International Fisheries; Western and Central Pacific Fisheries for Highly Migratory Species; Transshipping, Bunkering, Reporting, and Purse Seine Discard Requirements, 71501-71513 [2012-29028]
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 232 / Monday, December 3, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
15 CFR Part 902
50 CFR Part 300
[Docket No. 110209128–2641–02]
RIN 0648–BA85
International Fisheries; Western and
Central Pacific Fisheries for Highly
Migratory Species; Transshipping,
Bunkering, Reporting, and Purse Seine
Discard Requirements
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
NMFS issues regulations
under the authority of the Western and
Central Pacific Fisheries Convention
Implementation Act (WCPFC
Implementation Act) to implement
requirements for U.S. fishing vessels
used for commercial fishing that offload
or receive transshipments of highly
migratory species (HMS), U.S. fishing
vessels used for commercial fishing that
provide bunkering or other support
services to fishing vessels, and U.S.
fishing vessels used for commercial
fishing that receive bunkering or engage
in other support services, in the area of
application of the Convention on the
Conservation and Management of
Highly Migratory Fish Stocks in the
Western and Central Pacific Ocean
(Convention). Some of the requirements
also apply to transshipments of fish
caught in the area of application of the
Convention (Convention Area) and
transshipped elsewhere. NMFS also
issues requirements regarding
notification of entry into and exit from
the ‘‘Eastern High Seas Special
Management Area’’ (Eastern SMA) and
requirements relating to discards from
purse seine fishing vessels. This action
is necessary for the United States to
implement decisions of the Commission
for the Conservation and Management of
Highly Migratory Fish Stocks in the
Western and Central Pacific Ocean
(Commission or WCPFC) and to satisfy
its obligations under the Convention, to
which it is a Contracting Party.
DATES: This rule is effective January 2,
2013.
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SUMMARY:
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Copies of supporting
documents that were prepared for this
final rule, including the regulatory
impact review (RIR) and the
Environmental Assessment (EA), as well
as the proposed rule, are available via
the Federal e-Rulemaking portal, at
https://www.regulations.gov. Those
documents, and the small entity
compliance guide(s) prepared for this
final rule, are also available from NMFS
at the following address: Michael D.
Tosatto, Regional Administrator, NMFS
Pacific Islands Regional Office (PIRO),
1601 Kapiolani Blvd., Suite 1110,
Honolulu, HI 96814–4700. The initial
regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA)
and final regulatory flexibility analysis
(FRFA) prepared under the authority of
the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) are
included in the proposed rule and this
final rule, respectively.
Written comments regarding the
burden-hour estimates or other aspects
of the collection-of-information
requirements contained in this final rule
may be submitted to Michael D. Tosatto,
Regional Administrator, NMFS PIRO
(see address above) and by email to
OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov or fax
to (202) 395–7285.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Rini
Ghosh, NMFS PIRO, 808–944–2273.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
ADDRESSES:
[FR Doc. 2012–28980 Filed 11–30–12; 8:45 am]
Background
On February 15, 2012, NMFS
published a proposed rule in the
Federal Register (77 FR 8759) to revise
regulations at 50 CFR part 300, subpart
O, in order to implement certain
decisions of the WCPFC. The proposed
rule was open to public comment
through April 16, 2012.
This final rule is issued under the
authority of the WCPFC Implementation
Act (16 U.S.C. 6901 et seq.), which
authorizes the Secretary of Commerce,
in consultation with the Secretary of
State and the Secretary of the
Department in which the United States
Coast Guard is operating (currently the
Department of Homeland Security), to
promulgate such regulations as may be
necessary to carry out the obligations of
the United States under the Convention,
including the decisions of the WCPFC.
The authority to promulgate regulations
has been delegated to NMFS.
This final rule implements provisions
in Conservation and Management
Measures (CMMs) adopted by the
WCFPC, particularly CMMs 2009–06,
2009–01, 2010–02, and 2009–02. The
preamble to the proposed rule includes
further background information,
including information on the
Convention and the WCPFC, as well as
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detailed information about each of the
CMMs being implemented in this rule,
and the basis for the proposed
regulations.
New Requirements
This final rule establishes the
following requirements:
1. Transshipment Reporting
Requirements
The owner and operator (operator
means, with respect to any vessel, the
master or other individual aboard and in
charge of that vessel) of any U.S. fishing
vessel used for commercial fishing that
transships HMS in the Convention Area,
whether from an offloading vessel or to
a receiving vessel, or that transships
HMS caught in the Convention Area,
whether from an offloading vessel or to
a receiving vessel, is required to ensure
the completion of and submission to
NMFS of a transshipment report for
each transshipment. The form required
to be used for these reports is available
from the NMFS Pacific Islands Regional
Administrator. A separate report is
required for each transshipment.
The information specified on the
report form must be recorded on the
form within 24 hours of completion of
the transshipment. The requirements for
transshipments on the high seas and for
emergency transshipments (i.e., a
transshipment conducted under
circumstances of force majeure or other
serious mechanical breakdown that
could reasonably be expected to
threaten the health or safety of the
vessel or crew or cause a significant
financial loss through fish spoilage) that
would otherwise be prohibited are
slightly different than the requirements
for all other transshipments. For
transshipment on the high seas and for
emergency transshipments that would
otherwise be prohibited, the report must
be submitted by email or fax to the
address specified by the NMFS Pacific
Islands Regional Administrator no later
than 10 calendar days after completion
of the transshipment. The report can be
submitted without signatures to
accommodate vessels that remain at sea
for more than 10 days after completion
of the transshipment and that do not
have fax or email capabilities. In such
circumstances, for example, the
information required on the form could
be communicated via radio to a shore
agent, and the shore agent could email
or fax the form to NMFS within the 10day deadline, which would enable
NMFS to submit the report to the
Commission within the 15-day due date
under CMM 2009–06.
The original, signed copy of the report
for high seas or emergency
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transshipments must be submitted to
the address specified on the form no
later than 15 calendar days after the
vessel first enters into port, or 15
calendar days after the transshipment
for emergency transshipments in port.
For all other transshipments (i.e.,
transshipments that do not take place on
the high seas and that are not emergency
transshipments), if the transshipment is
subject to transshipment reporting
requirements in 50 CFR part 300 subpart
D, 50 CFR part 660, or 50 CFR part 665,
the original transshipment report must
be submitted by the due date for
submitting the transshipment reports
specified in those regulations. If the
vessel owner and operator are not
subject to any of the above-referenced
transshipment reporting requirements,
for transshipments at sea the report
must be submitted no later than 72
hours after the vessel first enters into
port; for transshipments in port, the
report must be submitted no later than
72 hours after completion of the
transshipment. These reporting
requirements do not apply to
transshipments that take place entirely
within the territorial seas or
archipelagic waters of any nation, as
defined by the domestic laws and
regulations of that nation and
recognized by the United States, and
only include fish caught within such
waters.
As noted in the preamble to the
proposed rule, NMFS has developed a
specific form, the Pacific Transshipment
Declaration Form, to be used for the
transshipment reporting requirements.
2. Prior Notice for High Seas
Transshipments and Notice of
Emergency Transshipments
For any transshipment of HMS on the
high seas in the Convention Area or on
the high seas anywhere of HMS that
were caught in the Convention Area that
is not prohibited (e.g., high seas
transshipments by vessels other than
purse seine vessels), vessel owners and
operators must ensure the submission to
the Commission of notice of the
transshipment at least 36 hours prior to
the transshipment. The notice must be
provided by fax or email in the format
specified by the NMFS Pacific Islands
Regional Administrator as specified in
this rule. The notice must include the
following information: (1) The name of
the offloading vessel; (2) the vessel
identification markings located on the
hull or superstructure of the offloading
vessel; (3) the name of the receiving
vessel; (4) the vessel identification
markings located on the hull or
superstructure of the receiving vessel;
(5) the expected amount, in metric tons,
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of the fish product being transshipped,
broken down by species and processed
state; (6) the expected date or dates of
the transshipment; (7) the expected
location of transshipment, including
latitude and longitude to the nearest
tenth of a degree; (8) an indication of
which one of the following areas the
expected transshipment location is
situated: High seas inside the
Convention Area, high seas outside the
Convention Area, or an area under the
jurisdiction of a particular nation—in
which case the nation must be specified;
and (9) the geographic location of the
catch to be transshipped, as described
by: The expected amount of HMS to be
transshipped, in metric tons, that was
caught in each of the following areas:
inside the Convention Area on the high
seas, outside the Convention Area on
the high seas, and within areas under
the jurisdiction of a particular nation,
with each such nation and the
associated amount specified.
Information regarding the geographic
location of the catch is not required,
however, if the reporting vessel is the
receiving vessel. The transshipment
must take place within 24 nautical miles
of the expected location provided in the
notice.
Notice is also required for emergency
transshipments that would otherwise be
prohibited. For each transshipment that
qualifies as an emergency
transshipment, the owner or operator of
the offloading and receiving vessels
must ensure delivery of the notice
directly to the Commission by fax or
email within 12 hours of completion of
the transshipment, and must ensure the
notice includes the same information
described above for the notice for high
seas transshipments, as well as a
description of the reasons for the
emergency transshipment, in the format
specified by the NMFS Pacific Islands
Regional Administrator. The
transshipment must take place within
24 nautical miles of the location
provided in the notice.
This final rule allows emergency
transshipments involving purse seine
vessels to take place at sea in the
Convention Area. Such transshipments
were prohibited prior to the effective
date of this final rule (see 50 CFR
300.216).
A copy of each notice must be
submitted to NMFS by the same due
dates specified for submission to the
Commission: That is, at least 36 hours
prior to the start of such transshipment
on the high seas or within 12 hours after
completion of an emergency
transshipment.
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3. Observer Coverage for
Transshipments at Sea
Transshipments at sea in the
Convention Area require observer
coverage for vessels, with the specific
requirements dependent upon the type
of vessel and the type of fish to be
transshipped. Observer coverage is not
required for emergency transshipments
at sea or for transshipments that take
place entirely within the territorial seas
or archipelagic waters of any nation, as
defined by the domestic laws and
regulations of that nation and
recognized by the United States, and
only includes fish caught in such
waters. The observers are required to be
WCPFC Observers. Observers deployed
by NMFS are currently considered
WCPFC Observers, as the program has
completed the required authorization
process to become part of the WCPFC
Regional Observer Programme (ROP).
For most transshipments, an observer is
required on board the receiving vessel.
However, for transshipments to a
receiving vessel less than or equal to 33
meters in registered length, and not
involving purse seine-caught fish or
frozen longline-caught fish, the observer
may be deployed on either the
offloading vessel or receiving vessel. All
involved vessel owners and operators
are required to ensure that a WCPFC
Observer is on board one of the two
vessels to monitor the transshipment for
the duration of the transshipment, even
when the requirement to carry an
observer falls on the other vessel
involved in the transshipment (e.g., in
those cases when the observer
requirement applies only to the
receiving vessel). The owner or operator
of a vessel requiring an observer for
transshipments at sea must ensure that
notice is provided to the NMFS Pacific
Islands Regional Administrator at least
72 hours (excluding weekends and
Federal holidays) before the vessel
leaves port on the fishing trip indicating
the need for an observer. The notice will
need to include the official number of
the vessel, the name of the vessel, the
intended date, time and location of
departure, the name of the vessel
operator, and a telephone number at
which the vessel owner, vessel operator,
or a designated agent may be contacted
during the business day (8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Hawaii Standard Time). The notice
must be provided to the office or
telephone number designated by the
NMFS Pacific Islands Regional
Administrator. If applicable, notice may
be provided in conjunction with the
notice required under 50 CFR
665.803(a), which requires the permit
holder, or designated agent, for any
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vessel registered for use under a Hawaii
longline limited access permit, or for
any vessel greater than 40 feet length
overall that is registered for use under
an American Samoa longline limited
access permit, to notify NMFS at least
72 hours (excluding weekends and
Federal holidays) before the vessel
leaves port on a fishing trip, any part of
which occurs in the U.S. EEZ around
the Hawaiian Archipelago or American
Samoa.
In addition, a receiving vessel must
receive product from only one
offloading vessel at a time for each
observer that is available to monitor the
transshipment; the observer may be on
the offloading or receiving vessel.
Accordingly, if only one WCPFC
Observer is available, the receiving
vessel must receive HMS from only one
offloading vessel at a time.
Operators and crew members of
vessels carrying observers under these
requirements are subject to general
requirements regarding WCPFC
Observers at 50 CFR 300.215, such as
providing any WCPFC Observer on
board the vessel with full access to the
vessel, as well as access to information
and data sources.
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4. Categories of Vessels With Which
Transshipping and Bunkering May Be
Conducted
The owner and operator of any U.S.
fishing vessel used for commercial
fishing for HMS must ensure that any
vessel with which they engage in
transshipment (to or from) in the
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Convention Area, or engage in
bunkering or other support activities (to
or from) in the Convention Area, falls
into one of the three following
categories. The vessel must be: (1)
Flagged by a WCPFC Member or
Cooperating Non-Member; (2) on the
WCPFC Interim Register of Non-Member
Carrier and Bunker Vessels (Interim
Register), which is available at https://
www.wcpfc.int/; or (3) on the WCPFC
Record of Fishing Vessels, which is
available at https://www.wcpfc.int/.
NMFS notes that the Interim Register is
tentatively scheduled to expire in 2013,
at which point no vessels would fall in
this category. Only fishing vessels that
are authorized to be used for fishing in
the U.S. EEZ may transship and/or
bunker in the U.S. EEZ. These
requirements for transshipments do not
apply to emergency transshipments or
transshipments that take place entirely
within the territorial seas or
archipelagic waters of any nation, as
defined by the domestic laws and
regulations of that nation and
recognized by the United States, and
only include fish caught within such
waters.
5. Requirements Regarding Notification
of Entry Into and Exit From Eastern
SMA
The owner or operator of any U.S.
fishing vessel used for commercial
fishing must ensure the submission of a
notice to the Commission containing
specific information at least six hours
prior to entry and no later than six
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71503
hours prior to exiting the Eastern SMA
(see Figure 1, below). The notices must
be submitted in the format specified by
the NMFS Pacific Islands Regional
Administrator. The notices must be
submitted via fax or email and must
include the following information: (1)
The vessel identification markings
located on the hull or superstructure of
the vessel; (2) whether the notice is for
entry or exit; (3) date and time of
anticipated point of entry or exit; (4)
latitude and longitude of anticipated
point of entry or exit; (5) amount of fish
product on board at the time of the
report, in kilograms, in total and for
each of the following species or species
groups: yellowfin tuna, bigeye tuna,
albacore, skipjack tuna, swordfish,
shark, other; and (6) an indication of
whether the vessel has engaged in or
will engage in any transshipments while
in the Eastern SMA. A copy of the
notice must be provided to NMFS at
least six hours prior to the entry and no
later than six hours prior to the exit.
The map in Figure 1 shows the
Eastern SMA as the high seas area
within the rectangle bounded by the
bold black lines.
Figure 1. Eastern SMA. Areas of high
seas are indicated in white; areas of
claimed national jurisdiction, including
territorial seas, archipelagic waters, and
EEZs, are indicated in dark shading. The
Eastern SMA is the high seas area (in
white) within the rectangle bounded by
the bold black lines. This map displays
indicative maritime boundaries only.
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6. Requirements Regarding Discards
From Purse Seine Fishing Vessels
The owner or operator of any U.S.
purse seine fishing vessel must ensure
the submission of a report containing
specific information to the Commission
and a copy of the report to NMFS no
later than 48 hours after any discard at
sea of bigeye tuna (Thunnus obesus),
yellowfin tuna (Thunnus albacares), or
skipjack tuna (Katsuwonus pelamis).
The reports must be submitted in the
format specified by the NMFS Pacific
Islands Regional Administrator via fax
or email. A specific form, the U.S. Purse
Seine Discard Form (OMB Control
Number 0648–0649), has been
developed for this requirement. A hard
copy of the report must be submitted to
the observer on board the vessel.
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7. Other Requirements
This final rule prohibits the transfer of
fish at sea from a purse seine net
deployed by or under the control of a
fishing vessel of the United States to any
other fishing vessel in the Convention
Area. However, the rule includes a
narrow exception that allows U.S. purse
seine vessels to transfer fish through net
sharing (i.e., the transfer of fish that
have not yet been loaded on board any
fishing vessel from the purse seine net
of one vessel to another fishing vessel)
to other U.S. purse seine vessels on the
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final set of a trip when there is
insufficient well space for the fish. The
final rule also amends the regulatory
definition of transshipment to exclude
net sharing from the definition of
transshipment as purse seine vessels are
generally prohibited from engaging in
transshipment of HMS at sea. Under the
exception for net sharing, the purse
seine vessel that transfers fish through
net sharing is prohibited from making
further purse seine sets during the
remainder of its fishing trip.
Furthermore, in the U.S. EEZ, net
sharing is allowed only between U.S.
vessels that are authorized to be used for
fishing in that area. In the event of a net
share, the owner and operator of the
vessel that caught the fish must record
the catch, as required under 50 CFR
300.34(c)(1), on the Regional Purse
Seine Logsheet (RPL), and must note
that the net sharing has taken place, in
the manner specified by the NMFS
Pacific Islands Regional Administrator,
on the RPL. The owner and operator of
the vessel that accepted the fish must
note on the RPL for their vessel that the
net sharing has taken place, in the
manner specified by the NMFS Pacific
Islands Regional Administrator.
