International Fisheries; Western and Central Pacific Fisheries for Highly Migratory Species; Fishing Restrictions and Observer Requirements in Purse Seine Fisheries for 2013-2014, 14755-14762 [2013-05330]
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emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 45 / Thursday, March 7, 2013 / Proposed Rules
(ii) The contracting officer shall
update the Federal Data Procurement
System (FPDS) to reflect OHA’s
decision; and
(iii) The concern must remove its
designation in SAM as an EDWOSB or
WOSB concern eligible under the
WOSB Program, and shall not submit an
offer as an EDWOSB concern or WOSB
concern eligible under the WOSB
Program, until SBA issues a decision
that the ineligibility is resolved or OHA
finds the concern is eligible on appeal.
(j) Appeals of EDWOSB or WOSB
concerns eligible under the WOSB
Program status determinations. (1) The
protested EDWOSB concern or WOSB
concern eligible under the WOSB
program, the protester, or the
contracting officer may file an appeal of
a WOSB or EDWOSB status protest
determination with OHA.
(2) OHA must receive the appeal no
later than 10 business days after the date
of receipt of the protest determination.
SBA will dismiss an untimely appeal.
(3) See subpart G ‘‘Rules of Practice
for Appeals From Women-Owned Small
Business Concerns (WOSB) and
Economically Disadvantaged WOSB
Concern (EDWOSB) Protests’’ at 13 CFR
134.701 through 134.715 for SBA’s
appeals regulations.
(k) The appeal must be in writing. The
appeal must identify the protest
determination being appealed and must
set forth a full and specific statement as
to why the EDWOSB concern or WOSB
concern eligible under the WOSB
program protest determination is alleged
to be based on a clear error of fact or
law, together with an argument
supporting such allegation.
(l) The party appealing the decision
must provide notice of the appeal to—
(1) The contracting officer;
(2) Director, Office of Government
Contracting, U.S. Small Business
Administration, 409 Third Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20416, facsimile 202–
205–6390;
(3) The protested EDWOSB concern or
WOSB concern eligible under the
WOSB program, or the original
protester, as appropriate; and
(4) SBA’s Office of General Counsel,
Associate General Counsel for
Procurement Law, U.S. Small Business
Administration, 409 Third Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20416, facsimile 202–
205–6873, or email at
OPLService@sba.gov.
(m) OHA will make its decision
within 15 business days of the receipt
of the appeal, if practicable. SBA will
provide a copy of the decision to the
contracting officer, the protester, and
the protested EDWOSB concern or
WOSB concern eligible under the
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WOSB program. The OHA decision is
the final agency decision and is binding
on the parties.
19.402
[Amended]
13. Amend section 19.402 by
removing from paragraph (c)(1)(ii) ‘‘the
Woman-Owned’’ and adding ‘‘the
Women-Owned’’ in its place.
■
19.502–2
[Amended]
14. Amend section 19.502–2 by
removing from paragraph (c) ‘‘(see
19.102(f)(4) and (5))’’ and adding ‘‘(see
19.102(f)(6) and (7))’’ in its place.
■
19.508
[Amended]
15. Amend section 19.508 by
removing from paragraph (c) and
paragraph (d) ‘‘(see 19.102(f)(4) and
(5))’’ and adding ‘‘(see 19.102(f)(6) and
(7))’’ in its place.
■
19.703
[Amended]
16. Amend section 19.703 by
removing from paragraph (a)
introductory text and paragraph (a)(1)
‘‘woman-owned small business
concern’’ and adding ‘‘women-owned
small business concern’’ in its place;
and removing from paragraph (b) ‘‘a
woman-owned’’ and adding ‘‘a womenowned’’ in its place.
■
19.811–3
[Amended]
12. Amend section 19.811–3 by
removing from paragraph (d)(2) ‘‘(see
19.102(f)(4) and (5))’’ and adding ‘‘(see
19.102(f)(6) and (7))’’ in its place.
■
[FR Doc. 2013–04995 Filed 3–6–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6820–EP–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 300
[Docket No. 130104011–3011–01]
RIN 0648–BC87
International Fisheries; Western and
Central Pacific Fisheries for Highly
Migratory Species; Fishing
Restrictions and Observer
Requirements in Purse Seine Fisheries
for 2013–2014
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: NMFS proposes regulations
under authority of the Western and
Central Pacific Fisheries Convention
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14755
Implementation Act (WCPFC
Implementation Act) to implement
limits on fishing effort by U.S. purse
seine vessels in the U.S. exclusive
economic zone and on the high seas,
restrictions on the use of fish
aggregating devices (FADs), and
requirements for U.S. purse seine
vessels to carry observers. This action is
necessary for the United States to
implement provisions of a conservation
and management measure (CMM)
adopted by the Commission for the
Conservation and Management of
Highly Migratory Fish Stocks in the
Western and Central Pacific Ocean
(WCPFC) and to satisfy the international
obligations of the United States under
the Convention on the Conservation and
Management of Highly Migratory Fish
Stocks in the Western and Central
Pacific Ocean (Convention), to which it
is a Contracting Party.
DATES: Comments must be submitted in
writing by April 8, 2013.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
on this proposed rule, identified by
NOAA–NMFS–2013–0043, and the
regulatory impact review (RIR) prepared
for this proposed rule, by either of the
following methods:
• Electronic Submission: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to
www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;
D=;NOAA-NMFS-2013-0043, click the
‘‘Comment Now!’’ icon, complete the
required fields, and enter or attach your
comments.
• Mail: Submit written comments to
Michael D. Tosatto, Regional
Administrator, NMFS, Pacific Islands
Regional Office (PIRO), 1601 Kapiolani
Blvd., Suite 1110, Honolulu, HI 96814–
4700.
Instructions: Comments sent by any
other method, to any other address or
individual, or received after the end of
the comment period, might not be
considered by NMFS. All comments
received are a part of the public record
and will generally be posted for public
viewing on www.regulations.gov
without change. All personal identifying
information (e.g., name and address),
confidential business information, or
otherwise sensitive information
submitted voluntarily by the sender will
be publicly accessible. NMFS will
accept anonymous comments (enter ‘‘N/
A’’ in the required fields if you wish to
remain anonymous). Attachments to
electronic comments will be accepted in
Microsoft Word, Excel, or Adobe PDF
file formats only.
An initial regulatory flexibility
analysis (IRFA) prepared under
authority of the Regulatory Flexibility
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 45 / Thursday, March 7, 2013 / Proposed Rules
Act is included in the Classification
section of the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section of this proposed
rule.
Copies of the EA and RIR prepared for
this proposed rule are available from
www.regulations.gov or may be obtained
from Michael D. Tosatto, NMFS PIRO
(see address above).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tom
Graham, NMFS PIRO, 808–944–2219.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background on the Convention and the
WCPFC
The Convention Area comprises the
majority of the western and central
Pacific Ocean (WCPO). A map showing
the boundaries of the Convention Area
can be found on the WCPFC Web site
at: www.wcpfc.int/doc/convention-areamap. The Convention focuses on the
conservation and management of highly
migratory species (HMS) and the
management of fisheries for HMS. The
objective of the Convention is to ensure,
through effective management, the longterm conservation and sustainable use
of HMS in the WCPO.
As a Contracting Party to the
Convention and a Member of the
WCPFC, the United States is obligated
to implement the decisions of the
WCPFC. The WCPFC Implementation
Act (16 U.S.C. 6901 et seq.), 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 Secretary
of Commerce has delegated the
authority to promulgate regulations to
NMFS.
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
WCPFC Decisions Regarding Purse
Seine Fisheries and Description of the
Proposed Action
At its Ninth Regular Session, in
December 2012, the WCPFC adopted
CMM 2012–01, ‘‘Conservation and
Management Measure for Bigeye,
Yellowfin and Skipjack Tuna in the
Western and Central Pacific Ocean.’’
The CMM’s stated general objective is to
ensure that the stocks of bigeye tuna
(Thunnus obesus), yellowfin tuna
(Thunnus albacares), and skipjack tuna
(Katsuwonus pelamis) in the WCPO are,
at a minimum, maintained at levels
capable of producing their maximum
sustainable yield as qualified by
relevant environmental and economic
factors. The CMM includes specific
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objectives for each of the three stocks:
For each, the fishing mortality rate is to
be reduced to or maintained at levels no
greater than the fishing mortality rate
associated with maximum sustainable
yield. The requirements of the CMM,
identified as ‘‘interim’’ measures, are for
calendar year 2013. The CMM also calls
for the WCPFC to establish, at its regular
annual session in December 2013, a
multi-year management program for
2014–2017 for the three stocks.
CMM 2012–01 is the most recent in a
series of CMMs for the management of
tropical tuna stocks under the purview
of the WCPFC. It is a successor to CMM
2011–01, adopted in March 2012 (most
provisions of which were applicable in
2012), and before that CMM 2008–01,
adopted in December 2008 (most
provisions of which were applicable in
2009–2011). These CMMs are available
with other decisions of the WCPFC at
www.wcpfc.int/decisions.htm.
In 2009 NMFS issued regulations to
implement the purse seine-related
provisions of CMM 2008–01 (final rule
published August 4, 2009; 74 FR 38544;
hereafter ‘‘2009 rule’’). In December
2011, after an intersessional decision by
the WCPFC to extend CMM 2008–01,
NMFS issued regulations to extend the
purse seine-related regulations through
December 31, 2012 (interim rule
published December 30, 2011; 76 FR
82180; hereafter ‘‘2011 rule’’). NMFS
did not develop regulations to
implement the purse seine-related
provisions of CMM 2011–01 because the
applicable provisions had already been
effectively implemented in the 2011
rule.
CMM 2012–01 obligates WCPFC
Members, Cooperating Non-members
and Participating Territories
(collectively, CCMs) to implement, for
purse seine vessels, in the Convention
Area between the latitudes of 20° North
and 20° South: (1) Limits on fishing
effort on the high seas and in their
respective exclusive economic zones
(EEZs); (2) restrictions on the use of fish
aggregating devices (FADs), including a
prohibition on setting on FADs during
specified periods; (3) a requirement that
observers be on board during all fishing
trips, with certain exceptions; and (4) a
requirement that all bigeye tuna,
yellowfin tuna, and skipjack tuna be
retained on board up to the point of first
landing or transshipment, with certain
exceptions.
Unlike CMMs 2008–01 and 2011–01,
the provisions of CMM 2012–01 apply
only to areas of high seas and EEZs
within the Convention Area; they do not
apply to territorial seas or archipelagic
waters. Accordingly, the requirements
of this proposed rule would apply only
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in areas of high seas and EEZs, which
was not the case with all the
requirements established in the 2009
rule and 2011 rule.
The ‘‘interim’’ measures of CMM
2012–01 are applicable for 2013. The
CMM also calls for the WCPFC to adopt
a new CMM for bigeye, yellowfin, and
skipjack tuna during its next regular
annual session, in December 2013. The
new CMM would be a multi-year
management program for 2014–2017
that is designed to achieve the
management objectives for the three
stocks that are set out in CMM 2012–01.
Under section 505(a) of the WCPFC
Implementation Act, NMFS is
authorized to promulgate such
regulations as may be necessary to carry
out the Unites States’ international
obligations under the Convention. It is
foreseeable that the new CMM would
include some of the same provisions for
purse seine vessels as those included in
CMM 2012–01. NMFS proposes to
implement this proposed rule for 2014
as well as 2013, as it believes this is the
most effective way to ensure that the
United States satisfies its international
obligations under the Convention for
2014. Implementing this proposed rule
for both 2013 and 2014 would also serve
to provide early public notice that the
regulations would remain the same in
2014 unless the purse seine provisions
of the new CMM differ from those in
CMM 2012–01. Once the WCPFC adopts
a new CMM, NMFS would take any
steps necessary to implement the
WCPFC’s decision(s).
