Fisheries Off West Coast States; Coastal Pelagic Species Fisheries; Annual Specifications; 2021-2022 Annual Specifications and Management Measures for Pacific Sardine, 36237-36239 [2021-14643]
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[FR Doc. 2021–14429 Filed 7–8–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 5001–06–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 660
[Docket No: 210702–0144; RTID 0648–
XW035]
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Fisheries Off West Coast States;
Coastal Pelagic Species Fisheries;
Annual Specifications; 2021–2022
Annual Specifications and
Management Measures for Pacific
Sardine
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
AGENCY:
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Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
NMFS is implementing
annual harvest specifications and
management measures for the northern
subpopulation of Pacific sardine
(hereafter, Pacific sardine), for the
fishing year, which runs from July 1,
2021, through June 30, 2022. This final
rule will prohibit most directed
commercial fishing for Pacific sardine
off the coasts of Washington, Oregon,
and California. Pacific sardine harvest
will be allowed only in the live bait
fishery, minor directed fisheries, as
incidental catch in other fisheries, or as
authorized under exempted fishing
permits. The incidental harvest of
Pacific sardine will be limited to 20
percent by weight of all fish per trip
when caught with other stocks managed
under the Coastal Pelagic Species
Fishery Management Plan, or up to 2
metric tons per trip when caught with
non-Coastal Pelagic Species stocks. The
annual catch limit for the 2021–2022
Pacific sardine fishing year is 3,329
metric tons. This final rule is intended
to conserve and manage the Pacific
sardine stock off the U.S. West Coast.
DATES: Effective July 6, 2021.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Taylor Debevec, West Coast Region,
NMFS, (562) 619–2052,
Taylor.Debevec@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NMFS
manages the Pacific sardine fishery in
the U.S. exclusive economic zone (EEZ)
off the Pacific coast (California, Oregon,
and Washington) in accordance with the
Coastal Pelagic Species (CPS) Fishery
Management Plan (FMP). The FMP and
its implementing regulations require
NMFS to set annual catch levels for the
Pacific sardine fishery based on the
annual specification framework and
control rules in the FMP. These control
rules include the harvest guideline (HG)
control rule, which, in conjunction with
the overfishing limit (OFL) and
acceptable biological catch (ABC) rules
in the FMP, are used to manage harvest
levels for Pacific sardine, in accordance
with the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
(MSA), 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
This final rule implements the annual
catch levels, reference points, and
management measures for the 2021–
2022 fishing year. The final rule adopts,
without changes, the catch levels and
restrictions that NMFS proposed in the
SUMMARY:
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36237
rule published on May 26, 2021. The
proposed rule for this action included
additional background on the
specifications and details of how the
Pacific Fishery Management Council
(Council) derived its recommended
specifications for Pacific sardine. Those
details are not repeated here. For
additional information on this action,
please refer to the proposed rule (86 FR
28325).
This rule implements an OFL of 5,525
metric tons (mt) and an ABC/annual
catch limit (ACL) of 3,329 mt, based on
CPS FMP control rules and a biomass
estimate of Pacific sardine of 28,276 mt.
This biomass estimate is from the 2020
benchmark stock assessment and was
recommended for use this year by the
Council’s Scientific and Statistical
Committee after identifying significant
uncertainties in the 2021 catch-only
projection. Because the estimated
biomass is less than the value of the
CUTOFF parameter in the CPS FMP
(150,000 mt), the harvest guideline is set
to 0 mt, meaning there is no primary
directed fishery for Pacific sardine. This
is the seventh consecutive year the
primary directed fishery has been
closed. Because the estimated biomass
is below the minimum stock size
threshold (50,000 mt) the FMP requires
that incidental catch of Pacific sardine
in other CPS fisheries be limited to an
incidental allowance of no more than 20
percent by weight. Although these
management measures, triggered by the
FMP, are expected to keep catch far
below the ACL as they have done in
recent history, this rule also implements
an annual catch target (ACT) of 3,000 mt
and implements management measures
to ensure harvest opportunity
throughout the year.
A summary of the 2021–2022 fishing
year specifications can be found in
Table 1, and management measures in
the list below.
