International Fisheries; Pacific Tuna Fisheries; Fishing Restrictions for Pacific Bluefin Tuna in the Eastern Pacific Ocean, 28452-28455 [2014-11182]
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 95 / Friday, May 16, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 300
[Docket No. 130722647–4403–02]
RIN 0648–BD55
International Fisheries; Pacific Tuna
Fisheries; Fishing Restrictions for
Pacific Bluefin Tuna in the Eastern
Pacific Ocean
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
NMFS is issuing regulations
under the Tuna Conventions Act to
implement Resolution C–13–02 of the
Inter-American Tropical Tuna
Commission (IATTC or the
Commission) by specifying limits on
U.S. commercial catch of Pacific bluefin
tuna from the eastern Pacific Ocean
(EPO) waters of the IATTC Convention
Area in 2014. This action is necessary
for the United States to satisfy its
obligations as a member of the IATTC to
conserve Pacific Bluefin tuna, which is
an overfished stock.
DATES: The rule is effective June 16,
2014.
SUMMARY:
Copies of supporting
documents that were prepared for this
final rule, including the Regulatory
Impact Review (RIR), environmental
assessment (EA), final regulatory
flexibility analysis (FRFA), and the
proposed rule, are available via the
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov, docket NOAA–
NMFS–2013–0119. These documents,
and the small entity compliance guide
prepared for this final rule, are also
available from the Regional
Administrator, NMFS, West Coast
Regional Office, 7600 Sand Point Way
NE., Bldg 1, Seattle, WA 98115–0070. A
summary of the initial regulatory
flexibility analysis (IRFA) is included in
the proposed rule, and a summary of the
FRFA is included in this final rule.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Amber Rhodes, NMFS, 562–980–3231,
or Heidi Taylor, NMFS, 562–980–4039.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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ADDRESSES:
Background
On January 10, 2014, NMFS
published a proposed rule in the
Federal Register (79 FR 1810) that
would add regulations at 50 CFR 300,
subpart C, to implement Resolution C–
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13–02, ‘‘Measures for the Conservation
and Management of Bluefin Tuna in the
Eastern Pacific Ocean,’’ which was
adopted by the IATTC at its 85th
Meeting, in June 2013. The proposed
rule was open to public comment
through February 10, 2014. The
comments received are addressed in this
rule.
The final rule is implemented under
the authority of the Tuna Conventions
Act (16 U.S.C. 951–962 and 971 et seq.),
which directs the Secretary of
Commerce, after approval by the
Secretary of State, to promulgate such
regulations as may be necessary to
implement resolutions adopted by the
IATTC. The Secretary’s authority to
promulgate such regulations as may be
necessary to carry out the obligations of
the United States has been delegated to
NMFS.
The proposed rule includes additional
background information, including
information on the IATTC, the
international obligations of the United
States as an IATTC Member, and the
basis for the new regulations.
New Regulations
This final rule establishes 2014 limits
on catch of Pacific bluefin tuna
(Thunnus orientalis) in the IATTC
Convention Area. Once Pacific bluefin
tuna catch limits have been reached,
NMFS will prohibit any further
targeting, retaining on board,
transshipping, or landing of Pacific
bluefin tuna in the Convention Area,
because these activities can be
effectively verified for enforcement
purposes. The following section
includes a description of how the
Pacific bluefin tuna catch limit
provisions apply under three possible
scenarios.
2014 Catch Limits for Pacific Bluefin
Tuna
Once the Commission-wide
commercial catch limit of 5,000 metric
tons has been reached and the U.S.
commercial fleet is expected to be
reached or has exceeded the 500 metric
tons catch limit, then targeting,
retaining on board, transshipping, or
landing of Pacific bluefin tuna by all
U.S. commercial vessels in the IATTC
Convention Area shall be prohibited for
the remainder of 2014. If the U.S.
commercial fishing fleet has not caught
500 metric tons of Pacific bluefin tuna
in the Convention Area in 2014 when
the Commission-wide 5,000 metric tons
catch limit is reached, then the U.S.
commercial fleet may continue to target,
retain, transship, or land Pacific bluefin
tuna until the 500 metric ton limit is
reached. The U.S. commercial fleet may
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continue to target, retain, transship, or
land more than the 500 metric tons of
Pacific bluefin tuna in 2014 unless and
until the Commission-wide catch limit
of 5,000 metric tons is reached.
Announcement of the Limits Being
Reached
To ensure that the total catch of
Pacific bluefin tuna taken from the
IATTC Convention Area does not
exceed the Commission-wide catch
limit for 2014, NMFS will report U.S.
catch to the IATTC Director on a
monthly basis. The IATTC Director will
inform the IATTC Members and
Cooperating non-members (collectively,
CPCs) when 50 percent of the
Commission-wide limit is reached. The
Director will likewise send similar
notices when 60, 70, and 80 percent of
the Commission-wide limit is reached.
When 90 percent of the Commissionwide limit is reached, the Director will
send the corresponding notice to all
CPCs, with a projection of when the
5,000 metric ton Commission-wide limit
will be reached, at which time CPCs are
expected to take the necessary internal
measures to avoid exceeding the limit.
NMFS will provide updates on
Commission-wide and U.S. catches to
the public via the IATTC and coastal
pelagic species email distribution lists
and the West Coast Region Web site:
https://www.westcoast.fisheries
.noaa.gov/fisheries/migratory_species/
bluefin_tuna_harvest_status.html.
