International Fisheries; Pacific Tuna Fisheries; 2022-2024 In-Season Action Announcement Procedures for Commercial Pacific Bluefin Tuna in the Eastern Pacific Ocean; Correction, 18256-18258 [2023-06337]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 59 / Tuesday, March 28, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
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Miguel A. Cardona,
Secretary of Education.
[FR Doc. 2023–06303 Filed 3–27–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4000–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 300
[Docket No. 230119–0019]
RIN 0648–BL59
International Fisheries; Pacific Tuna
Fisheries; 2022–2024 In-Season Action
Announcement Procedures for
Commercial Pacific Bluefin Tuna in the
Eastern Pacific Ocean; Correction
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule; correction.
AGENCY:
NMFS is correcting a final
rule for in-season action announcement
procedures for commercial Pacific
bluefin tuna (PBF) that appeared in the
Federal Register on January 27, 2023. In
that rule, NMFS did not address a
public comment because of an error on
the deadline for comment submissions.
This correction responds to the
comment, which does not change the
action in the January 27 final rule.
DATES: Effective March 28, 2023.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Celia Barroso, NMFS, 562–432–1850,
Celia.Barroso@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On
January 27, 2023, NMFS published a
final rule on in-season action
announcement procedures for PBF (88
FR 5273). Due to an error on the
deadline for comment submissions,
NMFS did not see, and therefore did not
respond, to a public comment submitted
during the public comment period of
the proposed rule. Upon learning of this
error, NMFS immediately took steps to
issue this correction to the final rule
that addresses the comment.
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SUMMARY:
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Classification
The NMFS Assistant Administrator
has determined that this final rule is
consistent with the Tuna Conventions
Act and other applicable laws.
This final rule has been determined to
be not significant for purposes of
Executive Order 12866.
Section 553(b)(B) of the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA)
authorizes agencies to dispense with
notice and comment procedures for
rules when the agency for ‘‘good cause’’
finds that those procedures are
‘‘impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary
to the public interest.’’ The Assistant
Administrator for Fisheries determined
that there is good cause to waive prior
notice and an opportunity for public
comment on this action because this
action is simply to correct an
inadvertent error in the January 27 final
rule (88 FR 5273) that would not change
the final action. Immediate correction of
the error is necessary to adequately
respond to public comments received
during the proposed rulemaking stage in
accordance with the APA.
Under section 553(d) of the APA, an
agency must delay the effective date of
regulations for 30 days after the date of
publication, unless the agency finds
good cause to make the regulations
effective sooner. For the same reasons
stated above, the Assistant
Administrator for Fisheries has
determined good cause exists to waive
the 30-day delay in the date of
effectiveness. This correction only
addresses a public comment but does
not change the action in the January 27
final rule, which became effective on
February 27, 2023, and NMFS does not
anticipate in-season action on PBF until
spring 2023 at the earliest. Delaying
effectiveness of the January 27 final rule
due to this correction would result in
confusion among fishery participants
and increase the risk of exceeding PBF
catch limits, and would therefore be
contrary to public interest.
The Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5
U.S.C. 603 and 604, requires an agency
to prepare an initial and a final
regulatory flexibility analysis whenever
an agency is required by section 553 of
the APA or any other law to publish a
general notice of proposed rulemaking.
Because NMFS found good cause under
section 553(b)(3)(B) of the APA to forgo
publication of a notice of proposed
rulemaking, the regulatory flexibility
analyses described in 5 U.S.C. 603 and
604 are not required for this rulemaking.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This final rule contains no collection
of information requirements under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4700
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Correction
In FR Rule Doc. 2023–01447 (88 FR
5273), appearing in the Federal Register
on Friday, January 27, 2023, the
following corrections are made:
1. On page 5273, in the second
column, in the second paragraph, the
last sentence is revised to read, ‘‘NMFS
received two public comments on the
proposed rule, which are addressed
later in this preamble.’’
2. On page 5273, in the third column,
above the Classification section, a new
section is added to read as follows:
Public Comments and Responses
NMFS received two public comments
on the proposed rule. One comment,
from an individual commenter, voiced
general support for management actions
to conserve Pacific bluefin tuna (PBF).
The other comment, from the Center for
Biological Diversity, asserted that NMFS
has failed to consider the impacts to
protected species of the proposed rule
and asked NMFS to delay publication of
the final rule until an updated
Endangered Species Act (ESA)
consultation on the impacts of the drift
gillnet fleet on humpback whales is
‘‘complete.’’ NMFS has considered the
comment and will not change the final
rule to implement the previously
described revision in regulations. The
comment included two main
components, and NMFS’ response to
each component is below.