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 129 / Friday, July 9, 2021 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 1—HARVEST SPECIFICATIONS FOR THE 2021–2022 SARDINE FISHING YEAR IN METRIC TONS
[mt]
Biomass estimate
OFL
ABC
HG
ACL
ACT
28,276
5,525
3,329
0
3,329
3,000
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Measures for commercial sardine
harvest during the 2021–2022 fishing
year:
(1) If landings in the live bait fishery
reach 1,800 mt of Pacific sardine, then
a 1-mt per-trip limit of sardine would
apply to the live bait fishery.
(2) An incidental per-landing limit of
20-percent (by weight) Pacific sardine
applies to other CPS primary directed
fisheries (e.g., Pacific mackerel).
(3) If the ACT of 3,000 mt is attained,
then a 1-mt per-trip limit of Pacific
sardine would apply to all CPS fisheries
(i.e., 1) and 2) would no longer apply).
(4) An incidental per-landing
allowance of 2 mt of Pacific sardine
would apply to non-CPS fisheries until
the ACL is reached.
All sources of catch, including any
exempted fishing permit (EFP) setasides, the live bait fishery, and other
minimal sources of harvest, such as
incidental catch in CPS and non-CPS
fisheries and minor directed fishing,
will be accounted for against the ACT
and ACL. At the April 2021 Council
meeting, the Council approved 830 mt
of the ACL for three EFP proposals to
support stock assessments for Pacific
sardine. Any Pacific sardine harvested
between July 1, 2021, and the effective
date of the final rule will count toward
the 2021–2022 ACT.
The NMFS West Coast Regional
Administrator will publish a
notification in the Federal Register to
announce when catch reaches the
incidental limits as well as any changes
to allowable incidental catch
percentages. Additionally, to ensure that
the regulated community is informed of
any closure, NMFS will make
announcements through other means
available, including emails to
fishermen, processors, and state fishery
management agencies.
Comments and Responses
On May 26, 2021, NMFS published a
proposed rule for this action and
solicited public comments through June
10, 2021 (86 FR 28325). NMFS received
one public comment letter containing
multiple comments from the
environmental group Oceana. After
considering the public comment, NMFS
made no changes from the proposed
rule. NMFS summarizes and responds
to the comment letter from Oceana
below.
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Comment: Oceana states that the
proposed harvest specifications are not
based on the best available science, fail
to prevent overfishing, and will impede
rebuilding. Oceana requests that NMFS
revise the proposed specifications to
reduce catch limits. Specifically,
Oceana suggests that NMFS use a
different EMSY value to calculate the
OFL, ABC, and ACL, which would
result in an OFL of 1,230 mt, an ABC
of 741 mt, and an ACL lower than 741
mt. Oceana also suggests that NMFS
reduce catch by limiting live bait
harvest of sardine, denying EFP
applications that propose to land or sell
sardine or limiting their catch to 10 mt,
and limiting incidental catch of sardine
in other directed CPS fisheries to no
more than 10 percent of landings.
Response: NMFS has determined this
action is based on the best available
science, prevents overfishing, and will
not impede rebuilding. NMFS disagrees
with Oceana’s suggestion that setting a
lower ACL, specifically an ACL lower
than 741 mt, is necessary to prevent
overfishing. The reference points being
implemented through this action were
recommended by the Council based on
the control rules in the FMP and were
endorsed by the Council’s Scientific and
Statistical Committee (SSC) as the best
scientific information available for
setting the 2021–2022 harvest
specifications for Pacific sardine. In
addition, the management measures
adopted by the Council, including an
ACT that was set even lower than the
ACL (3,000 mt), are more than adequate
to ensure catch does not exceed the
ACL/ABC and OFL, and therefore add
an additional measure for preventing
overfishing. Furthermore, although the
SSC did not endorse the 2021 catchonly projection due to uncertainty in the
model (including the level of catch by
Mexico), more precaution was built into
the Council’s ABC recommendation to
account for this uncertainty and to
ensure overfishing is prevented. The
reference points implemented through
this action should also be viewed in the
context of the non-discretionary harvest
restrictions already in place, pursuant to
the CPS FMP, which generally restrict
the fishery from catching the full ACL.