This proposed rule would satisfy the
obligations of the United States under
CMM 2012–01 with respect to U.S.
purse seine vessels. CMM 2012–01 also
includes requirements for longline
vessels, which would be implemented
for U.S. longline vessels in a separate
rulemaking. This proposed rule
includes three elements, corresponding
to the first three of the four purse seinerelated provisions of CMM 2012–01
identified above (i.e., fishing effort
limits, FAD restrictions, and observer
requirements). The fourth purse seinerelated provision of CMM 2012–01—the
catch retention requirement for bigeye
tuna, yellowfin tuna and skipjack
tuna—would not be implemented in
this proposed rule because that
requirement is already in effect for 2013
and 2014 (see final rule issued
December 3, 2012, removing the
December 31, 2012, termination date of
the catch retention provisions; 77 FR
71501). Further information on the three
elements of this proposed rule follows:
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 45 / Thursday, March 7, 2013 / Proposed Rules
(1) Fishing Effort Limits
The proposed rule would establish
limits for each of calendar years 2013
and 2014 on the number of fishing days
that may be used by the U.S. purse seine
fleet in the U.S. EEZ and on the high
seas within the Convention Area
between the latitudes of 20° North and
20° South.
With respect to the U.S. EEZ, CMM
2012–01 requires coastal CCMs to
‘‘establish effort limits or equivalent
catch limits for purse seine fisheries
within their EEZs that reflect the
geographical distributions of skipjack,
yellowfin, and bigeye tunas, and are
consistent with the objectives for those
species.’’ With respect to the high seas,
CMM 2012–01 requires CCMs to ‘‘take
measures not to increase fishing days on
high seas.’’ For the purpose of these
limits, and in order to provide
continued operational flexibility for
affected purse seine vessels, the high
seas and U.S. EEZ within the
Convention Area would be combined
into a single area—called the Effort
Limit Area for Purse Seine, or ELAPS,
as similarly done in the 2009 rule and
2011 rule.
The limit in the ELAPS would apply
on a calendar-year basis, in each of 2013
and 2014. The limit for each year would
be 2,588 fishing days. This is the same
rate at which fishing effort was limited
in the 2009 rule for the years 2009–
2011, and extended by interim final rule
for the year 2012. The limiting fishing
rate of 2,588 fishing days per year was
based on fishing effort by the U.S. purse
seine fleet in the reference year of 2004,
as specified in CMM 2008–01, and the
size of the fleet at that time as compared
to the number of U.S. vessels allowed to
be licensed under the Treaty on
Fisheries between the Governments of
Certain Pacific Islands States and the
Government of the United States of
America (aka South Pacific Tuna Treaty,
or SPTT). The limits in 2009–2012 were
implemented as overlapping multi-year
limits, with a limit of 3,882 fishing days
in each year, a limit of 6,470 fishing
days in each two-year period, and a
limit of 7,764 fishing days (i.e., three
times the base rate of 2,588 fishing days
per year) for each three-year period. The
three-year limits were for the purpose of
constraining fishing effort within the
WCPFC-mandated limits, while the oneand two-year limits were aimed at
avoiding unduly long closed periods.
Further details on the basis for the
limits established in the 2009 rule are
available in that final rule and the
proposed rule that led to it (published
June 1, 2009; 74 FR 26160). Because the
provisions of CMM 2012–01 are for a
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one-year period and because
modifications to the effort limits
established in this proposed rule might
be needed if the WCPFC adopts a new
CMM at the end of 2013, the fishing
effort limits in this proposed rule are
annual limits.
(2) FAD Restrictions
CMM 2012–01 requires CCMs to
prohibit their purse seine vessels from
setting on FADs in EEZs and on the high
seas in the Convention Area between
the latitudes of 20° North and 20° South
from July 1 through September 30. The
CMM further requires CCMs to either
prohibit setting on FADs in October or
limit the total number of FAD sets in the
calendar year by the CCM’s purse seine
fleet to two-thirds of the fleet’s average
annual number in the 2001–2011
period, as specified in Attachment A of
CMM 2012–01 (for a CCM that is a
Small Island Developing State, the total
annual limit on FAD sets would be
eight-ninths of its fleet’s 2009–2012
annual average). For the U.S. purse
seine fleet, the calendar-year limit
would be 1,464 FAD sets. Assuming that
fishing patterns in 2013 would be
similar to those in recent years, and
because the limit-year would start
January 1, the 2013 limit of 1,464 FAD
sets would be expected to be reached as
early as April 2013. It is infeasible for
NMFS to complete the rulemaking
process that would be necessary to
establish the limit and the legal
mechanism to prohibit further FAD sets
once the limit is reached before April,
the date the fleet would likely reach the
FAD set limit. Furthermore, NMFS finds
that it would not be feasible to establish
by that time the mechanism needed to
monitor FAD sets with respect to the
limit and to reliably project when the
limit is likely to be reached so that
further FAD sets can be prohibited in a
timely manner. For example, a system
would have to be established for rapidly
processing data collected from vessel
observers and/or masters and for using
those data to project future levels of
FAD sets in advance of actually
reaching the limit. Thus, the option of
limiting the annual number of FAD sets
would likely result in the mandated
limit for 2013 being exceeded, and the
United States would have failed to
satisfy its international obligations with
respect to the purse seine provisions of
CMM 2012–01. Because the option of
limiting the number of annual FAD sets
would be infeasible to implement, and
the United States would consequently
fail to satisfy its international
obligations under the Convention, this
option is not considered in detail. Thus,
this proposed rule would implement the
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first of the two options: an additional
month, in October, of the FAD closure
period. Again, this would be in addition
to the three-month FAD prohibition
period of July–September.
This proposed rule would maintain
many of the same specific FAD-related
restrictions during the FAD prohibition
periods as those established in the 2009
rule, but to ensure the full effect to the
prohibition on FAD setting during the
FAD prohibition periods, the definition
of FAD would be modified, a new
prohibition would be added, and
another prohibition would be modified
to clarify already prohibited activities.
The 2009 rule defined a FAD to mean
any artificial or natural floating object,
whether anchored or not and whether
situated at the water surface or not, that
is capable of aggregating fish, as well as
any objects used for that purpose that
are situated on board a vessel or
otherwise out of the water (see 74 FR
38544). The definition of FAD also
specified that it did not include a
fishing vessel, provided that the fishing
vessel was not used for the purpose of
aggregating fish. The 2009 rule included
the following prohibitions during the
FAD prohibition periods: (1) Setting a
purse seine around a FAD or within one
nautical mile of a FAD; (2) setting a
purse seine in a manner intended to
capture fish that have aggregated in
association with a FAD, such as by
setting the purse seine in an area from
which a FAD has been moved or
removed within the previous eight
hours, or setting the purse seine in an
area in which a FAD has been inspected
or handled within the previous eight
hours, or setting the purse seine in an
area into which fish were drawn by a
vessel from the vicinity of a FAD; (3)
deploying a FAD into the water; and (4)
repairing, cleaning, maintaining, or
otherwise servicing a FAD, including
any electronic equipment used in
association with a FAD, in the water or
on a vessel while at sea. The fourth
prohibition, regarding the servicing of
FADs, had the following exceptions: (a)
A FAD could be inspected and handled
as needed to identify the owner of the
FAD, identify and release incidentally
captured animals, un-foul fishing gear,
or prevent damage to property or risk to
human safety; and (b) a FAD could be
removed from the water and if removed
may be cleaned, provided that it is not
returned to the water.
This proposed rule would change the
definition of a FAD and the specific
prohibitions established in the 2009 rule
in two main respects. First, the
regulatory text would emphasize that
setting on fish that have aggregated in
association with a vessel when a vessel
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has used lights to aggregate, move or
hold fish is prohibited during the FAD
prohibition period. Setting in such a
manner was already prohibited under
the 2009 rule, as it was prohibited to set
on fish aggregated in association with a
vessel if the vessel was used to aggregate
fish. This proposed rule would amplify
that prohibition by explicitly
prohibiting the use of lights in specific
manners that are known to be used to
aggregate fish. These prohibitions would
include submerging lights under water
from, or suspending or hanging lights
over the side of, a purse seine vessel or
associated skiffs, other watercraft or
equipment; and directing lights into the
water or using lights in a manner other
than as needed to illuminate the deck of
the purse seine vessel or associated
skiffs, other watercraft or equipment, to
comply with navigational requirements,
and to ensure the health and safety of
the crew. These light-related
prohibitions would not apply in specific
emergency situations. Second, the
prohibitions would be expanded to
address the fish aggregating properties
of fishing vessels. Like other floating
objects, fishing vessels tend to aggregate
fish. In order to give better effect to
CMM 2012–01’s aim of eliminating
fishing on schools associated with
floating objects during specified months
of the year, during the FAD prohibition
period this proposed rule would
prohibit setting a purse seine in a
manner intended to capture fish that
have aggregated in association with a
vessel. For example, it would be
prohibited to set a purse seine in an area
from which a vessel has been moved or
removed within the previous eight
hours, or to set a purse seine in an area
into which fish were drawn by a vessel
from the vicinity of a vessel. Thus,
vessels would be treated like FADs with
respect to some of the prohibited
activities. But since vessels would not
be treated like FADs with respect to the
prohibitions on deploying and servicing
FADs, the definition of FAD would not
include vessels. A FAD would be
defined to mean any artificial or natural
floating object, whether anchored or not
and whether situated at the water
surface or not, that is capable of
aggregating fish, as well as any object
used for that purpose that is situated on
board a vessel or otherwise out of the
water, but not including a vessel.
(3) Observer Requirements
CMM 2012–01 includes two observer
provisions applicable to purse seine
vessels. The first calls for each flag CCM
to require that its purse seine vessels
fishing in the Convention Area between
the latitudes of 20° North and 20° South
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carry observers authorized under the
WCPFC Regional Observer Programme
(hereafter ‘‘WCPFC observers’’). This
applies to vessels fishing on the high
seas, on the high seas and in waters
under the jurisdiction of at least one
coastal State, or in waters under the
jurisdiction of at least two coastal
States. In other words, it does not apply
to vessels fishing exclusively within the
jurisdiction of a single coastal State. The
CMM’s second observer provision calls
for each coastal CCM to require that all
purse seine vessels—that is, purse seine
vessels of any flag—fishing in the
Convention Area between the latitudes
of 20° North and 20° South solely
within the jurisdiction of the coastal
CCM carry an observer (not necessarily
a WCPFC observer).
The first of these two observer
provisions was included in similar form
in CMM 2008–01 and implemented in
the 2009 rule. It would be implemented
in a similar fashion in this proposed
rule, with one notable difference. The
2009 rule included an exception for
fishing trips for which the NMFS Pacific
Islands Regional Administrator has
determined that a WCPFC observer is
not available, provided that written
documentation of such determination is
carried on board the vessel during the
entirety of the fishing trip. This
exception was included in that rule
because at that time it was not clear
whether the observer programs in the
region would be able to provide
observers on all the required fishing
trips made by U.S. purse seine vessels.
Given that the Pacific Islands Forum
Fisheries Agency observer program has
deployed observers on all fishing trips
by the U.S. WCPO purse seine fleet for
more than three years, NMFS no longer
believes that this exception is needed,
and it is not included in this proposed
rule.