Component 1: The commenter asserts
that, because drift gillnet catches of PBF
have increased, NMFS mischaracterized
these catches as ‘‘incidental.’’ The
commenter also states that this is
illustrated by NMFS characterizing the
purse seine fleet as targeting PBF when
the majority of the purse seine-caught
landings, or tuna landings, are not PBF.
NMFS Response to Component 1:
NMFS acknowledges the drift gillnet
fleet off of the West Coast catches and
retains various marketable species,
including PBF. Drift gillnet has a long
history of catching PBF incidentally,
and it has always been a marketable
species that contributes to drift gillnet
revenues (see Pacific Fisheries
Information Network [PacFIN] Apex
Reports Highly Migratory Species SAFE
Reports 003 and 009 at https://
pacfin.psmfc.org/). PBF have become
more abundant in U.S. waters in recent
years and, therefore, are more likely to
be caught. Additionally, this coincides
with a reduction in landings (PacFIN) in
recent years and anecdotal evidence
from fishermen that swordfish were
locally less abundant off California in
2021 and 2022, which may be the cause
for the landings composition presented
in the comment.
E:\FR\FM\28MRR1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 59 / Tuesday, March 28, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
The final rule had two parts: (1)
amend the in-season action
announcement procedures to allow for
quicker in-season action that would
improve NMFS’ ability to remain within
the internationally-agreed PBF catch
limit, and (2) disincentivize regulatory
discards by allowing fish already on
board to be landed within 24 hours of
any in-season actions to reduce trip
limits.
Regarding the second part, only the
purse seine fleet is likely to be affected.
The existing trip limit scheme in
accordance with a final rule published
on August 5, 2022 (87 FR 47939) that is
applicable to 2022–2024 reduces the
trip limit as cumulative catches in the
year reach thresholds. The lowest trip
limit in 2023–2024 will be 3 metric
tons, after which the next threshold
reached would result in the fishery
closing. In recent years, no drift gillnet
(DGN) vessel has caught more than 3 mt
of PBF in a single trip. Therefore, the
component allowing 24 hours to land
fish after in-season actions to reduce
trip limits would not apply to DGN
because that fleet would only be
impacted by the in-season action to
close the fishery. Furthermore, as noted
in the proposed rule, allowing vessels to
land or transship fish on board for 24
hours after the in-season action notice is
consistent with the policy in the event
of a fishery closure, which has been in
place since 2014, and reduces the
likelihood of regulatory discards. NMFS
will consider using a different term
other than ‘‘incidental’’ to describe the
DGN PBF fishing activities in future
rulemakings; however, any changes in
the use of the term will not impact
implementation of the final rule.
Regarding the catch composition of
the coastal purse seine fleet, NMFS
notes that catches of PBF have been
restricted due to an international
rebuilding plan, whereas there are no
international catch limits for yellowfin
tuna. There are periods where the
coastal purse seine fleet chooses to
target species other than PBF (e.g.,
yellowfin tuna, market squid) to make a
larger profit, and it is not uncommon for
a purse seine vessel to catch more
yellowfin tuna than PBF on a single trip
because NMFS has imposed restrictive
trip limits for PBF. Ultimately, the
impacts of the rule will not change
whether a fleet targets PBF or catches
and retains PBF incidentally because
the trip limits and in-season action
procedures apply regardless of intention
when PBF was caught.
Component 2: The commenter argues
that an ESA consultation is necessary
because the proposed rule ‘‘could
increase the time that humpback whales
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16:02 Mar 27, 2023
Jkt 259001
co-occur with the California drift gillnet
fishery, and thus increase entanglement
risk.’’ The commenter notes that ‘‘[t]he
proposed rule states that the intent
behind the revised announcement
procedures is efficiency: ‘to allow for
quicker in-season action in part because
the Pacific bluefin tuna fishery may
catch a lot of the catch limit in a short
period of time.’ ’’ The commenter goes
on to assert: ‘‘A more efficient fishery—
one that is managed to allow a lot of
Pacific bluefin tuna caught in a short
period—is not necessarily good for
conservation. Specifically,
indiscriminate fishing increases the risk
of entanglement for humpback whales.
NMFS could reduce the risk of
entanglement of humpback whales by
limiting the fishery well before the
vessels approach the bluefin tuna catch
limits.’’