These non-discretionary restrictions
include the continued closure of the
primary directed fishery (i.e., the largest
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fishery that takes the majority of Pacific
sardine catch) and restrictions on
incidental harvest of Pacific sardine in
other CPS fisheries (which are currently
less than half of typical incidental
limits).
NMFS also finds it unnecessary to
further limit the landings of sardine by
implementing any of the additional
measures recommended by Oceana—
i.e., limiting live bait harvest, denying
EFP applications or limiting their
allowable catch, and reducing the
percentage of landings allowed in other
directed CPS fisheries. The Council
considered the overfished status of
Pacific sardine, as well as the
uncertainty around the 2021 catch
update due to the inability to collect
survey data during the COVID–19
pandemic, and incorporated
precautionary measures in their
recommendations to NMFS to account
for those factors. Those precautionary
measures included: (1) Deeming the
assessment Tier 3 (high uncertainty); (2)
using a P* value of 0.4 (high
uncertainty); (3) reducing the ACT from
the ACL; (4) reducing the EFP allowance
from the requested amount; (5) limiting
incidental sardine landings in CPS
fisheries to 20 percent; and (6)
incorporating accountability measures.
These accountability measures include:
(1) Limiting live bait landings to 1 mt
per landing once 1,800 mt of sardine is
attained; (2) imposing a per-trip limit of
1 mt of sardine in all CPS fisheries once
the ACT is attained; and (3)
implementing an incidental per-landing
allowance of 2 mt in non-CPS fisheries
until the ACL is reached.
Finally, although changes to how
EMSY is calculated is beyond the scope
of this rulemaking, NMFS would
nevertheless like to respond to Oceana’s
suggestion in this regard. NMFS is
aware of the 2019 scientific publication
referenced by Oceana in their comment
letter and of ongoing Council
discussions related to EMSY. NMFS is
committed to participating in
discussions about new science and
whether that science justifies a change
to how EMSY is calculated for
management purposes. Regarding the
2019 paper mentioned by Oceana that
was authored by researchers at the
SWFSC, NMFS notes that research
related to the appropriate temperature
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index to inform EMSY is ongoing. NMFS
has not yet determined whether, based
on that paper, a change in how EMSY is
calculated is necessary for management
purposes. NMFS will continue to
examine whether this new publication
warrants a change in management;
however, at this time NMFS has
determined that the reference points set
through this action are based on the best
scientific information available.
Regarding recent Council discussions
related to EMSY, NMFS notes that the
Council’s SSC—the scientific advisory
body that is responsible for
recommending changes to EMSY—has
the ability to recommend changes to
EMSY at any time, and it has not
determined that a change is necessary at
this time. The Council’s SSC previously
made such a recommendation in 2014
when it recommended that NMFS
switch from using the 3-year average of
Scripps Institution of Oceanography
(SIO) sea surface temperature
measurements to using the 3-year
average of CalCOFI sea surface
temperature measurements to inform
EMSY. In 2014 the SSC also
recommended an interim measure of a
static EMSY of 18 percent until that
change, from SIO to CalCOFI, could be
adopted after being properly analyzed.
Classification
Pursuant to section 304(b)(1)(A) of the
MSA, the NMFS Assistant
Administrator has determined that this
final rule is consistent with the CPS
FMP, other provisions of the MSA, and
other applicable law.
The need to implement these
measures in a timely manner to ensure
they are in place as soon as possible
after the start of the fishing season, July
1, 2021, constitutes good cause under
authority contained in 5 U.S.C.
553(d)(3), to establish an effective date
less than 30 days after date of
publication. In accordance with the
FMP, this rule was recommended by the
Council at its meeting in April 2021, the
contents of which were based on the
best available new information on the
population status of Pacific sardine that
became available at that time. Making
these final specifications effective as
soon as possible after July 1, the first
day of the fishing year, is necessary for
the conservation and management of the
Pacific sardine resource because last
year’s restrictions on harvest are not
effective after June 30. The FMP
requires a prohibition on primary
directed fishing for Pacific sardine for
the 2021–2022 fishing year because the
sardine biomass has dropped below the
CUTOFF. The purpose of the CUTOFF
in the FMP, and for prohibiting a
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primary directed fishery when the
biomass drops below this level, is to
protect the stock when biomass is low
and provide a buffer of spawning stock
that is protected from fishing and can
contribute to rebuilding the stock. A
delay of a full 30 days in the date of
effectiveness for this rule would result
in the re-opening of the primary
directed commercial fishery on July 1.