CMM 2012–01’s second provision,
which is an obligation of coastal States
with respect to waters under their
jurisdiction, was not included in CMM
2008–01 and thus not included in the
2009 rule. Currently, no foreign purse
seine fishing vessels are authorized to
fish in the U.S. EEZ in the Convention
Area, and no such authorizations are
foreseeable during the duration of this
proposed rule. Should a foreign vessel
be authorized to fish in the U.S. EEZ, a
requirement that the vessel carry an
observer could be included as one of the
terms of that authorization. Therefore,
NMFS does not see any need to include
a requirement in this proposed rule that
foreign purse seine vessels that fish in
the U.S. EEZ must carry observers, and
this proposed rule does not include
such a requirement. Thus, the CMM’s
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second observer provision would be
implemented only for U.S. purse seine
vessels. Unlike the CMM’s first observer
provision, the second provision does
not specify that the required observers
must be WCPFC observers. However,
NMFS has identified only two observer
programs that would be used as sources
of observers to satisfy this
requirement—the Pacific Islands Forum
Fisheries Agency observer program and
the NMFS observer program. Currently,
both these programs are authorized by
the WCPFC as part of its Regional
Observer Programme, so observers
deployed by these two programs are
WCPFC observers. Thus, this proposed
rule would require that WCPFC
observers be carried by U.S. purse seine
vessels when fishing solely within the
U.S. EEZ.
As described above, this proposed
rule would not require U.S. purse seine
vessels to carry observers when fishing
exclusively in water under the
jurisdiction of a single foreign nation.
However, in that situation, the foreign
nation might have its own observer
requirements that apply to the U.S.
vessel. Furthermore, U.S. regulations at
50 CFR 300.214 require that if a U.S.
fishing vessel with a WCPFC Area
Endorsement or for which a WCPFC
Area Endorsement is required is used
for fishing for HMS in the Convention
Area in areas under the jurisdiction of
a CCM other than the United States, the
owner and operator of the vessel must
ensure that the vessel is operated in
compliance with the applicable laws of
such CCM, including any laws related to
carrying observers.
Summary of Proposed Action
(1) Fishing Effort Limits
This proposed rule would establish
for U.S. purse seine vessels a limit of
2,588 fishing days for each of 2013 and
2014, applicable in the ELAPS, which
would be defined to include all areas of
high seas and the U.S. EEZ within the
Convention Area between the latitudes
of 20° North and 20° South, and would
not include the territorial sea as in the
2009 rule and 2011 rule. Once NMFS
determines during either of those years
that, based on available information, the
applicable limit is expected to be
reached by a specific future date, NMFS
would issue a notice announcing the
closure of the U.S. purse seine fishery
in the ELAPS starting on that specific
future date. Upon such closure, it would
be prohibited to use a U.S. purse seine
vessel to fish in the ELAPS through the
end of the calendar year. NMFS would
publish the notice at least seven
calendar days before the effective date
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of the closure to provide fishermen
advance notice of the closure.
(2) FAD Restrictions
This proposed rule would establish
FAD prohibition periods from July 1
through October 31 in 2013 and in 2014,
during which it would be prohibited for
U.S. fishing vessels to set purse seines
on FADs or to engage in specific other
FAD-related activities in the Convention
Area between the latitudes of 20° North
and 20° South.
(3) Observer Requirements
This proposed rule would require that
U.S. purse seine vessels carry WCPFC
observers on all fishing trips in the
Convention Area, except fishing trips
that occur entirely outside the area
bounded by 20° North and 20° South
latitude or entirely within waters of
single foreign nation.
In addition to establishing the three
sets of requirements described above,
this proposed rule would revise
paragraph (c) of 50 CFR 300.223, which
relates to areas closed to purse seine
fishing. The requirements in that
paragraph, which implemented the
purse seine closed area provisions of
CMM 2008–01, expired December 31,
2012. Under this proposed rule the
contents of that paragraph would be
removed and the paragraph would be
reserved. Because the requirements in
that paragraph have expired, this
revision is merely of a housekeeping
nature.
Classification
The Administrator, Pacific Islands
Region, NMFS, has determined that this
proposed rule is consistent with the
WCPFC Implementation Act and other
applicable laws, subject to further
consideration after public comment.
Executive Order 12866
This proposed rule has been
determined to be not significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
An initial regulatory flexibility
analysis (IRFA) was prepared, as
required by section 603 of the RFA. The
IRFA describes the economic impact
this proposed rule, if adopted, would
have on small entities. A description of
the action, why it is being considered,
and the legal basis for this action are
contained in the SUMMARY section of the
preamble and in other sections of this
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
the preamble. The analysis follows:
There would be no disproportionate
economic impacts between small and
large entities operating vessels as a
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result of this proposed rule.
Furthermore, there would be no
disproportionate economic impacts
based on vessel size, gear, or homeport.
Estimated Number of Small Entities
Affected
The proposed rule would apply to
owners and operators of U.S. purse
seine vessels used for fishing in the
Convention Area. The number of
affected vessels is the number licensed
under the SPTT. The current number of
licensed vessels is 40, which is the
maximum number of licenses available
under the SPTT (excluding joint-venture
licenses, of which there are five
available under the SPTT, none of
which have ever been applied for or
issued). Based on limited financial
information available on the purse seine
fleet, including the fleet’s total landings
in 2010 and average cannery prices for
tuna species in that year, most or all of
the businesses that operate vessels in
the fleet 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 (i.e., 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), so the purse seine fleet is
included in this analysis.
Recordkeeping, Reporting, and Other
Compliance Requirements
The proposed rule would not
establish any new reporting or
recordkeeping requirements (within the
meaning of the Paperwork Reduction
Act). Affected vessel owners and
operators would have to comply with all
the proposed requirements, as described
earlier in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section of the preamble.
Fulfillment of these requirements is not
expected to require any professional
skills that the affected vessel owners
and operators do not already possess.
The costs of complying with the
proposed requirements are described
below to the extent possible for each of
the three elements of the proposed rule:
(1) Fishing Effort Limits: If and when
the fishery in the U.S. EEZ and on the
high seas (i.e., in the ELAPS) is closed
as a result of the established annual
effort limit being reached in either of
2013 or 2014, owners and operators of
purse seine vessels would have to cease
fishing in that area for the remainder of
the calendar year. Closure of the fishery
in the ELAPS could cause foregone
fishing opportunities and associated
economic losses if the ELAPS contains
preferred fishing grounds during such a
closure. The likelihood of the fishery
PO 00000
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
14759
being closed in the ELAPS in either of
the two years and the economic losses
a closure would bring cannot be
estimated with certainty. Recent fishing
patterns (2005 through 2010) suggest a
fairly low likelihood of the fishery being
closed in the ELAPS. Among the six
years in that period, there was only one
year, 2005, in which the fleet
(extrapolated to a hypothetical 40-vessel
fleet, the expected fleet size for the
foreseeable future) spent 2,588 fishing
days in the ELAPS (in 2005, the 15vessel fleet spent 985 fishing days in the
ELAPS, equivalent to 40 vessels
spending 2,628 fishing days). Thus, the
likelihood of the limit being reached
appears to be fairly low, and the
duration of any closure would likely be
relatively brief. However, there is
considerable inter-annual variation in
the fleet’s spatial distribution of fishing
effort, influenced to some extent by
oceanic conditions associated with El
˜
Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO)
patterns. The eastern areas of the WCPO
have tended to be comparatively more
˜
attractive to the fleet during El Nino
events, when warm water spreads from
the western Pacific to the eastern Pacific
and large, valuable yellowfin tuna
become more vulnerable to purse seine
fishing. Consequently, the U.S. EEZ and
portions of the high seas within the
Convention Area are likely to be more
important fishing grounds to the fleet
˜
during El Nino events (as compared to
˜
neutral or La Nina events).
The ELAPS constitutes a relatively
small portion of the WCPO fishing
grounds available to, and typically used
by, the U.S. purse seine fleet.
Unpublished NMFS data indicate that,
on average, during 1997 through 2010,
annual fishing effort in the ELAPS, in
terms of vessel-days fished, made up
about 27 percent of the fleet’s annual
total. The percentages among those
years ranged from 6 to 40. In the event
of a closure, affected vessels could
continue to fish in the Convention Area
in foreign EEZs, to the extent
authorized. Given that foreign EEZs in
the Convention Area have collectively
received the majority of the U.S. purse
seine fleet’s fishing effort (60 to 94
percent in the years 1997–2010), the
costs associated with being limited to
such areas for what would likely be a
relatively small portion of the year
would likely not be substantial.
Nonetheless, the closure of any fishing
grounds for any amount of time would
be expected to bring costs to affected
entities (e.g., because revenues per unit
of fishing effort in the open area might,
during the closed period, be lower than
in the closed area, and vessels might use
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more fuel and spend more time having
to travel to open areas). As indicated in
the preceding paragraph, the magnitude
of the losses would depend on where
the best fishing grounds are during the
closed period, which would likely be
dependent in part on ENSO-related
conditions. If the ELAPS is a preferred
fishing ground during the closure, then
the losses would be accordingly greater
than if the ELAPS is not preferred
relative to other fishing grounds.
The effort limit could also affect the
temporal distribution of fishing effort in
the U.S. purse seine fishery. Given that
the limit would be competitive—that is,
not allocated among individual
vessels—vessel operators might have an
incentive to fish harder in the affected
area earlier in a given year than they
otherwise would. A race-to-fish effect
might also be expected in the time
period between when a closure of the
fishery is announced and when it is
actually closed, which would be at least
seven calendar days. To the extent such
shifts occur, they could affect the
seasonal timing of fish catches and
deliveries to canneries. If deliveries
from the fleet were substantially
concentrated early in the year, it could
adversely affect prices during that
period. However, as discussed in the
preceding paragraphs, the majority of
fishing effort is expected to occur
outside the area subject to the proposed
limit, so the intensity of any race-to-fish
is likely to be low if it occurs at all, and
the timing of catches and deliveries
would likely not be appreciably
impacted. Furthermore, the timing of
cannery deliveries by the U.S. fleet
alone is unlikely to have an appreciable
impact on prices, since many canneries
buy from the fleets of multiple nations.
A race to fish could bring costs to
affected entities if it causes vessel
operators to forego vessel maintenance
or to fish in weather or ocean conditions
that it otherwise would not. This could
bring costs in terms of the health and
safety of the crew, as well as the
economic performance of the vessel. For
the reasons stated above, any such costs
are expected to be minor. In addition,
there is no evidence that economies of
scale would favor larger vessels or
businesses over smaller ones, or vice
versa, if the fleet’s fishing effort is
constrained by these limits.
(2) FAD Restrictions: The prohibitions
on setting on FADs and on fish
aggregating in association with fishing
vessels (collectively called ‘‘FAD
restrictions’’) in July through October in
each of 2013 and 2014 would
substantially constrain the manner in
which purse seine fishing could be
conducted during those periods. The
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costs associated with these constraints
cannot be quantitatively estimated, but
the fleet’s historical use of FADs can
help give a qualitative indication of the
costs. The data on FAD sets presented
below do not include sets made on fish
aggregating in association with fishing
vessels, but the number of the latter type
of sets is small. According to logbooks
maintained by vessel operators, sets on
fish aggregating in association with
vessels averaged about four per year for
the entire fleet from 1997 through 2010
(examination by NMFS of observer data
from selected years indicates a
somewhat higher number than the
number reported by vessel operators, so
vessel logbook data might underestimate
the actual number, but the number is
still small in comparison to FAD sets).