Additionally, NMFS will report
preliminarily estimated Pacific bluefin
tuna catch between monthly intervals (if
and when catches approach the limits)
to help participants in the U.S.
commercial fishery plan for the
possibility of the catch limit being
reached.
When NMFS is informed that the
5,000 metric ton Commission-wide limit
has been met (based on information
provided by the IATTC Director) and
that the 500 metric ton catch limit is
expected to be reached (based on
landings receipts, data submitted in
logbooks, and other available fishery
information), NMFS will publish a
notice in the Federal Register
announcing that the targeting, retaining,
transshipping or landing of Pacific
bluefin tuna will be prohibited on a
specified effective date through
December 31, 2014. Upon that effective
date, a commercial fishing vessel of the
United States may not be used to target,
retain on board, transship, or land any
additional PBF in the Convention Area
during the period specified in the
announcement. Any PBF already on
board a fishing vessel on the effective
date may be retained on board,
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transshipped, and/or landed, to the
extent authorized by applicable laws
and regulations, provided that they are
landed within 14 days after the effective
date.
Public Comments and Responses
NMFS received eight written public
comments. The Department of the
Interior submitted comments on behalf
of the National Park Service. One
commenter expressed concern about
matters beyond the scope of this action.
Seven commenters expressed concern
for the status of the resource. None of
the seven commenters opposed placing
restrictions on the U.S. catch of Pacific
bluefin tuna; however, six of them
suggested further restricting the U.S.
catch of Pacific bluefin tuna. Summaries
of the comments received and NMFS’
responses appear below.
Comment 1: The proposed rule is not
consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act) because it
does not prevent overfishing by
addressing the relative impacts of the
U.S. fleet.
Response: NMFS is promulgating this
rule in accordance with IATTC
Resolution C–13–02 and under the
authority of the Tuna Conventions Act.
This action is not subject to the
Magnuson-Stevens Act. However,
NMFS informed the Pacific Fishery
Management Council and the Western
Pacific Fishery Management Council of
the stock status determination and
obligations under section 304(i) of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act to develop and
submit recommendations to NMFS and/
or the Secretary of State for domestic
and international actions that will end
overfishing in the fishery and rebuild
the affected stock taking into account
the relative impact of U.S. vessels and
that of foreign vessels on the stock.
Comment 2: The proposed rule
indicates that NMFS only analyzed two
alternatives. More alternatives,
including a suspension of bluefin
fishing, should have been analyzed.
Response: The preamble of the
proposed rule included a discussion of
only two alternatives as part of the IRFA
summary: the proposed rule and no
action. The purpose of the IFRA is to
determine whether the action would
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
No other significant alternatives
accomplished the stated objectives of
the applicable statutes and minimized
the economic impact of the proposed
rule on affected small entities. In
addition to the IRFA, NMFS prepared a
draft EA and made it available for
public comment with the proposed rule.
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The draft EA included several
alternatives to the proposed action,
including suspension of directed fishing
for Pacific bluefin tuna in the eastern
Pacific Ocean, and considered the
potential effects of each alternative on
the human environment (i.e., natural,
social, and economic environment). The
final EA is publicly available as a
supporting document to this rule.
Comment 3: Catch data should be upto-date. NMFS should not be reporting
catch data that is more than 1 year old
as ‘‘preliminary.’’
Response: NMFS decided not to cite
the U.S. catch of Pacific bluefin tuna in
2013 in the proposed rule because, at
that time, the 2013 fishing season for
Pacific bluefin tuna had not yet ended.
U.S. catch reported in this final rule has
been updated with ‘‘preliminary’’ data
for U.S. commercial catch of Pacific
bluefin tuna in 2013. ‘‘Preliminary’’ data
is subject to change. NMFS adheres to
strict guidelines for publishing fishery
data in the interest of ensuring data
quality and protecting confidential data.
Due to changes in data reporting
mechanisms, there has been a delay in
the availability of the published data
sets typically made available annually
in the Pacific Fishery Management
Council’s Highly Migratory Species
Stock Assessment and Fishery
Evaluation (SAFE) documents. In the
meantime, and when publishing
supporting information in rules, NMFS
has been publishing data as
‘‘preliminary’’ only after it has been
determined not to be confidential.
Comment 4: There are unacceptable
levels of Pacific bluefin tuna mortality
by overseas fleets and recreational
fisheries. A Pacific-wide catch limit is
needed and the 500 metric ton limit
should include recreational catch.
Additionally, the U.S. National Park
Service (NPS) recommends that NMFS
include national park unit boundaries in
Pacific bluefin tuna regulations with
consideration for additional monitoring
of effort and catch, recreational catchand-release, and a moratorium on
harvest of Pacific bluefin tuna until
individual national park units request a
harvest allocation.
Response: NMFS notes these
recommendations going forward.
However, they are beyond the scope of
the IATTC resolution that this rule
implements. NMFS acknowledges that
the average annual Pacific bluefin tuna
landings by U.S. commercial vessels
fishing in the EPO represent roughly
two percent of the average annual
landings from all fleets commercially
fishing in the EPO for years 2007
through 2011 (refer to Section 1.4 of the
Environmental Assessment). This
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contribution to Pacific bluefin mortality
by the U.S. commercial fishing fleet is
even smaller when considering the
levels of catch by all fisheries, Pacificwide. While the United States is a
member of both the IATTC and the
Western and Central Pacific Fisheries
Commission (WCPFC), a Pacific-wide
catch limit would require
complimentary action by the WCPFC.