In addition to the new requirements,
the final rule amends the language that
is in 50 CFR 300.223(d) to remove the
termination date (December 31, 2012)
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applicable to the catch retention
provision and includes some editorial
changes to that language (i.e., from
stating that ‘‘a fishing vessel of the
United States equipped with purse seine
gear may not discard at sea within the
Convention Area any bigeye tuna,
yellowfin tuna, or skipjack tuna’’ to
stating that ‘‘an owner or operator of a
fishing vessel of the United States
equipped with purse seine gear must
ensure the retention on board at all
times while at sea within the
Convention Area any bigeye tuna,
yellowfin tuna, or skipjack tuna’’). The
final rule also corrects 50 CFR
300.222(y), which was inconsistent with
50 CFR 300.223(d)(3). Section
300.223(d)(3) states that the catch
retention requirements are applicable to
the entire Convention Area. However,
§ 300.222(y), which is a prohibitions
section, stated that the prohibition on
discarding fish at sea in contravention
of § 300.223(d) is limited to the high
seas and areas within the jurisdiction of
the United States, including the U.S.
EEZ and territorial sea between 20° N.
latitude and 20° S. latitude. This final
rule amends § 300.222(y) to amend the
description of the requirement to state
that the catch retention requirements are
applicable to the entire Convention
Area.
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The final rule also includes a minor
change to the wording of the language
at 50 CFR 300.216(b) so that the
terminology referring to U.S. purse seine
vessels is consistent throughout 50 CFR
part 300 subpart O. Specifically, the
phrase ‘‘purse seine fishing vessel of the
United States’’ is replaced with ‘‘fishing
vessel of the United States equipped
with purse seine gear.’’
The final rule also modifies the
prohibitions for at-sea transshipments
for purse seine vessels. The final rule
includes an additional prohibition for
transshipments at sea involving purse
seine vessels of fish caught in the
Convention Area but transshipped
outside of the Convention Area, and
allows emergency transshipments
involving purse seine vessels to take
place at sea in the Convention Area.
Comments and Responses
NMFS received one comment letter
on the proposed rule, with three distinct
comments. Each comment is
summarized below, followed by a
response from NMFS.
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Comment 1
The basis for the prohibitions on net
sharing provided in the proposed rule—
that it would be difficult to keep track
of fish—seems insufficient. The purse
seine vessel receiving the fish would
likely report the fish, since it would
have the best estimate of the amount in
the net share. It is also unclear how
commonly net sharing among purse
seine vessels takes place. If this is a
matter of serious concern, a better
explanation of the need for the
prohibitions should be given. It would
be worthwhile to exempt the transfer of
live fish from one fishing vessel to
another from this prohibition. Although
vessels fishing in the eastern Pacific
Ocean (EPO) will not likely be subject
to these prohibitions on a frequent basis,
in the past, there has been some
confusion, since corrected, as to
whether the prohibition on
transshipping in the area of application
of the IATTC applies to the transfer of
live bluefin tuna.
Response
As stated in the proposed rule,
existing regulations at 50 CFR
300.223(d) require U.S. purse seine
fishing vessels to retain all catch of
bigeye tuna, yellowfin tuna, and
skipjack tuna unless: (1) The fish are
unfit for human consumption; (2) there
is insufficient well space to
accommodate all the fish captured in a
given set, provided that no additional
sets are made during the trip; or (3)
serious malfunction of equipment
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occurs. Existing regulations at 50 CFR
300.216 prohibit purse seine vessels
from conducting transshipments at sea
in the Convention Area, consistent with
Article 29 of the Convention. However,
the existing catch retention provisions
at 50 CFR 223(d) do not address
whether net sharing falls within the
definition of transshipment, which is
prohibited at sea for purse seine vessels.
As stated in Section 3.1.1.1 of the EA,
NMFS estimates that approximately 10
percent of all U.S. purse seine trips in
the WCPO include a net sharing event.
This rule explicitly excludes net sharing
activities from the definition of
transshipment and implements a
general prohibition on net sharing, as
net sharing in most situations would not
be consistent with the catch retention
requirements.
However, the rule allows U.S. purse
seine fishing vessels to conduct limited
net sharing on the final set of a trip with
other U.S. purse seine vessels,
consistent with CMM 2008–01, which
states that ‘‘excess fish taken in the last
set may be transferred to and retained
on board another purse seine vessel
provided this is not prohibited under
applicable national law.’’ As stated in
the IRFA, NMFS considered the
alternatives of allowing U.S. purse seine
fishing vessels to conduct net sharing
with foreign-flagged vessels, and
allowing U.S. purse seine fishing vessels
to conduct net sharing both to and from
foreign-flagged vessels on the last set of
the transferring vessel’s trip.
Alternatives to allow net sharing on
other than the last set would be
inconsistent with CMM 2008–01, so
were not considered. However, allowing
net sharing to foreign-flagged vessels
would make it difficult to ensure
consistent counting of catches—for
example, the shared catch might be
logged as catch by both the U.S. catcher
vessel and the foreign-flagged vessel
with which the catch is shared,
resulting in inaccurate reporting.
Allowing net sharing to and from
foreign-flagged vessels would have the
same shortcomings and would also be
very difficult to enforce, as the United
States would have limited ability to
determine whether a foreign-flagged
vessel complied with the last-set
condition.
Regarding the commenter’s
recommendation to generally exempt
the transfer of live fish from one vessel
to another, net sharing of live fish on the
final set of trip between U.S. purse seine
fishing vessels is not prohibited under
the new rule.
Finally, the net sharing requirements
in this rule are applicable in the
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71505
Convention Area, and do not apply in
the EPO.
Comment 2
Regarding the projected costs for
observer coverage for transshipments at
sea, a refrigerated carrier vessel that
operates regularly in the Convention
Area would likely have an observer on
board, so the observer coverage
requirements for troll vessels
transshipping on the high seas would
likely be covered. However, if a troll
vessel wants to transship on the high
seas to a carrier that is not already active
in the Convention Area, the projected
cost of the observer requirements does
not include the following cost estimates:
(1) Cost in time and money to see that
such a refrigerated carrier is properly
registered; and (2) the cost of travel to
get an observer accepted by the ROP of
the WCPFC to and from the
transshipping point. Although this may
be seen as a business cost for
transshipping, it is still a substantial
cost that may well fall on the troll or
pole-and-line vessels, and should at
least be factored into the cost estimates.
Response
Should a U.S. troll or pole-and-line
vessel desire to transship to a foreignflagged carrier vessel that is not already
active in the Convention Area, and if the
owner of the carrier vessel chooses to
make the carrier vessel available for
such transshipments by satisfying the
various applicable WCPFC
requirements, NMFS agrees that some of
the costs of doing so could be passed on
to fishing businesses that interact with
the carrier vessel, such as the U.S. troll
or pole-and-line fishing business. Such
costs include the $2,500 annual fee for
registering a vessel on the Interim
Register, the costs associated with
participating in the WCPFC vessel
monitoring system, and the costs
associated with carrying WCPFC ROP
observers, possibly including travel
costs for the observer. NMFS notes that
the cost of transporting a WCPFC
Observer would depend on the
circumstances, and could be minimal if
a WCPFC Observer is available at the
carrier vessel’s port of departure and
does not need further transportation
from the port of return. NMFS also notes
that the Interim Register is tentatively
scheduled to expire in 2013. If some or
all these costs are passed on by the
owner/operator of the carrier vessel to
fishing businesses that make use of the
carrier vessel, NMFS expects that carrier
vessels would be likely to work with
multiple offloading vessels and would
distribute the costs accordingly. The
costs borne by any single U.S. troll or
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pole-and-line fishing business would be
accordingly smaller than the total costs.
NMFS has revised the RIR to
acknowledge and reflect these possible
costs incurred by U.S. fishing
businesses. This comment is also
relevant in the context of the FRFA, as
discussed in the Classification section of
this preamble.
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with RULES
Comment 3
Regarding the notification of entry
and exit to and from the Eastern SMA,
the system set up for this entry and exit
notification scheme is fatally flawed
under international law, because States
bordering a high seas pocket have no
more right to know what is going on
there than other Commission members.
If Kiribati, Cook Islands and French
Polynesia are to receive special
notifications, those notifications should
be made to the Commission and be
available to all Commission members.
While few, if any, U.S. albacore troll
and pole-and-line vessels fish in the
Eastern SMA, this area is close to
various transit lines. That area is right
along the track line going from Papeete,
French Polynesia, to Majuro, Marshall
Islands—both are important ports for
the South Pacific albacore troll fishery.
In the past, vessels in this fishery
transshipped their fish in Papeete and
then proceeded directly to Majuro for
fueling before heading to fishing
grounds in the North Pacific.
Historically, as many as a dozen vessels
made that circuit. The Eastern SMA is
also very close to the track line going
from Pago Pago, American Samoa, to
Papeete. There is also a history of
vessels proceeding from the South
Pacific fishing grounds to Honolulu, and
the Eastern SMA is near that track line.
Thus, the proposed rule underestimates
the frequency of U.S. troll and pole and
line vessels transiting the Eastern SMA
and associated costs.
Response
NMFS notes the commenter’s view
that the system set up by the
Commission for the Eastern SMA is
flawed. This comment appears to be a
general comment on the Commission’s
decision to adopt CMM 2010–02, which
is beyond the scope of this rulemaking.
The Commission exercised its authority
pursuant to the Convention to adopt
conservation and management measures
for the high seas, which are
implemented by members, including,
where appropriate, by flag State
members, in accordance with their
jurisdiction and control over vessels
flying their flag on the high seas. To the
extent the comment alleges that NMFS’
implementation of the notification
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scheme provided for in this final rule is
inconsistent with international law,
NMFS disagrees. In order to meet the
international obligations of the United
States as a member of the Commission,
and pursuant to the authority of the
WCPFC Implementation Act, NMFS is
implementing this provision of CMM
2010–02 via regulations. NMFS is
unaware of any provisions of
international law that this rulemaking
would violate.
NMFS appreciates the additional
information regarding the operational
activity of the U.S. albacore troll and
pole-and-line vessels near the Eastern
SMA. However, the comment does not
include any indication of the historical
or current number of Eastern SMA
entries and exits by such vessels on an
annual basis. In the RIR issued with the
proposed rule and in the IRFA, NMFS
estimated that U.S. albacore troll vessels
would enter the Eastern SMA between
zero and two times per year and exit the
same number of times. This estimate
was based on readily available data
regarding the fishing patterns of the
fleet, indicating that the fishing grounds
of this fleet are and have been in areas
distant from the Eastern SMA. In order
to take into consideration the
commenter’s information, NMFS has
evaluated (unpublished) data from
NMFS’ vessel monitoring system (VMS)
to determine the precise annual number
of Eastern SMA entries and exits by
vessels in this fleet. The VMS data
indicate that U.S. albacore troll vessels
entered the Eastern SMA zero times
during 2011 and 2012 (2011 was the
first full year in which U.S. albacore
troll vessels fishing in the Convention
Area were required to participate in the
vessel monitoring system).
Given these recent data and the
location of the traditional fishing
grounds of the U.S. albacore troll fleet,
NMFS believes that the estimate of zero
to two entries per year (and zero to two
exits per year) is reasonable and an
appropriate basis on which to estimate
the costs to the U.S. albacore troll fleet
to satisfy the Eastern SMA entry and
exit notification requirements. NMFS
acknowledges that there has been
limited activity by the albacore troll
fleet in the Convention Area in recent
years (see Table 10 in the EA indicating
that the number of U.S. albacore troll
vessels operating in the South Pacific
each year has numbered no more than
six since 2007). Should the activity of
the U.S. albacore troll fleet in the
Convention Area return to the greater
levels experienced in the past and
should that increased activity include
use of the historic lines of transit
mentioned in the comment, the number
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Sfmt 4700
and associated costs of the entry and
exit notifications may be higher,
possibly affecting as many as a dozen
vessels each year, as noted by the
commenter, or more. Although such a
future scenario is possible, it, like other
possible future scenarios, is speculative
and does not warrant changes to the
estimates used by NMFS as a basis to
estimate the costs to affected U.S.
fishing fleets.
Changes From the Proposed Rule
NMFS made some minor technical
and non-substantive changes to the
proposed rule in this final rule to
remove ambiguities. Also, given the
effective date the final rule, the
provision that the at-sea observer
provisions do not apply to
transshipments to receiving vessels
greater than 33 meters in registered
length and involving only fish caught by
troll gear and/or pole-and-line gear prior
to January 1, 2013, has been removed.
Due to an editorial error, the proposed
rule indicated that a new, separate
definition would be provided for the
term ‘‘on board.’’ However, the
definition of ‘‘on board’’ was included
in the revised definition of
transshipment and in the definition of
net sharing in the proposed rule, which
remain the same in this final rule. Also,
although the regulatory text in the
proposed rule specified that the purse
seine discard reports would be required
for discards of bigeye tuna, yellowfin
tuna, or skipjack tuna, the proposed
rule’s preamble incorrectly indicated
that discards of fish, in general, would
need to be reported. In addition,
although the regulatory text in the
proposed rule specified the editorial
changes to the purse seine catch
retention requirement, the proposed
rule’s preamble did not mention these
editorial changes (i.e., from stating that
‘‘a fishing vessel of the United States
equipped with purse seine gear may not
discard at sea within the Convention
Area any bigeye tuna, yellowfin tuna, or
skipjack tuna’’ to stating that ‘‘an owner
or operator of a fishing vessel of the
United States equipped with purse seine
gear must ensure the retention on board
at all times while at sea within the
Convention Area any bigeye tuna,
yellowfin tuna, or skipjack tuna’’).
In § 902.1(b) of title 15 of the Code of
Federal Regulations, which includes a
table listing control numbers issues by
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for collections of information
required under NOAA regulations, new
entries have been added for the OMB
control numbers approved for the
information collections required under
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 232 / Monday, December 3, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
§§ 300.215, 300.218, and 300.225 of title
50 of the Code of Federal Regulations.
Delegation of Authority
Under NOAA Administrative Order
205–11, dated December 17, 1990, the
under Secretary of Oceans and
Atmosphere has delegated authority to
sign material for publication in the
Federal Register to the Assistant
Administrator for Fisheries, NOAA.
Classification
The Administrator, Pacific Islands
Region, NMFS, has determined that this
final rule is consistent with the WCPFC
Implementation Act and other
applicable laws.
Executive Order 12866
The final rule has been determined
not to be significant for purposes of
Executive Order 12866.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
A FRFA was prepared. The FRFA
incorporates the IRFA prepared for the
proposed rule. The analysis in the IRFA
is not repeated here in its entirety.
A description of the action, why it is
being considered, and the legal basis for
this action are contained in the
preamble of the proposed rule and in
the SUMMARY and SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION sections of this final rule,
above. The analysis follows:
There would be no disproportionate
economic impacts between small and
large entities operating vessels as a
result of this final rule. Furthermore,
there would be no disproportionate
economic impacts based on vessel size,
gear, or homeport.
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with RULES
Significant Issues Raised by Public
Comments in Response to IRFA
NMFS received two comments related
to the IRFA (see Comments 2 and 3 on
the proposed rule, above). Regarding
Comment 2, NMFS agrees with the
commenter that U.S. fishing businesses
could bear costs associated with
transshipping to foreign-flagged carrier
vessels that are not already active in the
Convention Area, and that this should
be factored into the estimated
compliance costs. See NMFS’ Response
to Comment 2 on the proposed rule,
above, for a description of those
possible costs. NMFS has also revised
the RIR to reflect those possible costs.
Regarding Comment 3, NMFS
acknowledges the additional
information about the historical activity
of U.S. albacore troll and pole-and-line
vessels near the Eastern SMA, as well as
the possibility that the future rate of
entries into and exits out of the Eastern
SMA by U.S. albacore troll vessels, and
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71507
the associated costs, could be greater
than the estimates provided in the IRFA.
However, NMFS believes that the
estimate in the IRFA of zero to two
entries per year (and zero to two exits
per year) is reasonable, based on readily
available information regarding the
fishing patterns of the fleet and recent
VMS data, and an appropriate basis for
the cost estimates. See NMFS’ Response
to Comment 3 on the proposed rule,
above, for further details. NMFS has not
made any changes to the rule as a result
of these two comments.
Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other
Compliance Requirements
Description of Small Entities to Which
the Rule Will Apply
The final rule will apply to owners
and operators of U.S. HMS fishing
vessels used to: (1) Transship HMS in
the Convention Area or to transship
outside the Convention Area HMS
caught in the Convention Area; (2) enter
or exit the Eastern SMA; or (3) purse
seine for HMS in the Convention Area.
The estimated number of affected
entities is as follows, broken down by
vessel type:
Based on the number of longline
vessels permitted to fish under the
Fishery Ecosystem Plan for Pacific
Pelagic Fisheries of the Western Pacific
Region or the Fishery Management Plan
for U.S. West Coast Fisheries for Highly
Migratory Species as of January 2011,
the estimated number of longline
vessels to which the rule will apply is
170. Based on the number of purse seine
vessels licensed under the South Pacific
Tuna Treaty as of January 2011, the
estimated number of purse seine vessels
to which the rule will apply is 36. Based
on the average annual number of
albacore troll vessels that fished in the
Convention Area during 2002–2009, the
estimated number of troll vessels to
which the rule will apply is 26. The
total estimated number of vessels that
would be subject to the rule is 232.
Based on the best available financial
information about the affected fishing
fleets, and using individual vessels as
proxies for individual businesses,
NMFS believes that all the affected fish
harvesting businesses in the longline
and troll fleets are small entities as
defined by the RFA; that is, they are
independently owned and operated and
not dominant in their fields of
operation, and have annual receipts of
no more than $4.0 million. In the purse
seine fleet, most or all of the businesses
that operate these vessels are large
entities as defined by the RFA.
However, it is possible that one or a few
of these fish harvesting businesses meet
the criteria for small entities, so the
purse seine fleet is included in the
remainder of this analysis.