Thus, the data on FAD sets provide
useful indicators of the fleet’s historical
fishing patterns with respect to the
broader types of sets that would be
prohibited under the proposed rule. In
the years 1997–2010, the proportion of
sets made on FADs in the U.S. purse
seine fishery ranged from less than 30
percent in some years to more than 90
percent in others. The importance of
FAD sets in terms of vessel revenues,
and in turn profits, appears to be quite
variable over time, and is probably a
function of many factors, including fuel
prices (e.g., unassociated sets involve
more searching time and thus tend to
bring higher fuel costs than FAD sets)
and market conditions (e.g., FAD
fishing, which tends to result in greater
catches of lower-value skipjack tuna and
smaller yellowfin tuna and bigeye tuna
than unassociated sets, might be more
attractive and profitable when canneries
are not rejecting small fish). Thus, the
costs of complying with the FAD
restrictions would depend on a variety
of factors. The fleet’s experience during
2009–2012, when two- and three-month
FAD prohibition periods were in place,
should give an indication of what would
be expected to occur under the
proposed four-month FAD prohibition
periods. The numbers of FAD sets
during the prohibition periods were
close to zero, but the number of FAD
sets across each of the four entire years
appears not to have been strongly
impacted. That impact is difficult to
evaluate in part because there is so
much inter-annual variability in the use
of FADs. The proportions of all sets that
were made on FADs in 2009 and 2010
were lower than the average over the
previous 12 years (2010 is the last year
for which complete data on set types are
available). The proportion in 2009 was
within the historical range, while that in
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Frm 00044
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
2010 was the lowest during the entire
period.
Although it is not possible to
quantitatively estimate the costs that
affected entities would bear as a result
of the FAD prohibition periods, the fact
that the fleet has made a relatively large
portion of its sets on FADs suggests that
prohibiting the use of FADs for four
months each year may bring substantial
costs and/or revenue losses. To help
mitigate those costs, vessel operators
might choose to schedule their routine
vessel maintenance during the FAD
prohibition periods. It also is
conceivable that some might choose not
to fish at all during the prohibition
periods rather than fish without the use
of FADs. Observations of the fleet’s
behavior in 2009–2012 do not suggest
that either of these responses occurred
to an appreciable degree. The
proportion of the fleet that fished during
the two- and three-month FAD
prohibition periods of 2009–2012 did
not appreciably differ from the
proportion that fished during the same
months in the years 1997–2008, when
no FAD prohibition periods were in
place.
(3) Observer Requirements: The
requirement to carry a WCPFC observer
on all fishing trips in the Convention
Area between the latitudes of 20° North
and 20° South would not bring any
compliance costs to affected entities that
are not already being borne under
existing requirements. Under
regulations at 50 CFR 300.215, U.S.
fishing vessels with WCPFC Area
Endorsements (which all vessels in the
WCPO U.S. purse seine fleet currently
have and are expected to continue to
have) must carry a WCPFC observer
whenever directed to do so by NMFS.
Under that authority, NMFS has
directed all U.S. purse seine fishing
vessels to carry WCPFC observers on all
fishing trips in the Convention Area;
this directive is in effect from January 1
through December 31, 2013. The
proposed observer requirements differ
from those already in effect under 50
CFR 300.215 in that the latter apply to
all fishing trips in the Convention Area
while this proposed rule exempts
fishing trips that take place exclusively
within areas under the jurisdiction of a
single foreign nation or exclusively
outside the area bounded by 20° North
and 20° South latitude. The proposed
requirements are therefore slightly less
constraining than the existing
requirements (but in practice few trips
in either of the two exemption
categories are expected to be taken).
Thus, the observer requirements in this
proposed rule would not bring any costs
over and above those already incurred
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under existing requirements. A similar
requirement to carry WCPFC observers
on all fishing trips in the Convention
Area, with specific exceptions, was also
established in the 2009 rule. That
requirement expired December 31, 2012.
In the IRFA and final regulatory
flexibility analysis (FRFA) prepared for
the 2009 rule, the cost to purse seine
vessels of having to carry a WCPFC
observer on every fishing trip in the
Convention Area (i.e., to carry a WCPFC
observer on the 80 percent of trips that
would be required over the 20-percent
coverage already required under the
SPTT, as discussed below) was
estimated to be up to about $31,300 to
$39,100 per vessel per year (in 2009
dollars).
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Duplicating, Overlapping, and
Conflicting Federal Regulations
NMFS has not identified any Federal
regulations that duplicate, overlap with,
or conflict with the proposed
regulations, with the exception of the
proposed observer requirements. As
noted above, under regulations at 50
CFR 300.215, issued under authority of
the WCPFC Implementation Act, U.S.
fishing vessels with WCPFC Area
Endorsements are required to carry
WCPFC observers when directed to do
so by NMFS. Additionally, U.S. purse
seine vessels are subject to observer
requirements under authority of the
South Pacific Tuna Act of 1988 (SPTA;
16 U.S.C. 973–973r), at 50 CFR 300.43.
These regulations require that operators
and crew members of vessels operating
pursuant to the SPTT allow and assist
any person identified as an observer by
the Pacific Island Parties to the SPTT to
board the vessel and conduct and
perform specified observer functions.
Under the terms of the SPTT, U.S. purse
seine vessels carry such observers on
approximately 20 percent of their trips.
The proposed observer requirement
would overlap with the existing
regulations at 50 CFR 300.215 in that
carrying an observer during a given
fishing trip under either requirement
would satisfy the other requirement if it
applies to that fishing trip. Similarly,
the proposed requirement would
overlap with the existing regulations at
50 CFR 300.43 in that carrying an
observer under the latter regulation
would satisfy the proposed requirement.
The proposed requirement would not
duplicate (e.g., the overlapping observer
requirements would not result in a
vessel having to carry two observers on
a fishing trip) or conflict with existing
regulations.
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Alternatives to the Proposed Rule
NMFS has identified and considered
several alternatives to the proposed rule,
in addition to the no-action alternative.
The action alternatives are limited to the
ways in which the fishing effort limits
and the FAD restrictions would be
implemented; no alternatives other than
the no-action alternative were identified
for the observer requirements in the
proposed rule.
(1) Fishing Effort Limits: NMFS has
considered in depth two alternatives to
the proposed fleet-wide limit of 2,588
fishing days per year in the ELAPS. One
alternative would be more restrictive,
with separate fleet-wide annual limits in
the U.S. EEZ and the high seas in the
Convention Area. The limits would be
based on the respective levels of the
fleet’s fishing effort in those two areas
in 2010, which were the lowest levels of
fishing effort on a per-vessel basis from
1997 through 2010 (this time period was
used to maintain consistency with the
approach used to calculate the similar
limits for the 2009 rule). The limits
would be 27 fishing days per year in the
U.S. EEZ and 433 fishing days per year
on the high seas. These limits would be
much more constraining than the
proposed limits, and their separation
into two areas would provide less
operational flexibility for affected purse
seine vessels. Thus, these alternative
limits would be substantially more
constraining and thus more costly than
the proposed limits, and this alternative
is not preferred for that reason. The
second alternative would be less
restrictive than the limits proposed in
the rule. The high seas and the U.S. EEZ
would be combined for the purpose of
the limit, and the limit would be the
sum of the fleet’s respective greatest
annual levels of fishing effort in each of
the two areas (on an average per-vessel
basis, then expanded to a 40-vesselequivalent) during the 1997–2010 time
period. The limit would be 3,943 fishing
days per year in the ELAPS. Because
this alternative limit is greater and thus
less constraining than the proposed
limit, the costs of complying with this
alternative would be less than or equal
to those of the proposed limits. This
alternative is not preferred because it
would depart from the effort limits
established for the period 2009–2012.
The limits proposed in this rule are
consistent with the precedent set by the
2009 rule, and affected entities have
already been exposed to the impacts of
these limits for the past four years. In
the RFA analysis for the 2009 rule,
NMFS considered an alternative that
would allocate the fishing effort limits
among individual purse seine vessels in
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
14761
some manner. Given the complexity of
setting up such an allocation scheme,
which would require consideration of
such things as which entities are to
receive allocations, the criteria for
making allocations, and whether and
how the allocations would be
transferable, as well as a mechanism to
reliably monitor the fishing effort of the
individual entities, NMFS does not
believe it feasible to develop such an
allocation scheme for this proposed
rule, and thus has not considered it in
depth. NMFS notes, however, that as
found in the RFA analysis for the 2009
rule, such an alternative would likely
alleviate any adverse impacts of the
race-to-fish that might occur as a result
of establishing the competitive fishing
effort limits as in the proposed rule.
Those impacts, however, are expected to
be minor. The alternative of taking no
action at all is not preferred because it
would fail to accomplish the objective
of the WCPFC Implementation Act or
satisfy the international obligations of
the United States as a Contracting Party
to the Convention.
(2) FAD Restrictions: NMFS has
considered one alternative to the
proposed FAD restrictions. This
alternative would be the same as the
proposed restrictions except that it
would not be prohibited to set on fish
that have aggregated in association with
a vessel (provided that the vessel is not
used in a manner to aggregate fish). This
would be less restrictive and thus
presumably less costly to affected purse
seine fishing businesses than the
proposed requirements. The number of
such sets made historically has been
relatively small, averaging about four
per year for the entire fleet from 1997
through 2010, according to data
recorded by vessel operators in logbooks
(examination by NMFS of observer data
from selected years indicates a
somewhat higher number than the
number reported by vessel operators, so
vessel logbook data might underestimate
the actual number, but the number is
still small in comparison to FAD sets).
Therefore, the degree of relief in
compliance costs of allowing such sets
for four months each year would be
expected to be relatively small. NMFS
believes that this alternative would not
serve CMM 2012–01’s objective of
reducing the fishing mortality rates of
bigeye tuna and young tunas through
seasonal prohibitions on the use of
FADs as well as would the proposed
rule. For that reason, this alternative is
not preferred. The alternative of taking
no action at all is not preferred because
it would fail to accomplish the objective
of the WCPFC Implementation Act or
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 45 / Thursday, March 7, 2013 / Proposed Rules
satisfy the international obligations of
the United States as a Contracting Party
to the Convention.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 300
Administrative practice and
procedure, Fish, Fisheries, Fishing,
Marine resources, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Treaties.
Dated: March 4, 2013.
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, 50 CFR part 300 is proposed
to be amended as follows:
PART 300—INTERNATIONAL
FISHERIES REGULATIONS
1. The authority citation for 50 CFR
part 300, subpart O, continues to read as
follows:
■
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 6901 et seq.
2. In § 300.211, the definitions of
‘‘Effort Limit Area for Purse Seine or
ELAPS’’, and ‘‘Fish aggregating device’’,
or ‘‘FAD’’, are revised to read as follows:
■
§ 300.211
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
Effort Limit Area for Purse Seine, or
ELAPS, means, within the area between
20° N. latitude and 20° S. latitude, areas
within the Convention Area that either
are high seas or within the EEZ.
Fish aggregating device, or FAD,
means any artificial or natural floating
object, whether anchored or not and
whether situated at the water surface or
not, that is capable of aggregating fish,
as well as any object used for that
purpose that is situated on board a
vessel or otherwise out of the water. The
definition of FAD does not include a
vessel.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. In § 300.223, introductory text to
the section, paragraph (a) introductory
text and paragraph (a)(1), paragraphs (b)
and (c), and paragraph (e) introductory
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
*
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text and paragraphs (e)(1) and (e)(2) are
revised to read as follows:
§ 300.223
Purse seine fishing restrictions.
None of the requirements of this
section apply in the territorial seas or
archipelagic waters of the United States
or any other nation, as defined by the
domestic laws and regulations of that
nation and recognized by the United
States. All dates used in this section are
in Universal Coordinated Time, also
known as UTC; for example: the year
2013 starts at 00:00 on January 1, 2013
UTC and ends at 24:00 on December 31,
2013 UTC; and July 1, 2013, begins at
00:00 UTC and ends at 24:00 UTC.