Suggestions for purely domestic fishery
management actions—such as rules on
Pacific bluefin fishing within U.S.
national parks—would be better suited
to the decision-making process of the
appropriate fishery management
councils and implementation under the
authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
Changes From the Proposed Rule
No substantive changes have been
made to this rule since the proposed
rule stage. Minor edits were made to the
regulatory text to improve clarity. The
authority citations for 50 CFR part 300
and subpart C are revised to identify
more precisely the statutory citation for
the Tuna Conventions Act as 16 U.S.C.
951 et seq.
Classification
The NMFS Assistant Administrator
has determined that this final rule is
necessary for the conservation and
management of Pacific bluefin tuna, and
that it is consistent with the Tuna
Conventions Act and other applicable
laws.
This final rule has been determined to
be not significant for purposes of
Executive Order 12866.
There are no new collection-ofinformation requirements associated
with this action that are subject to the
Paperwork Reduction Act, existing
collection-of-information requirements
associated with the U.S. West Coast
Highly Migratory Species Fishery
Management Plan still apply. These
requirements have been approved by the
Office of Management and Budget under
Control Number 0648–0204.
A final regulatory flexibility analysis
(FRFA) was prepared. A copy of this
analysis is available from the NMFS (see
ADDRESSES). The FRFA incorporates the
IRFA, and a summary of the analyses
completed to support the action is
included directly below.
The main objective of this rule is to
establish catch limits to contribute to
the conservation of the Pacific bluefin
tuna stock. This rule applies to owners
and operators of U.S. commercial
fishing vessels that catch Pacific bluefin
tuna in the IATTC Convention Area.
Each vessel that is expected to be
affected is considered a small business
according to the Small Business
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 95 / Friday, May 16, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
Administration’s revised size standards
(78 FR 37398, July 20, 2013). Pacific
bluefin tuna do not serve as the primary
target species for any U.S. commercial
vessels, but rather are incidentally or
opportunistically caught by U.S.
commercial vessels fishing in the EPO.
Therefore, the action is not expected to
have a significant or disproportional
economic impact on these small
business entities.
After NMFS determines that the limits
are expected to be reached, NMFS will
publish a notice in the Federal Register
announcing that restrictions will be
effective from the dates specified
through the end of the calendar year.
NMFS will take reasonable actions to
inform vessel owners in advance of
publishing, in a Federal Register
announcement, the effective date for the
restrictions on targeting, retaining,
transshipping, or landing Pacific bluefin
tuna captured in the IATTC Convention
Area. In the event that the limit on
Pacific bluefin tuna catch is reached in
2014, it will be the responsibility of the
commercial vessel owner to ensure that
no further targeting of Pacific bluefin
tuna occurs, and that no additional
Pacific bluefin tuna are retained on
board, transshipped, or landed after the
specified dates published in the Federal
Register notice announcing that the
annual limit is expected to be reached.
While this rule does not mandate any
new ‘‘reporting’’ or ‘‘recordkeeping’’
requirements for the public, some
compliance costs may be associated
with these regulations if the restrictions
on targeting, retaining, transshipping, or
landing Pacific bluefin tuna in the
IATTC Convention Area becomes
effective in 2014 as a result of the
commercial catch limits being reached.
The Pacific bluefin tuna commercial
catch limits are not expected to result in
the cessation of fishing by U.S.
commercial vessels for Pacific bluefin
tuna in the Convention Area since the
annual U.S. catches of Pacific bluefin
tuna have not reached 500 metric tons
in more than a decade. In the event of
a closure under this rule, the cost of
compliance would be de minimis.
Compliance costs could consist of
returning incidentally caught bluefin
tuna to the ocean, forgoing associated
profits, and potentially losing fishing
opportunity if Pacific bluefin tuna are
available to the U.S. fleet during a time
when fishing for them has been
prohibited.
The U.S. catch of Pacific bluefin tuna
in the EPO represents a relatively minor
component of the overall catch of
Pacific bluefin tuna from the EPO. The
average annual U.S. catch of Pacific
bluefin tuna was 106 metric tons for
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1999 through 2013. Pacific bluefin tuna
is commercially caught by U.S. vessels
fishing in the EPO on an irregular basis.
Most of the landings are made by small
coastal purse seine vessels operating in
the Southern California Bight with
limited additional landings made by the
drift gillnet fleet that targets swordfish
and thresher shark. Lesser amounts of
Pacific bluefin tuna are caught by
surface hook and line and longline gear
(typically less than .05 metric tons per
year for these gear types combined). The
number of purse seine vessels that have
landed tuna in California averaged 197
annually from 1981 through 1990.
However, from 2000 to 2013, no more
than six small purse seiners have been
registered with the IATTC to target
Pacific bluefin tuna in the Convention
Area each year. The landings data
suggests that they opportunistically
targeted Pacific bluefin tuna in alternate
years since 2001.
For the purposes of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act analysis, NMFS
compared the effects of the Pacific
bluefin tuna restrictions imposed by this
rule to a no action alternative. No
additional alternatives exist that
accomplish the stated objectives of
applicable statutes and that minimize
the rule’s economic impact on the
affected small entities. Under the no
action alternative, there would be no
limit on U.S. commercial catches of
Pacific bluefin tuna in the IATTC
Convention Area. It is unlikely that any
short-term economic benefit to U.S.
commercial fisheries would be gained
from not implementing Resolution C–
13–02 because recent trends in Pacific
bluefin tuna catch data indicate that it
is unlikely that the U.S. catch limit will
be reached. However, failing to adopt
this rule would result in the United
States not satisfying its international
obligations as a member of the IATTC.
