Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone off Alaska; Application for an Exempted Fishing Permit, 44385-44388 [2017-20187]
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Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Notices
The
following items are on the agenda,
though agenda items may be addressed
out of order (changes will be noted on
the Council’s Web site when possible.)
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Tuesday, October 10, 2017
Executive Committee
Review 2017 and Proposed 2018
Implementation Plan; discuss
recommendations on 2018 priorities.
Swearing In of New and Reappointed
Council Members
Election of Officers
Surfclam and Ocean Quahog Goals and
Objectives Workshop
Review results from Fisheries Forum
project; review Fishery Management
Action Team recommendations; identify
and approve revised goals and
objectives for public hearing document.
Golden Tilefish Individual Transferable
Quota Program Review
Review and approve final report.
Regional Planning Body Ecologically
Rich Areas Presentation
Wednesday, October 11, 2017
Lobster Standardized Bycatch Reporting
Methodology Framework—Meeting 2
Final action on preferred alternatives
Science Report; Organization Reports;
and Liaison Reports.
• Continuing and New Business.
Although non-emergency issues not
contained in this agenda may come
before this group for discussion, in
accordance with the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act), those
issues may not be the subject of formal
action during these meetings. Actions
will be restricted to those issues
specifically identified in this notice and
any issues arising after publication of
this notice that require emergency
action under section 305(c) of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, provided the
public has been notified of the Council’s
intent to take final action to address the
emergency.
Special Accommodations
These meetings are physically
accessible to people with disabilities.
Requests for sign language
interpretation or other auxiliary aid
should be directed to M. Jan Saunders,
(302) 526–5251, at least 5 days prior to
the meeting date.
Dated: September 19, 2017.
Tracey L. Thompson,
Acting Deputy Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2017–20238 Filed 9–21–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
Spiny Dogfish Specifications
Review previously set specifications
for 2018 and consider any modifications
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
Ecosystem Approach to Fisheries
Management Risk Assessment
Finalize and adopt EAFM Based Risk
Assessment.
Summer Flounder, Scup, and Black Sea
Bass Commercial Accountability
Measure Framework—Meeting 1
Review background, issues, and draft
alternatives.
2018 Recreational Black Sea Bass Wave
1 Fishery
Consider a potential February 2018
opening of the recreational Wave 1
fishery.
Reports will be received from the
NOAA Office of Law Enforcement and
the U.S. Coast Guard.
Review plan for the development of
the Strategic Plan.
Thursday, October 12, 2017
• Business Session Committee
Reports; Executive Director’s Report;
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Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone off Alaska; Application for an
Exempted Fishing Permit
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; receipt of application for
exempted fishing permit.
AGENCY:
This notice announces receipt
of an exempted fishing permit (EFP)
application from the Alaska Seafood
Cooperative (AKSC). If granted, this EFP
would allow non-pelagic trawl catcher/
processor operators targeting groundfish
in the Gulf of Alaska (GOA) and Bering
Sea and Aleutian Islands (BSAI) to
remove halibut from a trawl codend on
the deck, and release those halibut back
to the water in a timely manner to
increase survivability. The proposed
project would build on work conducted
by the applicant under EFPs in 2009,
2012, and 2015 through 2017 to test
SUMMARY:
Law Enforcement Reports
2019–23 Strategic Plan
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
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methods for sorting halibut on deck of
non-pelagic trawl catcher/processor
vessels in the BSAI including methods
to increase halibut survivability and
ensure reliable catch accounting and
personnel safety. The objective of the
proposed project is to refine the few,
remaining operational issues to yield
robust methods which could be
implemented to allow sorting of halibut
on the deck of non-pelagic trawl vessels
as a standard practice in the BSAI and
GOA in the future. The specific
objectives of the proposed project are to
(1) continue the proven methods used in
2017 EFP operations in 2018 and 2019;
(2) develop individual-vessel deck
sorting safety protocols; (3) test methods
for moving fish on deck to ensure a
single flow of fish, which is essential for
proper catch monitoring; and (4) expand
the project to the GOA to standardize
operations between the BSAI and GOA
and evaluate the potential for increasing
halibut survivability in the GOA. This
experiment has the potential to promote
the objectives of the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act and the Northern Pacific Halibut
Act.
DATES: Comments on this EFP
application must be submitted to NMFS
on or before October 10, 2017. The
North Pacific Fishery Management
Council (Council) will consider the
application at its meeting from October
2, 2017, through October 10, 2017, in
Anchorage, AK.
ADDRESSES: The Council meeting will be
held at the Hilton Hotel, 500 W 3rd
Ave., Anchorage, AK 99501. The agenda
for the Council meeting is available at
https://www.npfmc.org. You may submit
comments on this document, identified
by NOAA–NMFS–2017–0112, by any 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-20170112, click the ‘‘Comment Now!’’ icon,
complete the required fields, and enter
or attach your comments.
• Mail: Submit written comments to
Glenn Merrill, Assistant Regional
Administrator, Sustainable Fisheries
Division, Alaska Region NMFS, Attn:
Ellen Sebastian. Mail comments to P.O.
Box 21668, Juneau, AK 99802–1668.
Instructions: Comments sent by any
other method, to any other address or
individual, or received after the end of
the comment period, may not be
considered. All comments received are
a part of the public record and will
generally be posted for public viewing
on www.regulations.gov without change.
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All personal identifying information
(e.g., name, address) 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).