NMFS has attempted to identify
alternatives that would accomplish the
objectives of the Act and minimize any
significant economic impact of the final
rule on small entities. The alternative of
taking no action at all was rejected
because it would fail to accomplish the
objectives of the WCPFC
Implementation Act. As a Contracting
Party to the Convention, the United
States is required to implement the
decisions of the WCPFC. For some of
the elements where the CMMs provide
discretion in implementation, NMFS
has identified specific alternatives, as
described below. For the other elements,
NMFS has not identified alternatives.
However, for each of the elements
where alternatives have not been
identified, NMFS has developed the
element to be the least burdensome on
small entities, while still being in
accordance with the relevant WCPFC
decision, as explained below.
With respect to element (1) of the
rule, transshipment reporting
requirements, one alternative would be
to impose a uniform timeframe for
submission of the report; to satisfy all
requirements and the provisions of
CMM 2009–06, it would have to be
submitted to NMFS within 10 calendar
days after completion of the
transshipment. This alternative would
be more burdensome for certain types of
fishing vessels than the alternative
adopted in this final rule, and was
rejected for that reason. Submission of
transshipment reports, as well as
specific timeframes for submission of
the reports for high seas and emergency
transshipments, are specified in CMM
2009–06. Thus, NMFS has not identified
any alternatives that would be less
burdensome than the alternative
adopted in this final rule and would
accomplish the objectives of the WCPFC
Implementation Act.
With respect to element (2), prior
notice for high seas transshipments and
emergency transshipments, one
alternative would be to give affected
entities the option of either providing
the notice of high seas transshipment to
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Frm 00025
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
The reporting, recordkeeping, and
other compliance requirements under
this rule are described earlier in the
preamble. The classes of small entities
subject to the requirements and the
types of professional skills necessary to
fulfill each of the requirements are
described in the IRFA.
Steps Taken To Minimize the
Significant Economic Impact on Small
Entities
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 232 / Monday, December 3, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
NMFS at least one business day plus 36
hours in advance of the transshipment
(i.e., 60 hours before the transshipment),
or, as under this final rule, providing
the notice directly to the WCPFC at least
36 hours in advance of the
transshipment, with a copy to NMFS.
This flexibility could relieve the burden
for some entities and/or situations;
specifically, in cases where it is less
burdensome to send the notification to
NMFS than to the WCPFC. Under this
alternative, if a vessel operator exercises
the first option, NMFS would have to
forward the notification to the WCPFC
within one business day, so this
alternative would bring some additional
administrative costs to NMFS. This
alternative would also have the
disadvantage of being more complex
and possibly more confusing to affected
entities than the final rule (under which
there would be a single timeframe and
single recipient). For these reasons, and
because NMFS believes that the benefits
of the flexibility afforded to affected
entities by this alternative would be
minor, this alternative was rejected.
CMM 2009–06 specifies submission of
the notices, as well as specific
timeframes for submission of the
notices. Thus, the alternatives
considered by NMFS were restricted by
the parameters of the CMM.
With respect to element (3), observer
coverage for transshipments at sea,
NMFS has not identified any
alternatives that would be less
burdensome than the alternative
adopted in this final rule and would
accomplish the objectives of the WCPFC
Implementation Act. CMM 2009–06
specifies requirements for at-sea
observer coverage. For most
transshipments, the provisions of the
CMM specify that the observer must be
on board the receiving vessel. However,
for transshipments to receiving vessels
less than or equal to 33 meters in
registered length and not involving
purse seine caught fish or frozen
longline caught fish, the observer may
be on board the offloading or receiving
vessel. The final rule allows maximum
flexibility for at-sea observer coverage
by allowing observers to be on board
either the offloading or receiving vessel
for transshipments to receiving vessels
less than or equal to 33 meters in
registered length and not involving
purse seine caught fish or frozen
longline caught fish. There are other
conceivable alternatives, such as
requiring that an observer be on board
the receiving vessel or requiring that an
observer be on board the offloading
vessel. However, these two approaches
would be more constraining, and thus,
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more burdensome on affected entities
than the provisions in the final rule and
would not provide any advantages with
respect to the underlying purpose of the
observer requirement. In developing this
element to afford affected entities with
the maximum flexibility, NMFS is
ensuring that there is a greater chance
of compliance, and thus, a greater
chance that the objective of the CMM
and the final rule will be satisfied.
With respect to element (4),
restrictions on vessels with which
transshipping and bunkering may be
conducted, NMFS has not identified any
alternatives that would be less
burdensome than the alternative
adopted in this final rule and would
accomplish the objectives of the WCPFC
Implementation Act. CMM 2009–06 and
CMM 2009–01 include specific
provisions for vessels with which
transshipping and bunkering may be
conducted and the final rule
implements those provisions; the CMMs
leave no room for consideration of any
alternatives. With respect to element (5),
notice of entry or exit for Eastern SMA,
NMFS has not identified any
alternatives that would be less
burdensome than the alternative
adopted in this final rule and would
accomplish the objectives of the WCPFC
Implementation Act. CMM 2010–02
includes specific requirements for
notice of entry or exit for the Eastern
SMA and the final rule implements
those provisions; the CMM leaves no
room for consideration of any
alternatives that would reduce the cost
of compliance.
With respect to element (6), the purse
seine discard report, NMFS has not
identified any alternatives that would be
less burdensome than the alternative
adopted in this final rule and would
accomplish the objectives of the WCPFC
Implementation Act. CMM 2009–02
includes specific requirements for the
purse seine discard report, and the final
rule implements those provisions; the
CMM leaves no room for consideration
of any alternatives that would reduce
the cost of compliance.
With respect to element (7), net
sharing restrictions and reporting, one
alternative would be to allow U.S.
vessels to net share to (but not from)
foreign-flagged vessels, and a second
would be to allow U.S. vessels to net
share both to and from foreign vessels.
Under both these alternatives, net
sharing would be allowed only on the
last set. Alternatives to allow net
sharing on other than the last set would
not be consistent with WCPFC
decisions, so were not further
considered. Both alternatives identified
above would be less restrictive than the
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alternative adopted in this final rule and
thus bring lower compliance costs. The
first alternative would make it difficult
to ensure consistent counting and
reporting of catches—for example, the
shared catch might be logged as catch by
both the U.S. catcher vessel and the
foreign vessel with which the catch is
shared. Since the foreign vessel is not
expected to report its catch and effort
data to NMFS, this could result in
inaccurate reporting of catch. The
alternative was rejected for that reason.
The second alternative would have the
same shortcoming and would also be
very difficult to enforce, as the United
States would have limited ability to
determine whether a foreign vessel
complied with the last-set condition.
The alternative was rejected for those
reasons.
For each element, NMFS also
considered the no-action alternative, or
status quo situation. However, as stated
above, the no-action alternative would
not accomplish the objectives of the
WCPFC Implementation Act and was
rejected for that reason.
Small Entity Compliance Guides
Section 212 of the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996 states that, for each rule or group
of related rules for which an agency is
required to prepare a FRFA, the agency
shall publish one or more guides to
assist small entities in complying with
the rule, and shall designate such
publications as ‘‘small entity
compliance guides.’’ The agency shall
explain the actions a small entity is
required to take to comply with a rule
or group of rules. As part of this
rulemaking process, one or more small
entity compliance guides have been
prepared. The guide(s) will be sent to
permit and license holders in the
affected fisheries. The guide(s) and this
final rule will also be available at
https://www.fpir.noaa.gov/ and by
request from NMFS PIRO (see
ADDRESSES).
Paperwork Reduction Act
This final rule contains new
collection-of-information requirements
subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act
(PRA) and which have been approved
by OMB under control number 0648–
0649. The public reporting burdens for
each of the requirements are estimated
as follows: transshipment reporting: 60
minutes per response, on average; prior
notice for high seas transshipments and
emergency transshipments: 15 minutes
per response, on average; pre-trip
notification for the purpose of deploying
observers: 1 minute per response, on
average; notice of entry or exit for
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Eastern SMA: 15 minutes per response,
on average; purse seine discard report:
30 minutes per response, on average.
These estimates include the time for
reviewing instructions, searching
existing data sources, gathering and
maintaining the data needed, and
completing and reviewing the collection
of information.
Send comments on these or any other
aspects of the proposed collection of
information to Michael D. Tosatto,
Regional Administrator, NMFS PIRO
(see ADDRESSES), and by email to
OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov or fax
to 202–395–7285.
This final rule also contains a
collection-of-information requirement
subject to the PRA that was previously
approved by OMB under control
number 0648–0218, ‘‘South Pacific
Tuna Act’’ (the net sharing reporting
requirement). The public reporting
burden for the Catch Report Form under
that collection-of-information
requirement is estimated to average one
hour per response, including the time
for reviewing instructions, searching
existing data sources, gathering and
maintaining the data needed, and
completing and reviewing the collection
of information. NMFS estimated that the
net sharing reporting requirement
would not increase the public reporting
burden for the Catch Report Form. Send
comments regarding this burden
estimate, or any other aspect of this data
collection, including suggestions for
reducing the burden, to Michael D.
Tosatto, Regional Administrator, NMFS
PIRO (see ADDRESSES) and by email to
OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov or fax
to 202–395–7285.
Notwithstanding any other provision
of the law, no person is required to
respond to, and no person shall be
subject to penalty for failure to comply
with, a collection of information subject
to the requirements of the PRA, unless
that collection of information displays a
currently valid OMB control number.
Prior notice and opportunity for
public comment are not required with
respect to the revision to the table of
OMB control numbers in 15 CFR
902.1(b), because this action is a rule of
agency organization, procedure or
practice under 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(A).
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with RULES
List of Subjects
15 CFR Part 902
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
50 CFR Part 300
Administrative practice and
procedure, Fish, Fisheries, Fishing,
Marine resources, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Treaties.
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Dated: November 27, 2012.
Alan D. Risenhoover,
Director, Office of Sustainable Fisheries,
performing the functions and duties of the
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
71509
Fishing Vessels’’ are added, in
alphabetical order, and the definition of
‘‘Transshipment’’ is revised, to read as
follows:
§ 300.211
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
For the reasons set out in the
Cooperating Non-Member means a
preamble, 15 CFR Chapter IX and 50
non-Member of the Commission that has
CFR Chapter III are amended as follows: been accorded Cooperating Non15 CFR CHAPTER IX—NATIONAL OCEANIC Member status by the Commission at the
Commission’s most recent annual
AND ATMOSPHERIC ADMINISTRATION,
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
meeting.
Eastern High Seas Special
PART 902—NOAA INFORMATION
Management Area means the area of the
COLLECTION REQUIREMENTS UNDER
high seas within the area bounded by
THE PAPERWORK REDUCTION ACT:
the four lines connecting, in the most
OMB CONTROL NUMBERS
direct fashion, the coordinates specified
as follows: 11° S. latitude and 161° W.
■ 1. The authority citation for part 902
longitude; 11° S. latitude and 154° W.
continues to read as follows:
longitude; 16° S. latitude and 154° W.
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
longitude; and 16° S. latitude and 161°
■ 2. In § 902.1, paragraph (b), the table
W. longitude.
is amended by adding in the left column
*
*
*
*
*
under 50 CFR, in numerical order,
Net sharing means the transfer of fish
entries for §§ 300.215, 300.218, and
that have not yet been loaded on board
300.225, and, in the right column, in
any fishing vessel from the purse seine
corresponding positions, the control
net of one vessel to another fishing
number ‘‘–0649’’ as follows:
vessel. Fish shall be considered to be on
§ 902.1 OMB control numbers assigned
board a fishing vessel once they are on
pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act.
a deck or in a hold, or once they are first
*
*
*
*
*
lifted out of the water by the vessel.
(b) * * *
*
*
*
*
*
Transshipment means the unloading
Current OMB
CFR Part or section where
control number of fish from on board one fishing vessel
the information collection re(all numbers
and its direct transfer to, and loading on
quirement is located
begin with
board, another fishing vessel, either at
0648–)
sea or in port. Fish shall be considered
to be on board a fishing vessel once they
*
*
*
*
*
are on a deck or in a hold, or once they
50 CFR.
are first lifted out of the water by the
vessel. Net sharing is not a
*
*
*
*
*
transshipment.
300.215 .............................
–0649
*
*
*
*
300.218 .............................
–0649 *
WCPFC Interim Register of Non*
*
*
*
*
Member Carrier and Bunker Vessels
300.225 .............................
–0649
means, for the purposes of this subpart,
the WCPFC Interim Register of non*
*
*
*
*
Member Carrier and Bunker Vessels as
established in the decisions of the
50 CFR CHAPTER III—INTERNATIONAL
WCPFC and maintained on the
FISHING AND RELATED ACTIVITIES
WCPFC’s Web site at https://
PART 300—INTERNATIONAL
www.wcpfc.int/.
FISHERIES REGULATIONS
*
*
*
*
*
WCPFC Record of Fishing Vessels
■ 1. The authority citation for 50 CFR
part 300, subpart O, continues to read as means, for the purposes of this subpart,
the WCPFC Record of Fishing Vessels as
follows:
established in the decisions of the
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 6901 et seq.
WCPFC and maintained on the
■ 2. In § 300.211, definitions of
WCPFC’s Web site at https://
‘‘Cooperating Non-Member,’’ ‘‘Eastern
www.wcpfc.int/.
High Seas Special Management Area,’’
*
*
*
*
*
‘‘Net sharing,’’ ‘‘WCPFC Interim Register
of non-Member Carrier and Bunker
■ 3. Section 300.215 is revised to read
Vessels,’’ and ‘‘WCPFC Record of
as follows:
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*
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Observers.
(a) Applicability. This section applies
to the following categories of fishing
vessels:
(1) Any fishing vessel of the United
States with a WCPFC Area
Endorsement.
(2) Any fishing vessel of the United
States for which a WCPFC Area
Endorsement is required.
(3) Any fishing vessel of the United
States used for commercial fishing that
receives or offloads in the Convention
Area a transshipment of HMS at sea.
(b) Notifications. The owner or
operator of a vessel required to carry a
WCPFC observer under paragraph (d) of
this section during a given fishing trip
must ensure the provision of notice to
the Pacific Islands Regional
Administrator at least 72 hours
(exclusive of weekends and Federal
holidays) before the vessel leaves port
on the fishing trip, indicating the need
for an observer. The notice must be
provided to the office or telephone
number designated by the Pacific
Islands Regional Administrator and
must include the official number of the
vessel, the name of the vessel, the
intended departure date, time, and
location, the name of the operator of the
vessel, and a telephone number at
which the owner, operator, or a
designated agent may be contacted
during the business day (8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Hawaii Standard Time). If applicable,
notice may be provided in conjunction
with the notice required under
§ 665.803(a) of this title.
(c) Accommodating observers. (1)
Fishing vessels specified in paragraphs
(a)(1) and (a)(2) of this section must
carry, when directed to do so by NMFS,
a WCPFC observer on fishing trips
during which the vessel at any time
enters or is within the Convention Area.
The operator and each member of the
crew of the fishing vessel shall act in
accordance with paragraphs (c)(3),
(c)(4), and (c)(5) of this section with
respect to any WCPFC observer.
(2) Fishing vessels specified in
paragraph (a)(3) of this section must
carry an observer when required to do
so under paragraph (d) of this section.
The operator and each member of the
crew of the fishing vessel shall act in
accordance with paragraphs (c)(3),
(c)(4), and (c)(5) of this section, as
applicable, with respect to any WCPFC
observer.
(3) The operator and crew shall allow
and assist WCPFC observers to:
(i) Embark at a place and time
determined by NMFS or otherwise
agreed to by NMFS and the vessel
operator;
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(ii) Have access to and use of all
facilities and equipment as necessary to
conduct observer duties, including, but
not limited to: Full access to the bridge,
the fish on board, and areas which may
be used to hold, process, weigh and
store fish; full access to the vessel’s
records, including its logs and
documentation, for the purpose of
inspection and copying; access to, and
use of, navigational equipment, charts
and radios; and access to other
information relating to fishing;
(iii) Remove samples;
(iv) Disembark at a place and time
determined by NMFS or otherwise
agreed to by NMFS and the vessel
operator; and
(v) Carry out all duties safely.
(4) The operator shall provide the
WCPFC observer, while on board the
vessel, with food, accommodation and
medical facilities of a reasonable
standard equivalent to those normally
available to an officer on board the
vessel, at no expense to the WCPFC
observer.
(5) The operator and crew shall not
assault, obstruct, resist, delay, refuse
boarding to, intimidate, harass or
interfere with WCPFC observers in the
performance of their duties, or attempt
to do any of the same.
(d) Transshipment observer
coverage—(1) Receiving vessels. Any
fishing vessel of the United States used
for commercial fishing that receives in
the Convention Area a transshipment of
HMS at sea must have a WCPFC
observer on board during such
transshipment unless at least one of the
following sets of conditions applies:
(i) The vessel is less than or equal to
33 meters in registered length, the
transshipment does not include any fish
caught by purse seine gear, the
transshipment does not include any
frozen fish caught by longline gear, and,
during the transshipment, there is a
WCPFC observer on board the vessel
that offloads the transshipment;
(ii) The transshipment takes place
entirely within the territorial seas or
archipelagic waters of any nation, as
defined by the domestic laws and
regulations of that nation and
recognized by the United States, and
only includes fish caught in such
waters; or
(iii) The transshipment is an
emergency, as specified under
§ 300.216(b)(4).
(2) Offloading vessels. Any fishing
vessel of the United States used for
commercial fishing that offloads a
transshipment of HMS at sea in the
Convention Area must have a WCPFC
observer on board, unless one or more
of the following conditions apply:
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(i) The vessel that receives the
transshipment has a WCPFC observer on
board;
(ii) The vessel that receives the
transshipment is greater than 33 meters
in registered length;
(iii) The transshipment includes fish
caught by purse seine gear;
(iv) The transshipment includes
frozen fish caught by longline gear;
(v) The transshipment takes place
entirely within the territorial seas or
archipelagic waters of any nation, as
defined by the domestic laws and
regulations of that nation and
recognized by the United States, and
only includes fish caught in such
waters; or
(vi) The transshipment is an
emergency, as specified under
§ 300.216(b)(4).
