Taking and Importing Marine Mammals; Taking Marine Mammals Incidental to the U.S. Navy Training and Testing Activities in the Atlantic Fleet Training and Testing Study Area, 66245-66246 [2018-27788]
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 246 / Wednesday, December 26, 2018 / Notices
Background
On December 3, 2018, Commerce
published the January 2019 Advance
Sunset Review Notice,1 in which
Commerce inadvertently omitted
Sodium Nitrite from China (C–570–926)
from the list of sunset reviews that will
initiate on January 2019; we are
advancing the initiation of this sunset
review to promote administrative
efficiency. Additionally, the January
2019 Advance Sunset Review Notice
listed the incorrect case numbers for
two sunset reviews involving Certain
Hot-Rolled Carbon Steel Flat Products
from Indonesia. The correct case
numbers for the Certain Hot-Rolled
Carbon Steel Flat Products from
Indonesia sunset reviews are (A–560–
812) and (C–560–813). This notice
serves to correct the January 2019
Advance Sunset Review Notice for the
aforementioned items.
This correction notice for the advance
notification of sunset reviews is being
published in accordance with section
751(c) of the Act and 19 CFR 351.218
(c).
Dated: December 18, 2018.
James Maeder,
Associate Deputy Assistant Secretary for
Antidumping and Countervailing Duty
Operations performing the duties of Deputy
Assistant Secretary for Antidumping and
Countervailing Duty Operations.
[FR Doc. 2018–27864 Filed 12–21–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
RIN 0648–XG694
Taking and Importing Marine
Mammals; Taking Marine Mammals
Incidental to the U.S. Navy Training
and Testing Activities in the Atlantic
Fleet Training and Testing Study Area
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; receipt of application
and request for Letters of Authorization
extension; request for comments and
information.
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
AGENCY:
NMFS has received a request
from the U.S. Navy (Navy) to amend
NMFS’ Marine Mammal Protection Act
SUMMARY:
1 See Antidumping or Countervailing Duty Order,
Finding, or Suspended Investigation; Advance
Notification of Sunset Review, 83 FR 62292
(December 3, 2018) (January 2019 Advance Sunset
Review Notice).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:07 Dec 21, 2018
Jkt 247001
(MMPA) regulations authorizing the
take of marine mammals incidental to
Navy training and testing activities
conducted in the Atlantic Fleet Training
and Testing (AFTT) Study Area from
November 2018 to November 2023 to
cover seven years of the Navy’s
activities, instead of five. Section 316 of
the John S. McCain National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019
(2019 NDAA), signed into law on
August 13, 2018, amended the MMPA to
extend the maximum period for MMPA
incidental take regulations under
section 101(a)(5)(A) from five to seven
years for military readiness activities.
The Navy’s activities qualify as military
readiness activities pursuant to the
MMPA, as amended by the NDAA for
Fiscal Year 2004. The Navy proposes no
changes to their specified activities,
mitigation measures, monitoring, or
reporting and requests that NMFS
amend the final rule issued on
November 14, 2018, to authorize
incidental take of marine mammals for
the two additional years now allowed
under the statute. NMFS invites the
public to provide information,
suggestions, and comments on the
Navy’s application.
DATES: Comments and information must
be received no later than January 25,
2019.
ADDRESSES: Comments on the
application should be addressed to Jolie
Harrison, Chief, Permits and
Conservation Division, Office of
Protected Resources, National Marine
Fisheries Service. Physical comments
should be sent to 1315 East-West
Highway, Silver Spring, MD 20910 and
electronic comments should be sent to
ITP.Piniak@noaa.gov.
Instructions: NMFS is not responsible
for information or comments sent by
any other method, to any other address
or individual, or received after the end
of the comment period. Information and
comments received electronically,
including all attachments, must not
exceed a 25-megabyte file size.
Attachments to electronic comments
will be accepted in Microsoft Word or
Excel or Adobe PDF file formats only.
All information and comments received
are a part of the public record and will
generally be posted online at https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/permit/
incidental-take-authorizations-undermarine-mammal-protection-act without
change. All personal identifying
information (e.g., name, address)
voluntarily submitted by the commenter
may be publicly accessible. Do not
submit confidential business
information or otherwise sensitive or
protected information.
