Magnuson-Stevens Act Provisions; General Provisions for Domestic Fisheries; Application for Exempted Fishing Permits, 15793-15794 [2018-07583]
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 71 / Thursday, April 12, 2018 / Notices
project. A total of 81 trips were
completed in fishing year 2017.
The project partners have submitted a
renewal request for fishing year 2018.
The proposed participant list includes
14 vessels, 13 of which participated in
this EFP in fishing year 2017. Together,
these vessels are expected to take an
estimated 400 trips. The project partners
expect up to 10 additional vessels may
join the project in fishing year 2018.
Vessels participating in this EFP
would be required to use EM on 100
percent of groundfish trips. Camera
systems would be used in lieu of human
at-sea monitors, and in addition to
Northeast Fishery Observer Program
(NEFOP) observers. Vessels would
adhere to a vessel-specific monitoring
plan detailing at-sea catch handling
protocols. Vessels would submit haullevel electronic vessel trip reports
(eVTR) with count and weight estimates
for all groundfish discards.
The discard estimates provided in the
eVTR would be used for catch
accounting, and all catch of allocated
groundfish would be deducted from the
appropriate sector’s allocation. The EM
service provider would review the video
footage and produce an EM summary
report identifying, counting, and
generating weight estimates for all
groundfish discards. The provider
would submit this report to NMFS.
NMFS would compare the eVTR and
EM summary file to ensure the
submissions match within an
established tolerance. If the trips do not
match, the eVTR would not be used for
catch accounting for that trip. For trips
that carry a NEFOP observer, the NEFOP
data would be used for catch
accounting. The EM service provider
would review 100 percent of the video
footage at the outset of the fishing year,
but may reduce the review percentage
mid-year as part of audit-model testing,
if approved by NMFS.
Because participating vessels would
be fully monitored, project partners
requested access to closed areas to
incentivize participation and create
additional fishing opportunities for
healthy stocks. Vessels would be
allowed to use hook gear and sink
gillnets in Closed Area II from May 1
through February 15, hook gear in
Western Gulf of Maine Closure Area,
and jig gear in Cashes Ledge Closure
Area.
If approved, the applicant may
request minor modifications and
extensions to the EFP throughout the
year. EFP modifications and extensions
may be granted without further notice if
they are deemed essential to facilitate
completion of the proposed research
and have minimal impacts that do not
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:20 Apr 11, 2018
Jkt 244001
change the scope or impact of the
initially approved EFP request. Any
fishing activity conducted outside the
scope of the exempted fishing activity
would be prohibited.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: April 9, 2018.
Jennifer M. Wallace,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2018–07596 Filed 4–11–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
RIN 0648–XG150
Magnuson-Stevens Act Provisions;
General Provisions for Domestic
Fisheries; Application for Exempted
Fishing Permits
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; request for comments.
AGENCY:
The Assistant Regional
Administrator for Sustainable Fisheries,
Greater Atlantic Region, NMFS, has
made a preliminary determination that
an exempted fishing permit application
submitted by the Gulf of Maine
Research Institute contains all of the
required information and warrants
further consideration. The exempted
fishing permit would allow the use of
electronic monitoring to support testing
a maximized retention model in the
groundfish fishery.
Regulations under the MagnusonStevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act require publication of
this notification to provide interested
parties the opportunity to comment on
applications for proposed Exempted
Fishing Permits.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before April 27, 2018.
ADDRESSES: You may submit written
comments by either of the following
methods:
• Email: nmfs.gar.efp@noaa.gov.
Include in the subject line ‘‘GMRI
MREM EFP.’’
• Mail: Michael Pentony, Regional
Administrator, NMFS, Greater Atlantic
Regional Fisheries Office, 55 Great
Republic Drive, Gloucester, MA 01930.
Mark the outside of the envelope ‘‘GMRI
MREM EFP.’’
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Claire Fitz-Gerald, Fishery Management
Specialist, 978–281–9255.
SUMMARY:
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15793
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Groundfish sectors are required to
implement and fund an at-sea
monitoring (ASM) program. A sector is
allowed to use electronic monitoring
(EM) to satisfy this monitoring
requirement, provided that NMFS
deems the technology sufficient for
catch monitoring. NMFS has yet to
approve EM as an alternative to ASM,
but is working with industry and other
stakeholders to develop EM for catch
monitoring in the groundfish fishery.
For the groundfish fishery, the program
designs currently being considered are
the ‘‘audit model’’ and the ‘‘maximized
retention model.’’ The audit model
would use EM to verify discards
reported by a captain on a vessel trip
report. Under the maximized retention
electronic monitoring (MREM) model,
vessels would be required to retain most
fish species (e.g., allocated groundfish
stocks), and EM would be used to
ensure compliance with discarding
regulations.