Furthermore, implementing Resolution
C–13–02 conserves Pacific bluefin tuna
by limiting catches, thereby increasing
the chances that small entities will have
continued opportunities to harvest this
currently overfished stock in the EPO.
Section 212 of the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996 states that, for each rule or group
of related rules for which an agency is
required to prepare a FRFA, the agency
shall publish one or more guides to
assist small entities in complying with
the rule, and shall designate such
publications as ‘‘small entity
compliance guides.’’ The agency shall
explain the actions a small entity is
required to take to comply with a rule
or group of rules. As part of this
rulemaking process, a small entity
compliance guide (the guide) was
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prepared. Copies of this final rule are
available from the West Coast Regional
Office, and the guide will be sent to
vessels that catch Pacific bluefin tuna in
the IATTC Convention Area via the
IATTC and coastal pelagic species email
distributions lists. The guide and this
final rule will be available upon request
and on the West Coast Region Web site:
https://www.westcoast.fisheries
.noaa.gov/fisheries/migratory_species/
bluefin_tuna_harvest_status.html.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 300
Administrative practice and
procedure, Antarctica, Canada, Exports,
Fish, Fisheries, Fishing, Imports,
Indians, Labeling, Marine resources,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Russian Federation,
Transportation, Treaties, Wildlife.
Dated: May 9, 2014.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, 50 CFR part 300 is amended
as follows:
PART 300—INTERNATIONAL
FISHERIES REGULATIONS
1. The authority citation for part 300
is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 951 et seq., 16 U.S.C.
1801 et seq., 16 U.S.C. 5501 et seq., 16 U.S.C.
2431 et seq., 31 U.S.C. 9701 et seq.
2. The authority citation for 50 CFR
part 300, Subpart C, is revised to read
as follows:
■
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 951 et seq.
3. In § 300.24, paragraph (u) is added
to read as follows:
■
§ 300.24
Prohibitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(u) Use a United States commercial
fishing vessel in the IATTC Convention
Area in contravention of § 300.25(h)(4)
■ 4. In § 300.25, paragraph (h) is added
to read as follows:
§ 300.25 Eastern Pacific fisheries
management.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) Pacific bluefin tuna commercial
catch limits in the eastern Pacific
Ocean.
(1) For the calendar year 2014, all
commercial fishing vessels of IATTC
member countries and cooperating nonmember countries collectively are
subject to a limit of 5,000 metric tons of
Pacific bluefin tuna that may be
captured, retained, and landed in the
Convention Area.
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(2) Notwithstanding the collective
5,000 metric ton limit, in calendar year
2014 commercial vessels of the United
States may capture, retain, transship, or
land 500 metric tons of Pacific bluefin
tuna.
(3) After NMFS determines that the
limits under paragraphs (h)(1) and (h)(2)
of this section are expected to be
reached by a future date, and at least 7
calendar days in advance of that date,
NMFS will publish a notice of closure
in the Federal Register announcing the
effective date that additional targeting,
retaining on board, transshipping or
landing Pacific bluefin tuna in the
Convention Area shall be prohibited as
described in paragraph (h)(4) of this
section.
(4) Beginning on the date announced
in the notice of closure published under
paragraph (h)(3) of this section through
the end of the calendar year, a
commercial fishing vessel of the United
States may not be used to target, retain
on board, transship, or land any
additional Pacific bluefin tuna captured
in the Convention Area. Any Pacific
bluefin tuna already on board a fishing
vessel on the effective date of the notice
may be retained on board, transshipped,
and/or landed, to the extent authorized
by applicable laws and regulations,
provided such tuna is landed within 14
days after the effective date published in
the notice of closure.
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
[FR Doc. 2014–11182 Filed 5–15–14; 8:45 am]
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 660
[Docket No. 140418348–4406–01]
RIN 0648–BE14
Magnuson-Stevens Act Provisions;
Fisheries off West Coast States;
Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery;
2013–2014 Biennial Specifications and
Management Measures; Correction
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule; correcting
amendment.
AGENCY:
This action corrects the
Pacific coast groundfish harvest
specifications and management
measures regulations that published in
the Federal Register on January 3, 2013.
Specifically, this rule corrects the 2014
shorebased trawl allocations for several
species of groundfish in the shorebased
trawl allocation table that were
inadvertently misreported. Quota share
accounts will be updated to reflect this
correction within two weeks from May
16, 2014.
DATES: This rule is effective May 16,
2014.
SUMMARY:
Miako Ushio, 206–526–4644;
Miako.Ushio@noaa.gov.
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
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Background
NMFS established the 2013–2014
harvest specifications and management
measures for groundfish taken in the
U.S. exclusive economic zone off the
coasts of Washington, Oregon, and
California through a final rule that
published on January 3, 2013. (78 FR
580). This notice corrects the 2014
shorebased trawl allocations for several
species of groundfish in the shorebased
trawl allocation table that were
inadvertently misreported in the
January 3, 2013 final rule.
During the development of the
shorebased trawl allocations, due to a
spreadsheet error, some shorebased
fishery allocations were multiplied by
the initial issuance allocation
percentages for non-whiting trips. Those
non-whiting trip allocation percentages
were designed only to be used for
calculations related to the initial
issuance of quota share. The initial
issuance allocation percentages for nonwhiting trips were not intended to be
used for determining the annual
shorebased trawl allocation for those
species. As a result, for certain
Individual Fishing Quota (IFQ) species,
the shorebased trawl sector did not
receive its full 2014 allocation.