Delaying the effective date of this rule
much beyond July 1 would be contrary
to the public interest because it would
jeopardize the sustainability of the
Pacific sardine stock. Furthermore, most
affected fishermen are aware that the
Council recommended that primary
directed commercial fishing be
prohibited for the 2021–2022 fishing
year, and are fully prepared to comply
with the prohibition.
This final rule is exempt from review
under Executive Order 12866.
The Chief Counsel for Regulation of
the Department of Commerce certified
to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration during
the proposed rule stage that this action
would not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities for the purposes of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act. The factual
basis for the certification was published
in the proposed rule and is not repeated
here. As a result, a regulatory flexibility
analysis was not required, and none was
prepared.
Pursuant to Executive Order 13175,
this rule was developed after
meaningful consultation and
collaboration with the Council’s tribal
representative, who has agreed with the
provisions that apply to tribal vessels.
This action does not contain a
collection-of-information requirement
for purposes of the Paper Reduction Act.
There are no relevant Federal rules that
may duplicate, overlap, or conflict with
the action.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: July 6, 2021.
Samuel D. Rauch, III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2021–14643 Filed 7–6–21; 4:15 pm]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 665
[Docket No. 210701–0142]
RIN 0648–BK28
Pacific Island Fisheries; Exemption for
Large U.S. Longline Vessels To Fish in
Portions of the American Samoa Large
Vessel Prohibited Area; Court Order
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
NMFS implements a
regulatory exemption that allows certain
U.S. longline vessels 50 ft (15.2 m) and
larger (‘‘large longline vessels’’) to fish
in portions of the American Samoa
Large Vessel Prohibited Area (LVPA).
The intent is to comply with a U.S.
Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals decision
and Order that reversed a district court
ruling that had vacated and set aside the
exemption.
DATES: Effective July 6, 2021.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Bob
Harman, NMFS PIRO Sustainable
Fisheries, 808–725–5170.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NMFS and
the Western Pacific Fishery
Management Council (Council) manage
pelagic fisheries in the U.S. Pacific
Islands under the Fishery Ecosystem
Plan for Pelagic Fisheries of the Western
Pacific Region. In 2016, NMFS
published a final rule (81 FR 5619,
February 3, 2016) that allowed U.S.
longline vessels greater than 50 feet that
hold a Federal American Samoa
longline limited entry permit to fish
within the LVPA to within about 12–17
nm (22–31 km) from shore around
Swains Island, Tutuila, and the Manua
Islands. Large longline vessels
continued to be restricted from fishing
within the remaining portions of the
LVPA. The intent of the rule was to
improve the viability of the American
Samoa longline fishery and achieve
optimum yield, while preventing
overfishing in accordance with National
Standard 1 of the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act). Additional
information about the LVPA exemptions
is available in the proposed rule (80 FR
51527, August 25, 2015) and final rule.
In July 2016, the Territory of
American Samoa sued NMFS in the U.S.
District Court for the District of Hawaii
(Territory of American Samoa v. NMFS,
SUMMARY:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 129 (Friday, July 9, 2021)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 36237-36239]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-14643]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 660
[Docket No: 210702-0144; RTID 0648-XW035]
Fisheries Off West Coast States; Coastal Pelagic Species
Fisheries; Annual Specifications; 2021-2022 Annual Specifications and
Management Measures for Pacific Sardine
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS is implementing annual harvest specifications and
management measures for the northern subpopulation of Pacific sardine
(hereafter, Pacific sardine), for the fishing year, which runs from
July 1, 2021, through June 30, 2022. This final rule will prohibit most
directed commercial fishing for Pacific sardine off the coasts of
Washington, Oregon, and California. Pacific sardine harvest will be
allowed only in the live bait fishery, minor directed fisheries, as
incidental catch in other fisheries, or as authorized under exempted
fishing permits. The incidental harvest of Pacific sardine will be
limited to 20 percent by weight of all fish per trip when caught with
other stocks managed under the Coastal Pelagic Species Fishery
Management Plan, or up to 2 metric tons per trip when caught with non-
Coastal Pelagic Species stocks. The annual catch limit for the 2021-
2022 Pacific sardine fishing year is 3,329 metric tons. This final rule
is intended to conserve and manage the Pacific sardine stock off the
U.S. West Coast.
