COMMERCIAL WASTE, AND BALLAST WATER
0
1. The authority citation for part 151 continues to read:
Authority: 33 U.S.C. 1321, 1902, 1903, 1908; 46 U.S.C. 6101;
Pub. L. 104-227 (110 Stat. 3034); Pub. L. 108-293 (118 Stat. 1063),
Sec. 623; E.O. 12777, 3 CFR, 1991 Comp. p. 351; DHS Delegation No.
0170.1, sec. 2(77).
Subpart A--Implementation of MARPOL 73/78 and the Protocol on
Environmental Protection to the Antarctic Treaty as It Pertains to
Pollution From Ships
Sec. 151.53 [Amended]
0
2. Amend Sec. 151.53(c) by adding the words ``Wider Caribbean Region,
the'' before the word ``Mediterranean''; adding the word ``the'' before
the word ``Baltic''; and adding a comma after the word ``Gulfs.''
0
3. Revise Appendix A to Sec. Sec. 151.51 through 151.77 to read as
follows:
Appendix A to Sec. Sec. 151.51 Through 151.77--Summary of Garbage
Discharge Restrictions
[[Page 19544]]
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All vessels except fixed or floating platforms and
associated vessels Fixed or floating
Garbage type ----------------------------------------------------- platforms & assoc.
Outside special areas In special areas \2\ (33 vessels \3\ (33 CFR
(33 CFR 151.69) CFR 151.71) 151.73)
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Plastics--includes synthetic Disposal prohibited (33 Disposal prohibited (33 Disposal prohibited (33
ropes and fishing nets and CFR 151.67). CFR 151.67). CFR 151.67).
plastic bags.
Dunnage, lining and packing Disposal prohibited less Disposal prohibited (33 Disposal prohibited.
materials that float. than 25 miles from CFR 151.71)..
nearest land and in the
navigable waters of the
U.S.
Paper, rags, glass, metal Disposal prohibited less Disposal prohibited (33 Disposal prohibited.
bottles, crockery and similar than 12 miles from CFR 151.71).
refuse. nearest land and in the
navigable waters of the
U.S.
Paper, rags, glass, etc. Disposal prohibited less Disposal prohibited (33 Disposal prohibited.
comminuted or ground \1\. than 3 miles from CFR 151.71).
nearest land and in the
navigable waters of the
U.S.
Victual waste not comminuted or Disposal prohibited less Disposal prohibited less Disposal prohibited.
ground. than 12 miles from than 12 miles from
nearest land and in the nearest land.
navigable waters of the
U.S.
Victual waste comminuted or Disposal prohibited less Disposal prohibited less Disposal prohibited less
ground \1\. than 3 miles from than 12 miles from than 12 miles from
nearest land and in the nearest land, except in nearest land and in the
navigable waters of the the Wider Caribbean navigable waters of the
U.S. Region special area, U.S.
where disposal is
prohibited less than 3
miles from nearest land.
Mixed garbage types \4\.......... See Note 4............... See Note 4.............. See Note 4.
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Note 1: Comminuted or ground garbage must be able to pass through a screen with a mesh size no larger than 25
mm. (1 inch) (33 CFR 151.75).
Note 2: Special areas under Annex V are the Mediterranean, Baltic, Black, Red, and North Seas areas, the Gulfs
area, and the Wider Caribbean Region. (33 CFR 151.53).
Note 3: Fixed or floating platforms and associated vessels includes all fixed or floating platforms engaged in
exploration, exploitation or associated offshore processing of seabed mineral resources, and all ships within
500m of such platforms.
Note 4: When garbage is mixed with other harmful substances having different disposal or discharge requirements,
the more stringent disposal restrictions shall apply.
Dated: March 16, 2012.
J.G Lantz,
Director of Commercial Regulations and Standards, U.S. Coast Guard.
[FR Doc. 2012-7787 Filed 3-30-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110-04-P