Electronic copies of the EFP
application and the basis for a
categorical exclusion under the National
Environmental Policy Act are available
from the Alaska Region, NMFS Web site
at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Brandee Gerke, 907–586–7650.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NMFS
manages the domestic groundfish
fisheries in the BSAI and GOA
management areas under the Fishery
Management Plan (FMP) for Groundfish
of the BSAI and the FMP for Groundfish
of the GOA, which the Council prepared
under the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act.
Regulations governing the BSAI and
GOA groundfish fisheries appear at 50
CFR parts 600 and 679. The FMPs and
the implementing regulations at
§ 600.745(b) and § 679.6 allow the
NMFS Regional Administrator to
authorize, for limited experimental
purposes, fishing that would otherwise
be prohibited. Procedures for issuing
EFPs are contained in the implementing
regulations.
The IPHC and NMFS manage fishing
for Pacific halibut (Hippoglossus
stenolepis) through regulations
established under the authority of the
Convention between the United States
and Canada for the Preservation of the
Halibut Fishery of the Northern Pacific
Ocean and Bering Sea (Convention) and
the Northern Pacific Halibut Act of
1982. The IPHC promulgates regulations
pursuant to the Convention. The IPHC’s
regulations are subject to approval by
the Secretary of State with concurrence
from the Secretary of Commerce
(Secretary).
Background
Regulations implemented by the IPHC
allow Pacific halibut to be commercially
harvested by the directed North Pacific
longline fishery. Halibut is a prohibited
species in the groundfish fishery,
requiring immediate return to the sea
with a minimum of injury. Halibut
caught incidentally by non-pelagic trawl
catcher/processors in the groundfish
fisheries must be weighed on a NMFSapproved scale, sampled by observers,
and returned to the ocean as soon as
possible. The Council establishes
annual maximum halibut bycatch
allowances and seasonal
apportionments adjusted by an
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estimated halibut discard mortality rate
(DMR) for groundfish fisheries. The
DMRs are based on the best information
available, including information
contained in the annual Stock
Assessment and Fishery Evaluation
report, available at https://www.alaska
fisheries.noaa.gov/. NMFS approves the
halibut DMRs developed and
recommended by the IPHC and the
Council for the BSAI groundfish
fisheries for use in monitoring the
halibut bycatch allowances and seasonal
apportionments. The IPHC developed
these DMRs for the BSAI groundfish
fisheries using the 10-year mean DMRs
for those fisheries.
Directed fishing in a groundfish
fishery closes when the halibut
mortality apportionment for the fishery
is reached, even if the target species
catch is less than the seasonal or annual
quota for the directed fishery. In the
case of the Bering Sea flatfish fishery,
seasons have been closed before fishery
quotas have been reached to prevent the
fishery from exceeding the halibut
mortality apportionment.
With the implementation of
Amendment 80 to the FMP on
September 14, 2007 (72 FR 52668),
halibut mortality apportionments were
established for the Amendment 80
sector and for Amendment 80
cooperatives. Amendment 80 is a catch
share program that allocates several
BSAI non-pollock trawl groundfish
fisheries (including the flatfish fishery)
among fishing sectors, and facilitates the
formation of harvesting cooperatives in
the non-American Fisheries Act trawl
catcher/processor sector. Though
halibut mortality apportionments
provide Amendment 80 cooperatives
more flexibility to use available
mortality, halibut mortality continues to
constrain fishing in some Amendment
80 fisheries. Therefore, this sector is
actively exploring ways to continue to
reduce halibut mortality.
The Amendment 80 sector may also
harvest groundfish in the GOA. The
Amendment 80 sector does not receive
fishery allocations in the GOA and the
amount of each groundfish species that
may be caught by the cooperative in the
GOA is limited to the sideboard
amounts specified in Table 27 of the
2018 GOA Groundfish Harvest
Specifications. The Amendment 80
sector is subject to halibut PSC limits
established for that sector in the GOA.
The Amendment 80 sector GOA halibut
PSC limits for 2018 are provided in
Table 28 of the GOA Groundfish Harvest
Specifications. The 2018 GOA
Groundfish Harvest Specifications are
available at: https://alaska
fisheries.noaa.gov/harvest-
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specifications/field_harvest_spec_year/
2017-2018-841.
Before incidentally caught halibut are
returned to the sea, at-sea observers
must estimate halibut and groundfish
catch amounts. Regulations in 50 CFR
part 679 assure that observer estimates
of halibut and groundfish catch are
credible and accurate, and that potential
bias is minimized. For example, NMFS
requires sector fishing vessels to make
all catch available for sampling by an
observer; prohibits vessel crew from
tampering with observer samples;
prohibits vessel crew from removing
halibut from a codend, bin, or
conveyance system prior to being
observed and counted by an at-sea
observer; and prohibits fish (including
halibut) from remaining on deck unless
an observer is present.
In 2009 and 2012, halibut mortality
experiments were conducted by
members of the Amendment 80 sector
under EFP 09–02 (74 FR 12113, March
23, 2009) and EFP 12–01 (76 FR 70972,
November 16, 2011). By regulation, all
catch including halibut is moved across
a flow scale below deck before the
halibut is returned to the sea. Halibut
mortality increases with increased
handling and time out of water. Under
the 2009 and 2012 EFPs, experimental
methods for sorting catch on a vessel’s
deck allowed halibut to be returned to
the sea in less time, with less handling
relative to halibut routed below deck
and over the flow scale. The halibut
mortality during flatfish fishing under
the 2009 and 2012 EFPs was estimated
to be approximately 17 metric tons (mt)
and 10.8 mt, respectively, less than the
amounts estimated from the DMR for
this fishery. The reduced halibut
mortality under the 2009 and 2012 EFPs
is attributed to the improved condition
of halibut through reduced handling
and time out of water.