DATES: Effective July 6, 2021.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Taylor Debevec, West Coast Region,
NMFS, (562) 619-2052, [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NMFS manages the Pacific sardine fishery in
the U.S. exclusive economic zone (EEZ) off the Pacific coast
(California, Oregon, and Washington) in accordance with the Coastal
Pelagic Species (CPS) Fishery Management Plan (FMP). The FMP and its
implementing regulations require NMFS to set annual catch levels for
the Pacific sardine fishery based on the annual specification framework
and control rules in the FMP. These control rules include the harvest
guideline (HG) control rule, which, in conjunction with the overfishing
limit (OFL) and acceptable biological catch (ABC) rules in the FMP, are
used to manage harvest levels for Pacific sardine, in accordance with
the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act (MSA), 16
U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
This final rule implements the annual catch levels, reference
points, and management measures for the 2021-2022 fishing year. The
final rule adopts, without changes, the catch levels and restrictions
that NMFS proposed in the rule published on May 26, 2021. The proposed
rule for this action included additional background on the
specifications and details of how the Pacific Fishery Management
Council (Council) derived its recommended specifications for Pacific
sardine. Those details are not repeated here. For additional
information on this action, please refer to the proposed rule (86 FR
28325).
This rule implements an OFL of 5,525 metric tons (mt) and an ABC/
annual catch limit (ACL) of 3,329 mt, based on CPS FMP control rules
and a biomass estimate of Pacific sardine of 28,276 mt. This biomass
estimate is from the 2020 benchmark stock assessment and was
recommended for use this year by the Council's Scientific and
Statistical Committee after identifying significant uncertainties in
the 2021 catch-only projection. Because the estimated biomass is less
than the value of the CUTOFF parameter in the CPS FMP (150,000 mt), the
harvest guideline is set to 0 mt, meaning there is no primary directed
fishery for Pacific sardine. This is the seventh consecutive year the
primary directed fishery has been closed. Because the estimated biomass
is below the minimum stock size threshold (50,000 mt) the FMP requires
that incidental catch of Pacific sardine in other CPS fisheries be
limited to an incidental allowance of no more than 20 percent by
weight. Although these management measures, triggered by the FMP, are
expected to keep catch far below the ACL as they have done in recent
history, this rule also implements an annual catch target (ACT) of
3,000 mt and implements management measures to ensure harvest
opportunity throughout the year.
A summary of the 2021-2022 fishing year specifications can be found
in Table 1, and management measures in the list below.
[[Page 36238]]
Table 1--Harvest Specifications for the 2021-2022 Sardine Fishing Year in Metric Tons
[mt]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Biomass estimate OFL ABC HG ACL ACT
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
28,276 5,525 3,329 0 3,329 3,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Measures for commercial sardine harvest during the 2021-2022
fishing year:
(1) If landings in the live bait fishery reach 1,800 mt of Pacific
sardine, then a 1-mt per-trip limit of sardine would apply to the live
bait fishery.
(2) An incidental per-landing limit of 20-percent (by weight)
Pacific sardine applies to other CPS primary directed fisheries (e.g.,
Pacific mackerel).
(3) If the ACT of 3,000 mt is attained, then a 1-mt per-trip limit
of Pacific sardine would apply to all CPS fisheries (i.e., 1) and 2)
would no longer apply).
(4) An incidental per-landing allowance of 2 mt of Pacific sardine
would apply to non-CPS fisheries until the ACL is reached.
All sources of catch, including any exempted fishing permit (EFP)
set-asides, the live bait fishery, and other minimal sources of
harvest, such as incidental catch in CPS and non-CPS fisheries and
minor directed fishing, will be accounted for against the ACT and ACL.