Table 1 depicts the initial issuance
allocation percentages between whiting
and non-whiting trips NMFS used to
weigh each calculation to determine
initial quota share amounts that
represented a combined whiting and
non-whiting shorebased IFQ program.
TABLE 1—THE COUNCIL-PREFERRED SHORESIDE WHITING AND NON-WHITING TRAWL ALLOCATIONS FOR USE IN INITIAL
ALLOCATION OF QUOTA SHARE. EXCERPT FROM THE Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) FOR ALLOCATION OF HARVEST OPPORTUNITY BETWEEN SECTORS OF THE PACIFIC COAST GROUNDFISH FISHERY
Stocks and stock
Shoreside trawl sectors
Alternative 4:
Complexes
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Non-Whiting
Lingcod—coastwide ...........................................
Pacific Cod .........................................................
Pacific Whiting—coastwide ................................
Sablefish N. of 36° .............................................
Sablefish S. of 36° .............................................
PACIFIC OCEAN PERCH .................................
WIDOW ..............................................................
Chilipepper S. of 40°10′ ....................................
Splitnose S. of 40°10′ ........................................
Yellowtail N. of 40°10′ .......................................
Shortspine N. of 34°27′ .....................................
Shortspine S. of 34°27′ .....................................
Longspine N. of 34°27′ ......................................
Longspine S. of 34°27′ ......................................
DARKBLOTCHED .............................................
Minor Slope RF North ........................................
Dover Sole .........................................................
English Sole .......................................................
Petrale Sole—coastwide ....................................
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Whiting
99.7% ...............................................................
99.9% ...............................................................
0.1% .................................................................
98.2% ...............................................................
100.0% .............................................................
Remaining ........................................................
Remaining ........................................................
100.0% .............................................................
100.0% .............................................................
Remaining ........................................................
99.9% ...............................................................
100.0% .............................................................
100.0% .............................................................
100.0% .............................................................
Remaining ........................................................
98.6% ...............................................................
100.0% .............................................................
99.9% ...............................................................
100.0% .............................................................
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0.3%
0.1%
99.9%
1.8%
0.0%
17% or 30 mt, whichever is greater, to
If under rebuilding, 52% to SS +
0.0%
0.0%
300 mt
0.1%
0.0%
0.0%
0.0%
9% or 25 mt, whichever is greater, to
1.4%
0.0%
0.1%
0.0%
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16MYR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 95 (Friday, May 16, 2014)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 28452-28455]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-11182]
[[Page 28452]]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 300
[Docket No. 130722647-4403-02]
RIN 0648-BD55
International Fisheries; Pacific Tuna Fisheries; Fishing
Restrictions for Pacific Bluefin Tuna in the Eastern Pacific Ocean
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: NMFS is issuing regulations under the Tuna Conventions Act to
implement Resolution C-13-02 of the Inter-American Tropical Tuna
Commission (IATTC or the Commission) by specifying limits on U.S.
commercial catch of Pacific bluefin tuna from the eastern Pacific Ocean
(EPO) waters of the IATTC Convention Area in 2014. This action is
necessary for the United States to satisfy its obligations as a member
of the IATTC to conserve Pacific Bluefin tuna, which is an overfished
stock.
DATES: The rule is effective June 16, 2014.
ADDRESSES: Copies of supporting documents that were prepared for this
final rule, including the Regulatory Impact Review (RIR), environmental
assessment (EA), final regulatory flexibility analysis (FRFA), and the
proposed rule, are available via the Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov, docket NOAA-NMFS-2013-0119. These documents, and
the small entity compliance guide prepared for this final rule, are
also available from the Regional Administrator, NMFS, West Coast
Regional Office, 7600 Sand Point Way NE., Bldg 1, Seattle, WA 98115-
0070. A summary of the initial regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA)
is included in the proposed rule, and a summary of the FRFA is included
in this final rule.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Amber Rhodes, NMFS, 562-980-3231, or
Heidi Taylor, NMFS, 562-980-4039.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
On January 10, 2014, NMFS published a proposed rule in the Federal
Register (79 FR 1810) that would add regulations at 50 CFR 300, subpart
C, to implement Resolution C-13-02, ``Measures for the Conservation and
Management of Bluefin Tuna in the Eastern Pacific Ocean,'' which was
adopted by the IATTC at its 85th Meeting, in June 2013. The proposed
rule was open to public comment through February 10, 2014. The comments
received are addressed in this rule.
The final rule is implemented under the authority of the Tuna
Conventions Act (16 U.S.C. 951-962 and 971 et seq.), which directs the
Secretary of Commerce, after approval by the Secretary of State, to
promulgate such regulations as may be necessary to implement
resolutions adopted by the IATTC. The Secretary's authority to
promulgate such regulations as may be necessary to carry out the
obligations of the United States has been delegated to NMFS.
The proposed rule includes additional background information,
including information on the IATTC, the international obligations of
the United States as an IATTC Member, and the basis for the new
regulations.
New Regulations
This final rule establishes 2014 limits on catch of Pacific bluefin
tuna (Thunnus orientalis) in the IATTC Convention Area. Once Pacific
bluefin tuna catch limits have been reached, NMFS will prohibit any
further targeting, retaining on board, transshipping, or landing of
Pacific bluefin tuna in the Convention Area, because these activities
can be effectively verified for enforcement purposes. The following
section includes a description of how the Pacific bluefin tuna catch
limit provisions apply under three possible scenarios.