In 2015, test fishing under EFP 2015–
02 (80 FR 3222, January 22, 2015)
expanded on results of the 2009 and
2012 EFPs to explore the feasibility of
deck sorting halibut in additional
fisheries, on more vessels, and during a
longer interval of time during the
fishing season. The primary objective
was to reduce halibut mortality in the
Amendment 80 groundfish fisheries in
2015. Fishing under the EFP began in
May and continued through November.
The most prominent result from the
2015 EFP was that substantial halibut
mortality savings were achieved from
deck sorting on BSAI non-pelagic trawl
catcher/processor vessels. The
preliminary estimate of halibut savings
under the 2015 EFP is 131 mt. For the
nine vessels that participated in the
2015 EFP, all but one achieved mortality
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rates in the range of 41 percent to 53
percent, compared to the standard
mortality rate of 80 percent in the
Bering Sea flatfish fisheries without
deck sorting (average across target
fisheries of interest for the 2015 EFP).
EFP 2016–01 (81 FR 4018, January 25,
2016) was issued on May 6, 2016 with
an effective period through April 30,
2017. EFP 2016–01 expanded on the
prior EFPs and expanded test fishing
with the deck sorting methods to nonpelagic trawl catcher/processors
participating in trawl limited access and
community development quota (CDQ)
fisheries in addition to the Amendment
80 vessels. Test fishing under EFP
2016–01 from May through November
2016 resulted in more participating
vessels over more fisheries and yielded
greater halibut savings relative to prior
years. In 2016, twelve catcher/processor
vessels participated in test fishing under
EFP 2016–01. In prior deck sorting
EFPs, test fishing primarily occurred in
the flathead sole and arrowtooth
flounder fisheries. In 2016, test fishing
expanded to fisheries for yellowfin sole,
Pacific cod, Pacific ocean perch, and
Atka mackerel to a much larger extent
than in prior years. Halibut mortality is
estimated to have been reduced by 288
mt through deck sorting in 2016 under
EFP 2016–01.
EFP 2016–01 was modified on
January 10, 2017 to allow vessel
operators the option of carrying two or
three observers per trip, depending on
the needs of the vessel. EFP 2016–01
originally required the vessel to carry
three observers. EFP fishing in 2016
demonstrated that two observers could
sufficiently collect the requisite data for
EFP hauls. Under modified EFP 2016–
01 vessel operators may opt to carry
more than two observers to maintain the
pace at which fish are run through the
factory while halibut are being sorted
and sampled by an observer on deck or
they may carry two observers with the
condition that fish may not be run into
the factory while the observer is on deck
sampling the sorted halibut. Additional
modifications to EFP 2016–01 included
(a) changes in observer sampling
methods designed to increase
consistency of observer sampling for the
EFP with other, routine observer
sampling in the fisheries; (b) changes to
the persons named on the EFP as
designated representatives; and (c) the
addition of new vessels to the EFP. On
February 17, 2017, NMFS renewed
modified EFP 2016–01 to be effective
through December 31, 2017 (82 FR 5539,
January 18, 2017). Results from the 2017
EFP are not yet available.
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Proposed Action
On August 29, 2017, the AKSC, an
Amendment 80 cooperative, submitted
an application for an EFP for 2018 and
2019 to build on the information
collected in prior deck sorting EFPs and
further reduce halibut mortality in the
Amendment 80, CDQ, and trawl limited
access sectors. The objectives of the
proposed EFP for 2018 and 2019 are to
test modifications to the procedures and
approaches in the 2016 and 2017 EFP
that (1) move substantively towards
implementation of deck sorting as an
allowable fish handling mode for the
non-pelagic catcher/processor trawl
fisheries in the BSAI and GOA; and (2)
improve on elements that worked in
prior deck sorting EFPs. Consistent with
2016 and 2017 methods, the EFP would
allow crew on board catcher/processors
to sort halibut removed from a codend
on the deck of the vessel. Those sorted
halibut could be released back to the
water after the halibut are measured by
the observer for length and tested for
physical condition using standard IPHC
viability assessment methods.
The applicants propose to test several
new aspects that would inform a future,
operationalized deck sorting process in
Federal regulations:
(1) Expand deck sorting methods to
non-pelagic trawl catcher/processor
vessels in the GOA;
(2) Require vessel-specific deck
sorting safety plans that detail how safe
working conditions for observers are
incorporated into deck sorting
operations on each participating vessel;
(3) Establish a time limit for deck
sorting of 35 minutes per haul (because
the application does not state who
would run the timer, this detail would
have to be resolved in the permit,
should a permit be granted);
(4) Standardize chutes used to move
fish on deck so only one flow of fish is
used to move halibut to the observer;
(5) Make optional, the census of
halibut in the factory and transfer the
responsibility for conducting the census
from the observer to the vessel crew.
The applicant proposes to begin EFP
fishing in January 2018 and end on
December 31, 2019. The EFP would
allow halibut to be sorted, sampled, and
released prior to being weighed on a
flow scale, to achieve the experimental
objectives and reduce halibut mortality.