NMFS response to Component 2:
Contrary to the commenter’s suggestion,
taking quicker in-season action will
neither result in a more efficient fishery
in which a lot of PBF can be caught in
a short period, nor will it result in
‘‘indiscriminate fishing’’ that increases
the risk of entanglement for humpback
whales. This final rule simply increases
NMFS’ ability to take in-season action
quickly to reduce trip limits or close the
fishery in a manner that aids the United
States in adhering to international catch
limits while avoiding regulatory
discards.
With respect to the commenter’s
suggestion that NMFS could reduce the
risk of entanglement of humpback
whales by limiting the fishery well
before vessels approach the catch limits,
NMFS views this comment as in part
directed to the existing trip limit
scheme applicable to 2022–2024 (87 FR
47939, August 5, 2022), as well as the
announcement procedures in the
proposed rule (87 FR 70766, November
21, 2022). The trip limit scheme was
modeled on the management approach
in 2021 (e.g., trip limits, quicker inseason action announcement, electronic
landing receipts). This was
recommended by the Pacific Fishery
Management Council (PFMC) at its
November 2021 meeting.
The PFMC recommendation and
original proposed rule for 2022–2024
regulations intended to have quicker inseason action announcement procedures
to support operational flexibility and
reduce the risk of exceeding the
internationally-agreed catch limits.
NMFS proposed the new in-season
action procedures to adhere to the intent
behind the Council recommendation (87
FR 70766, November 21, 2022).
Additional history on the more recent
approaches to managing PBF may be
PO 00000
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18257
found in the proposed rule for the 2021
regulations (86 FR 279, January 5, 2021)
and the proposed rule for the 2022–2024
regulations (87 FR 12409, March 4,
2022) for PBF. Among other things,
these proposed rules explain that
relying solely on the Federal Register
notice for in-season action contributed
to the United States exceeding its
internationally-agreed catch limit in
2017. Since then, NMFS implemented
reduced trip limits and, more recently,
trip limits that reduce as cumulative
catches for the calendar year, quicker inseason action procedures, and a
requirement for PBF buyers to submit
electronic landing receipts within 24
hours of a landing. Reducing trip limits
or closing a fishery earlier is outside the
scope of this proposed rule because the
thresholds to take in-season action have
already been implemented with the
August 5, 2022, final rule (87 FR 47939).
While it is uncertain whether the
current characteristics of the PBF
fishery will continue, it is imperative
we manage the fishery in a manner that
improves NMFS’ ability to adhere to
international catch limits.
3. On page 5273, in the third column,
in the Classification section, the
paragraph under the header Economic
Analyses is corrected to read:
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, for
purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility
Act, this action would not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
The factual basis for the certification
was published in the proposed rule and
is not repeated here. No information
received during the public comment
period changes the action from the
proposed rule or NMFS’ analysis. The
Center for Biological Diversity suggested
that drift gillnet vessels are incorrectly
characterized as catching Pacific bluefin
tuna incidentally, however, whether
characterized as incidentally catching or
targeting Pacific bluefin tuna in
relatively small quantities does not
change the factual basis for the
certification published. Therefore, the
initial certification published with the
proposed rule—that this rule is not
expected to have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities—remains unchanged. As a
result, a regulatory flexibility analysis
was not required and none was
prepared.
There are no other corrections to the
final rule published on January 27,
2023.
E:\FR\FM\28MRR1.SGM
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18258
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 59 / Tuesday, March 28, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
Dated: March 22, 2023.
Samuel D. Rauch, III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
Friday, March 10, 2023, make the
following corrections:
1. Table 1, beginning on page 14928,
should appear as follows:
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
[FR Doc. 2023–06337 Filed 3–27–23; 8:45 am]
50 CFR Part 679
[Docket No. 230306–0065]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
RTID 0648–XC365
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska; Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands; Final 2023 and 2024
Harvest Specifications for Groundfish
Correction
In rule document 2023–04877
beginning on page 14926 in the issue of
TABLE 1—FINAL 2023 OVERFISHING LEVEL (OFL), ACCEPTABLE BIOLOGICAL CATCH (ABC), TOTAL ALLOWABLE CATCH
(TAC), INITIAL TAC (ITAC), CDQ RESERVE ALLOCATION, AND NON-SPECIFIED RESERVES OF GROUNDFISH IN THE BSAI 1
[Amounts are in metric tons]
2023
Species
Area
OFL
Pollock 4 .............................................
TAC
ITAC 2
CDQ 3
Nonspecified
reserves
Skates ................................................
Sharks ................................................
Octopuses ..........................................
BS ..........................
AI ...........................
Bogoslof .................