GMRI submitted an exempted fishing
permit (EFP) application to test a
maximized retention electronic
monitoring (MREM) model and an
accompanying dockside monitoring
(DSM) program to monitor high-volume
bottom-trawl vessels in the groundfish
fleet. Vessels would be outfitted with
EM systems (cameras and gear sensors),
and the cameras would be on for 100
percent of groundfish trips. The EFP
would require participating vessels to
retain and land all catch of allocated
groundfish, including undersized fish
that they would normally be required to
discard. All other species would be
handled per normal commercial fishing
operations. An EM service provider
would review 100 percent of the video
footage to verify that the vessels did not
discard allocated groundfish. NMFS
Northeast Fisheries Science Center staff
would conduct a secondary review of
100 percent of the video footage for all
trips.
All catch would be assessed shoreside
via an accompanying DSM program.
The DSM program would have three
primary objectives: (1) Biological
sampling; (2) verification of dealerreported landings, and; (3) fish hold
inspections. Vessels would be
authorized to sell catch, including
undersized fish, to a limited number of
dealers. The vessel and dealer would
work with the Center to ensure that a
Federal employee or contract staff is
present to observe 100 percent of
offloads for this project. The sampler
would verify dealer landings and collect
biosamples, including length-frequency
data on a subset of fish in each market
category. The Northeast Region Office of
E:\FR\FM\12APN1.SGM
12APN1
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
15794
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 71 / Thursday, April 12, 2018 / Notices
Law Enforcement would randomly
inspect fish holds on approximately 10
percent of EFP trips.
Because vessels would be fully
monitored, GMRI also requested
exemptions to incentivize participation
in the project and increase fishing
opportunities for healthy stocks. The
EFP would allow vessels to use the
codend configuration used in the
Canadian haddock fishery (5.1-inch
(13.0-cm) square mesh codend) and/or
the codend configuration tested in the
REDNET project (4.5-inch (11.4-cm)
diamond mesh codend). This exemption
is intended to improve size selectivity
and increase catch of target species,
while avoiding groundfish species of
concern.
The applicant also requested access to
portions of Closed Area II. Vessels
would be allowed to fish in the nonessential fish habitat portions of Closed
Areas I and II from May 1 through
February 15. Vessels would not be
allowed to fish in the area from
February 16 through April 30 as fishing
activity during this time may negatively
affect Georges Bank cod and haddock
spawning. The applicant states that, due
to the distribution and movement of
groundfish stocks, this exemption
would improve vessels’ ability to
selectively target healthy groundfish
stocks.
The EFP application also requested an
exemption from sector third-party ASM
requirements. We do not intend to grant
this requested exemption. Participating
vessels would still be required to
discard non-allocated groundfish stocks
(e.g. ocean pout, wolffish, windowpane
flounder) and adhere to possession
limits for certain groundfish stocks (e.g.
halibut) and non-groundfish species
((e.g. monkfish, dogfish, skate). NMFS
applies assumed discard rates to all
trips to estimate catch for non-allocated
groundfish and non-groundfish species.
These discard rates are calculated from
the data that at-sea monitors collect.
Therefore, continued ASM coverage for
participating vessels is necessary to
collect catch and discard information on
a subset of EFP trips to derive assumed
discard rate values. These vessels would
carry ASM coverage at the standard
level required for sectors, which is 15
percent for the 2018 fishing year.
Northeast Fishery Observer Program
observers would not be deployed on
these vessels because their fishing
activity is not consistent with the
Standardized Bycatch Reporting
Methodology sampling design.
This EFP would cover fishing trips
that occur in the 2018 and 2019 fishing
years. NMFS would authorize a
maximum of eight bottom-trawl vessels
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:20 Apr 11, 2018
Jkt 244001
to participate. All catch of groundfish
stocks allocated to sectors would be
deducted from the appropriate sector’s
allocation for each groundfish stock.
Because this is a maximized retention
program, vessels would not be
permitted to discard legal unmarketable
fish for allocated groundfish stocks,
regardless of whether the vessel holds a
sector exemption to do so through its
operations plan.
If approved, the applicant may
request minor modifications and
extensions to the EFP throughout the
year. EFP modifications and extensions
may be granted without further notice if
they are deemed essential to facilitate
completion of the proposed research
and have minimal impacts that do not
change the scope or impact of the
initially approved EFP request. Any
fishing activity conducted outside the
scope of the exempted fishing activity
would be prohibited.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: April 9, 2018.