This EFP application requests an
amount of halibut PSC mortality for
vessels engaged in experimental fishing
not to exceed the 2018 halibut PSC
mortality apportionments set out in
Table 14 of the Final 2017 and 2018
BSAI Harvest Specifications (available
at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/sites/
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default/files/17_18bsaitable14.pdf); and
Table 14 and Table 15 of the Final 2017
and 2018 GOA Harvest Specifications
(available at https://alaska
fisheries.noaa.gov/sites/default/files/17_
18goatable14.pdf and https://alaska
fisheries.noaa.gov/sites/default/files/17_
18goatable15.pdf). Participants request
no additional groundfish or halibut
quota as part of this EFP application,
and all groundfish catch will accrue
against the appropriate Amendment 80,
CDQ, or trawl limited access sector
catch and PSC allowances.
Participating vessels would procure
and use NMFS-trained at-sea observers
during EFP trips. Observers would
perform all of their duties on work shifts
not exceed 12 hours per observer.
Identical to methods in 2016 and
2017, observers would be able to enter
and extrapolate data via the NMFS
Catch Accounting System so PSC usage
by EFP participants would be reported
and tracked in near real-time along with
non-EFP participants’ usage and would
accrue against the cooperative’s halibut
PSC mortality apportionments. If the
halibut mortality apportionment is
reached, the EFP permit holder would
notify NMFS and end EFP fishing. As
required by existing regulations,
Amendment 80 fishing will also cease
when the annual halibut mortality
apportionment is reached.
Also identical to methods in 2016 and
2017, halibut that are not sorted on deck
would flow to the factory and be
available to the observer for sampling.
The on-duty observer would collect
species composition samples per
standard protocols to estimate the
proportion of halibut in the haul relative
to other species. The proportion of
halibut estimated to be in the haul
would be extrapolated to the total haul
catch weight to estimate the total
amount of halibut not sorted on deck. A
mortality rate of 90 percent would be
applied to the amount of halibut in the
factory to estimate the halibut mortality
from the factory. The resulting factory
halibut mortality amount would be
combined with the amount of halibut
mortality estimated in the deck-sorted
portion of the haul to estimate the total
halibut mortality for each EFP haul.
The following example is provided as
an illustration for how total halibut
mortality would be calculated for a haul
under the 2016 EFP. Assume a vessel
catches 400 kilograms (kg) of halibut in
one haul. Assume 92 percent of the
halibut is removed on deck and the
vessel achieves a halibut discard
mortality of 50 percent by releasing
these fish from deck. In this example,
the amount of halibut mortality on deck
is 184 kg. A halibut mortality of 90
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percent is applied to the 32 kg of halibut
that are sampled in the factory, resulting
in a halibut mortality of 28.8 kg in the
factory. In this example, the total
halibut mortality for the haul is 212.8
kg.
The halibut mortality data collected
by observers would be available to
NMFS in near-real time for inseason
management in 2018 and 2019. In
addition to the observer samples, under
the 2018 EFP, at the discretion of the
vessel operator, vessel crew could
conduct a census (a full count) of
halibut in the factory, after they have
been available to the observer for
sampling, to compare observer estimates
of total halibut and census results.
In 2018, EFP participants would
continue to operate under a single catch
handling and accounting method for all
hauls on a fishing trip designated as an
EFP trip. Operators of participating
vessels would still have a way to opt out
of sorting on deck when it is potentially
unsafe or when the vessel has located a
fishing area where halibut bycatch is
very low.
This proposed action would exempt
participating catcher/processors from
selected 50 CFR part 679 prohibitions,
and monitoring and observer
requirements. Should the Regional
Administrator issue a permit based on
this EFP application, the conditions of
the permit will be designed to minimize
halibut mortality and any potential for
biasing estimates of groundfish and
halibut mortality. Vessels participating
in EFP fishing may be exempt from, at
minimum, the following regulations:
1. The prohibition against interfering
with or biasing the sampling procedure
employed by an observer including
physical, mechanical, or other sorting or
discarding of catch before sampling, at
§ 679.7(g)(2);
2. the requirements to weigh all catch
by an Amendment 80 vessel on a
NMFS-approved scale at § 679.93(c)(1)
and by all vessels at § 679.28(b); and
3. the requirement to return all
prohibited species, or parts thereof, to
the sea immediately, with a minimum of
injury, regardless of its condition at
§ 679.21(b)(2)(ii).
In 2020, the AKSC would be required
to submit to NMFS a report of the EFP
results after EFP experimental fishing
has ended in 2019. The report would
include a comparison of halibut
mortality from halibut sampled during
the EFP and an estimate of halibut
mortality under standard IPHC halibut
mortality rates for those target fisheries.
Under the EFP, participants would be
limited to their groundfish allocations
under the 2016 harvest specifications.
The amount of halibut mortality applied
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to the EFP activities would be subject to
review and approval by NMFS.
This EFP would be valid upon
issuance in 2018 until either the end of
2019 or when the annual halibut
mortality apportionment is reached in
areas of the BSAI and GOA open to
directed fishing by the various sectors.
EFP-authorized fishing activities would
not be expected to change the nature or
duration of the groundfish fishery, gear
used, or the amount or species of fish
caught by the participants.
The fieldwork that would be
conducted under this EFP is not
expected to have a significant impact on
the human environment as detailed in
the categorical exclusion prepared for
this action (see ADDRESSES).