(e) Related observer requirements.
Observers deployed by NMFS pursuant
to regulations issued under other
statutory authorities on vessels used for
fishing for HMS in the Convention Area
will be deemed by NMFS to have been
deployed pursuant to this section.
■ 4. Section 300.216 is revised to read
as follows:
§ 300.216 Transshipping, bunkering and
net sharing.
(a) Transshipment monitoring.
[Reserved]
(b) Restrictions on transshipping and
bunkering—(1) Restrictions on
transshipments involving purse seine
fishing vessels. (i) Fish may not be
transshipped from a fishing vessel of the
United States equipped with purse seine
gear at sea in the Convention Area, and
a fishing vessel of the United States may
not be used to receive a transshipment
of fish from a fishing vessel equipped
with purse seine gear at sea in the
Convention Area.
(ii) Fish caught in the Convention
Area may not be transshipped from a
fishing vessel of the United States
equipped with purse seine gear at sea,
and a fishing vessel of the United States
may not be used to receive a
transshipment of fish caught in the
Convention Area from a fishing vessel
equipped with purse seine gear at sea.
(2) Restrictions on at-sea
transshipments. If a transshipment takes
place entirely within the territorial seas
or archipelagic waters of any nation, as
defined by the domestic laws and
regulations of that nation and
recognized by the United States, and
only includes fish caught within such
waters, this paragraph does not apply.
(i) The owner and operator of a
fishing vessel of the United States used
for commercial fishing that offloads or
receives a transshipment of HMS at sea
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in the Convention Area must ensure that
a WCPFC observer is on board at least
one of the vessels involved in the
transshipment for the duration of the
transshipment.
(ii) A fishing vessel of the United
States used for commercial fishing that
receives transshipments of HMS at sea
in the Convention Area shall not receive
such transshipments from more than
one vessel at a time unless there is a
separate WCPFC observer available on
either the offloading or receiving vessel
to monitor each additional
transshipment.
(3) General restrictions on
transshipping and bunkering—(i)
Transshipment. Only fishing vessels
that are authorized to be used for fishing
in the EEZ may engage in transshipment
in the EEZ. Any fishing vessel of the
United States used for commercial
fishing shall not be used to offload or
receive a transshipment of HMS in the
Convention Area unless one or more of
the following is satisfied:
(A) The other vessel involved in the
transshipment is flagged to a Member or
Cooperating Non-Member of the
Commission;
(B) The other vessel involved in the
transshipment is on the WCPFC Record
of Fishing Vessels;
(C) The other vessel involved in the
transshipment is on the WCPFC Interim
Register of Non-Member Carrier and
Bunker Vessels; or
(D) The transshipment takes place
entirely within the territorial seas or
archipelagic waters of any nation, as
defined by the domestic laws and
regulations of that nation and
recognized by the United States, and
only includes fish caught within such
waters.
(ii) Bunkering, supplying and
provisioning. Only fishing vessels that
are authorized to be used for fishing in
the EEZ may engage in bunkering in the
EEZ. A fishing vessel of the United
States used for commercial fishing for
HMS shall not be used to provide
bunkering, to receive bunkering, or to
exchange supplies or provisions with
another vessel in the Convention Area
unless one or more of the following is
satisfied:
(A) The other vessel involved in the
bunkering or exchange of supplies or
provisions is flagged to a Member or a
Cooperating Non-Member of the
Commission;
(B) The other vessel involved in the
bunkering or exchange of supplies or
provisions is on the WCPFC Record of
Fishing Vessels; or
(C) The other vessel involved in the
bunkering or exchange of supplies or
provisions is on the WCPFC Interim
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Register of Non-Member Carrier and
Bunker Vessels.
(4) Emergency transshipments. The
restrictions in paragraphs (b)(1), (b)(2),
and (b)(3)(i) of this section shall not
apply to a transshipment conducted
under circumstances of force majeure or
other serious mechanical breakdown
that could reasonably be expected to
threaten the health or safety of the
vessel or crew or cause a significant
financial loss through fish spoilage.
(c) Net sharing restrictions. (1) The
owner and operator of a fishing vessel
of the United States shall not conduct
net sharing in the Convention Area
unless all of the following conditions
are met:
(i) The vessel transferring the fish is
a fishing vessel of the United States
equipped with purse seine gear;
(ii) The vessel transferring the fish has
insufficient well space for the fish;
(iii) The vessel transferring the fish
engages in no additional purse seine
sets during the remainder of the fishing
trip; and
(iv) The vessel accepting the fish is a
fishing vessel of the United States
equipped with purse seine gear.
(2) Only fishing vessels of the United
States that are authorized to be used for
fishing in the EEZ may engage in net
sharing in the EEZ, subject to the
provisions of paragraph (c)(1) of this
section.
■ 5. In § 300.218, paragraphs (b), (c), (d),
(e) and (f) are added to read as follows:
§ 300.218 Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Transshipment reports. The owner
and operator of any fishing vessel of the
United States used for commercial
fishing that offloads or receives a
transshipment of HMS in the
Convention Area, or a transshipment
anywhere of HMS caught in the
Convention Area, must ensure that a
transshipment report for the
transshipment is completed, using a
form that is available from the Pacific
Islands Regional Administrator, and
recording all the information specified
on the form. The owner and operator of
the vessel must ensure that the
transshipment report is completed and
signed within 24 hours of the
completion of the transshipment, and
must ensure that the report is submitted
as follows:
(1) For vessels licensed under
§ 300.32, the original transshipment
report is submitted to the address
specified by the Pacific Islands Regional
Administrator by the due date specified
at § 300.34(c)(2) for submitting the
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71511
transshipment logsheet form to the
Administrator as defined at § 300.31.
(2) For vessels registered for use
under § 660.707 of this title, the original
transshipment report is submitted to the
address specified by the Pacific Islands
Regional Administrator by the due date
specified for the logbook form at
§ 660.708 of this title.
(3) For vessels subject to the
requirements of § 665.14(c) and
§ 665.801(e) of this title, and not subject
to the requirements of paragraphs (b)(1)
or (b)(2) of this section, the original
transshipment report is submitted to the
address specified by the Pacific Islands
Regional Administrator by the due date
specified at § 665.14(c) of this title for
submitting transshipment logbooks to
the Pacific Islands Regional
Administrator for landings of western
Pacific pelagic management unit
species.
(4) For all transshipments on the high
seas and emergency transshipments that
meet the conditions described in
§ 300.216(b)(4), including
transshipments involving the categories
of vessels specified in paragraphs (b)(1),
(b)(2), and (b)(3) of this section, the
report is submitted by fax or email to
the address specified by the Pacific
Islands Regional Administrator no later
than 10 calendar days after completion
of the transshipment. The report may be
submitted with or without signatures so
long as the original transshipment
report with signatures is submitted to
the address specified by the Pacific
Islands Regional Administrator no later
than 15 calendar days after the vessel
first enters into port or 15 calendar days
after completion of the transshipment
for emergency transshipments in port.
(5) For all other transshipments at sea,
the original transshipment report is
submitted to the address specified by
the Pacific Islands Regional
Administrator no later than 72 hours
after the vessel first enters into port.
(6) For all other transshipments in
port, the original transshipment report
is submitted to the address specified by
the Pacific Islands Regional
Administrator no later than 72 hours
after completion of the transshipment.
(c) Exceptions to transshipment
reporting requirements. Paragraph (b) of
this section shall not apply to a
transshipment that takes place entirely
within the territorial seas or
archipelagic waters of any nation, as
defined by the domestic laws and
regulations of that nation and
recognized by the United States, and
only includes fish caught within such
waters.
(d) Transshipment notices—(1) High
seas transshipments. The owner and
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operator of a fishing vessel of the United
States used for commercial fishing that
offloads or receives a transshipment of
HMS on the high seas in the Convention
Area, or a transshipment of HMS caught
in the Convention Area anywhere on the
high seas, and not subject to the
requirements of paragraph (d)(2) of this
section, must ensure that a notice is
submitted to the Commission by fax or
email at least 36 hours prior to the start
of such transshipment at the address
specified by the Pacific Islands Regional
Administrator, and that a copy of that
notice is submitted to NMFS at the
address specified by the Pacific Islands
Regional Administrator at least 36 hours
prior to the start of the transshipment.
The notice must be reported in the
format provided by the Pacific Islands
Regional Administrator and must
contain the following information:
(i) The name of the offloading vessel.
(ii) The vessel identification markings
located on the hull or superstructure of
the offloading vessel.
(iii) The name of the receiving vessel.
(iv) The vessel identification markings
located on the hull or superstructure of
the receiving vessel.
(v) The expected amount, in metric
tons, of fish product to be transshipped,
broken down by species and processed
state.
(vi) The expected date or dates of the
transshipment.
(vii) The expected location of the
transshipment, including latitude and
longitude to the nearest tenth of a
degree.
(viii) An indication of which one of
the following areas the expected
transshipment location is situated: high
seas inside the Convention Area; high
seas outside the Convention Area; or an
area under the jurisdiction of a
particular nation, in which case the
nation must be specified.
(ix) The expected amount of HMS to
be transshipped, in metric tons, that was
caught in each of the following areas:
inside the Convention Area, on the high
seas; outside the Convention Area, on
the high seas; and within areas under
the jurisdiction of particular nations,
with each such nation and the
associated amount specified. This
information is not required if the
reporting vessel is the receiving vessel.
(2) Emergency transshipments. The
owner and operator of a fishing vessel
of the United States used for
commercial fishing for HMS that
offloads or receives a transshipment of
HMS in the Convention Area, or a
transshipment of HMS caught in the
Convention Area anywhere, that is
allowed under § 300.216(b)(4) but
would otherwise be prohibited under
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the regulations in this subpart, must
ensure that a notice is submitted by fax
or email to the Commission at the
address specified by the Pacific Islands
Regional Administrator, and a copy is
submitted to NMFS at the address
specified by the Pacific Islands Regional
Administrator within twelve hours of
the completion of the transshipment.
The notice must be reported in the
format provided by the Pacific Islands
Regional Administrator and must
contain the following information:
(i) The name of the offloading vessel.
(ii) The vessel identification markings
located on the hull or superstructure of
the offloading vessel.
(iii) The name of the receiving vessel.
(iv) The vessel identification markings
located on the hull or superstructure of
the receiving vessel.
(v) The expected or actual amount, in
metric tons, of fish product
transshipped, broken down by species
and processed state.
(vi) The expected or actual date or
dates of the transshipment.
(vii) The expected or actual location
of the transshipment, including latitude
and longitude to the nearest tenth of a
degree.
(viii) An indication of which one of
the following areas the expected or
actual transshipment location is
situated: High seas inside the
Convention Area; high seas outside the
Convention Area; or an area under the
jurisdiction of a particular nation, in
which case the nation must be specified.
(ix) The amount of HMS to be
transshipped, in metric tons, that was
caught in each of the following areas:
inside the Convention Area, on the high
seas; outside the Convention Area, on
the high seas; and within areas under
the jurisdiction of particular nations,
with each such nation and the
associated amount specified. This
information is not required if the
reporting vessel is the receiving vessel.
(x) The reason or reasons for the
emergency transshipment (i.e., a
transshipment conducted under
circumstances of force majeure or other
serious mechanical breakdown that
could reasonably be expected to
threaten the health or safety of the
vessel or crew or cause a significant
financial loss through fish spoilage).
(3) Location of high seas and
emergency transshipments. A high seas
or emergency transshipment in the
Convention Area or of HMS caught in
the Convention Area anywhere subject
to the notification requirements of
paragraph (d)(1) or (d)(2) must take
place within 24 nautical miles of the
location for the transshipment indicated
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in the notice submitted under paragraph
(d)(1)(vii) or (d)(2)(vii) of this section.
(e) Purse seine discard reports. The
owner and operator of any fishing vessel
of the United States equipped with
purse seine gear must ensure that a
report of any at-sea discards of any
bigeye tuna (Thunnus obesus),
yellowfin tuna (Thunnus albacares), or
skipjack tuna (Katsuwonus pelamis)
caught in the Convention Area is
completed, using a form that is available
from the Pacific Islands Regional
Administrator, and recording all the
information specified on the form. The
report must be submitted within 48
hours after any discard to the
Commission by fax or email at the
address specified by the Pacific Islands
Regional Administrator. A copy of the
report must be submitted to NMFS at
the address specified by the Pacific
Islands Regional Administrator by fax or
email within 48 hours after any such
discard. A hard copy of the report must
be provided to the observer on board the
vessel, if any.
(f) Net sharing reports—(1)
Transferring vessels. The owner and
operator of a fishing vessel of the United
States equipped with purse seine gear
that transfers fish to another fishing
vessel equipped with purse seine gear
under § 300.216(c) shall ensure that the
amount, by species, of fish transferred,
as well as the net sharing activity, is
recorded on the catch report forms
maintained pursuant to § 300.34(c)(1),
in the format specified by the Pacific
Islands Regional Administrator.
(2) Accepting vessels. The owner and
operator of a fishing vessel of the United
States equipped with purse seine gear
that accepts fish from another purse
seine fishing vessel under § 300.216(c)
shall ensure that the net sharing activity
is recorded on the catch report forms
maintained pursuant to § 300.34(c)(1),
in the format specified by the Pacific
Islands Regional Administrator.
■ 6. In § 300.222, paragraph (y) is
revised and paragraphs (ee), (ff), (gg),
(hh), (ii), (jj), (kk), (ll), (mm) (nn), (oo),
(pp), and (qq) are added to read as
follows:
§ 300.222
Prohibitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(y) Discard fish at sea in the
Convention Area in contravention of
§ 300.223(d).
*
*
*
*
*
(ee) Fail to carry on board a WCPFC
observer during a transshipment at sea,
as required in § 300.215(d).
(ff) Offload, receive, or load fish
caught in the Convention Area from a
purse seine vessel at sea in
contravention of § 300.216.
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(gg) Fail to ensure that a WCPFC
observer is on board at least one of the
vessels involved in the transshipment
for the duration of the transshipment in
contravention of § 300.216(b)(2)(i),
except as specified at § 300.216(b)(4).
(hh) Receive transshipments from
more than one fishing vessel at a time
in contravention of § 300.216(b)(2)(ii),
except as specified at § 300.216(b)(4).
(ii) Transship to or from another
vessel, in contravention of
§ 300.216(b)(3)(i), except as specified at
§ 300.216(b)(4).
(jj) Provide bunkering, receive
bunkering, or exchange supplies or
provisions with another vessel, in
contravention of § 300.216(b)(3)(ii).
(kk) Engage in net sharing except as
specified under § 300.216(c).
(ll) Fail to submit, or ensure
submission of, a transshipment report as
required in § 300.218(b), except as
specified under § 300.218(c).
(mm) Fail to submit, or ensure
submission of, a transshipment notice as
required in § 300.218(d).
(nn) Transship more than 24 nautical
miles from the location indicated in the
transshipment notice, in contravention
of § 300.218(d)(3).
(oo) Fail to submit, or ensure
submission of, a discard report as
required in § 300.218(e).
(pp) Fail to submit, or ensure
submission of, a net sharing report as
required in § 300.218(f).
(qq) Fail to submit, or ensure
submission of, an entry or exit notice for
the Eastern High Seas Special
Management Area as required in
§ 300.225.
■ 7. In § 300.223, paragraph (d)(3)
introductory text is revised to read as
follows:
§ 300.223.
Purse seine fishing restrictions.
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with RULES
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(3) An owner and operator of a fishing
vessel of the United States equipped
with purse seine gear must ensure the
retention on board at all times while at
sea within the Convention Area any
bigeye tuna (Thunnus obesus),
yellowfin tuna (Thunnus albacares), or
skipjack tuna (Katsuwonus pelamis),
except in the following circumstances
and with the following conditions:
*
*
*
*
*
■ 8. Section 300.225 is added to subpart
O to read as follows:
§ 300.225 Eastern High Seas Special
Management Area.
(a) Entry notices. The owner and
operator of a fishing vessel of the United
States used for commercial fishing for
HMS must ensure the submission of a
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notice to the Commission at the address
specified by the Pacific Islands Regional
Administrator by fax or email at least
six hours prior to entering the Eastern
High Seas Special Management Area.
The owner or operator must ensure the
submission of a copy of the notice to
NMFS at the address specified by the
Pacific Islands Regional Administrator
by fax or email at least six hours prior
to entering the Eastern High Seas
Special Management Area. The notice
must be submitted in the format
specified by the Pacific Island Regional
Administrator and must include the
following information:
(1) The vessel identification markings
located on the hull or superstructure of
the vessel;
(2) Date and time (in UTC) of
anticipated point of entry;
(3) Latitude and longitude, to nearest
tenth of a degree, of anticipated point of
entry;
(4) Amount of fish product on board
at the time of the notice, in kilograms,
in total and for each of the following
species or species groups: yellowfin
tuna, bigeye tuna, albacore, skipjack
tuna, swordfish, shark, other; and
(5) An indication of whether the
vessel intends to engage in any
transshipments prior to exiting the
Eastern High Seas Special Management
Area.
(b) Exit notices. The owner and
operator of a fishing vessel of the United
States used for commercial fishing for
HMS must ensure the submission of a
notice to the Commission at the address
specified by the Pacific Islands Regional
Administrator by fax or email no later
than six hours prior to exiting the
Eastern High Seas Special Management
Area. The owner or operator must
ensure the submission of a copy of the
notice to NMFS at the address specified
by the Pacific Islands Regional
Administrator by fax or email no later
than six hours prior to exiting the
Eastern High Seas Special Management
Area. The notices must be submitted in
the format specified by the Pacific
Island Regional Administrator and must
include the following information:
(1) The vessel identification markings
located on the hull or superstructure of
the vessel.