2014 Catch Limits for Pacific Bluefin Tuna
Once the Commission-wide commercial catch limit of 5,000 metric
tons has been reached and the U.S. commercial fleet is expected to be
reached or has exceeded the 500 metric tons catch limit, then
targeting, retaining on board, transshipping, or landing of Pacific
bluefin tuna by all U.S. commercial vessels in the IATTC Convention
Area shall be prohibited for the remainder of 2014. If the U.S.
commercial fishing fleet has not caught 500 metric tons of Pacific
bluefin tuna in the Convention Area in 2014 when the Commission-wide
5,000 metric tons catch limit is reached, then the U.S. commercial
fleet may continue to target, retain, transship, or land Pacific
bluefin tuna until the 500 metric ton limit is reached. The U.S.
commercial fleet may continue to target, retain, transship, or land
more than the 500 metric tons of Pacific bluefin tuna in 2014 unless
and until the Commission-wide catch limit of 5,000 metric tons is
reached.
Announcement of the Limits Being Reached
To ensure that the total catch of Pacific bluefin tuna taken from
the IATTC Convention Area does not exceed the Commission-wide catch
limit for 2014, NMFS will report U.S. catch to the IATTC Director on a
monthly basis. The IATTC Director will inform the IATTC Members and
Cooperating non-members (collectively, CPCs) when 50 percent of the
Commission-wide limit is reached. The Director will likewise send
similar notices when 60, 70, and 80 percent of the Commission-wide
limit is reached. When 90 percent of the Commission-wide limit is
reached, the Director will send the corresponding notice to all CPCs,
with a projection of when the 5,000 metric ton Commission-wide limit
will be reached, at which time CPCs are expected to take the necessary
internal measures to avoid exceeding the limit. NMFS will provide
updates on Commission-wide and U.S. catches to the public via the IATTC
and coastal pelagic species email distribution lists and the West Coast
Region Web site: https://www.westcoast.fisheries .noaa.gov/fisheries/
migratory_species/bluefin_tuna_harvest_status.html. Additionally,
NMFS will report preliminarily estimated Pacific bluefin tuna catch
between monthly intervals (if and when catches approach the limits) to
help participants in the U.S. commercial fishery plan for the
possibility of the catch limit being reached.
When NMFS is informed that the 5,000 metric ton Commission-wide
limit has been met (based on information provided by the IATTC
Director) and that the 500 metric ton catch limit is expected to be
reached (based on landings receipts, data submitted in logbooks, and
other available fishery information), NMFS will publish a notice in the
Federal Register announcing that the targeting, retaining,
transshipping or landing of Pacific bluefin tuna will be prohibited on
a specified effective date through December 31, 2014. Upon that
effective date, a commercial fishing vessel of the United States may
not be used to target, retain on board, transship, or land any
additional PBF in the Convention Area during the period specified in
the announcement. Any PBF already on board a fishing vessel on the
effective date may be retained on board,
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transshipped, and/or landed, to the extent authorized by applicable
laws and regulations, provided that they are landed within 14 days
after the effective date.
Public Comments and Responses
NMFS received eight written public comments. The Department of the
Interior submitted comments on behalf of the National Park Service. One
commenter expressed concern about matters beyond the scope of this
action. Seven commenters expressed concern for the status of the
resource. None of the seven commenters opposed placing restrictions on
the U.S. catch of Pacific bluefin tuna; however, six of them suggested
further restricting the U.S. catch of Pacific bluefin tuna. Summaries
of the comments received and NMFS' responses appear below.
Comment 1: The proposed rule is not consistent with the Magnuson-
Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act)
because it does not prevent overfishing by addressing the relative
impacts of the U.S. fleet.
Response: NMFS is promulgating this rule in accordance with IATTC
Resolution C-13-02 and under the authority of the Tuna Conventions Act.
This action is not subject to the Magnuson-Stevens Act. However, NMFS
informed the Pacific Fishery Management Council and the Western Pacific
Fishery Management Council of the stock status determination and
obligations under section 304(i) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act to develop
and submit recommendations to NMFS and/or the Secretary of State for
domestic and international actions that will end overfishing in the
fishery and rebuild the affected stock taking into account the relative
impact of U.S. vessels and that of foreign vessels on the stock.
Comment 2: The proposed rule indicates that NMFS only analyzed two
alternatives. More alternatives, including a suspension of bluefin
fishing, should have been analyzed.
Response: The preamble of the proposed rule included a discussion
of only two alternatives as part of the IRFA summary: the proposed rule
and no action. The purpose of the IFRA is to determine whether the
action would have a significant economic impact on a substantial number
of small entities. No other significant alternatives accomplished the
stated objectives of the applicable statutes and minimized the economic
impact of the proposed rule on affected small entities. In addition to
the IRFA, NMFS prepared a draft EA and made it available for public
comment with the proposed rule. The draft EA included several
alternatives to the proposed action, including suspension of directed
fishing for Pacific bluefin tuna in the eastern Pacific Ocean, and
considered the potential effects of each alternative on the human
environment (i.e., natural, social, and economic environment). The
final EA is publicly available as a supporting document to this rule.
Comment 3: Catch data should be up-to-date. NMFS should not be
reporting catch data that is more than 1 year old as ``preliminary.''