In accordance with § 679.6, NMFS has
determined that the application
warrants further consideration and has
forwarded the application to the
Council to initiate consultation. The
Council is scheduled to consider the
EFP application during its October 2017
meeting, which will be held at the
Hilton Hotel, Anchorage AK. The EFP
application will also be provided to the
Council’s Scientific and Statistical
Committee for review at the October
Council meeting. The applicant has
been invited to appear in support of the
application.
Public Comments
Interested persons may comment on
the application at the February 2016
Council meeting during public
testimony or until October 10, 2017.
Information regarding the meeting is
available at the Council’s Web site at
https://www.npfmc.org. Copies of the
application and categorical exclusion
are available for review from NMFS (see
ADDRESSES). Comments also may be
submitted directly to NMFS (see
ADDRESSES) by the end of the comment
period (see DATES).
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: September 18, 2017.
Emily H. Menashes,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
RIN 0648–XF698
New England Fishery Management
Council; Public Meeting
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; public meeting.
AGENCY:
The New England Fishery
Management Council (Council) is
scheduling a public meeting of its
Scientific & Statistical Committee to
consider actions affecting New England
fisheries in the exclusive economic zone
(EEZ). Recommendations from this
group will be brought to the full Council
for formal consideration and action, if
appropriate.
SUMMARY:
This meeting will be held on
Thursday, October 12, 2017 beginning at
10 a.m.
ADDRESSES:
Meeting address: The meeting will be
held at the Hilton Garden Inn, Boston
Logan, 100 Boardman Street, Boston,
MA 02128; phone: (617) 567–6789.
Council address: New England
Fishery Management Council, 50 Water
Street, Mill 2, Newburyport, MA 01950.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Thomas A. Nies, Executive Director,
New England Fishery Management
Council; telephone: (978) 465–0492.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
DATES:
Agenda
The Committee will review
information provided by the Council’s
Scallop Plan Development Team (PDT)
and recommend the overfishing levels
(OFLs) and acceptable biological catches
(ABCs) for Atlantic sea scallops for
fishing years 2018–19 (default). They
will also review information provided
by the Council’s Whiting PDT and
recommend the OFLs and ABCs for the
northern and southern stocks of silver
hake and separately for red hake for
fishing years 2018–20. Other business
will be discussed as needed.
Although non-emergency issues not
contained on this agenda may come
before this Council for discussion, those
issues may not be the subject of formal
action during this meeting. Council
action will be restricted to those issues
specifically listed in this notice and any
issues arising after publication of this
notice that require emergency action
under section 305(c) of the MagnusonStevens Act, provided the public has
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 183 (Friday, September 22, 2017)]
[Notices]
[Pages 44385-44388]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-20187]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
RIN 0648-XF678
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone off Alaska; Application
for an Exempted Fishing Permit
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; receipt of application for exempted fishing permit.
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SUMMARY: This notice announces receipt of an exempted fishing permit
(EFP) application from the Alaska Seafood Cooperative (AKSC). If
granted, this EFP would allow non-pelagic trawl catcher/processor
operators targeting groundfish in the Gulf of Alaska (GOA) and Bering
Sea and Aleutian Islands (BSAI) to remove halibut from a trawl codend
on the deck, and release those halibut back to the water in a timely
manner to increase survivability. The proposed project would build on
work conducted by the applicant under EFPs in 2009, 2012, and 2015
through 2017 to test methods for sorting halibut on deck of non-pelagic
trawl catcher/processor vessels in the BSAI including methods to
increase halibut survivability and ensure reliable catch accounting and
personnel safety. The objective of the proposed project is to refine
the few, remaining operational issues to yield robust methods which
could be implemented to allow sorting of halibut on the deck of non-
pelagic trawl vessels as a standard practice in the BSAI and GOA in the
future. The specific objectives of the proposed project are to (1)
continue the proven methods used in 2017 EFP operations in 2018 and
2019; (2) develop individual-vessel deck sorting safety protocols; (3)
test methods for moving fish on deck to ensure a single flow of fish,
which is essential for proper catch monitoring; and (4) expand the
project to the GOA to standardize operations between the BSAI and GOA
and evaluate the potential for increasing halibut survivability in the
GOA. This experiment has the potential to promote the objectives of the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act and the
Northern Pacific Halibut Act.
DATES: Comments on this EFP application must be submitted to NMFS on or
before October 10, 2017. The North Pacific Fishery Management Council
(Council) will consider the application at its meeting from October 2,
2017, through October 10, 2017, in Anchorage, AK.
ADDRESSES: The Council meeting will be held at the Hilton Hotel, 500 W
3rd Ave., Anchorage, AK 99501. The agenda for the Council meeting is
available at https://www.npfmc.org. You may submit comments on this
document, identified by NOAA-NMFS-2017-0112, by any 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-2017-0112, click the
``Comment Now!'' icon, complete the required fields, and enter or
attach your comments.
Mail: Submit written comments to Glenn Merrill, Assistant
Regional Administrator, Sustainable Fisheries Division, Alaska Region
NMFS, Attn: Ellen Sebastian. Mail comments to P.O. Box 21668, Juneau,
AK 99802-1668.
Instructions: Comments sent by any other method, to any other
address or individual, or received after the end of the comment period,
may not be considered. All comments received are a part of the public
record and will generally be posted for public viewing on
www.regulations.gov without change.
[[Page 44386]]
All personal identifying information (e.g., name, address) 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).