(2) Date and time (in UTC) of
anticipated point of exit.
(3) Latitude and longitude, to nearest
tenth of a degree, of anticipated point of
exit.
(4) Amount of fish product on board
at the time of the notice, in kilograms,
in total and for each of the following
species or species groups: yellowfin
tuna, bigeye tuna, albacore, skipjack
tuna, swordfish, shark, other; and
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
71513
(5) An indication of whether the
vessel has engaged in or will engage in
any transshipments prior to exiting the
Eastern High Seas Special Management
Area.
[FR Doc. 2012–29028 Filed 11–29–12; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
24 CFR Part 1000
[Docket No. FR–5275–F–13]
RIN 2577–AC80
Native American Housing Assistance
and Self-Determination
Reauthorization Act of 2008:
Amendments to Program Regulations
Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing, HUD.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This final rule revises the
regulations governing the Indian
Housing Block Grant (IHBG) program
and the Title VI Loan Guarantee
program. HUD negotiated this rule with
active tribal participation under the
procedures of the Negotiated
Rulemaking Act of 1990, pursuant to the
Native American Housing Assistance
and Self-Determination Reauthorization
Act of 2008. These regulatory changes
implement statutory amendments and
reflect the consensus decisions reached
by HUD and the tribal representatives.
DATES: Effective Date: January 2, 2013.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Rodger J. Boyd, Deputy Assistant
Secretary for Native American
Programs, Office of Public and Indian
Housing, Department of Housing and
Urban Development, 451 7th Street SW.,
Room 4126, Washington, DC 20410;
telephone number 202–401–7914 (this
is not a toll-free number). Hearing- or
speech-impaired individuals may access
this number via TTY by calling the tollfree Federal Relay Service at 1–800–
877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose of the Regulatory Action
This final rule implements a number
of amendments to the statutory
requirements governing HUD’s IHBG
and Title VI Loan Guarantee programs
under the Native American Housing
Assistance Act of 1996 (25 U.S.C. 4101
et seq.). Specifically, it focuses on
implementing provisions of the Native
American Housing Assistance and Self-
E:\FR\FM\03DER1.SGM
03DER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 232 (Monday, December 3, 2012)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 71501-71513]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-29028]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
15 CFR Part 902
50 CFR Part 300
[Docket No. 110209128-2641-02]
RIN 0648-BA85
International Fisheries; Western and Central Pacific Fisheries
for Highly Migratory Species; Transshipping, Bunkering, Reporting, and
Purse Seine Discard Requirements
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS issues regulations under the authority of the Western and
Central Pacific Fisheries Convention Implementation Act (WCPFC
Implementation Act) to implement requirements for U.S. fishing vessels
used for commercial fishing that offload or receive transshipments of
highly migratory species (HMS), U.S. fishing vessels used for
commercial fishing that provide bunkering or other support services to
fishing vessels, and U.S. fishing vessels used for commercial fishing
that receive bunkering or engage in other support services, in the area
of application of the Convention on the Conservation and Management of
Highly Migratory Fish Stocks in the Western and Central Pacific Ocean
(Convention). Some of the requirements also apply to transshipments of
fish caught in the area of application of the Convention (Convention
Area) and transshipped elsewhere. NMFS also issues requirements
regarding notification of entry into and exit from the ``Eastern High
Seas Special Management Area'' (Eastern SMA) and requirements relating
to discards from purse seine fishing vessels. This action is necessary
for the United States to implement decisions of the Commission for the
Conservation and Management of Highly Migratory Fish Stocks in the
Western and Central Pacific Ocean (Commission or WCPFC) and to satisfy
its obligations under the Convention, to which it is a Contracting
Party.
DATES: This rule is effective January 2, 2013.
ADDRESSES: Copies of supporting documents that were prepared for this
final rule, including the regulatory impact review (RIR) and the
Environmental Assessment (EA), as well as the proposed rule, are
available via the Federal e-Rulemaking portal, at https://www.regulations.gov. Those documents, and the small entity compliance
guide(s) prepared for this final rule, are also available from NMFS at
the following address: Michael D. Tosatto, Regional Administrator, NMFS
Pacific Islands Regional Office (PIRO), 1601 Kapiolani Blvd., Suite
1110, Honolulu, HI 96814-4700. The initial regulatory flexibility
analysis (IRFA) and final regulatory flexibility analysis (FRFA)
prepared under the authority of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
are included in the proposed rule and this final rule, respectively.
Written comments regarding the burden-hour estimates or other
aspects of the collection-of-information requirements contained in this
final rule may be submitted to Michael D. Tosatto, Regional
Administrator, NMFS PIRO (see address above) and by email to OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov or fax to (202) 395-7285.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Rini Ghosh, NMFS PIRO, 808-944-2273.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
On February 15, 2012, NMFS published a proposed rule in the Federal
Register (77 FR 8759) to revise regulations at 50 CFR part 300, subpart
O, in order to implement certain decisions of the WCPFC. The proposed
rule was open to public comment through April 16, 2012.
This final rule is issued under the authority of the WCPFC
Implementation Act (16 U.S.C. 6901 et seq.), which authorizes the
Secretary of Commerce, in consultation with the Secretary of State and
the Secretary of the Department in which the United States Coast Guard
is operating (currently the Department of Homeland Security), to
promulgate such regulations as may be necessary to carry out the
obligations of the United States under the Convention, including the
decisions of the WCPFC. The authority to promulgate regulations has
been delegated to NMFS.
This final rule implements provisions in Conservation and
Management Measures (CMMs) adopted by the WCFPC, particularly CMMs
2009-06, 2009-01, 2010-02, and 2009-02. The preamble to the proposed
rule includes further background information, including information on
the Convention and the WCPFC, as well as detailed information about
each of the CMMs being implemented in this rule, and the basis for the
proposed regulations.
New Requirements
This final rule establishes the following requirements:
1. Transshipment Reporting Requirements
The owner and operator (operator means, with respect to any vessel,
the master or other individual aboard and in charge of that vessel) of
any U.S. fishing vessel used for commercial fishing that transships HMS
in the Convention Area, whether from an offloading vessel or to a
receiving vessel, or that transships HMS caught in the Convention Area,
whether from an offloading vessel or to a receiving vessel, is required
to ensure the completion of and submission to NMFS of a transshipment
report for each transshipment. The form required to be used for these
reports is available from the NMFS Pacific Islands Regional
Administrator. A separate report is required for each transshipment.
The information specified on the report form must be recorded on
the form within 24 hours of completion of the transshipment. The
requirements for transshipments on the high seas and for emergency
transshipments (i.e., a transshipment conducted under circumstances of
force majeure or other serious mechanical breakdown that could
reasonably be expected to threaten the health or safety of the vessel
or crew or cause a significant financial loss through fish spoilage)
that would otherwise be prohibited are slightly different than the
requirements for all other transshipments. For transshipment on the
high seas and for emergency transshipments that would otherwise be
prohibited, the report must be submitted by email or fax to the address
specified by the NMFS Pacific Islands Regional Administrator no later
than 10 calendar days after completion of the transshipment. The report
can be submitted without signatures to accommodate vessels that remain
at sea for more than 10 days after completion of the transshipment and
that do not have fax or email capabilities. In such circumstances, for
example, the information required on the form could be communicated via
radio to a shore agent, and the shore agent could email or fax the form
to NMFS within the 10-day deadline, which would enable NMFS to submit
the report to the Commission within the 15-day due date under CMM 2009-
06.
The original, signed copy of the report for high seas or emergency
[[Page 71502]]
transshipments must be submitted to the address specified on the form
no later than 15 calendar days after the vessel first enters into port,
or 15 calendar days after the transshipment for emergency
transshipments in port.
For all other transshipments (i.e., transshipments that do not take
place on the high seas and that are not emergency transshipments), if
the transshipment is subject to transshipment reporting requirements in
50 CFR part 300 subpart D, 50 CFR part 660, or 50 CFR part 665, the
original transshipment report must be submitted by the due date for
submitting the transshipment reports specified in those regulations. If
the vessel owner and operator are not subject to any of the above-
referenced transshipment reporting requirements, for transshipments at
sea the report must be submitted no later than 72 hours after the
vessel first enters into port; for transshipments in port, the report
must be submitted no later than 72 hours after completion of the
transshipment. These reporting requirements do not apply to
transshipments that take place entirely within the territorial seas or
archipelagic waters of any nation, as defined by the domestic laws and
regulations of that nation and recognized by the United States, and
only include fish caught within such waters.
As noted in the preamble to the proposed rule, NMFS has developed a
specific form, the Pacific Transshipment Declaration Form, to be used
for the transshipment reporting requirements.
2. Prior Notice for High Seas Transshipments and Notice of Emergency
Transshipments
For any transshipment of HMS on the high seas in the Convention
Area or on the high seas anywhere of HMS that were caught in the
Convention Area that is not prohibited (e.g., high seas transshipments
by vessels other than purse seine vessels), vessel owners and operators
must ensure the submission to the Commission of notice of the
transshipment at least 36 hours prior to the transshipment. The notice
must be provided by fax or email in the format specified by the NMFS
Pacific Islands Regional Administrator as specified in this rule. The
notice must include the following information: (1) The name of the
offloading vessel; (2) the vessel identification markings located on
the hull or superstructure of the offloading vessel; (3) the name of
the receiving vessel; (4) the vessel identification markings located on
the hull or superstructure of the receiving vessel; (5) the expected
amount, in metric tons, of the fish product being transshipped, broken
down by species and processed state; (6) the expected date or dates of
the transshipment; (7) the expected location of transshipment,
including latitude and longitude to the nearest tenth of a degree; (8)
an indication of which one of the following areas the expected
transshipment location is situated: High seas inside the Convention
Area, high seas outside the Convention Area, or an area under the
jurisdiction of a particular nation--in which case the nation must be
specified; and (9) the geographic location of the catch to be
transshipped, as described by: The expected amount of HMS to be
transshipped, in metric tons, that was caught in each of the following
areas: inside the Convention Area on the high seas, outside the
Convention Area on the high seas, and within areas under the
jurisdiction of a particular nation, with each such nation and the
associated amount specified. Information regarding the geographic
location of the catch is not required, however, if the reporting vessel
is the receiving vessel. The transshipment must take place within 24
nautical miles of the expected location provided in the notice.
Notice is also required for emergency transshipments that would
otherwise be prohibited. For each transshipment that qualifies as an
emergency transshipment, the owner or operator of the offloading and
receiving vessels must ensure delivery of the notice directly to the
Commission by fax or email within 12 hours of completion of the
transshipment, and must ensure the notice includes the same information
described above for the notice for high seas transshipments, as well as
a description of the reasons for the emergency transshipment, in the
format specified by the NMFS Pacific Islands Regional Administrator.
The transshipment must take place within 24 nautical miles of the
location provided in the notice.
This final rule allows emergency transshipments involving purse
seine vessels to take place at sea in the Convention Area. Such
transshipments were prohibited prior to the effective date of this
final rule (see 50 CFR 300.216).
A copy of each notice must be submitted to NMFS by the same due
dates specified for submission to the Commission: That is, at least 36
hours prior to the start of such transshipment on the high seas or
within 12 hours after completion of an emergency transshipment.
3. Observer Coverage for Transshipments at Sea
Transshipments at sea in the Convention Area require observer
coverage for vessels, with the specific requirements dependent upon the
type of vessel and the type of fish to be transshipped. Observer
coverage is not required for emergency transshipments at sea or for
transshipments that take place entirely within the territorial seas or
archipelagic waters of any nation, as defined by the domestic laws and
regulations of that nation and recognized by the United States, and
only includes fish caught in such waters. The observers are required to
be WCPFC Observers. Observers deployed by NMFS are currently considered
WCPFC Observers, as the program has completed the required
authorization process to become part of the WCPFC Regional Observer
Programme (ROP). For most transshipments, an observer is required on
board the receiving vessel. However, for transshipments to a receiving
vessel less than or equal to 33 meters in registered length, and not
involving purse seine-caught fish or frozen longline-caught fish, the
observer may be deployed on either the offloading vessel or receiving
vessel. All involved vessel owners and operators are required to ensure
that a WCPFC Observer is on board one of the two vessels to monitor the
transshipment for the duration of the transshipment, even when the
requirement to carry an observer falls on the other vessel involved in
the transshipment (e.g., in those cases when the observer requirement
applies only to the receiving vessel). The owner or operator of a
vessel requiring an observer for transshipments at sea must ensure that
notice is provided to the NMFS Pacific Islands Regional Administrator
at least 72 hours (excluding weekends and Federal holidays) before the
vessel leaves port on the fishing trip indicating the need for an
observer. The notice will need to include the official number of the
vessel, the name of the vessel, the intended date, time and location of
departure, the name of the vessel operator, and a telephone number at
which the vessel owner, vessel operator, or a designated agent may be
contacted during the business day (8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Hawaii Standard
Time). The notice must be provided to the office or telephone number
designated by the NMFS Pacific Islands Regional Administrator. If
applicable, notice may be provided in conjunction with the notice
required under 50 CFR 665.803(a), which requires the permit holder, or
designated agent, for any
[[Page 71503]]
vessel registered for use under a Hawaii longline limited access
permit, or for any vessel greater than 40 feet length overall that is
registered for use under an American Samoa longline limited access
permit, to notify NMFS at least 72 hours (excluding weekends and
Federal holidays) before the vessel leaves port on a fishing trip, any
part of which occurs in the U.S. EEZ around the Hawaiian Archipelago or
American Samoa.
In addition, a receiving vessel must receive product from only one
offloading vessel at a time for each observer that is available to
monitor the transshipment; the observer may be on the offloading or
receiving vessel. Accordingly, if only one WCPFC Observer is available,
the receiving vessel must receive HMS from only one offloading vessel
at a time.
Operators and crew members of vessels carrying observers under
these requirements are subject to general requirements regarding WCPFC
Observers at 50 CFR 300.215, such as providing any WCPFC Observer on
board the vessel with full access to the vessel, as well as access to
information and data sources.
4. Categories of Vessels With Which Transshipping and Bunkering May Be
Conducted
The owner and operator of any U.S. fishing vessel used for
commercial fishing for HMS must ensure that any vessel with which they
engage in transshipment (to or from) in the Convention Area, or engage
in bunkering or other support activities (to or from) in the Convention
Area, falls into one of the three following categories. The vessel must
be: (1) Flagged by a WCPFC Member or Cooperating Non-Member; (2) on the
WCPFC Interim Register of Non-Member Carrier and Bunker Vessels
(Interim Register), which is available at https://www.wcpfc.int/; or (3)
on the WCPFC Record of Fishing Vessels, which is available at https://www.wcpfc.int/. NMFS notes that the Interim Register is tentatively
scheduled to expire in 2013, at which point no vessels would fall in
this category. Only fishing vessels that are authorized to be used for
fishing in the U.S. EEZ may transship and/or bunker in the U.S. EEZ.
These requirements for transshipments do not apply to emergency
transshipments or transshipments that take place entirely within the
territorial seas or archipelagic waters of any nation, as defined by
the domestic laws and regulations of that nation and recognized by the
United States, and only include fish caught within such waters.
5. Requirements Regarding Notification of Entry Into and Exit From
Eastern SMA
The owner or operator of any U.S. fishing vessel used for
commercial fishing must ensure the submission of a notice to the
Commission containing specific information at least six hours prior to
entry and no later than six hours prior to exiting the Eastern SMA (see
Figure 1, below). The notices must be submitted in the format specified
by the NMFS Pacific Islands Regional Administrator. The notices must be
submitted via fax or email and must include the following information:
(1) The vessel identification markings located on the hull or
superstructure of the vessel; (2) whether the notice is for entry or
exit; (3) date and time of anticipated point of entry or exit; (4)
latitude and longitude of anticipated point of entry or exit; (5)
amount of fish product on board at the time of the report, in
kilograms, in total and for each of the following species or species
groups: yellowfin tuna, bigeye tuna, albacore, skipjack tuna,
swordfish, shark, other; and (6) an indication of whether the vessel
has engaged in or will engage in any transshipments while in the
Eastern SMA. A copy of the notice must be provided to NMFS at least six
hours prior to the entry and no later than six hours prior to the exit.
The map in Figure 1 shows the Eastern SMA as the high seas area
within the rectangle bounded by the bold black lines.
Figure 1. Eastern SMA. Areas of high seas are indicated in white;
areas of claimed national jurisdiction, including territorial seas,
archipelagic waters, and EEZs, are indicated in dark shading. The
Eastern SMA is the high seas area (in white) within the rectangle
bounded by the bold black lines. This map displays indicative maritime
boundaries only.
[[Page 71504]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR03DE12.000
6. Requirements Regarding Discards From Purse Seine Fishing Vessels
The owner or operator of any U.S. purse seine fishing vessel must
ensure the submission of a report containing specific information to
the Commission and a copy of the report to NMFS no later than 48 hours
after any discard at sea of bigeye tuna (Thunnus obesus), yellowfin
tuna (Thunnus albacares), or skipjack tuna (Katsuwonus pelamis). The
reports must be submitted in the format specified by the NMFS Pacific
Islands Regional Administrator via fax or email. A specific form, the
U.S. Purse Seine Discard Form (OMB Control Number 0648-0649), has been
developed for this requirement. A hard copy of the report must be
submitted to the observer on board the vessel.
7. Other Requirements
This final rule prohibits the transfer of fish at sea from a purse
seine net deployed by or under the control of a fishing vessel of the
United States to any other fishing vessel in the Convention Area.