At the April 2021 Council meeting, the Council approved 830 mt of the
ACL for three EFP proposals to support stock assessments for Pacific
sardine. Any Pacific sardine harvested between July 1, 2021, and the
effective date of the final rule will count toward the 2021-2022 ACT.
The NMFS West Coast Regional Administrator will publish a
notification in the Federal Register to announce when catch reaches the
incidental limits as well as any changes to allowable incidental catch
percentages. Additionally, to ensure that the regulated community is
informed of any closure, NMFS will make announcements through other
means available, including emails to fishermen, processors, and state
fishery management agencies.
Comments and Responses
On May 26, 2021, NMFS published a proposed rule for this action and
solicited public comments through June 10, 2021 (86 FR 28325). NMFS
received one public comment letter containing multiple comments from
the environmental group Oceana. After considering the public comment,
NMFS made no changes from the proposed rule. NMFS summarizes and
responds to the comment letter from Oceana below.
Comment: Oceana states that the proposed harvest specifications are
not based on the best available science, fail to prevent overfishing,
and will impede rebuilding. Oceana requests that NMFS revise the
proposed specifications to reduce catch limits. Specifically, Oceana
suggests that NMFS use a different EMSY value to calculate
the OFL, ABC, and ACL, which would result in an OFL of 1,230 mt, an ABC
of 741 mt, and an ACL lower than 741 mt. Oceana also suggests that NMFS
reduce catch by limiting live bait harvest of sardine, denying EFP
applications that propose to land or sell sardine or limiting their
catch to 10 mt, and limiting incidental catch of sardine in other
directed CPS fisheries to no more than 10 percent of landings.
Response: NMFS has determined this action is based on the best
available science, prevents overfishing, and will not impede
rebuilding. NMFS disagrees with Oceana's suggestion that setting a
lower ACL, specifically an ACL lower than 741 mt, is necessary to
prevent overfishing. The reference points being implemented through
this action were recommended by the Council based on the control rules
in the FMP and were endorsed by the Council's Scientific and
Statistical Committee (SSC) as the best scientific information
available for setting the 2021-2022 harvest specifications for Pacific
sardine. In addition, the management measures adopted by the Council,
including an ACT that was set even lower than the ACL (3,000 mt), are
more than adequate to ensure catch does not exceed the ACL/ABC and OFL,
and therefore add an additional measure for preventing overfishing.
Furthermore, although the SSC did not endorse the 2021 catch-only
projection due to uncertainty in the model (including the level of
catch by Mexico), more precaution was built into the Council's ABC
recommendation to account for this uncertainty and to ensure
overfishing is prevented. The reference points implemented through this
action should also be viewed in the context of the non-discretionary
harvest restrictions already in place, pursuant to the CPS FMP, which
generally restrict the fishery from catching the full ACL. These non-
discretionary restrictions include the continued closure of the primary
directed fishery (i.e., the largest fishery that takes the majority of
Pacific sardine catch) and restrictions on incidental harvest of
Pacific sardine in other CPS fisheries (which are currently less than
half of typical incidental limits).
NMFS also finds it unnecessary to further limit the landings of
sardine by implementing any of the additional measures recommended by
Oceana--i.e., limiting live bait harvest, denying EFP applications or
limiting their allowable catch, and reducing the percentage of landings
allowed in other directed CPS fisheries. The Council considered the
overfished status of Pacific sardine, as well as the uncertainty around
the 2021 catch update due to the inability to collect survey data
during the COVID-19 pandemic, and incorporated precautionary measures
in their recommendations to NMFS to account for those factors. Those
precautionary measures included: (1) Deeming the assessment Tier 3
(high uncertainty); (2) using a P* value of 0.4 (high uncertainty); (3)
reducing the ACT from the ACL; (4) reducing the EFP allowance from the
requested amount; (5) limiting incidental sardine landings in CPS
fisheries to 20 percent; and (6) incorporating accountability measures.
These accountability measures include: (1) Limiting live bait landings
to 1 mt per landing once 1,800 mt of sardine is attained; (2) imposing
a per-trip limit of 1 mt of sardine in all CPS fisheries once the ACT
is attained; and (3) implementing an incidental per-landing allowance
of 2 mt in non-CPS fisheries until the ACL is reached.