Jennifer M. Wallace,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2018–07583 Filed 4–11–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
RIN 0648–XG151
Magnuson-Stevens Act Provisions;
General Provisions for Domestic
Fisheries; Application for Exempted
Fishing Permits
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; request for comments.
AGENCY:
The Acting Assistant Regional
Administrator for Sustainable Fisheries,
Greater Atlantic Region, NMFS, has
made a preliminary determination that
an exempted fishing permit application
submitted by The Nature Conservancy
contains all of the required information
and warrants further consideration. This
exempted fishing permit would allow
participants to use electronic
monitoring systems in lieu of at-sea
monitors in support of a study to
develop electronic monitoring for catch
monitoring in the groundfish fishery.
Regulations under the MagnusonStevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act require publication of
this notification to provide interested
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00011
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
parties the opportunity to comment on
applications for proposed Exempted
Fishing Permits.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before April 27, 2018.
ADDRESSES: You may submit written
comments by either of the following
methods:
• Email: nmfs.gar.efp@noaa.gov.
Include in the subject line ‘‘TNC EM
EFP RENEWAL.’’
• Mail: Michael Pentony, Regional
Administrator, NMFS, Greater Atlantic
Regional Fisheries Office, 55 Great
Republic Drive, Gloucester, MA 01930.
Mark the outside of the envelope ‘‘TNC
EM EFP RENEWAL.’’
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Claire Fitz-Gerald, Groundfish Fishery
Management Specialist, 978–281–9255.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Groundfish sectors are required to
implement and fund an at-sea
monitoring (ASM) program. Sectors may
use electronic monitoring (EM) to satisfy
this monitoring requirement, provided
NMFS deems the technology sufficient
for catch monitoring. NMFS has yet to
approve EM as a suitable alternative to
ASM. However, we are working with
industry and other stakeholders to test
the operational feasibility of EM and
resolve outstanding issues that are
barriers to implementation.
In fishing year 2016, The Nature
Conservancy, in partnership with the
Cape Cod Commercial Fishermen’s
Alliance; the Maine Coast Fishermen’s
Association; and, the Gulf of Maine
Research Institute; and fishermen from
the Northeast Fishery Sectors V & XI,
the GB Cod Fixed Gear Sector, the
Sustainable Harvest Sector, and the
Maine Coast Community Sector;
obtained an exempted fishing permit
(EFP) for vessels to use EM systems in
lieu of human observers to meet their
ASM requirements. Fourteen vessels
participated in the project, and 52 EFP
trips were completed. In fishing year
2017, the project partners submitted a
renewal request for this EFP as well as
an additional EFP application for a 100percent EM project. Both EFPs were
issued; 13 vessels participated in the
100-percent EFP and 5 vessels
participated in this EFP. Thirty-seven
EFP trips were completed this year to
date under this EFP.
The project partners have submitted a
renewal request for this EFP for the
2018 fishing year. The proposed
participant list includes five vessels, all
of which participated in this EFP in
fishing year 2017. Together, they are
expected to take an estimated 225 trips
in fishing year 2018. At 15-percent
E:\FR\FM\12APN1.SGM
12APN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 71 (Thursday, April 12, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 15793-15794]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-07583]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
RIN 0648-XG150
Magnuson-Stevens Act Provisions; General Provisions for Domestic
Fisheries; Application for Exempted Fishing Permits
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Assistant Regional Administrator for Sustainable
Fisheries, Greater Atlantic Region, NMFS, has made a preliminary
determination that an exempted fishing permit application submitted by
the Gulf of Maine Research Institute contains all of the required
information and warrants further consideration. The exempted fishing
permit would allow the use of electronic monitoring to support testing
a maximized retention model in the groundfish fishery.
Regulations under the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act require publication of this notification to provide
interested parties the opportunity to comment on applications for
proposed Exempted Fishing Permits.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before April 27, 2018.
ADDRESSES: You may submit written comments by either of the following
methods:
Email: [email protected]. Include in the subject line
``GMRI MREM EFP.''
Mail: Michael Pentony, Regional Administrator, NMFS,
Greater Atlantic Regional Fisheries Office, 55 Great Republic Drive,
Gloucester, MA 01930. Mark the outside of the envelope ``GMRI MREM
EFP.''
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Claire Fitz-Gerald, Fishery Management
Specialist, 978-281-9255.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Groundfish sectors are required to implement
and fund an at-sea monitoring (ASM) program. A sector is allowed to use
electronic monitoring (EM) to satisfy this monitoring requirement,
provided that NMFS deems the technology sufficient for catch
monitoring. NMFS has yet to approve EM as an alternative to ASM, but is
working with industry and other stakeholders to develop EM for catch
monitoring in the groundfish fishery. For the groundfish fishery, the
program designs currently being considered are the ``audit model'' and
the ``maximized retention model.'' The audit model would use EM to
verify discards reported by a captain on a vessel trip report. Under
the maximized retention electronic monitoring (MREM) model, vessels
would be required to retain most fish species (e.g., allocated
groundfish stocks), and EM would be used to ensure compliance with
discarding regulations.