PO 00000
Frm 00009
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
66245
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Wendy Piniak, Office of Protected
Resources, NMFS, (301) 427–8401. An
electronic copy of the Navy’s
application may be obtained online at:
https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/
national/marine-mammal-protection/
incidental-take-authorizations-militaryreadiness-activities. In case of problems
accessing these documents, please call
the contact listed above.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Sections 101(a)(5)(A) and (D) of the
MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.) direct
the Secretary of Commerce (as delegated
to NMFS) to allow, upon request, the
incidental, but not intentional, taking of
small numbers of marine mammals by
U.S. citizens who engage in a specified
activity (other than commercial fishing)
within a specified geographical region if
certain findings are made and either
regulations are issued or, if the taking is
limited to harassment, a notice of a
proposed authorization is provided to
the public for review.
An incidental take authorization shall
be granted if NMFS finds that the taking
will have a negligible impact on the
species or stock(s), will not have an
unmitigable adverse impact on the
availability of the species or stock(s) for
subsistence uses (where relevant), and if
the permissible methods of taking and
requirements pertaining to the
mitigation, monitoring, and reporting of
such takings are set forth.
NMFS has defined ‘‘negligible
impact’’ in 50 CFR 216.103 as an impact
resulting from the specified activity that
cannot be reasonably expected to, and is
not reasonably likely to, adversely affect
the species or stock through effects on
annual rates of recruitment or survival.
The MMPA states that the term ‘‘take’’
means to harass, hunt, capture, kill or
attempt to harass, hunt, capture, or kill
any marine mammal. The 2004 NDAA
(Public Law 108–136) amended the
MMPA to remove the ‘‘small numbers’’
and ‘‘specified geographical region’’
limitations for military readiness
activities. It also amended the definition
of ‘‘harassment’’ as it applies to military
readiness activities to read as follows
(Section 3(18)(B) of the MMPA): (i) Any
act that injures or has the significant
potential to injure a marine mammal or
marine mammal stock in the wild (Level
A harassment); or (ii) Any act that
disturbs or is likely to disturb a marine
mammal or marine mammal stock in the
wild by causing disruption of natural
behavioral patterns, including, but not
limited to, migration, surfacing, nursing,
breeding, feeding, or sheltering, to a
point where such behavioral patterns
E:\FR\FM\26DEN1.SGM
26DEN1
66246
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 246 / Wednesday, December 26, 2018 / Notices
are abandoned or significantly altered
(Level B harassment).
On August 13, 2018, the 2019 NDAA
(Public Law 115–232) amended the
MMPA to allow incidental take
regulations for military readiness
activities to be issued for up to seven
years.
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
Summary of Request
On November 16, 2018, NMFS
received an adequate and complete
application from the Navy requesting an
amendment of the regulations published
on November 14, 2018, that authorize
the take of marine mammals incidental
to the Navy’s training and testing
activities in the AFTT Study Area (83
FR 57076). Specifically, the activities
include training and testing (all
categorized as military readiness
activities) including the use of active
acoustic sonar systems and other
transducers, in-water detonations, air
guns, construction activities involving
pile removal and installation, and the
operation of a fleet of vessels throughout
the AFTT Study Area. These activities
may result in the incidental take of
marine mammals in the form of Level B
harassment (behavioral disruption or
temporary hearing impairment), Level A
harassment (permanent hearing
impairment or tissue damage), or
serious injury or mortality in a very
small number of cases. The requested
amendment would change the
expiration date of the regulations from
November 13, 2023 to November 13,
2025, allowing for seven total years of
validity, as allowed under the MMPA as
recently amended by the 2019 NDAA.
Description of Amendment
The Navy proposes that NMFS amend
the existing AFTT regulations and
associated Letters of Authorization
(LOAs) such that they would cover
incidental take caused by seven years of
training and testing activities instead of
five, extending the expiration date from
November 13, 2023 to November 13,
2025. The amendment would be
conducted through a proposed and final
rulemaking, consistent with the
requirements of section 101(a)(5)(A).
The Navy has not proposed any changes
to the nature of the specified activities
and, therefore, the boundaries of the
AFTT Study Area, the training and
testing activities (e.g., equipment and
sources used, exercises conducted), and
the mitigation, monitoring, and
reporting measures are identical to those
described and analyzed in the existing
AFTT regulations published on
November 14, 2018 (83 FR 57076).
The only changes contemplated in the
extension of the regulations are those
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:07 Dec 21, 2018
Jkt 247001
necessary to identify the appropriate
type and amount of incidental take to
authorize in the two additional years
that the amended regulations would
cover, and determine whether the
incidental take would have a negligible
impact on the affected species and
stocks.
The current AFTT rule authorizes
three serious injuries or mortalities from
vessel strike. The Navy’s request for an
amendment includes a revised vessel
strike analysis encompassing seven
years of activities versus the five years
addressed in the analysis supporting the
mortality estimate in the current LOAs.