(a) Fishing effort limits. This
paragraph establishes limits on the
number of fishing days that fishing
vessels of the United States equipped
with purse seine gear may collectively
spend in the ELAPS.
(1) For each of the calendar years
2013 and 2014 there is a limit of 2,588
fishing days.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Use of fish aggregating devices.
From July 1 through October 31, 2013,
and from July 1 through October 31,
2014, owners, operators, and crew of
fishing vessels of the United States shall
not do any of the activities described
below in the Convention Area in the
area between 20° N. latitude and 20° S.
latitude:
(1) Set a purse seine around a FAD or
within one nautical mile of a FAD.
(2) Set a purse seine in a manner
intended to capture fish that have
aggregated in association with a FAD or
a vessel, such as by setting the purse
seine in an area from which a FAD or
a vessel has been moved or removed
within the previous eight hours, or
setting the purse seine in an area in
which a FAD has been inspected or
handled within the previous eight
hours, or setting the purse seine in an
area into which fish were drawn by a
vessel from the vicinity of a FAD or a
vessel.
(3) Deploy a FAD into the water.
(4) Repair, clean, maintain, or
otherwise service a FAD, including any
PO 00000
Frm 00046
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 9990
electronic equipment used in
association with a FAD, in the water or
on a vessel while at sea, except that:
(i) A FAD may be inspected and
handled as needed to identify the FAD,
identify and release incidentally
captured animals, un-foul fishing gear,
or prevent damage to property or risk to
human safety; and
(ii) A FAD may be removed from the
water and if removed may be cleaned,
provided that it is not returned to the
water.
(5) From a purse seine vessel or any
associated skiffs, other watercraft or
equipment, do any of the following,
except in emergencies as needed to
prevent human injury or the loss of
human life, the loss of the purse seine
vessel, skiffs, watercraft or aircraft, or
environmental damage:
(i) Submerge lights under water;
(ii) Suspend or hang lights over the
side of the purse seine vessel, skiff,
watercraft or equipment, or;
(iii) Direct or use lights in a manner
other than as needed to illuminate the
deck of the purse seine vessel or
associated skiffs, watercraft or
equipment, to comply with navigational
requirements, and to ensure the health
and safety of the crew.
(c) Closed areas. [Reserved]
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Observer coverage. Until 24:00
UTC on December 31, 2014, a fishing
vessel of the United States may not be
used to fish with purse seine gear in the
Convention Area without a WCPFC
observer on board. This requirement
does not apply to fishing trips that meet
either of the following conditions:
(1) The portion of the fishing trip
within the Convention Area takes place
entirely within areas under jurisdiction
of a single nation other than the United
States.
(2) No fishing takes place during the
fishing trip in the Convention Area in
the area between 20° N. latitude and 20°
S. latitude.
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2013–05330 Filed 3–6–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
E:\FR\FM\07MRP1.SGM
07MRP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 45 (Thursday, March 7, 2013)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 14755-14762]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-05330]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 300
[Docket No. 130104011-3011-01]
RIN 0648-BC87
International Fisheries; Western and Central Pacific Fisheries
for Highly Migratory Species; Fishing Restrictions and Observer
Requirements in Purse Seine Fisheries for 2013-2014
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS proposes regulations under authority of the Western and
Central Pacific Fisheries Convention Implementation Act (WCPFC
Implementation Act) to implement limits on fishing effort by U.S. purse
seine vessels in the U.S. exclusive economic zone and on the high seas,
restrictions on the use of fish aggregating devices (FADs), and
requirements for U.S. purse seine vessels to carry observers. This
action is necessary for the United States to implement provisions of a
conservation and management measure (CMM) adopted by the Commission for
the Conservation and Management of Highly Migratory Fish Stocks in the
Western and Central Pacific Ocean (WCPFC) and to satisfy the
international obligations of the United States under the Convention on
the Conservation and Management of Highly Migratory Fish Stocks in the
Western and Central Pacific Ocean (Convention), to which it is a
Contracting Party.
DATES: Comments must be submitted in writing by April 8, 2013.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments on this proposed rule, identified by
NOAA-NMFS-2013-0043, and the regulatory impact review (RIR) prepared
for this proposed rule, by either of the following methods:
Electronic Submission: Submit all electronic public
comments via the Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to
www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail; D=;NOAA-NMFS-2013-0043, click the
``Comment Now!'' icon, complete the required fields, and enter or
attach your comments.
Mail: Submit written comments to Michael D. Tosatto,
Regional Administrator, NMFS, Pacific Islands Regional Office (PIRO),
1601 Kapiolani Blvd., Suite 1110, Honolulu, HI 96814-4700.
Instructions: Comments sent by any other method, to any other
address or individual, or received after the end of the comment period,
might not be considered by NMFS. All comments received are a part of
the public record and will generally be posted for public viewing on
www.regulations.gov without change. All personal identifying
information (e.g., name and address), confidential business
information, or otherwise sensitive information submitted voluntarily
by the sender will be publicly accessible. NMFS will accept anonymous
comments (enter ``N/A'' in the required fields if you wish to remain
anonymous). Attachments to electronic comments will be accepted in
Microsoft Word, Excel, or Adobe PDF file formats only.
An initial regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA) prepared under
authority of the Regulatory Flexibility
[[Page 14756]]
Act is included in the Classification section of the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section of this proposed rule.
Copies of the EA and RIR prepared for this proposed rule are
available from www.regulations.gov or may be obtained from Michael D.
Tosatto, NMFS PIRO (see address above).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tom Graham, NMFS PIRO, 808-944-2219.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background on the Convention and the WCPFC
The Convention Area comprises the majority of the western and
central Pacific Ocean (WCPO). A map showing the boundaries of the
Convention Area can be found on the WCPFC Web site at: www.wcpfc.int/doc/convention-area-map. The Convention focuses on the conservation and
management of highly migratory species (HMS) and the management of
fisheries for HMS. The objective of the Convention is to ensure,
through effective management, the long-term conservation and
sustainable use of HMS in the WCPO.
As a Contracting Party to the Convention and a Member of the WCPFC,
the United States is obligated to implement the decisions of the WCPFC.
The WCPFC Implementation Act (16 U.S.C. 6901 et seq.), 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 Secretary of Commerce has delegated the
authority to promulgate regulations to NMFS.
WCPFC Decisions Regarding Purse Seine Fisheries and Description of the
Proposed Action
At its Ninth Regular Session, in December 2012, the WCPFC adopted
CMM 2012-01, ``Conservation and Management Measure for Bigeye,
Yellowfin and Skipjack Tuna in the Western and Central Pacific Ocean.''
The CMM's stated general objective is to ensure that the stocks of
bigeye tuna (Thunnus obesus), yellowfin tuna (Thunnus albacares), and
skipjack tuna (Katsuwonus pelamis) in the WCPO are, at a minimum,
maintained at levels capable of producing their maximum sustainable
yield as qualified by relevant environmental and economic factors. The
CMM includes specific objectives for each of the three stocks: For
each, the fishing mortality rate is to be reduced to or maintained at
levels no greater than the fishing mortality rate associated with
maximum sustainable yield. The requirements of the CMM, identified as
``interim'' measures, are for calendar year 2013. The CMM also calls
for the WCPFC to establish, at its regular annual session in December
2013, a multi-year management program for 2014-2017 for the three
stocks.
CMM 2012-01 is the most recent in a series of CMMs for the
management of tropical tuna stocks under the purview of the WCPFC. It
is a successor to CMM 2011-01, adopted in March 2012 (most provisions
of which were applicable in 2012), and before that CMM 2008-01, adopted
in December 2008 (most provisions of which were applicable in 2009-
2011). These CMMs are available with other decisions of the WCPFC at
www.wcpfc.int/decisions.htm.
In 2009 NMFS issued regulations to implement the purse seine-
related provisions of CMM 2008-01 (final rule published August 4, 2009;
74 FR 38544; hereafter ``2009 rule''). In December 2011, after an
intersessional decision by the WCPFC to extend CMM 2008-01, NMFS issued
regulations to extend the purse seine-related regulations through
December 31, 2012 (interim rule published December 30, 2011; 76 FR
82180; hereafter ``2011 rule''). NMFS did not develop regulations to
implement the purse seine-related provisions of CMM 2011-01 because the
applicable provisions had already been effectively implemented in the
2011 rule.
CMM 2012-01 obligates WCPFC Members, Cooperating Non-members and
Participating Territories (collectively, CCMs) to implement, for purse
seine vessels, in the Convention Area between the latitudes of 20[deg]
North and 20[deg] South: (1) Limits on fishing effort on the high seas
and in their respective exclusive economic zones (EEZs); (2)
restrictions on the use of fish aggregating devices (FADs), including a
prohibition on setting on FADs during specified periods; (3) a
requirement that observers be on board during all fishing trips, with
certain exceptions; and (4) a requirement that all bigeye tuna,
yellowfin tuna, and skipjack tuna be retained on board up to the point
of first landing or transshipment, with certain exceptions.
Unlike CMMs 2008-01 and 2011-01, the provisions of CMM 2012-01
apply only to areas of high seas and EEZs within the Convention Area;
they do not apply to territorial seas or archipelagic waters.
Accordingly, the requirements of this proposed rule would apply only in
areas of high seas and EEZs, which was not the case with all the
requirements established in the 2009 rule and 2011 rule.
The ``interim'' measures of CMM 2012-01 are applicable for 2013.
The CMM also calls for the WCPFC to adopt a new CMM for bigeye,
yellowfin, and skipjack tuna during its next regular annual session, in
December 2013. The new CMM would be a multi-year management program for
2014-2017 that is designed to achieve the management objectives for the
three stocks that are set out in CMM 2012-01. Under section 505(a) of
the WCPFC Implementation Act, NMFS is authorized to promulgate such
regulations as may be necessary to carry out the Unites States'
international obligations under the Convention. It is foreseeable that
the new CMM would include some of the same provisions for purse seine
vessels as those included in CMM 2012-01. NMFS proposes to implement
this proposed rule for 2014 as well as 2013, as it believes this is the
most effective way to ensure that the United States satisfies its
international obligations under the Convention for 2014. Implementing
this proposed rule for both 2013 and 2014 would also serve to provide
early public notice that the regulations would remain the same in 2014
unless the purse seine provisions of the new CMM differ from those in
CMM 2012-01. Once the WCPFC adopts a new CMM, NMFS would take any steps
necessary to implement the WCPFC's decision(s).
This proposed rule would satisfy the obligations of the United
States under CMM 2012-01 with respect to U.S. purse seine vessels. CMM
2012-01 also includes requirements for longline vessels, which would be
implemented for U.S. longline vessels in a separate rulemaking. This
proposed rule includes three elements, corresponding to the first three
of the four purse seine-related provisions of CMM 2012-01 identified
above (i.e., fishing effort limits, FAD restrictions, and observer
requirements). The fourth purse seine-related provision of CMM 2012-
01--the catch retention requirement for bigeye tuna, yellowfin tuna and
skipjack tuna--would not be implemented in this proposed rule because
that requirement is already in effect for 2013 and 2014 (see final rule
issued December 3, 2012, removing the December 31, 2012, termination
date of the catch retention provisions; 77 FR 71501). Further
information on the three elements of this proposed rule follows:
[[Page 14757]]
(1) Fishing Effort Limits
The proposed rule would establish limits for each of calendar years
2013 and 2014 on the number of fishing days that may be used by the
U.S. purse seine fleet in the U.S. EEZ and on the high seas within the
Convention Area between the latitudes of 20[deg] North and 20[deg]
South.