GMRI submitted an exempted fishing permit (EFP) application to test
a maximized retention electronic monitoring (MREM) model and an
accompanying dockside monitoring (DSM) program to monitor high-volume
bottom-trawl vessels in the groundfish fleet. Vessels would be
outfitted with EM systems (cameras and gear sensors), and the cameras
would be on for 100 percent of groundfish trips. The EFP would require
participating vessels to retain and land all catch of allocated
groundfish, including undersized fish that they would normally be
required to discard. All other species would be handled per normal
commercial fishing operations. An EM service provider would review 100
percent of the video footage to verify that the vessels did not discard
allocated groundfish. NMFS Northeast Fisheries Science Center staff
would conduct a secondary review of 100 percent of the video footage
for all trips.
All catch would be assessed shoreside via an accompanying DSM
program. The DSM program would have three primary objectives: (1)
Biological sampling; (2) verification of dealer-reported landings, and;
(3) fish hold inspections. Vessels would be authorized to sell catch,
including undersized fish, to a limited number of dealers. The vessel
and dealer would work with the Center to ensure that a Federal employee
or contract staff is present to observe 100 percent of offloads for
this project. The sampler would verify dealer landings and collect
biosamples, including length-frequency data on a subset of fish in each
market category. The Northeast Region Office of
[[Page 15794]]
Law Enforcement would randomly inspect fish holds on approximately 10
percent of EFP trips.
Because vessels would be fully monitored, GMRI also requested
exemptions to incentivize participation in the project and increase
fishing opportunities for healthy stocks. The EFP would allow vessels
to use the codend configuration used in the Canadian haddock fishery
(5.1-inch (13.0-cm) square mesh codend) and/or the codend configuration
tested in the REDNET project (4.5-inch (11.4-cm) diamond mesh codend).
This exemption is intended to improve size selectivity and increase
catch of target species, while avoiding groundfish species of concern.
The applicant also requested access to portions of Closed Area II.
Vessels would be allowed to fish in the non-essential fish habitat
portions of Closed Areas I and II from May 1 through February 15.
Vessels would not be allowed to fish in the area from February 16
through April 30 as fishing activity during this time may negatively
affect Georges Bank cod and haddock spawning. The applicant states
that, due to the distribution and movement of groundfish stocks, this
exemption would improve vessels' ability to selectively target healthy
groundfish stocks.
The EFP application also requested an exemption from sector third-
party ASM requirements. We do not intend to grant this requested
exemption. Participating vessels would still be required to discard
non-allocated groundfish stocks (e.g. ocean pout, wolffish, windowpane
flounder) and adhere to possession limits for certain groundfish stocks
(e.g. halibut) and non-groundfish species ((e.g. monkfish, dogfish,
skate). NMFS applies assumed discard rates to all trips to estimate
catch for non-allocated groundfish and non-groundfish species. These
discard rates are calculated from the data that at-sea monitors
collect. Therefore, continued ASM coverage for participating vessels is
necessary to collect catch and discard information on a subset of EFP
trips to derive assumed discard rate values. These vessels would carry
ASM coverage at the standard level required for sectors, which is 15
percent for the 2018 fishing year. Northeast Fishery Observer Program
observers would not be deployed on these vessels because their fishing
activity is not consistent with the Standardized Bycatch Reporting
Methodology sampling design.
This EFP would cover fishing trips that occur in the 2018 and 2019
fishing years. NMFS would authorize a maximum of eight bottom-trawl
vessels to participate. All catch of groundfish stocks allocated to
sectors would be deducted from the appropriate sector's allocation for
each groundfish stock. Because this is a maximized retention program,
vessels would not be permitted to discard legal unmarketable fish for
allocated groundfish stocks, regardless of whether the vessel holds a
sector exemption to do so through its operations plan.
If approved, the applicant may request minor modifications and
extensions to the EFP throughout the year. EFP modifications and
extensions may be granted without further notice if they are deemed
essential to facilitate completion of the proposed research and have
minimal impacts that do not change the scope or impact of the initially
approved EFP request. Any fishing activity conducted outside the scope
of the exempted fishing activity would be prohibited.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: April 9, 2018.
Jennifer M. Wallace,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable Fisheries, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2018-07583 Filed 4-11-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P