Finally, although changes to how EMSY is calculated is
beyond the scope of this rulemaking, NMFS would nevertheless like to
respond to Oceana's suggestion in this regard. NMFS is aware of the
2019 scientific publication referenced by Oceana in their comment
letter and of ongoing Council discussions related to EMSY.
NMFS is committed to participating in discussions about new science and
whether that science justifies a change to how EMSY is
calculated for management purposes. Regarding the 2019 paper mentioned
by Oceana that was authored by researchers at the SWFSC, NMFS notes
that research related to the appropriate temperature
[[Page 36239]]
index to inform EMSY is ongoing. NMFS has not yet determined
whether, based on that paper, a change in how EMSY is
calculated is necessary for management purposes. NMFS will continue to
examine whether this new publication warrants a change in management;
however, at this time NMFS has determined that the reference points set
through this action are based on the best scientific information
available. Regarding recent Council discussions related to
EMSY, NMFS notes that the Council's SSC--the scientific
advisory body that is responsible for recommending changes to
EMSY--has the ability to recommend changes to
EMSY at any time, and it has not determined that a change is
necessary at this time. The Council's SSC previously made such a
recommendation in 2014 when it recommended that NMFS switch from using
the 3-year average of Scripps Institution of Oceanography (SIO) sea
surface temperature measurements to using the 3-year average of CalCOFI
sea surface temperature measurements to inform EMSY. In 2014
the SSC also recommended an interim measure of a static EMSY
of 18 percent until that change, from SIO to CalCOFI, could be adopted
after being properly analyzed.
Classification
Pursuant to section 304(b)(1)(A) of the MSA, the NMFS Assistant
Administrator has determined that this final rule is consistent with
the CPS FMP, other provisions of the MSA, and other applicable law.
The need to implement these measures in a timely manner to ensure
they are in place as soon as possible after the start of the fishing
season, July 1, 2021, constitutes good cause under authority contained
in 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3), to establish an effective date less than 30 days
after date of publication. In accordance with the FMP, this rule was
recommended by the Council at its meeting in April 2021, the contents
of which were based on the best available new information on the
population status of Pacific sardine that became available at that
time. Making these final specifications effective as soon as possible
after July 1, the first day of the fishing year, is necessary for the
conservation and management of the Pacific sardine resource because
last year's restrictions on harvest are not effective after June 30.
The FMP requires a prohibition on primary directed fishing for Pacific
sardine for the 2021-2022 fishing year because the sardine biomass has
dropped below the CUTOFF. The purpose of the CUTOFF in the FMP, and for
prohibiting a primary directed fishery when the biomass drops below
this level, is to protect the stock when biomass is low and provide a
buffer of spawning stock that is protected from fishing and can
contribute to rebuilding the stock. A delay of a full 30 days in the
date of effectiveness for this rule would result in the re-opening of
the primary directed commercial fishery on July 1.
Delaying the effective date of this rule much beyond July 1 would
be contrary to the public interest because it would jeopardize the
sustainability of the Pacific sardine stock. Furthermore, most affected
fishermen are aware that the Council recommended that primary directed
commercial fishing be prohibited for the 2021-2022 fishing year, and
are fully prepared to comply with the prohibition.
This final rule is exempt from review under Executive Order 12866.
The Chief Counsel for Regulation of the Department of Commerce
certified to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration during the proposed rule stage that this action would
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities for the purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility Act. The
factual basis for the certification was published in the proposed rule
and is not repeated here. As a result, a regulatory flexibility
analysis was not required, and none was prepared.
Pursuant to Executive Order 13175, this rule was developed after
meaningful consultation and collaboration with the Council's tribal
representative, who has agreed with the provisions that apply to tribal
vessels.
This action does not contain a collection-of-information
requirement for purposes of the Paper Reduction Act. There are no
relevant Federal rules that may duplicate, overlap, or conflict with
the action.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: July 6, 2021.
Samuel D. Rauch, III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2021-14643 Filed 7-6-21; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P