However, the rule includes a narrow exception that allows U.S. purse
seine vessels to transfer fish through net sharing (i.e., the transfer
of fish that have not yet been loaded on board any fishing vessel from
the purse seine net of one vessel to another fishing vessel) to other
U.S. purse seine vessels on the final set of a trip when there is
insufficient well space for the fish. The final rule also amends the
regulatory definition of transshipment to exclude net sharing from the
definition of transshipment as purse seine vessels are generally
prohibited from engaging in transshipment of HMS at sea. Under the
exception for net sharing, the purse seine vessel that transfers fish
through net sharing is prohibited from making further purse seine sets
during the remainder of its fishing trip.
Furthermore, in the U.S. EEZ, net sharing is allowed only between
U.S. vessels that are authorized to be used for fishing in that area.
In the event of a net share, the owner and operator of the vessel that
caught the fish must record the catch, as required under 50 CFR
300.34(c)(1), on the Regional Purse Seine Logsheet (RPL), and must note
that the net sharing has taken place, in the manner specified by the
NMFS Pacific Islands Regional Administrator, on the RPL. The owner and
operator of the vessel that accepted the fish must note on the RPL for
their vessel that the net sharing has taken place, in the manner
specified by the NMFS Pacific Islands Regional Administrator.
In addition to the new requirements, the final rule amends the
language that is in 50 CFR 300.223(d) to remove the termination date
(December 31, 2012) applicable to the catch retention provision and
includes some editorial changes to that language (i.e., from stating
that ``a fishing vessel of the United States equipped with purse seine
gear may not discard at sea within the Convention Area any bigeye tuna,
yellowfin tuna, or skipjack tuna'' to stating that ``an owner or
operator of a fishing vessel of the United States equipped with purse
seine gear must ensure the retention on board at all times while at sea
within the Convention Area any bigeye tuna, yellowfin tuna, or skipjack
tuna''). The final rule also corrects 50 CFR 300.222(y), which was
inconsistent with 50 CFR 300.223(d)(3). Section 300.223(d)(3) states
that the catch retention requirements are applicable to the entire
Convention Area. However, Sec. 300.222(y), which is a prohibitions
section, stated that the prohibition on discarding fish at sea in
contravention of Sec. 300.223(d) is limited to the high seas and areas
within the jurisdiction of the United States, including the U.S. EEZ
and territorial sea between 20[deg] N. latitude and 20[deg] S.
latitude. This final rule amends Sec. 300.222(y) to amend the
description of the requirement to state that the catch retention
requirements are applicable to the entire Convention Area.
[[Page 71505]]
The final rule also includes a minor change to the wording of the
language at 50 CFR 300.216(b) so that the terminology referring to U.S.
purse seine vessels is consistent throughout 50 CFR part 300 subpart O.
Specifically, the phrase ``purse seine fishing vessel of the United
States'' is replaced with ``fishing vessel of the United States
equipped with purse seine gear.''
The final rule also modifies the prohibitions for at-sea
transshipments for purse seine vessels. The final rule includes an
additional prohibition for transshipments at sea involving purse seine
vessels of fish caught in the Convention Area but transshipped outside
of the Convention Area, and allows emergency transshipments involving
purse seine vessels to take place at sea in the Convention Area.
Comments and Responses
NMFS received one comment letter on the proposed rule, with three
distinct comments. Each comment is summarized below, followed by a
response from NMFS.
Comment 1
The basis for the prohibitions on net sharing provided in the
proposed rule--that it would be difficult to keep track of fish--seems
insufficient. The purse seine vessel receiving the fish would likely
report the fish, since it would have the best estimate of the amount in
the net share. It is also unclear how commonly net sharing among purse
seine vessels takes place. If this is a matter of serious concern, a
better explanation of the need for the prohibitions should be given. It
would be worthwhile to exempt the transfer of live fish from one
fishing vessel to another from this prohibition. Although vessels
fishing in the eastern Pacific Ocean (EPO) will not likely be subject
to these prohibitions on a frequent basis, in the past, there has been
some confusion, since corrected, as to whether the prohibition on
transshipping in the area of application of the IATTC applies to the
transfer of live bluefin tuna.
Response
As stated in the proposed rule, existing regulations at 50 CFR
300.223(d) require U.S. purse seine fishing vessels to retain all catch
of bigeye tuna, yellowfin tuna, and skipjack tuna unless: (1) The fish
are unfit for human consumption; (2) there is insufficient well space
to accommodate all the fish captured in a given set, provided that no
additional sets are made during the trip; or (3) serious malfunction of
equipment occurs. Existing regulations at 50 CFR 300.216 prohibit purse
seine vessels from conducting transshipments at sea in the Convention
Area, consistent with Article 29 of the Convention. However, the
existing catch retention provisions at 50 CFR 223(d) do not address
whether net sharing falls within the definition of transshipment, which
is prohibited at sea for purse seine vessels. As stated in Section
3.1.1.1 of the EA, NMFS estimates that approximately 10 percent of all
U.S. purse seine trips in the WCPO include a net sharing event. This
rule explicitly excludes net sharing activities from the definition of
transshipment and implements a general prohibition on net sharing, as
net sharing in most situations would not be consistent with the catch
retention requirements.
However, the rule allows U.S. purse seine fishing vessels to
conduct limited net sharing on the final set of a trip with other U.S.
purse seine vessels, consistent with CMM 2008-01, which states that
``excess fish taken in the last set may be transferred to and retained
on board another purse seine vessel provided this is not prohibited
under applicable national law.'' As stated in the IRFA, NMFS considered
the alternatives of allowing U.S. purse seine fishing vessels to
conduct net sharing with foreign-flagged vessels, and allowing U.S.
purse seine fishing vessels to conduct net sharing both to and from
foreign-flagged vessels on the last set of the transferring vessel's
trip. Alternatives to allow net sharing on other than the last set
would be inconsistent with CMM 2008-01, so were not considered.
However, allowing net sharing to foreign-flagged vessels would make it
difficult to ensure consistent counting of catches--for example, the
shared catch might be logged as catch by both the U.S. catcher vessel
and the foreign-flagged vessel with which the catch is shared,
resulting in inaccurate reporting. Allowing net sharing to and from
foreign-flagged vessels would have the same shortcomings and would also
be very difficult to enforce, as the United States would have limited
ability to determine whether a foreign-flagged vessel complied with the
last-set condition.
Regarding the commenter's recommendation to generally exempt the
transfer of live fish from one vessel to another, net sharing of live
fish on the final set of trip between U.S. purse seine fishing vessels
is not prohibited under the new rule.
Finally, the net sharing requirements in this rule are applicable
in the Convention Area, and do not apply in the EPO.
Comment 2
Regarding the projected costs for observer coverage for
transshipments at sea, a refrigerated carrier vessel that operates
regularly in the Convention Area would likely have an observer on
board, so the observer coverage requirements for troll vessels
transshipping on the high seas would likely be covered. However, if a
troll vessel wants to transship on the high seas to a carrier that is
not already active in the Convention Area, the projected cost of the
observer requirements does not include the following cost estimates:
(1) Cost in time and money to see that such a refrigerated carrier is
properly registered; and (2) the cost of travel to get an observer
accepted by the ROP of the WCPFC to and from the transshipping point.
Although this may be seen as a business cost for transshipping, it is
still a substantial cost that may well fall on the troll or pole-and-
line vessels, and should at least be factored into the cost estimates.
Response
Should a U.S. troll or pole-and-line vessel desire to transship to
a foreign-flagged carrier vessel that is not already active in the
Convention Area, and if the owner of the carrier vessel chooses to make
the carrier vessel available for such transshipments by satisfying the
various applicable WCPFC requirements, NMFS agrees that some of the
costs of doing so could be passed on to fishing businesses that
interact with the carrier vessel, such as the U.S. troll or pole-and-
line fishing business. Such costs include the $2,500 annual fee for
registering a vessel on the Interim Register, the costs associated with
participating in the WCPFC vessel monitoring system, and the costs
associated with carrying WCPFC ROP observers, possibly including travel
costs for the observer. NMFS notes that the cost of transporting a
WCPFC Observer would depend on the circumstances, and could be minimal
if a WCPFC Observer is available at the carrier vessel's port of
departure and does not need further transportation from the port of
return. NMFS also notes that the Interim Register is tentatively
scheduled to expire in 2013. If some or all these costs are passed on
by the owner/operator of the carrier vessel to fishing businesses that
make use of the carrier vessel, NMFS expects that carrier vessels would
be likely to work with multiple offloading vessels and would distribute
the costs accordingly. The costs borne by any single U.S. troll or
[[Page 71506]]
pole-and-line fishing business would be accordingly smaller than the
total costs. NMFS has revised the RIR to acknowledge and reflect these
possible costs incurred by U.S. fishing businesses. This comment is
also relevant in the context of the FRFA, as discussed in the
Classification section of this preamble.
Comment 3
Regarding the notification of entry and exit to and from the
Eastern SMA, the system set up for this entry and exit notification
scheme is fatally flawed under international law, because States
bordering a high seas pocket have no more right to know what is going
on there than other Commission members. If Kiribati, Cook Islands and
French Polynesia are to receive special notifications, those
notifications should be made to the Commission and be available to all
Commission members.
While few, if any, U.S. albacore troll and pole-and-line vessels
fish in the Eastern SMA, this area is close to various transit lines.
That area is right along the track line going from Papeete, French
Polynesia, to Majuro, Marshall Islands--both are important ports for
the South Pacific albacore troll fishery. In the past, vessels in this
fishery transshipped their fish in Papeete and then proceeded directly
to Majuro for fueling before heading to fishing grounds in the North
Pacific. Historically, as many as a dozen vessels made that circuit.
The Eastern SMA is also very close to the track line going from Pago
Pago, American Samoa, to Papeete. There is also a history of vessels
proceeding from the South Pacific fishing grounds to Honolulu, and the
Eastern SMA is near that track line. Thus, the proposed rule
underestimates the frequency of U.S. troll and pole and line vessels
transiting the Eastern SMA and associated costs.
Response
NMFS notes the commenter's view that the system set up by the
Commission for the Eastern SMA is flawed. This comment appears to be a
general comment on the Commission's decision to adopt CMM 2010-02,
which is beyond the scope of this rulemaking. The Commission exercised
its authority pursuant to the Convention to adopt conservation and
management measures for the high seas, which are implemented by
members, including, where appropriate, by flag State members, in
accordance with their jurisdiction and control over vessels flying
their flag on the high seas. To the extent the comment alleges that
NMFS' implementation of the notification scheme provided for in this
final rule is inconsistent with international law, NMFS disagrees. In
order to meet the international obligations of the United States as a
member of the Commission, and pursuant to the authority of the WCPFC
Implementation Act, NMFS is implementing this provision of CMM 2010-02
via regulations. NMFS is unaware of any provisions of international law
that this rulemaking would violate.
NMFS appreciates the additional information regarding the
operational activity of the U.S. albacore troll and pole-and-line
vessels near the Eastern SMA. However, the comment does not include any
indication of the historical or current number of Eastern SMA entries
and exits by such vessels on an annual basis. In the RIR issued with
the proposed rule and in the IRFA, NMFS estimated that U.S. albacore
troll vessels would enter the Eastern SMA between zero and two times
per year and exit the same number of times. This estimate was based on
readily available data regarding the fishing patterns of the fleet,
indicating that the fishing grounds of this fleet are and have been in
areas distant from the Eastern SMA. In order to take into consideration
the commenter's information, NMFS has evaluated (unpublished) data from
NMFS' vessel monitoring system (VMS) to determine the precise annual
number of Eastern SMA entries and exits by vessels in this fleet. The
VMS data indicate that U.S. albacore troll vessels entered the Eastern
SMA zero times during 2011 and 2012 (2011 was the first full year in
which U.S. albacore troll vessels fishing in the Convention Area were
required to participate in the vessel monitoring system).
Given these recent data and the location of the traditional fishing
grounds of the U.S. albacore troll fleet, NMFS believes that the
estimate of zero to two entries per year (and zero to two exits per
year) is reasonable and an appropriate basis on which to estimate the
costs to the U.S. albacore troll fleet to satisfy the Eastern SMA entry
and exit notification requirements. NMFS acknowledges that there has
been limited activity by the albacore troll fleet in the Convention
Area in recent years (see Table 10 in the EA indicating that the number
of U.S. albacore troll vessels operating in the South Pacific each year
has numbered no more than six since 2007). Should the activity of the
U.S. albacore troll fleet in the Convention Area return to the greater
levels experienced in the past and should that increased activity
include use of the historic lines of transit mentioned in the comment,
the number and associated costs of the entry and exit notifications may
be higher, possibly affecting as many as a dozen vessels each year, as
noted by the commenter, or more. Although such a future scenario is
possible, it, like other possible future scenarios, is speculative and
does not warrant changes to the estimates used by NMFS as a basis to
estimate the costs to affected U.S. fishing fleets.
Changes From the Proposed Rule
NMFS made some minor technical and non-substantive changes to the
proposed rule in this final rule to remove ambiguities. Also, given the
effective date the final rule, the provision that the at-sea observer
provisions do not apply to transshipments to receiving vessels greater
than 33 meters in registered length and involving only fish caught by
troll gear and/or pole-and-line gear prior to January 1, 2013, has been
removed. Due to an editorial error, the proposed rule indicated that a
new, separate definition would be provided for the term ``on board.''
However, the definition of ``on board'' was included in the revised
definition of transshipment and in the definition of net sharing in the
proposed rule, which remain the same in this final rule. Also, although
the regulatory text in the proposed rule specified that the purse seine
discard reports would be required for discards of bigeye tuna,
yellowfin tuna, or skipjack tuna, the proposed rule's preamble
incorrectly indicated that discards of fish, in general, would need to
be reported. In addition, although the regulatory text in the proposed
rule specified the editorial changes to the purse seine catch retention
requirement, the proposed rule's preamble did not mention these
editorial changes (i.e., from stating that ``a fishing vessel of the
United States equipped with purse seine gear may not discard at sea
within the Convention Area any bigeye tuna, yellowfin tuna, or skipjack
tuna'' to stating that ``an owner or operator of a fishing vessel of
the United States equipped with purse seine gear must ensure the
retention on board at all times while at sea within the Convention Area
any bigeye tuna, yellowfin tuna, or skipjack tuna'').
In Sec. 902.1(b) of title 15 of the Code of Federal Regulations,
which includes a table listing control numbers issues by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for collections of information required
under NOAA regulations, new entries have been added for the OMB control
numbers approved for the information collections required under
[[Page 71507]]
Sec. Sec. 300.215, 300.218, and 300.225 of title 50 of the Code of
Federal Regulations.
Delegation of Authority
Under NOAA Administrative Order 205-11, dated December 17, 1990,
the under Secretary of Oceans and Atmosphere has delegated authority to
sign material for publication in the Federal Register to the Assistant
Administrator for Fisheries, NOAA.
Classification
The Administrator, Pacific Islands Region, NMFS, has determined
that this final rule is consistent with the WCPFC Implementation Act
and other applicable laws.
Executive Order 12866
The final rule has been determined not to be significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
A FRFA was prepared. The FRFA incorporates the IRFA prepared for
the proposed rule. The analysis in the IRFA is not repeated here in its
entirety.
A description of the action, why it is being considered, and the
legal basis for this action are contained in the preamble of the
proposed rule and in the SUMMARY and SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION sections
of this final rule, above. The analysis follows:
There would be no disproportionate economic impacts between small
and large entities operating vessels as a result of this final rule.
Furthermore, there would be no disproportionate economic impacts based
on vessel size, gear, or homeport.
Significant Issues Raised by Public Comments in Response to IRFA
NMFS received two comments related to the IRFA (see Comments 2 and
3 on the proposed rule, above). Regarding Comment 2, NMFS agrees with
the commenter that U.S. fishing businesses could bear costs associated
with transshipping to foreign-flagged carrier vessels that are not
already active in the Convention Area, and that this should be factored
into the estimated compliance costs. See NMFS' Response to Comment 2 on
the proposed rule, above, for a description of those possible costs.
NMFS has also revised the RIR to reflect those possible costs.
Regarding Comment 3, NMFS acknowledges the additional information about
the historical activity of U.S. albacore troll and pole-and-line
vessels near the Eastern SMA, as well as the possibility that the
future rate of entries into and exits out of the Eastern SMA by U.S.
albacore troll vessels, and the associated costs, could be greater than
the estimates provided in the IRFA. However, NMFS believes that the
estimate in the IRFA of zero to two entries per year (and zero to two
exits per year) is reasonable, based on readily available information
regarding the fishing patterns of the fleet and recent VMS data, and an
appropriate basis for the cost estimates. See NMFS' Response to Comment
3 on the proposed rule, above, for further details. NMFS has not made
any changes to the rule as a result of these two comments.
Description of Small Entities to Which the Rule Will Apply
The final rule will apply to owners and operators of U.S. HMS
fishing vessels used to: (1) Transship HMS in the Convention Area or to
transship outside the Convention Area HMS caught in the Convention
Area; (2) enter or exit the Eastern SMA; or (3) purse seine for HMS in
the Convention Area. The estimated number of affected entities is as
follows, broken down by vessel type:
Based on the number of longline vessels permitted to fish under the
Fishery Ecosystem Plan for Pacific Pelagic Fisheries of the Western
Pacific Region or the Fishery Management Plan for U.S. West Coast
Fisheries for Highly Migratory Species as of January 2011, the
estimated number of longline vessels to which the rule will apply is
170. Based on the number of purse seine vessels licensed under the
South Pacific Tuna Treaty as of January 2011, the estimated number of
purse seine vessels to which the rule will apply is 36. Based on the
average annual number of albacore troll vessels that fished in the
Convention Area during 2002-2009, the estimated number of troll vessels
to which the rule will apply is 26. The total estimated number of
vessels that would be subject to the rule is 232.