Response: NMFS decided not to cite the U.S. catch of Pacific
bluefin tuna in 2013 in the proposed rule because, at that time, the
2013 fishing season for Pacific bluefin tuna had not yet ended. U.S.
catch reported in this final rule has been updated with ``preliminary''
data for U.S. commercial catch of Pacific bluefin tuna in 2013.
``Preliminary'' data is subject to change. NMFS adheres to strict
guidelines for publishing fishery data in the interest of ensuring data
quality and protecting confidential data. Due to changes in data
reporting mechanisms, there has been a delay in the availability of the
published data sets typically made available annually in the Pacific
Fishery Management Council's Highly Migratory Species Stock Assessment
and Fishery Evaluation (SAFE) documents. In the meantime, and when
publishing supporting information in rules, NMFS has been publishing
data as ``preliminary'' only after it has been determined not to be
confidential.
Comment 4: There are unacceptable levels of Pacific bluefin tuna
mortality by overseas fleets and recreational fisheries. A Pacific-wide
catch limit is needed and the 500 metric ton limit should include
recreational catch. Additionally, the U.S. National Park Service (NPS)
recommends that NMFS include national park unit boundaries in Pacific
bluefin tuna regulations with consideration for additional monitoring
of effort and catch, recreational catch-and-release, and a moratorium
on harvest of Pacific bluefin tuna until individual national park units
request a harvest allocation.
Response: NMFS notes these recommendations going forward. However,
they are beyond the scope of the IATTC resolution that this rule
implements. NMFS acknowledges that the average annual Pacific bluefin
tuna landings by U.S. commercial vessels fishing in the EPO represent
roughly two percent of the average annual landings from all fleets
commercially fishing in the EPO for years 2007 through 2011 (refer to
Section 1.4 of the Environmental Assessment). This contribution to
Pacific bluefin mortality by the U.S. commercial fishing fleet is even
smaller when considering the levels of catch by all fisheries, Pacific-
wide. While the United States is a member of both the IATTC and the
Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC), a Pacific-
wide catch limit would require complimentary action by the WCPFC.
Suggestions for purely domestic fishery management actions--such as
rules on Pacific bluefin fishing within U.S. national parks--would be
better suited to the decision-making process of the appropriate fishery
management councils and implementation under the authority of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act.
Changes From the Proposed Rule
No substantive changes have been made to this rule since the
proposed rule stage. Minor edits were made to the regulatory text to
improve clarity. The authority citations for 50 CFR part 300 and
subpart C are revised to identify more precisely the statutory citation
for the Tuna Conventions Act as 16 U.S.C. 951 et seq.
Classification
The NMFS Assistant Administrator has determined that this final
rule is necessary for the conservation and management of Pacific
bluefin tuna, and that it is consistent with the Tuna Conventions Act
and other applicable laws.
This final rule has been determined to be not significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
There are no new collection-of-information requirements associated
with this action that are subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act,
existing collection-of-information requirements associated with the
U.S. West Coast Highly Migratory Species Fishery Management Plan still
apply. These requirements have been approved by the Office of
Management and Budget under Control Number 0648-0204.
A final regulatory flexibility analysis (FRFA) was prepared. A copy
of this analysis is available from the NMFS (see ADDRESSES). The FRFA
incorporates the IRFA, and a summary of the analyses completed to
support the action is included directly below.
The main objective of this rule is to establish catch limits to
contribute to the conservation of the Pacific bluefin tuna stock. This
rule applies to owners and operators of U.S. commercial fishing vessels
that catch Pacific bluefin tuna in the IATTC Convention Area. Each
vessel that is expected to be affected is considered a small business
according to the Small Business
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Administration's revised size standards (78 FR 37398, July 20, 2013).
Pacific bluefin tuna do not serve as the primary target species for any
U.S. commercial vessels, but rather are incidentally or
opportunistically caught by U.S. commercial vessels fishing in the EPO.
Therefore, the action is not expected to have a significant or
disproportional economic impact on these small business entities.
After NMFS determines that the limits are expected to be reached,
NMFS will publish a notice in the Federal Register announcing that
restrictions will be effective from the dates specified through the end
of the calendar year. NMFS will take reasonable actions to inform
vessel owners in advance of publishing, in a Federal Register
announcement, the effective date for the restrictions on targeting,
retaining, transshipping, or landing Pacific bluefin tuna captured in
the IATTC Convention Area. In the event that the limit on Pacific
bluefin tuna catch is reached in 2014, it will be the responsibility of
the commercial vessel owner to ensure that no further targeting of
Pacific bluefin tuna occurs, and that no additional Pacific bluefin
tuna are retained on board, transshipped, or landed after the specified
dates published in the Federal Register notice announcing that the
annual limit is expected to be reached.
While this rule does not mandate any new ``reporting'' or
``recordkeeping'' requirements for the public, some compliance costs
may be associated with these regulations if the restrictions on
targeting, retaining, transshipping, or landing Pacific bluefin tuna in
the IATTC Convention Area becomes effective in 2014 as a result of the
commercial catch limits being reached. The Pacific bluefin tuna
commercial catch limits are not expected to result in the cessation of
fishing by U.S. commercial vessels for Pacific bluefin tuna in the
Convention Area since the annual U.S. catches of Pacific bluefin tuna
have not reached 500 metric tons in more than a decade. In the event of
a closure under this rule, the cost of compliance would be de minimis.
Compliance costs could consist of returning incidentally caught bluefin
tuna to the ocean, forgoing associated profits, and potentially losing
fishing opportunity if Pacific bluefin tuna are available to the U.S.
fleet during a time when fishing for them has been prohibited.