Electronic copies of the EFP application and the basis for a
categorical exclusion under the National Environmental Policy Act are
available from the Alaska Region, NMFS Web site at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Brandee Gerke, 907-586-7650.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NMFS manages the domestic groundfish
fisheries in the BSAI and GOA management areas under the Fishery
Management Plan (FMP) for Groundfish of the BSAI and the FMP for
Groundfish of the GOA, which the Council prepared under the Magnuson-
Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act. Regulations governing
the BSAI and GOA groundfish fisheries appear at 50 CFR parts 600 and
679. The FMPs and the implementing regulations at Sec. 600.745(b) and
Sec. 679.6 allow the NMFS Regional Administrator to authorize, for
limited experimental purposes, fishing that would otherwise be
prohibited. Procedures for issuing EFPs are contained in the
implementing regulations.
The IPHC and NMFS manage fishing for Pacific halibut (Hippoglossus
stenolepis) through regulations established under the authority of the
Convention between the United States and Canada for the Preservation of
the Halibut Fishery of the Northern Pacific Ocean and Bering Sea
(Convention) and the Northern Pacific Halibut Act of 1982. The IPHC
promulgates regulations pursuant to the Convention. The IPHC's
regulations are subject to approval by the Secretary of State with
concurrence from the Secretary of Commerce (Secretary).
Background
Regulations implemented by the IPHC allow Pacific halibut to be
commercially harvested by the directed North Pacific longline fishery.
Halibut is a prohibited species in the groundfish fishery, requiring
immediate return to the sea with a minimum of injury. Halibut caught
incidentally by non-pelagic trawl catcher/processors in the groundfish
fisheries must be weighed on a NMFS-approved scale, sampled by
observers, and returned to the ocean as soon as possible. The Council
establishes annual maximum halibut bycatch allowances and seasonal
apportionments adjusted by an estimated halibut discard mortality rate
(DMR) for groundfish fisheries. The DMRs are based on the best
information available, including information contained in the annual
Stock Assessment and Fishery Evaluation report, available at https://www.alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/. NMFS approves the halibut DMRs developed
and recommended by the IPHC and the Council for the BSAI groundfish
fisheries for use in monitoring the halibut bycatch allowances and
seasonal apportionments. The IPHC developed these DMRs for the BSAI
groundfish fisheries using the 10-year mean DMRs for those fisheries.
Directed fishing in a groundfish fishery closes when the halibut
mortality apportionment for the fishery is reached, even if the target
species catch is less than the seasonal or annual quota for the
directed fishery. In the case of the Bering Sea flatfish fishery,
seasons have been closed before fishery quotas have been reached to
prevent the fishery from exceeding the halibut mortality apportionment.
With the implementation of Amendment 80 to the FMP on September 14,
2007 (72 FR 52668), halibut mortality apportionments were established
for the Amendment 80 sector and for Amendment 80 cooperatives.
Amendment 80 is a catch share program that allocates several BSAI non-
pollock trawl groundfish fisheries (including the flatfish fishery)
among fishing sectors, and facilitates the formation of harvesting
cooperatives in the non-American Fisheries Act trawl catcher/processor
sector. Though halibut mortality apportionments provide Amendment 80
cooperatives more flexibility to use available mortality, halibut
mortality continues to constrain fishing in some Amendment 80
fisheries. Therefore, this sector is actively exploring ways to
continue to reduce halibut mortality.
The Amendment 80 sector may also harvest groundfish in the GOA. The
Amendment 80 sector does not receive fishery allocations in the GOA and
the amount of each groundfish species that may be caught by the
cooperative in the GOA is limited to the sideboard amounts specified in
Table 27 of the 2018 GOA Groundfish Harvest Specifications. The
Amendment 80 sector is subject to halibut PSC limits established for
that sector in the GOA. The Amendment 80 sector GOA halibut PSC limits
for 2018 are provided in Table 28 of the GOA Groundfish Harvest
Specifications. The 2018 GOA Groundfish Harvest Specifications are
available at: https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/harvest-specifications/field_harvest_spec_year/2017-2018-841.
Before incidentally caught halibut are returned to the sea, at-sea
observers must estimate halibut and groundfish catch amounts.
Regulations in 50 CFR part 679 assure that observer estimates of
halibut and groundfish catch are credible and accurate, and that
potential bias is minimized. For example, NMFS requires sector fishing
vessels to make all catch available for sampling by an observer;
prohibits vessel crew from tampering with observer samples; prohibits
vessel crew from removing halibut from a codend, bin, or conveyance
system prior to being observed and counted by an at-sea observer; and
prohibits fish (including halibut) from remaining on deck unless an
observer is present.
In 2009 and 2012, halibut mortality experiments were conducted by
members of the Amendment 80 sector under EFP 09-02 (74 FR 12113, March
23, 2009) and EFP 12-01 (76 FR 70972, November 16, 2011). By
regulation, all catch including halibut is moved across a flow scale
below deck before the halibut is returned to the sea. Halibut mortality
increases with increased handling and time out of water. Under the 2009
and 2012 EFPs, experimental methods for sorting catch on a vessel's
deck allowed halibut to be returned to the sea in less time, with less
handling relative to halibut routed below deck and over the flow scale.
The halibut mortality during flatfish fishing under the 2009 and 2012
EFPs was estimated to be approximately 17 metric tons (mt) and 10.8 mt,
respectively, less than the amounts estimated from the DMR for this
fishery. The reduced halibut mortality under the 2009 and 2012 EFPs is
attributed to the improved condition of halibut through reduced
handling and time out of water.