Based on the best available financial information about the
affected fishing fleets, and using individual vessels as proxies for
individual businesses, NMFS believes that all the affected fish
harvesting businesses in the longline and troll fleets are small
entities as defined by the RFA; that is, they are independently owned
and operated and not dominant in their fields of operation, and have
annual receipts of no more than $4.0 million. In the purse seine fleet,
most or all of the businesses that operate these vessels are large
entities as defined by the RFA. However, it is possible that one or a
few of these fish harvesting businesses meet the criteria for small
entities, so the purse seine fleet is included in the remainder of this
analysis.
Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance Requirements
The reporting, recordkeeping, and other compliance requirements
under this rule are described earlier in the preamble. The classes of
small entities subject to the requirements and the types of
professional skills necessary to fulfill each of the requirements are
described in the IRFA.
Steps Taken To Minimize the Significant Economic Impact on Small
Entities
NMFS has attempted to identify alternatives that would accomplish
the objectives of the Act and minimize any significant economic impact
of the final rule on small entities. The alternative of taking no
action at all was rejected because it would fail to accomplish the
objectives of the WCPFC Implementation Act. As a Contracting Party to
the Convention, the United States is required to implement the
decisions of the WCPFC. For some of the elements where the CMMs provide
discretion in implementation, NMFS has identified specific
alternatives, as described below. For the other elements, NMFS has not
identified alternatives. However, for each of the elements where
alternatives have not been identified, NMFS has developed the element
to be the least burdensome on small entities, while still being in
accordance with the relevant WCPFC decision, as explained below.
With respect to element (1) of the rule, transshipment reporting
requirements, one alternative would be to impose a uniform timeframe
for submission of the report; to satisfy all requirements and the
provisions of CMM 2009-06, it would have to be submitted to NMFS within
10 calendar days after completion of the transshipment. This
alternative would be more burdensome for certain types of fishing
vessels than the alternative adopted in this final rule, and was
rejected for that reason. Submission of transshipment reports, as well
as specific timeframes for submission of the reports for high seas and
emergency transshipments, are specified in CMM 2009-06. Thus, NMFS has
not identified any alternatives that would be less burdensome than the
alternative adopted in this final rule and would accomplish the
objectives of the WCPFC Implementation Act.
With respect to element (2), prior notice for high seas
transshipments and emergency transshipments, one alternative would be
to give affected entities the option of either providing the notice of
high seas transshipment to
[[Page 71508]]
NMFS at least one business day plus 36 hours in advance of the
transshipment (i.e., 60 hours before the transshipment), or, as under
this final rule, providing the notice directly to the WCPFC at least 36
hours in advance of the transshipment, with a copy to NMFS. This
flexibility could relieve the burden for some entities and/or
situations; specifically, in cases where it is less burdensome to send
the notification to NMFS than to the WCPFC. Under this alternative, if
a vessel operator exercises the first option, NMFS would have to
forward the notification to the WCPFC within one business day, so this
alternative would bring some additional administrative costs to NMFS.
This alternative would also have the disadvantage of being more complex
and possibly more confusing to affected entities than the final rule
(under which there would be a single timeframe and single recipient).
For these reasons, and because NMFS believes that the benefits of the
flexibility afforded to affected entities by this alternative would be
minor, this alternative was rejected. CMM 2009-06 specifies submission
of the notices, as well as specific timeframes for submission of the
notices. Thus, the alternatives considered by NMFS were restricted by
the parameters of the CMM.
With respect to element (3), observer coverage for transshipments
at sea, NMFS has not identified any alternatives that would be less
burdensome than the alternative adopted in this final rule and would
accomplish the objectives of the WCPFC Implementation Act. CMM 2009-06
specifies requirements for at-sea observer coverage. For most
transshipments, the provisions of the CMM specify that the observer
must be on board the receiving vessel. However, for transshipments to
receiving vessels less than or equal to 33 meters in registered length
and not involving purse seine caught fish or frozen longline caught
fish, the observer may be on board the offloading or receiving vessel.
The final rule allows maximum flexibility for at-sea observer coverage
by allowing observers to be on board either the offloading or receiving
vessel for transshipments to receiving vessels less than or equal to 33
meters in registered length and not involving purse seine caught fish
or frozen longline caught fish. There are other conceivable
alternatives, such as requiring that an observer be on board the
receiving vessel or requiring that an observer be on board the
offloading vessel. However, these two approaches would be more
constraining, and thus, more burdensome on affected entities than the
provisions in the final rule and would not provide any advantages with
respect to the underlying purpose of the observer requirement. In
developing this element to afford affected entities with the maximum
flexibility, NMFS is ensuring that there is a greater chance of
compliance, and thus, a greater chance that the objective of the CMM
and the final rule will be satisfied.
With respect to element (4), restrictions on vessels with which
transshipping and bunkering may be conducted, NMFS has not identified
any alternatives that would be less burdensome than the alternative
adopted in this final rule and would accomplish the objectives of the
WCPFC Implementation Act. CMM 2009-06 and CMM 2009-01 include specific
provisions for vessels with which transshipping and bunkering may be
conducted and the final rule implements those provisions; the CMMs
leave no room for consideration of any alternatives. With respect to
element (5), notice of entry or exit for Eastern SMA, NMFS has not
identified any alternatives that would be less burdensome than the
alternative adopted in this final rule and would accomplish the
objectives of the WCPFC Implementation Act. CMM 2010-02 includes
specific requirements for notice of entry or exit for the Eastern SMA
and the final rule implements those provisions; the CMM leaves no room
for consideration of any alternatives that would reduce the cost of
compliance.
With respect to element (6), the purse seine discard report, NMFS
has not identified any alternatives that would be less burdensome than
the alternative adopted in this final rule and would accomplish the
objectives of the WCPFC Implementation Act. CMM 2009-02 includes
specific requirements for the purse seine discard report, and the final
rule implements those provisions; the CMM leaves no room for
consideration of any alternatives that would reduce the cost of
compliance.
With respect to element (7), net sharing restrictions and
reporting, one alternative would be to allow U.S. vessels to net share
to (but not from) foreign-flagged vessels, and a second would be to
allow U.S. vessels to net share both to and from foreign vessels. Under
both these alternatives, net sharing would be allowed only on the last
set. Alternatives to allow net sharing on other than the last set would
not be consistent with WCPFC decisions, so were not further considered.
Both alternatives identified above would be less restrictive than the
alternative adopted in this final rule and thus bring lower compliance
costs. The first alternative would make it difficult to ensure
consistent counting and reporting of catches--for example, the shared
catch might be logged as catch by both the U.S. catcher vessel and the
foreign vessel with which the catch is shared. Since the foreign vessel
is not expected to report its catch and effort data to NMFS, this could
result in inaccurate reporting of catch. The alternative was rejected
for that reason. The second alternative would have the same shortcoming
and would also be very difficult to enforce, as the United States would
have limited ability to determine whether a foreign vessel complied
with the last-set condition. The alternative was rejected for those
reasons.
For each element, NMFS also considered the no-action alternative,
or status quo situation. However, as stated above, the no-action
alternative would not accomplish the objectives of the WCPFC
Implementation Act and was rejected for that reason.
Small Entity Compliance Guides
Section 212 of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness
Act of 1996 states that, for each rule or group of related rules for
which an agency is required to prepare a FRFA, the agency shall publish
one or more guides to assist small entities in complying with the rule,
and shall designate such publications as ``small entity compliance
guides.'' The agency shall explain the actions a small entity is
required to take to comply with a rule or group of rules. As part of
this rulemaking process, one or more small entity compliance guides
have been prepared. The guide(s) will be sent to permit and license
holders in the affected fisheries. The guide(s) and this final rule
will also be available at https://www.fpir.noaa.gov/ and by request from
NMFS PIRO (see ADDRESSES).
Paperwork Reduction Act
This final rule contains new collection-of-information requirements
subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) and which have been
approved by OMB under control number 0648-0649. The public reporting
burdens for each of the requirements are estimated as follows:
transshipment reporting: 60 minutes per response, on average; prior
notice for high seas transshipments and emergency transshipments: 15
minutes per response, on average; pre-trip notification for the purpose
of deploying observers: 1 minute per response, on average; notice of
entry or exit for
[[Page 71509]]
Eastern SMA: 15 minutes per response, on average; purse seine discard
report: 30 minutes per response, on average. These estimates include
the time for reviewing instructions, searching existing data sources,
gathering and maintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing
the collection of information.
Send comments on these or any other aspects of the proposed
collection of information to Michael D. Tosatto, Regional
Administrator, NMFS PIRO (see ADDRESSES), and by email to OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov or fax to 202-395-7285.
This final rule also contains a collection-of-information
requirement subject to the PRA that was previously approved by OMB
under control number 0648-0218, ``South Pacific Tuna Act'' (the net
sharing reporting requirement). The public reporting burden for the
Catch Report Form under that collection-of-information requirement is
estimated to average one hour per response, including the time for
reviewing instructions, searching existing data sources, gathering and
maintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing the
collection of information. NMFS estimated that the net sharing
reporting requirement would not increase the public reporting burden
for the Catch Report Form. Send comments regarding this burden
estimate, or any other aspect of this data collection, including
suggestions for reducing the burden, to Michael D. Tosatto, Regional
Administrator, NMFS PIRO (see ADDRESSES) and by email to OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov or fax to 202-395-7285.
Notwithstanding any other provision of the law, no person is
required to respond to, and no person shall be subject to penalty for
failure to comply with, a collection of information subject to the
requirements of the PRA, unless that collection of information displays
a currently valid OMB control number.
Prior notice and opportunity for public comment are not required
with respect to the revision to the table of OMB control numbers in 15
CFR 902.1(b), because this action is a rule of agency organization,
procedure or practice under 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(A).
List of Subjects
15 CFR Part 902
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
50 CFR Part 300
Administrative practice and procedure, Fish, Fisheries, Fishing,
Marine resources, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Treaties.
Dated: November 27, 2012.
Alan D. Risenhoover,
Director, Office of Sustainable Fisheries, performing the functions and
duties of the Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs,
National Marine Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, 15 CFR Chapter IX and 50
CFR Chapter III are amended as follows:
15 CFR CHAPTER IX--NATIONAL OCEANIC AND ATMOSPHERIC ADMINISTRATION,
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
PART 902--NOAA INFORMATION COLLECTION REQUIREMENTS UNDER THE
PAPERWORK REDUCTION ACT: OMB CONTROL NUMBERS
0
1. The authority citation for part 902 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
0
2. In Sec. 902.1, paragraph (b), the table is amended by adding in the
left column under 50 CFR, in numerical order, entries for Sec. Sec.
300.215, 300.218, and 300.225, and, in the right column, in
corresponding positions, the control number ``-0649'' as follows:
Sec. 902.1 OMB control numbers assigned pursuant to the Paperwork
Reduction Act.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current OMB
control number
CFR Part or section where the information collection (all numbers
requirement is located begin with
0648-)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
50 CFR..................................................
* * * * *
300.215............................................... -0649
300.218............................................... -0649
* * * * *
300.225............................................... -0649
* * * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
50 CFR CHAPTER III--INTERNATIONAL FISHING AND RELATED ACTIVITIES
PART 300--INTERNATIONAL FISHERIES REGULATIONS
0
1. The authority citation for 50 CFR part 300, subpart O, continues to
read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 6901 et seq.
0
2. In Sec. 300.211, definitions of ``Cooperating Non-Member,''
``Eastern High Seas Special Management Area,'' ``Net sharing,'' ``WCPFC
Interim Register of non-Member Carrier and Bunker Vessels,'' and
``WCPFC Record of Fishing Vessels'' are added, in alphabetical order,
and the definition of ``Transshipment'' is revised, to read as follows:
Sec. 300.211 Definitions.
* * * * *
Cooperating Non-Member means a non-Member of the Commission that
has been accorded Cooperating Non-Member status by the Commission at
the Commission's most recent annual meeting.
Eastern High Seas Special Management Area means the area of the
high seas within the area bounded by the four lines connecting, in the
most direct fashion, the coordinates specified as follows: 11[deg] S.
latitude and 161[deg] W. longitude; 11[deg] S. latitude and 154[deg] W.
longitude; 16[deg] S. latitude and 154[deg] W. longitude; and 16[deg]
S. latitude and 161[deg] W. longitude.
* * * * *
Net sharing means the transfer of fish that have not yet been
loaded on board any fishing vessel from the purse seine net of one
vessel to another fishing vessel. Fish shall be considered to be on
board a fishing vessel once they are on a deck or in a hold, or once
they are first lifted out of the water by the vessel.
* * * * *
Transshipment means the unloading of fish from on board one fishing
vessel and its direct transfer to, and loading on board, another
fishing vessel, either at sea or in port. Fish shall be considered to
be on board a fishing vessel once they are on a deck or in a hold, or
once they are first lifted out of the water by the vessel. Net sharing
is not a transshipment.
* * * * *
WCPFC Interim Register of Non-Member Carrier and Bunker Vessels
means, for the purposes of this subpart, the WCPFC Interim Register of
non-Member Carrier and Bunker Vessels as established in the decisions
of the WCPFC and maintained on the WCPFC's Web site at https://www.wcpfc.int/.
* * * * *
WCPFC Record of Fishing Vessels means, for the purposes of this
subpart, the WCPFC Record of Fishing Vessels as established in the
decisions of the WCPFC and maintained on the WCPFC's Web site at https://www.wcpfc.int/.
* * * * *
0
3. Section 300.215 is revised to read as follows:
[[Page 71510]]
Sec. 300.215 Observers.
(a) Applicability. This section applies to the following categories
of fishing vessels:
(1) Any fishing vessel of the United States with a WCPFC Area
Endorsement.
(2) Any fishing vessel of the United States for which a WCPFC Area
Endorsement is required.
(3) Any fishing vessel of the United States used for commercial
fishing that receives or offloads in the Convention Area a
transshipment of HMS at sea.
(b) Notifications. The owner or operator of a vessel required to
carry a WCPFC observer under paragraph (d) of this section during a
given fishing trip must ensure the provision of notice to the Pacific
Islands Regional Administrator at least 72 hours (exclusive of weekends
and Federal holidays) before the vessel leaves port on the fishing
trip, indicating the need for an observer. The notice must be provided
to the office or telephone number designated by the Pacific Islands
Regional Administrator and must include the official number of the
vessel, the name of the vessel, the intended departure date, time, and
location, the name of the operator of the vessel, and a telephone
number at which the owner, operator, or a designated agent may be
contacted during the business day (8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Hawaii Standard
Time). If applicable, notice may be provided in conjunction with the
notice required under Sec. 665.803(a) of this title.
(c) Accommodating observers. (1) Fishing vessels specified in
paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of this section must carry, when directed
to do so by NMFS, a WCPFC observer on fishing trips during which the
vessel at any time enters or is within the Convention Area. The
operator and each member of the crew of the fishing vessel shall act in
accordance with paragraphs (c)(3), (c)(4), and (c)(5) of this section
with respect to any WCPFC observer.
(2) Fishing vessels specified in paragraph (a)(3) of this section
must carry an observer when required to do so under paragraph (d) of
this section. The operator and each member of the crew of the fishing
vessel shall act in accordance with paragraphs (c)(3), (c)(4), and
(c)(5) of this section, as applicable, with respect to any WCPFC
observer.
(3) The operator and crew shall allow and assist WCPFC observers
to:
(i) Embark at a place and time determined by NMFS or otherwise
agreed to by NMFS and the vessel operator;
(ii) Have access to and use of all facilities and equipment as
necessary to conduct observer duties, including, but not limited to:
Full access to the bridge, the fish on board, and areas which may be
used to hold, process, weigh and store fish; full access to the
vessel's records, including its logs and documentation, for the purpose
of inspection and copying; access to, and use of, navigational
equipment, charts and radios; and access to other information relating
to fishing;
(iii) Remove samples;
(iv) Disembark at a place and time determined by NMFS or otherwise
agreed to by NMFS and the vessel operator; and
(v) Carry out all duties safely.
(4) The operator shall provide the WCPFC observer, while on board
the vessel, with food, accommodation and medical facilities of a
reasonable standard equivalent to those normally available to an
officer on board the vessel, at no expense to the WCPFC observer.
(5) The operator and crew shall not assault, obstruct, resist,
delay, refuse boarding to, intimidate, harass or interfere with WCPFC
observers in the performance of their duties, or attempt to do any of
the same.
(d) Transshipment observer coverage--(1) Receiving vessels. Any
fishing vessel of the United States used for commercial fishing that
receives in the Convention Area a transshipment of HMS at sea must have
a WCPFC observer on board during such transshipment unless at least one
of the following sets of conditions applies:
(i) The vessel is less than or equal to 33 meters in registered
length, the transshipment does not include any fish caught by purse
seine gear, the transshipment does not include any frozen fish caught
by longline gear, and, during the transshipment, there is a WCPFC
observer on board the vessel that offloads the transshipment;
(ii) The transshipment takes place entirely within the territorial
seas or archipelagic waters of any nation, as defined by the domestic
laws and regulations of that nation and recognized by the United
States, and only includes fish caught in such waters; or
(iii) The transshipment is an emergency, as specified under Sec.
300.216(b)(4).
(2) Offloading vessels. Any fishing vessel of the United States
used for commercial fishing that offloads a transshipment of HMS at sea
in the Convention Area must have a WCPFC observer on board, unless one
or more of the following conditions apply:
(i) The vessel that receives the transshipment has a WCPFC observer
on board;
(ii) The vessel that receives the transshipment is greater than 33
meters in registered length;
(iii) The transshipment includes fish caught by purse seine gear;
(iv) The transshipment includes frozen fish caught by longline
gear;
(v) The transshipment takes place entirely within the territorial
seas or archipelagic waters of any nation, as defined by the domestic
laws and regulations of that nation and recognized by the United
States, and only includes fish caught in such waters; or
(vi) The transshipment is an emergency, as specified under Sec.
300.216(b)(4).
(e) Related observer requirements. Observers deployed by NMFS
pursuant to regulations issued under other statutory authorities on
vessels used for fishing for HMS in the Convention Area will be deemed
by NMFS to have been deployed pursuant to this section.