The U.S. catch of Pacific bluefin tuna in the EPO represents a
relatively minor component of the overall catch of Pacific bluefin tuna
from the EPO. The average annual U.S. catch of Pacific bluefin tuna was
106 metric tons for 1999 through 2013. Pacific bluefin tuna is
commercially caught by U.S. vessels fishing in the EPO on an irregular
basis. Most of the landings are made by small coastal purse seine
vessels operating in the Southern California Bight with limited
additional landings made by the drift gillnet fleet that targets
swordfish and thresher shark. Lesser amounts of Pacific bluefin tuna
are caught by surface hook and line and longline gear (typically less
than .05 metric tons per year for these gear types combined). The
number of purse seine vessels that have landed tuna in California
averaged 197 annually from 1981 through 1990. However, from 2000 to
2013, no more than six small purse seiners have been registered with
the IATTC to target Pacific bluefin tuna in the Convention Area each
year. The landings data suggests that they opportunistically targeted
Pacific bluefin tuna in alternate years since 2001.
For the purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility Act analysis, NMFS
compared the effects of the Pacific bluefin tuna restrictions imposed
by this rule to a no action alternative. No additional alternatives
exist that accomplish the stated objectives of applicable statutes and
that minimize the rule's economic impact on the affected small
entities. Under the no action alternative, there would be no limit on
U.S. commercial catches of Pacific bluefin tuna in the IATTC Convention
Area. It is unlikely that any short-term economic benefit to U.S.
commercial fisheries would be gained from not implementing Resolution
C-13-02 because recent trends in Pacific bluefin tuna catch data
indicate that it is unlikely that the U.S. catch limit will be reached.
However, failing to adopt this rule would result in the United States
not satisfying its international obligations as a member of the IATTC.
Furthermore, implementing Resolution C-13-02 conserves Pacific bluefin
tuna by limiting catches, thereby increasing the chances that small
entities will have continued opportunities to harvest this currently
overfished stock in the EPO.
Section 212 of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness
Act of 1996 states that, for each rule or group of related rules for
which an agency is required to prepare a FRFA, the agency shall publish
one or more guides to assist small entities in complying with the rule,
and shall designate such publications as ``small entity compliance
guides.'' The agency shall explain the actions a small entity is
required to take to comply with a rule or group of rules. As part of
this rulemaking process, a small entity compliance guide (the guide)
was prepared. Copies of this final rule are available from the West
Coast Regional Office, and the guide will be sent to vessels that catch
Pacific bluefin tuna in the IATTC Convention Area via the IATTC and
coastal pelagic species email distributions lists. The guide and this
final rule will be available upon request and on the West Coast Region
Web site: https://www.westcoast.fisheries .noaa.gov/fisheries/
migratory_species/bluefin_tuna_harvest_status.html.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 300
Administrative practice and procedure, Antarctica, Canada, Exports,
Fish, Fisheries, Fishing, Imports, Indians, Labeling, Marine resources,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Russian Federation,
Transportation, Treaties, Wildlife.
Dated: May 9, 2014.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, 50 CFR part 300 is amended
as follows:
PART 300--INTERNATIONAL FISHERIES REGULATIONS
0
1. The authority citation for part 300 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 951 et seq., 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq., 16
U.S.C. 5501 et seq., 16 U.S.C. 2431 et seq., 31 U.S.C. 9701 et seq.
0
2. The authority citation for 50 CFR part 300, Subpart C, is revised to
read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 951 et seq.
0
3. In Sec. 300.24, paragraph (u) is added to read as follows:
Sec. 300.24 Prohibitions.
* * * * *
(u) Use a United States commercial fishing vessel in the IATTC
Convention Area in contravention of Sec. 300.25(h)(4)
0
4. In Sec. 300.25, paragraph (h) is added to read as follows:
Sec. 300.25 Eastern Pacific fisheries management.
* * * * *
(h) Pacific bluefin tuna commercial catch limits in the eastern
Pacific Ocean.
(1) For the calendar year 2014, all commercial fishing vessels of
IATTC member countries and cooperating non-member countries
collectively are subject to a limit of 5,000 metric tons of Pacific
bluefin tuna that may be captured, retained, and landed in the
Convention Area.
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(2) Notwithstanding the collective 5,000 metric ton limit, in
calendar year 2014 commercial vessels of the United States may capture,
retain, transship, or land 500 metric tons of Pacific bluefin tuna.
(3) After NMFS determines that the limits under paragraphs (h)(1)
and (h)(2) of this section are expected to be reached by a future date,
and at least 7 calendar days in advance of that date, NMFS will publish
a notice of closure in the Federal Register announcing the effective
date that additional targeting, retaining on board, transshipping or
landing Pacific bluefin tuna in the Convention Area shall be prohibited
as described in paragraph (h)(4) of this section.
(4) Beginning on the date announced in the notice of closure
published under paragraph (h)(3) of this section through the end of the
calendar year, a commercial fishing vessel of the United States may not
be used to target, retain on board, transship, or land any additional
Pacific bluefin tuna captured in the Convention Area. Any Pacific
bluefin tuna already on board a fishing vessel on the effective date of
the notice may be retained on board, transshipped, and/or landed, to
the extent authorized by applicable laws and regulations, provided such
tuna is landed within 14 days after the effective date published in the
notice of closure.
[FR Doc. 2014-11182 Filed 5-15-14; 8:45 am]
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