With respect to the U.S. EEZ, CMM 2012-01 requires coastal CCMs to
``establish effort limits or equivalent catch limits for purse seine
fisheries within their EEZs that reflect the geographical distributions
of skipjack, yellowfin, and bigeye tunas, and are consistent with the
objectives for those species.'' With respect to the high seas, CMM
2012-01 requires CCMs to ``take measures not to increase fishing days
on high seas.'' For the purpose of these limits, and in order to
provide continued operational flexibility for affected purse seine
vessels, the high seas and U.S. EEZ within the Convention Area would be
combined into a single area--called the Effort Limit Area for Purse
Seine, or ELAPS, as similarly done in the 2009 rule and 2011 rule.
The limit in the ELAPS would apply on a calendar-year basis, in
each of 2013 and 2014. The limit for each year would be 2,588 fishing
days. This is the same rate at which fishing effort was limited in the
2009 rule for the years 2009-2011, and extended by interim final rule
for the year 2012. The limiting fishing rate of 2,588 fishing days per
year was based on fishing effort by the U.S. purse seine fleet in the
reference year of 2004, as specified in CMM 2008-01, and the size of
the fleet at that time as compared to the number of U.S. vessels
allowed to be licensed under the Treaty on Fisheries between the
Governments of Certain Pacific Islands States and the Government of the
United States of America (aka South Pacific Tuna Treaty, or SPTT). The
limits in 2009-2012 were implemented as overlapping multi-year limits,
with a limit of 3,882 fishing days in each year, a limit of 6,470
fishing days in each two-year period, and a limit of 7,764 fishing days
(i.e., three times the base rate of 2,588 fishing days per year) for
each three-year period. The three-year limits were for the purpose of
constraining fishing effort within the WCPFC-mandated limits, while the
one- and two-year limits were aimed at avoiding unduly long closed
periods. Further details on the basis for the limits established in the
2009 rule are available in that final rule and the proposed rule that
led to it (published June 1, 2009; 74 FR 26160). Because the provisions
of CMM 2012-01 are for a one-year period and because modifications to
the effort limits established in this proposed rule might be needed if
the WCPFC adopts a new CMM at the end of 2013, the fishing effort
limits in this proposed rule are annual limits.
(2) FAD Restrictions
CMM 2012-01 requires CCMs to prohibit their purse seine vessels
from setting on FADs in EEZs and on the high seas in the Convention
Area between the latitudes of 20[deg] North and 20[deg] South from July
1 through September 30. The CMM further requires CCMs to either
prohibit setting on FADs in October or limit the total number of FAD
sets in the calendar year by the CCM's purse seine fleet to two-thirds
of the fleet's average annual number in the 2001-2011 period, as
specified in Attachment A of CMM 2012-01 (for a CCM that is a Small
Island Developing State, the total annual limit on FAD sets would be
eight-ninths of its fleet's 2009-2012 annual average). For the U.S.
purse seine fleet, the calendar-year limit would be 1,464 FAD sets.
Assuming that fishing patterns in 2013 would be similar to those in
recent years, and because the limit-year would start January 1, the
2013 limit of 1,464 FAD sets would be expected to be reached as early
as April 2013. It is infeasible for NMFS to complete the rulemaking
process that would be necessary to establish the limit and the legal
mechanism to prohibit further FAD sets once the limit is reached before
April, the date the fleet would likely reach the FAD set limit.
Furthermore, NMFS finds that it would not be feasible to establish by
that time the mechanism needed to monitor FAD sets with respect to the
limit and to reliably project when the limit is likely to be reached so
that further FAD sets can be prohibited in a timely manner. For
example, a system would have to be established for rapidly processing
data collected from vessel observers and/or masters and for using those
data to project future levels of FAD sets in advance of actually
reaching the limit. Thus, the option of limiting the annual number of
FAD sets would likely result in the mandated limit for 2013 being
exceeded, and the United States would have failed to satisfy its
international obligations with respect to the purse seine provisions of
CMM 2012-01. Because the option of limiting the number of annual FAD
sets would be infeasible to implement, and the United States would
consequently fail to satisfy its international obligations under the
Convention, this option is not considered in detail. Thus, this
proposed rule would implement the first of the two options: an
additional month, in October, of the FAD closure period. Again, this
would be in addition to the three-month FAD prohibition period of July-
September.
This proposed rule would maintain many of the same specific FAD-
related restrictions during the FAD prohibition periods as those
established in the 2009 rule, but to ensure the full effect to the
prohibition on FAD setting during the FAD prohibition periods, the
definition of FAD would be modified, a new prohibition would be added,
and another prohibition would be modified to clarify already prohibited
activities.
The 2009 rule defined a FAD to mean any artificial or natural
floating object, whether anchored or not and whether situated at the
water surface or not, that is capable of aggregating fish, as well as
any objects used for that purpose that are situated on board a vessel
or otherwise out of the water (see 74 FR 38544). The definition of FAD
also specified that it did not include a fishing vessel, provided that
the fishing vessel was not used for the purpose of aggregating fish.
The 2009 rule included the following prohibitions during the FAD
prohibition periods: (1) Setting a purse seine around a FAD or within
one nautical mile of a FAD; (2) setting a purse seine in a manner
intended to capture fish that have aggregated in association with a
FAD, such as by setting the purse seine in an area from which a FAD has
been moved or removed within the previous eight hours, or setting the
purse seine in an area in which a FAD has been inspected or handled
within the previous eight hours, or setting the purse seine in an area
into which fish were drawn by a vessel from the vicinity of a FAD; (3)
deploying a FAD into the water; and (4) repairing, cleaning,
maintaining, or otherwise servicing a FAD, including any electronic
equipment used in association with a FAD, in the water or on a vessel
while at sea. The fourth prohibition, regarding the servicing of FADs,
had the following exceptions: (a) A FAD could be inspected and handled
as needed to identify the owner of the FAD, identify and release
incidentally captured animals, un-foul fishing gear, or prevent damage
to property or risk to human safety; and (b) a FAD could be removed
from the water and if removed may be cleaned, provided that it is not
returned to the water.
This proposed rule would change the definition of a FAD and the
specific prohibitions established in the 2009 rule in two main
respects. First, the regulatory text would emphasize that setting on
fish that have aggregated in association with a vessel when a vessel
[[Page 14758]]
has used lights to aggregate, move or hold fish is prohibited during
the FAD prohibition period. Setting in such a manner was already
prohibited under the 2009 rule, as it was prohibited to set on fish
aggregated in association with a vessel if the vessel was used to
aggregate fish. This proposed rule would amplify that prohibition by
explicitly prohibiting the use of lights in specific manners that are
known to be used to aggregate fish. These prohibitions would include
submerging lights under water from, or suspending or hanging lights
over the side of, a purse seine vessel or associated skiffs, other
watercraft or equipment; and directing lights into the water or using
lights in a manner other than as needed to illuminate the deck of the
purse seine vessel or associated skiffs, other watercraft or equipment,
to comply with navigational requirements, and to ensure the health and
safety of the crew. These light-related prohibitions would not apply in
specific emergency situations. Second, the prohibitions would be
expanded to address the fish aggregating properties of fishing vessels.
Like other floating objects, fishing vessels tend to aggregate fish. In
order to give better effect to CMM 2012-01's aim of eliminating fishing
on schools associated with floating objects during specified months of
the year, during the FAD prohibition period this proposed rule would
prohibit setting a purse seine in a manner intended to capture fish
that have aggregated in association with a vessel. For example, it
would be prohibited to set a purse seine in an area from which a vessel
has been moved or removed within the previous eight hours, or to set a
purse seine in an area into which fish were drawn by a vessel from the
vicinity of a vessel. Thus, vessels would be treated like FADs with
respect to some of the prohibited activities. But since vessels would
not be treated like FADs with respect to the prohibitions on deploying
and servicing FADs, the definition of FAD would not include vessels. A
FAD would be defined to mean any artificial or natural floating object,
whether anchored or not and whether situated at the water surface or
not, that is capable of aggregating fish, as well as any object used
for that purpose that is situated on board a vessel or otherwise out of
the water, but not including a vessel.
(3) Observer Requirements
CMM 2012-01 includes two observer provisions applicable to purse
seine vessels. The first calls for each flag CCM to require that its
purse seine vessels fishing in the Convention Area between the
latitudes of 20[deg] North and 20[deg] South carry observers authorized
under the WCPFC Regional Observer Programme (hereafter ``WCPFC
observers''). This applies to vessels fishing on the high seas, on the
high seas and in waters under the jurisdiction of at least one coastal
State, or in waters under the jurisdiction of at least two coastal
States. In other words, it does not apply to vessels fishing
exclusively within the jurisdiction of a single coastal State. The
CMM's second observer provision calls for each coastal CCM to require
that all purse seine vessels--that is, purse seine vessels of any
flag--fishing in the Convention Area between the latitudes of 20[deg]
North and 20[deg] South solely within the jurisdiction of the coastal
CCM carry an observer (not necessarily a WCPFC observer).
The first of these two observer provisions was included in similar
form in CMM 2008-01 and implemented in the 2009 rule. It would be
implemented in a similar fashion in this proposed rule, with one
notable difference. The 2009 rule included an exception for fishing
trips for which the NMFS Pacific Islands Regional Administrator has
determined that a WCPFC observer is not available, provided that
written documentation of such determination is carried on board the
vessel during the entirety of the fishing trip. This exception was
included in that rule because at that time it was not clear whether the
observer programs in the region would be able to provide observers on
all the required fishing trips made by U.S. purse seine vessels. Given
that the Pacific Islands Forum Fisheries Agency observer program has
deployed observers on all fishing trips by the U.S. WCPO purse seine
fleet for more than three years, NMFS no longer believes that this
exception is needed, and it is not included in this proposed rule.
CMM 2012-01's second provision, which is an obligation of coastal
States with respect to waters under their jurisdiction, was not
included in CMM 2008-01 and thus not included in the 2009 rule.
Currently, no foreign purse seine fishing vessels are authorized to
fish in the U.S. EEZ in the Convention Area, and no such authorizations
are foreseeable during the duration of this proposed rule. Should a
foreign vessel be authorized to fish in the U.S. EEZ, a requirement
that the vessel carry an observer could be included as one of the terms
of that authorization. Therefore, NMFS does not see any need to include
a requirement in this proposed rule that foreign purse seine vessels
that fish in the U.S. EEZ must carry observers, and this proposed rule
does not include such a requirement. Thus, the CMM's second observer
provision would be implemented only for U.S. purse seine vessels.
Unlike the CMM's first observer provision, the second provision does
not specify that the required observers must be WCPFC observers.
However, NMFS has identified only two observer programs that would be
used as sources of observers to satisfy this requirement--the Pacific
Islands Forum Fisheries Agency observer program and the NMFS observer
program. Currently, both these programs are authorized by the WCPFC as
part of its Regional Observer Programme, so observers deployed by these
two programs are WCPFC observers. Thus, this proposed rule would
require that WCPFC observers be carried by U.S. purse seine vessels
when fishing solely within the U.S. EEZ.
As described above, this proposed rule would not require U.S. purse
seine vessels to carry observers when fishing exclusively in water
under the jurisdiction of a single foreign nation. However, in that
situation, the foreign nation might have its own observer requirements
that apply to the U.S. vessel. Furthermore, U.S. regulations at 50 CFR
300.214 require that if a U.S. fishing vessel with a WCPFC Area
Endorsement or for which a WCPFC Area Endorsement is required is used
for fishing for HMS in the Convention Area in areas under the
jurisdiction of a CCM other than the United States, the owner and
operator of the vessel must ensure that the vessel is operated in
compliance with the applicable laws of such CCM, including any laws
related to carrying observers.