In 2015, test fishing under EFP 2015-02 (80 FR 3222, January 22,
2015) expanded on results of the 2009 and 2012 EFPs to explore the
feasibility of deck sorting halibut in additional fisheries, on more
vessels, and during a longer interval of time during the fishing
season. The primary objective was to reduce halibut mortality in the
Amendment 80 groundfish fisheries in 2015. Fishing under the EFP began
in May and continued through November. The most prominent result from
the 2015 EFP was that substantial halibut mortality savings were
achieved from deck sorting on BSAI non-pelagic trawl catcher/processor
vessels. The preliminary estimate of halibut savings under the 2015 EFP
is 131 mt. For the nine vessels that participated in the 2015 EFP, all
but one achieved mortality
[[Page 44387]]
rates in the range of 41 percent to 53 percent, compared to the
standard mortality rate of 80 percent in the Bering Sea flatfish
fisheries without deck sorting (average across target fisheries of
interest for the 2015 EFP).
EFP 2016-01 (81 FR 4018, January 25, 2016) was issued on May 6,
2016 with an effective period through April 30, 2017. EFP 2016-01
expanded on the prior EFPs and expanded test fishing with the deck
sorting methods to non-pelagic trawl catcher/processors participating
in trawl limited access and community development quota (CDQ) fisheries
in addition to the Amendment 80 vessels. Test fishing under EFP 2016-01
from May through November 2016 resulted in more participating vessels
over more fisheries and yielded greater halibut savings relative to
prior years. In 2016, twelve catcher/processor vessels participated in
test fishing under EFP 2016-01. In prior deck sorting EFPs, test
fishing primarily occurred in the flathead sole and arrowtooth flounder
fisheries. In 2016, test fishing expanded to fisheries for yellowfin
sole, Pacific cod, Pacific ocean perch, and Atka mackerel to a much
larger extent than in prior years. Halibut mortality is estimated to
have been reduced by 288 mt through deck sorting in 2016 under EFP
2016-01.
EFP 2016-01 was modified on January 10, 2017 to allow vessel
operators the option of carrying two or three observers per trip,
depending on the needs of the vessel. EFP 2016-01 originally required
the vessel to carry three observers. EFP fishing in 2016 demonstrated
that two observers could sufficiently collect the requisite data for
EFP hauls. Under modified EFP 2016-01 vessel operators may opt to carry
more than two observers to maintain the pace at which fish are run
through the factory while halibut are being sorted and sampled by an
observer on deck or they may carry two observers with the condition
that fish may not be run into the factory while the observer is on deck
sampling the sorted halibut. Additional modifications to EFP 2016-01
included (a) changes in observer sampling methods designed to increase
consistency of observer sampling for the EFP with other, routine
observer sampling in the fisheries; (b) changes to the persons named on
the EFP as designated representatives; and (c) the addition of new
vessels to the EFP. On February 17, 2017, NMFS renewed modified EFP
2016-01 to be effective through December 31, 2017 (82 FR 5539, January
18, 2017). Results from the 2017 EFP are not yet available.
Proposed Action
On August 29, 2017, the AKSC, an Amendment 80 cooperative,
submitted an application for an EFP for 2018 and 2019 to build on the
information collected in prior deck sorting EFPs and further reduce
halibut mortality in the Amendment 80, CDQ, and trawl limited access
sectors. The objectives of the proposed EFP for 2018 and 2019 are to
test modifications to the procedures and approaches in the 2016 and
2017 EFP that (1) move substantively towards implementation of deck
sorting as an allowable fish handling mode for the non-pelagic catcher/
processor trawl fisheries in the BSAI and GOA; and (2) improve on
elements that worked in prior deck sorting EFPs. Consistent with 2016
and 2017 methods, the EFP would allow crew on board catcher/processors
to sort halibut removed from a codend on the deck of the vessel. Those
sorted halibut could be released back to the water after the halibut
are measured by the observer for length and tested for physical
condition using standard IPHC viability assessment methods.
The applicants propose to test several new aspects that would
inform a future, operationalized deck sorting process in Federal
regulations:
(1) Expand deck sorting methods to non-pelagic trawl catcher/
processor vessels in the GOA;
(2) Require vessel-specific deck sorting safety plans that detail
how safe working conditions for observers are incorporated into deck
sorting operations on each participating vessel;
(3) Establish a time limit for deck sorting of 35 minutes per haul
(because the application does not state who would run the timer, this
detail would have to be resolved in the permit, should a permit be
granted);
(4) Standardize chutes used to move fish on deck so only one flow
of fish is used to move halibut to the observer;
(5) Make optional, the census of halibut in the factory and
transfer the responsibility for conducting the census from the observer
to the vessel crew.
The applicant proposes to begin EFP fishing in January 2018 and end
on December 31, 2019. The EFP would allow halibut to be sorted,
sampled, and released prior to being weighed on a flow scale, to
achieve the experimental objectives and reduce halibut mortality. This
EFP application requests an amount of halibut PSC mortality for vessels
engaged in experimental fishing not to exceed the 2018 halibut PSC
mortality apportionments set out in Table 14 of the Final 2017 and 2018
BSAI Harvest Specifications (available at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/sites/default/files/17_18bsaitable14.pdf); and
Table 14 and Table 15 of the Final 2017 and 2018 GOA Harvest
Specifications (available at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/sites/default/files/17_18goatable14.pdf and https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/sites/default/files/17_18goatable15.pdf). Participants request no
additional groundfish or halibut quota as part of this EFP application,
and all groundfish catch will accrue against the appropriate Amendment
80, CDQ, or trawl limited access sector catch and PSC allowances.