Based on the revised analysis, the Navy
requests one additional large whale
mortality bringing the total from three
vessel strikes over five years to four
vessel strikes over seven years. The
large whale stocks that are proposed to
be lethally taken by vessel strike are the
same as those included in the current
AFTT rule. Please see Chapter 6,
Section 6.2 of the Navy’s application for
a full description of the incidental take
by vessel strike.
Regarding the quantification of
expected takes from acoustic and
explosive sources (by Level A and Level
B harassment, as well as mortality
resulting from exposure to explosives),
the number of takes are based directly
on the level of activities (days, hours,
counts, etc., of different activities and
events) in a given year. In the existing
AFTT rule, the Navy bases their take
estimates across the five-year rule on
conducting three years of a nominal
(average) level of activity and two years
of a maximum level of activity. For the
amended seven year rule, the Navy
proposes to add one additional nominal
year and one additional maximum year
to determine the predicted take
numbers. Specifically, as in the current
rule, the Navy proposes to use the
maximum annual level to calculate
annual takes (which will remain
identical to the current rule), and the
sum of all years (four nominal and three
maximum, in the case of the new
amended rule) to calculate the sevenyear totals. Please see Chapter 6, Section
6.1 of the Navy’s application for a
description of the proposed take from
acoustic and explosive sources.
As noted above, the proposed
amendment of the rule would include
mitigation, monitoring, and reporting
measures that are identical to those
included in the current final rule (83 FR
57076, November 14, 2018). In
summary, mitigation would include: (1)
the use of Lookouts to observe for
biological resources and communicate
the need for mitigation implementation;
(2) powerdowns, shutdowns, and delay
PO 00000
Frm 00010
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 9990
of starts to avoid exposure of marine
mammals to high levels of sound or
explosive blasts more likely to result in
injury or more serious behavioral
disruption; (3) limiting the use of active
sonar or explosives in certain
biologically important areas to reduce
the probability or severity of impacts
when they are more likely to contribute
to fitness impacts, and (4) broadcasting
awareness notification messages to all of
the vessels in an area to reduce the
likelihood of vessel strike. Please see
Chapter 11 of the Navy’s application for
a full description of the proposed
mitigation, which is identical to that
required under the existing rule.
The Navy proposes to continue
forward the implementation of the
robust Integrated Comprehensive
Monitoring Program and Strategic
Planning Process outlined in the current
regulations. The Navy’s monitoring
strategy, currently required by the AFTT
regulations, is well-designed to work
across Navy ranges to help better
understand the impacts of the Navy’s
activities on marine mammals and their
habitat by focusing on learning more
about marine mammal occurrence in
different areas and exposure to Navy
stressors, marine mammal responses to
different sound sources, and the
consequences of those exposures and
responses on marine mammal
populations. Similarly, the proposed
amended regulations would include
identical adaptive management
provisions and reporting requirements
as the existing regulations. Please refer
to Chapter 13 of the Navy’s application
for full details on the monitoring and
reporting proposed by the Navy.
Information Solicited
Interested persons may submit
information, suggestions, and comments
concerning the Navy’s request (see
ADDRESSES). NMFS will consider all
information, suggestions, and comments
related to the request during the
development of proposed regulations
governing the incidental taking of
marine mammals by the Navy, if
appropriate.
Dated: December 18, 2018.
Donna S. Wieting,
Director, Office of Protected Resources,
National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2018–27788 Filed 12–21–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
E:\FR\FM\26DEN1.SGM
26DEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 246 (Wednesday, December 26, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 66245-66246]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-27788]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
RIN 0648-XG694
Taking and Importing Marine Mammals; Taking Marine Mammals
Incidental to the U.S. Navy Training and Testing Activities in the
Atlantic Fleet Training and Testing Study Area
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; receipt of application and request for Letters of
Authorization extension; request for comments and information.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS has received a request from the U.S. Navy (Navy) to amend
NMFS' Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) regulations authorizing the
take of marine mammals incidental to Navy training and testing
activities conducted in the Atlantic Fleet Training and Testing (AFTT)
Study Area from November 2018 to November 2023 to cover seven years of
the Navy's activities, instead of five. Section 316 of the John S.
McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (2019
NDAA), signed into law on August 13, 2018, amended the MMPA to extend
the maximum period for MMPA incidental take regulations under section
101(a)(5)(A) from five to seven years for military readiness
activities. The Navy's activities qualify as military readiness
activities pursuant to the MMPA, as amended by the NDAA for Fiscal Year
2004. The Navy proposes no changes to their specified activities,
mitigation measures, monitoring, or reporting and requests that NMFS
amend the final rule issued on November 14, 2018, to authorize
incidental take of marine mammals for the two additional years now
allowed under the statute. NMFS invites the public to provide
information, suggestions, and comments on the Navy's application.
DATES: Comments and information must be received no later than January
25, 2019.
ADDRESSES: Comments on the application should be addressed to Jolie
Harrison, Chief, Permits and Conservation Division, Office of Protected
Resources, National Marine Fisheries Service. Physical comments should
be sent to 1315 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, MD 20910 and
electronic comments should be sent to ITP.Piniak@noaa.gov.
Instructions: NMFS is not responsible for information or comments
sent by any other method, to any other address or individual, or
received after the end of the comment period. Information and comments
received electronically, including all attachments, must not exceed a
25-megabyte file size. Attachments to electronic comments will be
accepted in Microsoft Word or Excel or Adobe PDF file formats only. All
information and comments received are a part of the public record and
will generally be posted online at https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/permit/incidental-take-authorizations-under-marine-mammal-protection-act without change. All personal identifying information (e.g., name,
address) voluntarily submitted by the commenter may be publicly
accessible. Do not submit confidential business information or
otherwise sensitive or protected information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Wendy Piniak, Office of Protected
Resources, NMFS, (301) 427-8401. An electronic copy of the Navy's
application may be obtained online at: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/incidental-take-authorizations-military-readiness-activities. In case of problems accessing these
documents, please call the contact listed above.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Sections 101(a)(5)(A) and (D) of the MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.)
direct the Secretary of Commerce (as delegated to NMFS) to allow, upon
request, the incidental, but not intentional, taking of small numbers
of marine mammals by U.S. citizens who engage in a specified activity
(other than commercial fishing) within a specified geographical region
if certain findings are made and either regulations are issued or, if
the taking is limited to harassment, a notice of a proposed
authorization is provided to the public for review.
An incidental take authorization shall be granted if NMFS finds
that the taking will have a negligible impact on the species or
stock(s), will not have an unmitigable adverse impact on the
availability of the species or stock(s) for subsistence uses (where
relevant), and if the permissible methods of taking and requirements
pertaining to the mitigation, monitoring, and reporting of such takings
are set forth.
NMFS has defined ``negligible impact'' in 50 CFR 216.103 as an
impact resulting from the specified activity that cannot be reasonably
expected to, and is not reasonably likely to, adversely affect the
species or stock through effects on annual rates of recruitment or
survival.
The MMPA states that the term ``take'' means to harass, hunt,
capture, kill or attempt to harass, hunt, capture, or kill any marine
mammal. The 2004 NDAA (Public Law 108-136) amended the MMPA to remove
the ``small numbers'' and ``specified geographical region'' limitations
for military readiness activities. It also amended the definition of
``harassment'' as it applies to military readiness activities to read
as follows (Section 3(18)(B) of the MMPA): (i) Any act that injures or
has the significant potential to injure a marine mammal or marine
mammal stock in the wild (Level A harassment); or (ii) Any act that
disturbs or is likely to disturb a marine mammal or marine mammal stock
in the wild by causing disruption of natural behavioral patterns,
including, but not limited to, migration, surfacing, nursing, breeding,
feeding, or sheltering, to a point where such behavioral patterns
[[Page 66246]]
are abandoned or significantly altered (Level B harassment).
On August 13, 2018, the 2019 NDAA (Public Law 115-232) amended the
MMPA to allow incidental take regulations for military readiness
activities to be issued for up to seven years.
Summary of Request
On November 16, 2018, NMFS received an adequate and complete
application from the Navy requesting an amendment of the regulations
published on November 14, 2018, that authorize the take of marine
mammals incidental to the Navy's training and testing activities in the
AFTT Study Area (83 FR 57076). Specifically, the activities include
training and testing (all categorized as military readiness activities)