Summary of Proposed Action
(1) Fishing Effort Limits
This proposed rule would establish for U.S. purse seine vessels a
limit of 2,588 fishing days for each of 2013 and 2014, applicable in
the ELAPS, which would be defined to include all areas of high seas and
the U.S. EEZ within the Convention Area between the latitudes of
20[deg] North and 20[deg] South, and would not include the territorial
sea as in the 2009 rule and 2011 rule. Once NMFS determines during
either of those years that, based on available information, the
applicable limit is expected to be reached by a specific future date,
NMFS would issue a notice announcing the closure of the U.S. purse
seine fishery in the ELAPS starting on that specific future date. Upon
such closure, it would be prohibited to use a U.S. purse seine vessel
to fish in the ELAPS through the end of the calendar year. NMFS would
publish the notice at least seven calendar days before the effective
date
[[Page 14759]]
of the closure to provide fishermen advance notice of the closure.
(2) FAD Restrictions
This proposed rule would establish FAD prohibition periods from
July 1 through October 31 in 2013 and in 2014, during which it would be
prohibited for U.S. fishing vessels to set purse seines on FADs or to
engage in specific other FAD-related activities in the Convention Area
between the latitudes of 20[deg] North and 20[deg] South.
(3) Observer Requirements
This proposed rule would require that U.S. purse seine vessels
carry WCPFC observers on all fishing trips in the Convention Area,
except fishing trips that occur entirely outside the area bounded by
20[deg] North and 20[deg] South latitude or entirely within waters of
single foreign nation.
In addition to establishing the three sets of requirements
described above, this proposed rule would revise paragraph (c) of 50
CFR 300.223, which relates to areas closed to purse seine fishing. The
requirements in that paragraph, which implemented the purse seine
closed area provisions of CMM 2008-01, expired December 31, 2012. Under
this proposed rule the contents of that paragraph would be removed and
the paragraph would be reserved. Because the requirements in that
paragraph have expired, this revision is merely of a housekeeping
nature.
Classification
The Administrator, Pacific Islands Region, NMFS, has determined
that this proposed rule is consistent with the WCPFC Implementation Act
and other applicable laws, subject to further consideration after
public comment.
Executive Order 12866
This proposed rule has been determined to be not significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
An initial regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA) was prepared, as
required by section 603 of the RFA. The IRFA describes the economic
impact this proposed rule, if adopted, would have on small entities. A
description of the action, why it is being considered, and the legal
basis for this action are contained in the SUMMARY section of the
preamble and in other sections of this SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section of the preamble. The analysis follows:
There would be no disproportionate economic impacts between small
and large entities operating vessels as a result of this proposed rule.
Furthermore, there would be no disproportionate economic impacts based
on vessel size, gear, or homeport.
Estimated Number of Small Entities Affected
The proposed rule would apply to owners and operators of U.S. purse
seine vessels used for fishing in the Convention Area. The number of
affected vessels is the number licensed under the SPTT. The current
number of licensed vessels is 40, which is the maximum number of
licenses available under the SPTT (excluding joint-venture licenses, of
which there are five available under the SPTT, none of which have ever
been applied for or issued). Based on limited financial information
available on the purse seine fleet, including the fleet's total
landings in 2010 and average cannery prices for tuna species in that
year, most or all of the businesses that operate vessels in the fleet
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 (i.e., 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), so the purse seine fleet is included in this
analysis.
Recordkeeping, Reporting, and Other Compliance Requirements
The proposed rule would not establish any new reporting or
recordkeeping requirements (within the meaning of the Paperwork
Reduction Act). Affected vessel owners and operators would have to
comply with all the proposed requirements, as described earlier in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of the preamble. Fulfillment of these
requirements is not expected to require any professional skills that
the affected vessel owners and operators do not already possess. The
costs of complying with the proposed requirements are described below
to the extent possible for each of the three elements of the proposed
rule:
(1) Fishing Effort Limits: If and when the fishery in the U.S. EEZ
and on the high seas (i.e., in the ELAPS) is closed as a result of the
established annual effort limit being reached in either of 2013 or
2014, owners and operators of purse seine vessels would have to cease
fishing in that area for the remainder of the calendar year. Closure of
the fishery in the ELAPS could cause foregone fishing opportunities and
associated economic losses if the ELAPS contains preferred fishing
grounds during such a closure. The likelihood of the fishery being
closed in the ELAPS in either of the two years and the economic losses
a closure would bring cannot be estimated with certainty. Recent
fishing patterns (2005 through 2010) suggest a fairly low likelihood of
the fishery being closed in the ELAPS. Among the six years in that
period, there was only one year, 2005, in which the fleet (extrapolated
to a hypothetical 40-vessel fleet, the expected fleet size for the
foreseeable future) spent 2,588 fishing days in the ELAPS (in 2005, the
15-vessel fleet spent 985 fishing days in the ELAPS, equivalent to 40
vessels spending 2,628 fishing days). Thus, the likelihood of the limit
being reached appears to be fairly low, and the duration of any closure
would likely be relatively brief. However, there is considerable inter-
annual variation in the fleet's spatial distribution of fishing effort,
influenced to some extent by oceanic conditions associated with El
Ni[ntilde]o-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) patterns. The eastern areas of
the WCPO have tended to be comparatively more attractive to the fleet
during El Ni[ntilde]o events, when warm water spreads from the western
Pacific to the eastern Pacific and large, valuable yellowfin tuna
become more vulnerable to purse seine fishing. Consequently, the U.S.
EEZ and portions of the high seas within the Convention Area are likely
to be more important fishing grounds to the fleet during El Ni[ntilde]o
events (as compared to neutral or La Ni[ntilde]a events).
The ELAPS constitutes a relatively small portion of the WCPO
fishing grounds available to, and typically used by, the U.S. purse
seine fleet. Unpublished NMFS data indicate that, on average, during
1997 through 2010, annual fishing effort in the ELAPS, in terms of
vessel-days fished, made up about 27 percent of the fleet's annual
total. The percentages among those years ranged from 6 to 40. In the
event of a closure, affected vessels could continue to fish in the
Convention Area in foreign EEZs, to the extent authorized. Given that
foreign EEZs in the Convention Area have collectively received the
majority of the U.S. purse seine fleet's fishing effort (60 to 94
percent in the years 1997-2010), the costs associated with being
limited to such areas for what would likely be a relatively small
portion of the year would likely not be substantial. Nonetheless, the
closure of any fishing grounds for any amount of time would be expected
to bring costs to affected entities (e.g., because revenues per unit of
fishing effort in the open area might, during the closed period, be
lower than in the closed area, and vessels might use
[[Page 14760]]
more fuel and spend more time having to travel to open areas). As
indicated in the preceding paragraph, the magnitude of the losses would
depend on where the best fishing grounds are during the closed period,
which would likely be dependent in part on ENSO-related conditions. If
the ELAPS is a preferred fishing ground during the closure, then the
losses would be accordingly greater than if the ELAPS is not preferred
relative to other fishing grounds.
The effort limit could also affect the temporal distribution of
fishing effort in the U.S. purse seine fishery. Given that the limit
would be competitive--that is, not allocated among individual vessels--
vessel operators might have an incentive to fish harder in the affected
area earlier in a given year than they otherwise would. A race-to-fish
effect might also be expected in the time period between when a closure
of the fishery is announced and when it is actually closed, which would
be at least seven calendar days. To the extent such shifts occur, they
could affect the seasonal timing of fish catches and deliveries to
canneries. If deliveries from the fleet were substantially concentrated
early in the year, it could adversely affect prices during that period.
However, as discussed in the preceding paragraphs, the majority of
fishing effort is expected to occur outside the area subject to the
proposed limit, so the intensity of any race-to-fish is likely to be
low if it occurs at all, and the timing of catches and deliveries would
likely not be appreciably impacted. Furthermore, the timing of cannery
deliveries by the U.S. fleet alone is unlikely to have an appreciable
impact on prices, since many canneries buy from the fleets of multiple
nations. A race to fish could bring costs to affected entities if it
causes vessel operators to forego vessel maintenance or to fish in
weather or ocean conditions that it otherwise would not. This could
bring costs in terms of the health and safety of the crew, as well as
the economic performance of the vessel. For the reasons stated above,
any such costs are expected to be minor. In addition, there is no
evidence that economies of scale would favor larger vessels or
businesses over smaller ones, or vice versa, if the fleet's fishing
effort is constrained by these limits.
(2) FAD Restrictions: The prohibitions on setting on FADs and on
fish aggregating in association with fishing vessels (collectively
called ``FAD restrictions'') in July through October in each of 2013
and 2014 would substantially constrain the manner in which purse seine
fishing could be conducted during those periods. The costs associated
with these constraints cannot be quantitatively estimated, but the
fleet's historical use of FADs can help give a qualitative indication
of the costs. The data on FAD sets presented below do not include sets
made on fish aggregating in association with fishing vessels, but the
number of the latter type of sets is small. According to logbooks
maintained by vessel operators, sets on fish aggregating in association
with vessels averaged about four per year for the entire fleet from
1997 through 2010 (examination by NMFS of observer data from selected
years indicates a somewhat higher number than the number reported by
vessel operators, so vessel logbook data might underestimate the actual
number, but the number is still small in comparison to FAD sets). Thus,
the data on FAD sets provide useful indicators of the fleet's
historical fishing patterns with respect to the broader types of sets
that would be prohibited under the proposed rule. In the years 1997-
2010, the proportion of sets made on FADs in the U.S. purse seine
fishery ranged from less than 30 percent in some years to more than 90
percent in others. The importance of FAD sets in terms of vessel
revenues, and in turn profits, appears to be quite variable over time,
and is probably a function of many factors, including fuel prices
(e.g., unassociated sets involve more searching time and thus tend to
bring higher fuel costs than FAD sets) and market conditions (e.g., FAD
fishing, which tends to result in greater catches of lower-value
skipjack tuna and smaller yellowfin tuna and bigeye tuna than
unassociated sets, might be more attractive and profitable when
canneries are not rejecting small fish). Thus, the costs of complying
with the FAD restrictions would depend on a variety of factors. The
fleet's experience during 2009-2012, when two- and three-month FAD
prohibition periods were in place, should give an indication of what
would be expected to occur under the proposed four-month FAD
prohibition periods. The numbers of FAD sets during the prohibition
periods were close to zero, but the number of FAD sets across each of
the four entire years appears not to have been strongly impacted. That
impact is difficult to evaluate in part because there is so much inter-
annual variability in the use of FADs. The proportions of all sets that
were made on FADs in 2009 and 2010 were lower than the average over the
previous 12 years (2010 is the last year for which complete data on set
types are available). The proportion in 2009 was within the historical
range, while that in 2010 was the lowest during the entire period.
Although it is not possible to quantitatively estimate the costs
that affected entities would bear as a result of the FAD prohibition
periods, the fact that the fleet has made a relatively large portion of
its sets on FADs suggests that prohibiting the use of FADs for four
months each year may bring substantial costs and/or revenue losses. To
help mitigate those costs, vessel operators might choose to schedule
their routine vessel maintenance during the FAD prohibition periods. It
also is conceivable that some might choose not to fish at all during
the prohibition periods rather than fish without the use of FADs.
Observations of the fleet's behavior in 2009-2012 do not suggest that
either of these responses occurred to an appreciable degree. The
proportion of the fleet that fished during the two- and three-month FAD
prohibition periods of 2009-2012 did not appreciably differ from the
proportion that fished during the same months in the years 1997-2008,
when no FAD prohibition periods were in place.