Participating vessels would procure and use NMFS-trained at-sea
observers during EFP trips. Observers would perform all of their duties
on work shifts not exceed 12 hours per observer.
Identical to methods in 2016 and 2017, observers would be able to
enter and extrapolate data via the NMFS Catch Accounting System so PSC
usage by EFP participants would be reported and tracked in near real-
time along with non-EFP participants' usage and would accrue against
the cooperative's halibut PSC mortality apportionments. If the halibut
mortality apportionment is reached, the EFP permit holder would notify
NMFS and end EFP fishing. As required by existing regulations,
Amendment 80 fishing will also cease when the annual halibut mortality
apportionment is reached.
Also identical to methods in 2016 and 2017, halibut that are not
sorted on deck would flow to the factory and be available to the
observer for sampling. The on-duty observer would collect species
composition samples per standard protocols to estimate the proportion
of halibut in the haul relative to other species. The proportion of
halibut estimated to be in the haul would be extrapolated to the total
haul catch weight to estimate the total amount of halibut not sorted on
deck. A mortality rate of 90 percent would be applied to the amount of
halibut in the factory to estimate the halibut mortality from the
factory. The resulting factory halibut mortality amount would be
combined with the amount of halibut mortality estimated in the deck-
sorted portion of the haul to estimate the total halibut mortality for
each EFP haul.
The following example is provided as an illustration for how total
halibut mortality would be calculated for a haul under the 2016 EFP.
Assume a vessel catches 400 kilograms (kg) of halibut in one haul.
Assume 92 percent of the halibut is removed on deck and the vessel
achieves a halibut discard mortality of 50 percent by releasing these
fish from deck. In this example, the amount of halibut mortality on
deck is 184 kg. A halibut mortality of 90
[[Page 44388]]
percent is applied to the 32 kg of halibut that are sampled in the
factory, resulting in a halibut mortality of 28.8 kg in the factory. In
this example, the total halibut mortality for the haul is 212.8 kg.
The halibut mortality data collected by observers would be
available to NMFS in near-real time for inseason management in 2018 and
2019. In addition to the observer samples, under the 2018 EFP, at the
discretion of the vessel operator, vessel crew could conduct a census
(a full count) of halibut in the factory, after they have been
available to the observer for sampling, to compare observer estimates
of total halibut and census results.
In 2018, EFP participants would continue to operate under a single
catch handling and accounting method for all hauls on a fishing trip
designated as an EFP trip. Operators of participating vessels would
still have a way to opt out of sorting on deck when it is potentially
unsafe or when the vessel has located a fishing area where halibut
bycatch is very low.
This proposed action would exempt participating catcher/processors
from selected 50 CFR part 679 prohibitions, and monitoring and observer
requirements. Should the Regional Administrator issue a permit based on
this EFP application, the conditions of the permit will be designed to
minimize halibut mortality and any potential for biasing estimates of
groundfish and halibut mortality. Vessels participating in EFP fishing
may be exempt from, at minimum, the following regulations:
1. The prohibition against interfering with or biasing the sampling
procedure employed by an observer including physical, mechanical, or
other sorting or discarding of catch before sampling, at Sec.
679.7(g)(2);
2. the requirements to weigh all catch by an Amendment 80 vessel on
a NMFS-approved scale at Sec. 679.93(c)(1) and by all vessels at Sec.
679.28(b); and
3. the requirement to return all prohibited species, or parts
thereof, to the sea immediately, with a minimum of injury, regardless
of its condition at Sec. 679.21(b)(2)(ii).
In 2020, the AKSC would be required to submit to NMFS a report of
the EFP results after EFP experimental fishing has ended in 2019. The
report would include a comparison of halibut mortality from halibut
sampled during the EFP and an estimate of halibut mortality under
standard IPHC halibut mortality rates for those target fisheries.
Under the EFP, participants would be limited to their groundfish
allocations under the 2016 harvest specifications. The amount of
halibut mortality applied to the EFP activities would be subject to
review and approval by NMFS.
This EFP would be valid upon issuance in 2018 until either the end
of 2019 or when the annual halibut mortality apportionment is reached
in areas of the BSAI and GOA open to directed fishing by the various
sectors. EFP-authorized fishing activities would not be expected to
change the nature or duration of the groundfish fishery, gear used, or
the amount or species of fish caught by the participants.
The fieldwork that would be conducted under this EFP is not
expected to have a significant impact on the human environment as
detailed in the categorical exclusion prepared for this action (see
ADDRESSES).
In accordance with Sec. 679.6, NMFS has determined that the
application warrants further consideration and has forwarded the
application to the Council to initiate consultation. The Council is
scheduled to consider the EFP application during its October 2017
meeting, which will be held at the Hilton Hotel, Anchorage AK. The EFP
application will also be provided to the Council's Scientific and
Statistical Committee for review at the October Council meeting. The
applicant has been invited to appear in support of the application.
Public Comments
Interested persons may comment on the application at the February
2016 Council meeting during public testimony or until October 10, 2017.
Information regarding the meeting is available at the Council's Web
site at https://www.npfmc.org. Copies of the application and categorical
exclusion are available for review from NMFS (see ADDRESSES). Comments
also may be submitted directly to NMFS (see ADDRESSES) by the end of
the comment period (see DATES).
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: September 18, 2017.
Emily H. Menashes,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable Fisheries, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2017-20187 Filed 9-21-17; 8:45 am]
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