including the use of active acoustic sonar systems and other
transducers, in-water detonations, air guns, construction activities
involving pile removal and installation, and the operation of a fleet
of vessels throughout the AFTT Study Area. These activities may result
in the incidental take of marine mammals in the form of Level B
harassment (behavioral disruption or temporary hearing impairment),
Level A harassment (permanent hearing impairment or tissue damage), or
serious injury or mortality in a very small number of cases. The
requested amendment would change the expiration date of the regulations
from November 13, 2023 to November 13, 2025, allowing for seven total
years of validity, as allowed under the MMPA as recently amended by the
2019 NDAA.
Description of Amendment
The Navy proposes that NMFS amend the existing AFTT regulations and
associated Letters of Authorization (LOAs) such that they would cover
incidental take caused by seven years of training and testing
activities instead of five, extending the expiration date from November
13, 2023 to November 13, 2025. The amendment would be conducted through
a proposed and final rulemaking, consistent with the requirements of
section 101(a)(5)(A). The Navy has not proposed any changes to the
nature of the specified activities and, therefore, the boundaries of
the AFTT Study Area, the training and testing activities (e.g.,
equipment and sources used, exercises conducted), and the mitigation,
monitoring, and reporting measures are identical to those described and
analyzed in the existing AFTT regulations published on November 14,
2018 (83 FR 57076).
The only changes contemplated in the extension of the regulations
are those necessary to identify the appropriate type and amount of
incidental take to authorize in the two additional years that the
amended regulations would cover, and determine whether the incidental
take would have a negligible impact on the affected species and stocks.
The current AFTT rule authorizes three serious injuries or
mortalities from vessel strike. The Navy's request for an amendment
includes a revised vessel strike analysis encompassing seven years of
activities versus the five years addressed in the analysis supporting
the mortality estimate in the current LOAs. Based on the revised
analysis, the Navy requests one additional large whale mortality
bringing the total from three vessel strikes over five years to four
vessel strikes over seven years. The large whale stocks that are
proposed to be lethally taken by vessel strike are the same as those
included in the current AFTT rule. Please see Chapter 6, Section 6.2 of
the Navy's application for a full description of the incidental take by
vessel strike.
Regarding the quantification of expected takes from acoustic and
explosive sources (by Level A and Level B harassment, as well as
mortality resulting from exposure to explosives), the number of takes
are based directly on the level of activities (days, hours, counts,
etc., of different activities and events) in a given year. In the
existing AFTT rule, the Navy bases their take estimates across the
five-year rule on conducting three years of a nominal (average) level
of activity and two years of a maximum level of activity. For the
amended seven year rule, the Navy proposes to add one additional
nominal year and one additional maximum year to determine the predicted
take numbers. Specifically, as in the current rule, the Navy proposes
to use the maximum annual level to calculate annual takes (which will
remain identical to the current rule), and the sum of all years (four
nominal and three maximum, in the case of the new amended rule) to
calculate the seven-year totals. Please see Chapter 6, Section 6.1 of
the Navy's application for a description of the proposed take from
acoustic and explosive sources.
As noted above, the proposed amendment of the rule would include
mitigation, monitoring, and reporting measures that are identical to
those included in the current final rule (83 FR 57076, November 14,
2018). In summary, mitigation would include: (1) the use of Lookouts to
observe for biological resources and communicate the need for
mitigation implementation; (2) powerdowns, shutdowns, and delay of
starts to avoid exposure of marine mammals to high levels of sound or
explosive blasts more likely to result in injury or more serious
behavioral disruption; (3) limiting the use of active sonar or
explosives in certain biologically important areas to reduce the
probability or severity of impacts when they are more likely to
contribute to fitness impacts, and (4) broadcasting awareness
notification messages to all of the vessels in an area to reduce the
likelihood of vessel strike. Please see Chapter 11 of the Navy's
application for a full description of the proposed mitigation, which is
identical to that required under the existing rule.
The Navy proposes to continue forward the implementation of the
robust Integrated Comprehensive Monitoring Program and Strategic
Planning Process outlined in the current regulations. The Navy's
monitoring strategy, currently required by the AFTT regulations, is
well-designed to work across Navy ranges to help better understand the
impacts of the Navy's activities on marine mammals and their habitat by
focusing on learning more about marine mammal occurrence in different
areas and exposure to Navy stressors, marine mammal responses to
different sound sources, and the consequences of those exposures and
responses on marine mammal populations. Similarly, the proposed amended
regulations would include identical adaptive management provisions and
reporting requirements as the existing regulations. Please refer to
Chapter 13 of the Navy's application for full details on the monitoring
and reporting proposed by the Navy.
Information Solicited
Interested persons may submit information, suggestions, and
comments concerning the Navy's request (see ADDRESSES). NMFS will
consider all information, suggestions, and comments related to the
request during the development of proposed regulations governing the
incidental taking of marine mammals by the Navy, if appropriate.
Dated: December 18, 2018.
Donna S. Wieting,
Director, Office of Protected Resources, National Marine Fisheries
Service.
[FR Doc. 2018-27788 Filed 12-21-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P