(3) Observer Requirements: The requirement to carry a WCPFC
observer on all fishing trips in the Convention Area between the
latitudes of 20[deg] North and 20[deg] South would not bring any
compliance costs to affected entities that are not already being borne
under existing requirements. Under regulations at 50 CFR 300.215, U.S.
fishing vessels with WCPFC Area Endorsements (which all vessels in the
WCPO U.S. purse seine fleet currently have and are expected to continue
to have) must carry a WCPFC observer whenever directed to do so by
NMFS. Under that authority, NMFS has directed all U.S. purse seine
fishing vessels to carry WCPFC observers on all fishing trips in the
Convention Area; this directive is in effect from January 1 through
December 31, 2013. The proposed observer requirements differ from those
already in effect under 50 CFR 300.215 in that the latter apply to all
fishing trips in the Convention Area while this proposed rule exempts
fishing trips that take place exclusively within areas under the
jurisdiction of a single foreign nation or exclusively outside the area
bounded by 20[deg] North and 20[deg] South latitude. The proposed
requirements are therefore slightly less constraining than the existing
requirements (but in practice few trips in either of the two exemption
categories are expected to be taken). Thus, the observer requirements
in this proposed rule would not bring any costs over and above those
already incurred
[[Page 14761]]
under existing requirements. A similar requirement to carry WCPFC
observers on all fishing trips in the Convention Area, with specific
exceptions, was also established in the 2009 rule. That requirement
expired December 31, 2012. In the IRFA and final regulatory flexibility
analysis (FRFA) prepared for the 2009 rule, the cost to purse seine
vessels of having to carry a WCPFC observer on every fishing trip in
the Convention Area (i.e., to carry a WCPFC observer on the 80 percent
of trips that would be required over the 20-percent coverage already
required under the SPTT, as discussed below) was estimated to be up to
about $31,300 to $39,100 per vessel per year (in 2009 dollars).
Duplicating, Overlapping, and Conflicting Federal Regulations
NMFS has not identified any Federal regulations that duplicate,
overlap with, or conflict with the proposed regulations, with the
exception of the proposed observer requirements. As noted above, under
regulations at 50 CFR 300.215, issued under authority of the WCPFC
Implementation Act, U.S. fishing vessels with WCPFC Area Endorsements
are required to carry WCPFC observers when directed to do so by NMFS.
Additionally, U.S. purse seine vessels are subject to observer
requirements under authority of the South Pacific Tuna Act of 1988
(SPTA; 16 U.S.C. 973-973r), at 50 CFR 300.43. These regulations require
that operators and crew members of vessels operating pursuant to the
SPTT allow and assist any person identified as an observer by the
Pacific Island Parties to the SPTT to board the vessel and conduct and
perform specified observer functions. Under the terms of the SPTT, U.S.
purse seine vessels carry such observers on approximately 20 percent of
their trips. The proposed observer requirement would overlap with the
existing regulations at 50 CFR 300.215 in that carrying an observer
during a given fishing trip under either requirement would satisfy the
other requirement if it applies to that fishing trip. Similarly, the
proposed requirement would overlap with the existing regulations at 50
CFR 300.43 in that carrying an observer under the latter regulation
would satisfy the proposed requirement. The proposed requirement would
not duplicate (e.g., the overlapping observer requirements would not
result in a vessel having to carry two observers on a fishing trip) or
conflict with existing regulations.
Alternatives to the Proposed Rule
NMFS has identified and considered several alternatives to the
proposed rule, in addition to the no-action alternative. The action
alternatives are limited to the ways in which the fishing effort limits
and the FAD restrictions would be implemented; no alternatives other
than the no-action alternative were identified for the observer
requirements in the proposed rule.
(1) Fishing Effort Limits: NMFS has considered in depth two
alternatives to the proposed fleet-wide limit of 2,588 fishing days per
year in the ELAPS. One alternative would be more restrictive, with
separate fleet-wide annual limits in the U.S. EEZ and the high seas in
the Convention Area. The limits would be based on the respective levels
of the fleet's fishing effort in those two areas in 2010, which were
the lowest levels of fishing effort on a per-vessel basis from 1997
through 2010 (this time period was used to maintain consistency with
the approach used to calculate the similar limits for the 2009 rule).
The limits would be 27 fishing days per year in the U.S. EEZ and 433
fishing days per year on the high seas. These limits would be much more
constraining than the proposed limits, and their separation into two
areas would provide less operational flexibility for affected purse
seine vessels. Thus, these alternative limits would be substantially
more constraining and thus more costly than the proposed limits, and
this alternative is not preferred for that reason. The second
alternative would be less restrictive than the limits proposed in the
rule. The high seas and the U.S. EEZ would be combined for the purpose
of the limit, and the limit would be the sum of the fleet's respective
greatest annual levels of fishing effort in each of the two areas (on
an average per-vessel basis, then expanded to a 40-vessel-equivalent)
during the 1997-2010 time period. The limit would be 3,943 fishing days
per year in the ELAPS. Because this alternative limit is greater and
thus less constraining than the proposed limit, the costs of complying
with this alternative would be less than or equal to those of the
proposed limits. This alternative is not preferred because it would
depart from the effort limits established for the period 2009-2012. The
limits proposed in this rule are consistent with the precedent set by
the 2009 rule, and affected entities have already been exposed to the
impacts of these limits for the past four years. In the RFA analysis
for the 2009 rule, NMFS considered an alternative that would allocate
the fishing effort limits among individual purse seine vessels in some
manner. Given the complexity of setting up such an allocation scheme,
which would require consideration of such things as which entities are
to receive allocations, the criteria for making allocations, and
whether and how the allocations would be transferable, as well as a
mechanism to reliably monitor the fishing effort of the individual
entities, NMFS does not believe it feasible to develop such an
allocation scheme for this proposed rule, and thus has not considered
it in depth. NMFS notes, however, that as found in the RFA analysis for
the 2009 rule, such an alternative would likely alleviate any adverse
impacts of the race-to-fish that might occur as a result of
establishing the competitive fishing effort limits as in the proposed
rule. Those impacts, however, are expected to be minor. The alternative
of taking no action at all is not preferred because it would fail to
accomplish the objective of the WCPFC Implementation Act or satisfy the
international obligations of the United States as a Contracting Party
to the Convention.
(2) FAD Restrictions: NMFS has considered one alternative to the
proposed FAD restrictions. This alternative would be the same as the
proposed restrictions except that it would not be prohibited to set on
fish that have aggregated in association with a vessel (provided that
the vessel is not used in a manner to aggregate fish). This would be
less restrictive and thus presumably less costly to affected purse
seine fishing businesses than the proposed requirements. The number of
such sets made historically has been relatively small, averaging about
four per year for the entire fleet from 1997 through 2010, according to
data recorded by vessel operators in logbooks (examination by NMFS of
observer data from selected years indicates a somewhat higher number
than the number reported by vessel operators, so vessel logbook data
might underestimate the actual number, but the number is still small in
comparison to FAD sets). Therefore, the degree of relief in compliance
costs of allowing such sets for four months each year would be expected
to be relatively small. NMFS believes that this alternative would not
serve CMM 2012-01's objective of reducing the fishing mortality rates
of bigeye tuna and young tunas through seasonal prohibitions on the use
of FADs as well as would the proposed rule. For that reason, this
alternative is not preferred. The alternative of taking no action at
all is not preferred because it would fail to accomplish the objective
of the WCPFC Implementation Act or
[[Page 14762]]
satisfy the international obligations of the United States as a
Contracting Party to the Convention.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 300
Administrative practice and procedure, Fish, Fisheries, Fishing,
Marine resources, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Treaties.
Dated: March 4, 2013.
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, 50 CFR part 300 is
proposed to be amended as follows:
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, the definitions of ``Effort Limit Area for Purse
Seine or ELAPS'', and ``Fish aggregating device'', or ``FAD'', are
revised to read as follows:
Sec. 300.211 Definitions.
* * * * *
Effort Limit Area for Purse Seine, or ELAPS, means, within the area
between 20[deg] N. latitude and 20[deg] S. latitude, areas within the
Convention Area that either are high seas or within the EEZ.
Fish aggregating device, or FAD, means any artificial or natural
floating object, whether anchored or not and whether situated at the
water surface or not, that is capable of aggregating fish, as well as
any object used for that purpose that is situated on board a vessel or
otherwise out of the water. The definition of FAD does not include a
vessel.
* * * * *
0
3. In Sec. 300.223, introductory text to the section, paragraph (a)
introductory text and paragraph (a)(1), paragraphs (b) and (c), and
paragraph (e) introductory text and paragraphs (e)(1) and (e)(2) are
revised to read as follows:
Sec. 300.223 Purse seine fishing restrictions.
None of the requirements of this section apply in the territorial
seas or archipelagic waters of the United States or any other nation,
as defined by the domestic laws and regulations of that nation and
recognized by the United States. All dates used in this section are in
Universal Coordinated Time, also known as UTC; for example: the year
2013 starts at 00:00 on January 1, 2013 UTC and ends at 24:00 on
December 31, 2013 UTC; and July 1, 2013, begins at 00:00 UTC and ends
at 24:00 UTC.
(a) Fishing effort limits. This paragraph establishes limits on the
number of fishing days that fishing vessels of the United States
equipped with purse seine gear may collectively spend in the ELAPS.
(1) For each of the calendar years 2013 and 2014 there is a limit
of 2,588 fishing days.
* * * * *
(b) Use of fish aggregating devices. From July 1 through October
31, 2013, and from July 1 through October 31, 2014, owners, operators,
and crew of fishing vessels of the United States shall not do any of
the activities described below in the Convention Area in the area
between 20[deg] N. latitude and 20[deg] S. latitude:
(1) Set a purse seine around a FAD or within one nautical mile of a
FAD.
(2) Set a purse seine in a manner intended to capture fish that
have aggregated in association with a FAD or a vessel, such as by
setting the purse seine in an area from which a FAD or a vessel has
been moved or removed within the previous eight hours, or setting the
purse seine in an area in which a FAD has been inspected or handled
within the previous eight hours, or setting the purse seine in an area
into which fish were drawn by a vessel from the vicinity of a FAD or a
vessel.
(3) Deploy a FAD into the water.
(4) Repair, clean, maintain, or otherwise service a FAD, including
any electronic equipment used in association with a FAD, in the water
or on a vessel while at sea, except that:
(i) A FAD may be inspected and handled as needed to identify the
FAD, identify and release incidentally captured animals, un-foul
fishing gear, or prevent damage to property or risk to human safety;
and
(ii) A FAD may be removed from the water and if removed may be
cleaned, provided that it is not returned to the water.
(5) From a purse seine vessel or any associated skiffs, other
watercraft or equipment, do any of the following, except in emergencies
as needed to prevent human injury or the loss of human life, the loss
of the purse seine vessel, skiffs, watercraft or aircraft, or
environmental damage:
(i) Submerge lights under water;
(ii) Suspend or hang lights over the side of the purse seine
vessel, skiff, watercraft or equipment, or;
(iii) Direct or use lights in a manner other than as needed to
illuminate the deck of the purse seine vessel or associated skiffs,
watercraft or equipment, to comply with navigational requirements, and
to ensure the health and safety of the crew.
(c) Closed areas. [Reserved]
* * * * *
(e) Observer coverage. Until 24:00 UTC on December 31, 2014, a
fishing vessel of the United States may not be used to fish with purse
seine gear in the Convention Area without a WCPFC observer on board.
This requirement does not apply to fishing trips that meet either of
the following conditions:
(1) The portion of the fishing trip within the Convention Area
takes place entirely within areas under jurisdiction of a single nation
other than the United States.
(2) No fishing takes place during the fishing trip in the
Convention Area in the area between 20[deg] N. latitude and 20[deg] S.
latitude.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2013-05330 Filed 3-6-13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P