0
4. Section 300.216 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 300.216 Transshipping, bunkering and net sharing.
(a) Transshipment monitoring. [Reserved]
(b) Restrictions on transshipping and bunkering--(1) Restrictions
on transshipments involving purse seine fishing vessels. (i) Fish may
not be transshipped from a fishing vessel of the United States equipped
with purse seine gear at sea in the Convention Area, and a fishing
vessel of the United States may not be used to receive a transshipment
of fish from a fishing vessel equipped with purse seine gear at sea in
the Convention Area.
(ii) Fish caught in the Convention Area may not be transshipped
from a fishing vessel of the United States equipped with purse seine
gear at sea, and a fishing vessel of the United States may not be used
to receive a transshipment of fish caught in the Convention Area from a
fishing vessel equipped with purse seine gear at sea.
(2) Restrictions on at-sea transshipments. If a transshipment takes
place entirely within the territorial seas or archipelagic waters of
any nation, as defined by the domestic laws and regulations of that
nation and recognized by the United States, and only includes fish
caught within such waters, this paragraph does not apply.
(i) The owner and operator of a fishing vessel of the United States
used for commercial fishing that offloads or receives a transshipment
of HMS at sea
[[Page 71511]]
in the Convention Area must ensure that a WCPFC observer is on board at
least one of the vessels involved in the transshipment for the duration
of the transshipment.
(ii) A fishing vessel of the United States used for commercial
fishing that receives transshipments of HMS at sea in the Convention
Area shall not receive such transshipments from more than one vessel at
a time unless there is a separate WCPFC observer available on either
the offloading or receiving vessel to monitor each additional
transshipment.
(3) General restrictions on transshipping and bunkering--(i)
Transshipment. Only fishing vessels that are authorized to be used for
fishing in the EEZ may engage in transshipment in the EEZ. Any fishing
vessel of the United States used for commercial fishing shall not be
used to offload or receive a transshipment of HMS in the Convention
Area unless one or more of the following is satisfied:
(A) The other vessel involved in the transshipment is flagged to a
Member or Cooperating Non-Member of the Commission;
(B) The other vessel involved in the transshipment is on the WCPFC
Record of Fishing Vessels;
(C) The other vessel involved in the transshipment is on the WCPFC
Interim Register of Non-Member Carrier and Bunker Vessels; or
(D) The transshipment takes place entirely within the territorial
seas or archipelagic waters of any nation, as defined by the domestic
laws and regulations of that nation and recognized by the United
States, and only includes fish caught within such waters.
(ii) Bunkering, supplying and provisioning. Only fishing vessels
that are authorized to be used for fishing in the EEZ may engage in
bunkering in the EEZ. A fishing vessel of the United States used for
commercial fishing for HMS shall not be used to provide bunkering, to
receive bunkering, or to exchange supplies or provisions with another
vessel in the Convention Area unless one or more of the following is
satisfied:
(A) The other vessel involved in the bunkering or exchange of
supplies or provisions is flagged to a Member or a Cooperating Non-
Member of the Commission;
(B) The other vessel involved in the bunkering or exchange of
supplies or provisions is on the WCPFC Record of Fishing Vessels; or
(C) The other vessel involved in the bunkering or exchange of
supplies or provisions is on the WCPFC Interim Register of Non-Member
Carrier and Bunker Vessels.
(4) Emergency transshipments. The restrictions in paragraphs
(b)(1), (b)(2), and (b)(3)(i) of this section shall not apply to a
transshipment conducted under circumstances of force majeure or other
serious mechanical breakdown that could reasonably be expected to
threaten the health or safety of the vessel or crew or cause a
significant financial loss through fish spoilage.
(c) Net sharing restrictions. (1) The owner and operator of a
fishing vessel of the United States shall not conduct net sharing in
the Convention Area unless all of the following conditions are met:
(i) The vessel transferring the fish is a fishing vessel of the
United States equipped with purse seine gear;
(ii) The vessel transferring the fish has insufficient well space
for the fish;
(iii) The vessel transferring the fish engages in no additional
purse seine sets during the remainder of the fishing trip; and
(iv) The vessel accepting the fish is a fishing vessel of the
United States equipped with purse seine gear.
(2) Only fishing vessels of the United States that are authorized
to be used for fishing in the EEZ may engage in net sharing in the EEZ,
subject to the provisions of paragraph (c)(1) of this section.
0
5. In Sec. 300.218, paragraphs (b), (c), (d), (e) and (f) are added to
read as follows:
Sec. 300.218 Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
* * * * *
(b) Transshipment reports. The owner and operator of any fishing
vessel of the United States used for commercial fishing that offloads
or receives a transshipment of HMS in the Convention Area, or a
transshipment anywhere of HMS caught in the Convention Area, must
ensure that a transshipment report for the transshipment is completed,
using a form that is available from the Pacific Islands Regional
Administrator, and recording all the information specified on the form.
The owner and operator of the vessel must ensure that the transshipment
report is completed and signed within 24 hours of the completion of the
transshipment, and must ensure that the report is submitted as follows:
(1) For vessels licensed under Sec. 300.32, the original
transshipment report is submitted to the address specified by the
Pacific Islands Regional Administrator by the due date specified at
Sec. 300.34(c)(2) for submitting the transshipment logsheet form to
the Administrator as defined at Sec. 300.31.
(2) For vessels registered for use under Sec. 660.707 of this
title, the original transshipment report is submitted to the address
specified by the Pacific Islands Regional Administrator by the due date
specified for the logbook form at Sec. 660.708 of this title.
(3) For vessels subject to the requirements of Sec. 665.14(c) and
Sec. 665.801(e) of this title, and not subject to the requirements of
paragraphs (b)(1) or (b)(2) of this section, the original transshipment
report is submitted to the address specified by the Pacific Islands
Regional Administrator by the due date specified at Sec. 665.14(c) of
this title for submitting transshipment logbooks to the Pacific Islands
Regional Administrator for landings of western Pacific pelagic
management unit species.
(4) For all transshipments on the high seas and emergency
transshipments that meet the conditions described in Sec.
300.216(b)(4), including transshipments involving the categories of
vessels specified in paragraphs (b)(1), (b)(2), and (b)(3) of this
section, the report is submitted by fax or email to the address
specified by the Pacific Islands Regional Administrator no later than
10 calendar days after completion of the transshipment. The report may
be submitted with or without signatures so long as the original
transshipment report with signatures is submitted to the address
specified by the Pacific Islands Regional Administrator no later than
15 calendar days after the vessel first enters into port or 15 calendar
days after completion of the transshipment for emergency transshipments
in port.
(5) For all other transshipments at sea, the original transshipment
report is submitted to the address specified by the Pacific Islands
Regional Administrator no later than 72 hours after the vessel first
enters into port.
(6) For all other transshipments in port, the original
transshipment report is submitted to the address specified by the
Pacific Islands Regional Administrator no later than 72 hours after
completion of the transshipment.
(c) Exceptions to transshipment reporting requirements. Paragraph
(b) of this section shall not apply to a transshipment that takes place
entirely within the territorial seas or archipelagic waters of any
nation, as defined by the domestic laws and regulations of that nation
and recognized by the United States, and only includes fish caught
within such waters.
(d) Transshipment notices--(1) High seas transshipments. The owner
and
[[Page 71512]]
operator of a fishing vessel of the United States used for commercial
fishing that offloads or receives a transshipment of HMS on the high
seas in the Convention Area, or a transshipment of HMS caught in the
Convention Area anywhere on the high seas, and not subject to the
requirements of paragraph (d)(2) of this section, must ensure that a
notice is submitted to the Commission by fax or email at least 36 hours
prior to the start of such transshipment at the address specified by
the Pacific Islands Regional Administrator, and that a copy of that
notice is submitted to NMFS at the address specified by the Pacific
Islands Regional Administrator at least 36 hours prior to the start of
the transshipment. The notice must be reported in the format provided
by the Pacific Islands Regional Administrator and must contain the
following information:
(i) The name of the offloading vessel.
(ii) The vessel identification markings located on the hull or
superstructure of the offloading vessel.
(iii) The name of the receiving vessel.
(iv) The vessel identification markings located on the hull or
superstructure of the receiving vessel.
(v) The expected amount, in metric tons, of fish product to be
transshipped, broken down by species and processed state.
(vi) The expected date or dates of the transshipment.
(vii) The expected location of the transshipment, including
latitude and longitude to the nearest tenth of a degree.
(viii) An indication of which one of the following areas the
expected transshipment location is situated: high seas inside the
Convention Area; high seas outside the Convention Area; or an area
under the jurisdiction of a particular nation, in which case the nation
must be specified.
(ix) The expected amount of HMS to be transshipped, in metric tons,
that was caught in each of the following areas: inside the Convention
Area, on the high seas; outside the Convention Area, on the high seas;
and within areas under the jurisdiction of particular nations, with
each such nation and the associated amount specified. This information
is not required if the reporting vessel is the receiving vessel.
(2) Emergency transshipments. The owner and operator of a fishing
vessel of the United States used for commercial fishing for HMS that
offloads or receives a transshipment of HMS in the Convention Area, or
a transshipment of HMS caught in the Convention Area anywhere, that is
allowed under Sec. 300.216(b)(4) but would otherwise be prohibited
under the regulations in this subpart, must ensure that a notice is
submitted by fax or email to the Commission at the address specified by
the Pacific Islands Regional Administrator, and a copy is submitted to
NMFS at the address specified by the Pacific Islands Regional
Administrator within twelve hours of the completion of the
transshipment. The notice must be reported in the format provided by
the Pacific Islands Regional Administrator and must contain the
following information:
(i) The name of the offloading vessel.
(ii) The vessel identification markings located on the hull or
superstructure of the offloading vessel.
(iii) The name of the receiving vessel.
(iv) The vessel identification markings located on the hull or
superstructure of the receiving vessel.
(v) The expected or actual amount, in metric tons, of fish product
transshipped, broken down by species and processed state.
(vi) The expected or actual date or dates of the transshipment.
(vii) The expected or actual location of the transshipment,
including latitude and longitude to the nearest tenth of a degree.
(viii) An indication of which one of the following areas the
expected or actual transshipment location is situated: High seas inside
the Convention Area; high seas outside the Convention Area; or an area
under the jurisdiction of a particular nation, in which case the nation
must be specified.
(ix) The amount of HMS to be transshipped, in metric tons, that was
caught in each of the following areas: inside the Convention Area, on
the high seas; outside the Convention Area, on the high seas; and
within areas under the jurisdiction of particular nations, with each
such nation and the associated amount specified. This information is
not required if the reporting vessel is the receiving vessel.
(x) The reason or reasons for the emergency transshipment (i.e., a
transshipment conducted under circumstances of force majeure or other
serious mechanical breakdown that could reasonably be expected to
threaten the health or safety of the vessel or crew or cause a
significant financial loss through fish spoilage).
(3) Location of high seas and emergency transshipments. A high seas
or emergency transshipment in the Convention Area or of HMS caught in
the Convention Area anywhere subject to the notification requirements
of paragraph (d)(1) or (d)(2) must take place within 24 nautical miles
of the location for the transshipment indicated in the notice submitted
under paragraph (d)(1)(vii) or (d)(2)(vii) of this section.
(e) Purse seine discard reports. The owner and operator of any
fishing vessel of the United States equipped with purse seine gear must
ensure that a report of any at-sea discards of any bigeye tuna (Thunnus
obesus), yellowfin tuna (Thunnus albacares), or skipjack tuna
(Katsuwonus pelamis) caught in the Convention Area is completed, using
a form that is available from the Pacific Islands Regional
Administrator, and recording all the information specified on the form.
The report must be submitted within 48 hours after any discard to the
Commission by fax or email at the address specified by the Pacific
Islands Regional Administrator. A copy of the report must be submitted
to NMFS at the address specified by the Pacific Islands Regional
Administrator by fax or email within 48 hours after any such discard. A
hard copy of the report must be provided to the observer on board the
vessel, if any.
(f) Net sharing reports--(1) Transferring vessels. The owner and
operator of a fishing vessel of the United States equipped with purse
seine gear that transfers fish to another fishing vessel equipped with
purse seine gear under Sec. 300.216(c) shall ensure that the amount,
by species, of fish transferred, as well as the net sharing activity,
is recorded on the catch report forms maintained pursuant to Sec.
300.34(c)(1), in the format specified by the Pacific Islands Regional
Administrator.
(2) Accepting vessels. The owner and operator of a fishing vessel
of the United States equipped with purse seine gear that accepts fish
from another purse seine fishing vessel under Sec. 300.216(c) shall
ensure that the net sharing activity is recorded on the catch report
forms maintained pursuant to Sec. 300.34(c)(1), in the format
specified by the Pacific Islands Regional Administrator.
0
6. In Sec. 300.222, paragraph (y) is revised and paragraphs (ee),
(ff), (gg), (hh), (ii), (jj), (kk), (ll), (mm) (nn), (oo), (pp), and
(qq) are added to read as follows:
Sec. 300.222 Prohibitions.
* * * * *
(y) Discard fish at sea in the Convention Area in contravention of
Sec. 300.223(d).
* * * * *
(ee) Fail to carry on board a WCPFC observer during a transshipment
at sea, as required in Sec. 300.215(d).
(ff) Offload, receive, or load fish caught in the Convention Area
from a purse seine vessel at sea in contravention of Sec. 300.216.
[[Page 71513]]
(gg) Fail to ensure that a WCPFC observer is on board at least one
of the vessels involved in the transshipment for the duration of the
transshipment in contravention of Sec. 300.216(b)(2)(i), except as
specified at Sec. 300.216(b)(4).
(hh) Receive transshipments from more than one fishing vessel at a
time in contravention of Sec. 300.216(b)(2)(ii), except as specified
at Sec. 300.216(b)(4).
(ii) Transship to or from another vessel, in contravention of Sec.
300.216(b)(3)(i), except as specified at Sec. 300.216(b)(4).
(jj) Provide bunkering, receive bunkering, or exchange supplies or
provisions with another vessel, in contravention of Sec.
300.216(b)(3)(ii).
(kk) Engage in net sharing except as specified under Sec.
300.216(c).
(ll) Fail to submit, or ensure submission of, a transshipment
report as required in Sec. 300.218(b), except as specified under Sec.
300.218(c).
(mm) Fail to submit, or ensure submission of, a transshipment
notice as required in Sec. 300.218(d).
(nn) Transship more than 24 nautical miles from the location
indicated in the transshipment notice, in contravention of Sec.
300.218(d)(3).
(oo) Fail to submit, or ensure submission of, a discard report as
required in Sec. 300.218(e).
(pp) Fail to submit, or ensure submission of, a net sharing report
as required in Sec. 300.218(f).
(qq) Fail to submit, or ensure submission of, an entry or exit
notice for the Eastern High Seas Special Management Area as required in
Sec. 300.225.
0
7. In Sec. 300.223, paragraph (d)(3) introductory text is revised to
read as follows:
Sec. 300.223. Purse seine fishing restrictions.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(3) An owner and operator of a fishing vessel of the United States
equipped with purse seine gear must ensure the retention on board at
all times while at sea within the Convention Area any bigeye tuna
(Thunnus obesus), yellowfin tuna (Thunnus albacares), or skipjack tuna
(Katsuwonus pelamis), except in the following circumstances and with
the following conditions:
* * * * *
0
8. Section 300.225 is added to subpart O to read as follows:
Sec. 300.225 Eastern High Seas Special Management Area.
(a) Entry notices. The owner and operator of a fishing vessel of
the United States used for commercial fishing for HMS must ensure the
submission of a notice to the Commission at the address specified by
the Pacific Islands Regional Administrator by fax or email at least six
hours prior to entering the Eastern High Seas Special Management Area.
The owner or operator must ensure the submission of a copy of the
notice to NMFS at the address specified by the Pacific Islands Regional
Administrator by fax or email at least six hours prior to entering the
Eastern High Seas Special Management Area. The notice must be submitted
in the format specified by the Pacific Island Regional Administrator
and must include the following information:
(1) The vessel identification markings located on the hull or
superstructure of the vessel;
(2) Date and time (in UTC) of anticipated point of entry;
(3) Latitude and longitude, to nearest tenth of a degree, of
anticipated point of entry;
(4) Amount of fish product on board at the time of the notice, in
kilograms, in total and for each of the following species or species
groups: yellowfin tuna, bigeye tuna, albacore, skipjack tuna,
swordfish, shark, other; and
(5) An indication of whether the vessel intends to engage in any
transshipments prior to exiting the Eastern High Seas Special
Management Area.
(b) Exit notices. The owner and operator of a fishing vessel of the
United States used for commercial fishing for HMS must ensure the
submission of a notice to the Commission at the address specified by
the Pacific Islands Regional Administrator by fax or email no later
than six hours prior to exiting the Eastern High Seas Special
Management Area. The owner or operator must ensure the submission of a
copy of the notice to NMFS at the address specified by the Pacific
Islands Regional Administrator by fax or email no later than six hours
prior to exiting the Eastern High Seas Special Management Area. The
notices must be submitted in the format specified by the Pacific Island
Regional Administrator and must include the following information:
(1) The vessel identification markings located on the hull or
superstructure of the vessel.
(2) Date and time (in UTC) of anticipated point of exit.
(3) Latitude and longitude, to nearest tenth of a degree, of
anticipated point of exit.
(4) Amount of fish product on board at the time of the notice, in
kilograms, in total and for each of the following species or species
groups: yellowfin tuna, bigeye tuna, albacore, skipjack tuna,
swordfish, shark, other; and
(5) An indication of whether the vessel has engaged in or will
engage in any transshipments prior to exiting the Eastern High Seas
Special Management Area.
[FR Doc. 2012-29028 Filed 11-29-12; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P