BS ..........................
AI ...........................
Alaska-wide ...........
BS ..........................
AI ...........................
BSAI ......................
BSAI ......................
BS ..........................
AI ...........................
BSAI ......................
BSAI ......................
BSAI ......................
BSAI ......................
BSAI ......................
BSAI ......................
BSAI ......................
BS ..........................
EAI .........................
CAI .........................
WAI ........................
BSAI ......................
BSAI ......................
BS/EAI ...................
CAI/WAI .................
BSAI ......................
BSAI ......................
BS ..........................
AI ...........................
BSAI ......................
BS/EAI ...................
CAI .........................
WAI ........................
BSAI ......................
BSAI ......................
BSAI ......................
3,381,000
52,383
115,146
172,495
18,416
47,390
n/a
n/a
404,882
4,645
n/a
n/a
98,787
8,946
166,034
79,256
40,823
22,919
50,133
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
22,776
703
n/a
n/a
706
1,680
n/a
n/a
118,787
n/a
n/a
n/a
46,220
689
4,769
1,910,000
43,413
86,360
144,834
13,812
40,502
8,417
8,884
378,499
3,960
3,338
622
83,852
7,579
121,719
65,344
33,946
17,189
42,038
11,903
8,152
5,648
16,335
18,687
525
359
166
530
1,260
880
380
98,588
43,281
17,351
37,956
38,605
450
3,576
1,300,000
19,000
300
127,409
8,425
n/a
7,996
8,440
230,000
3,960
3,338
622
15,000
7,579
66,000
35,500
17,500
4,500
37,703
11,903
8,152
5,648
12,000
11,000
525
359
166
530
1,260
880
380
69,282
27,260
17,351
24,671
27,441
250
400
1,170,000
17,100
300
113,776
7,524
n/a
6,597
6,858
205,390
3,366
2,837
529
12,750
6,442
58,938
31,702
14,875
3,825
33,157
10,118
7,280
5,044
10,716
9,350
446
305
141
451
1,071
748
323
61,869
24,343
15,494
22,031
23,325
213
340
130,000
1,900
..................
13,633
901
n/a
1,099
1,424
24,610
n/a
357
..................
1,605
..................
7,062
3,799
..................
..................
n/a
..................
872
604
1,284
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
7,413
2,917
1,857
2,640
..................
..................
..................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
300
158
........................
........................
144
93
645
1,137
........................
........................
2,625
675
........................
1,785
........................
........................
........................
1,650
79
54
25
80
189
132
57
........................
........................
........................
........................
4,116
38
60
Total ............................................
................................
4,859,585
3,155,268
2,000,000
1,789,662
196,564
13,773
Pacific cod 5 .......................................
Sablefish 6 ..........................................
Yellowfin sole .....................................
Greenland turbot ................................
Arrowtooth flounder ............................
Kamchatka flounder ...........................
Rock sole 7 .........................................
Flathead sole 8 ...................................
Alaska plaice ......................................
Other flatfish 9 ....................................
Pacific ocean perch ...........................
Northern rockfish ................................
Blackspotted/Rougheye rockfish 10 ....
Shortraker rockfish .............................
Other rockfish 11 .................................
Atka mackerel ....................................
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ABC
Note: Regulatory areas and districts are defined at § 679.2 (BSAI=Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands management area, BS=Bering Sea subarea, AI=Aleutian Islands subarea, EAI=Eastern Aleutian district, CAI=Central Aleutian district, WAI=Western Aleutian district).
1 These amounts apply to the entire BSAI management area unless otherwise specified. With the exception of pollock, and for the purpose of
these harvest specifications, the Bering Sea subarea (BS) includes the Bogoslof District.
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E:\FR\FM\28MRR1.SGM
28MRR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 59 (Tuesday, March 28, 2023)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 18256-18258]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-06337]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 300
[Docket No. 230119-0019]
RIN 0648-BL59
International Fisheries; Pacific Tuna Fisheries; 2022-2024 In-
Season Action Announcement Procedures for Commercial Pacific Bluefin
Tuna in the Eastern Pacific Ocean; Correction
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule; correction.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS is correcting a final rule for in-season action
announcement procedures for commercial Pacific bluefin tuna (PBF) that
appeared in the Federal Register on January 27, 2023. In that rule,
NMFS did not address a public comment because of an error on the
deadline for comment submissions. This correction responds to the
comment, which does not change the action in the January 27 final rule.
DATES: Effective March 28, 2023.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Celia Barroso, NMFS, 562-432-1850,
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On January 27, 2023, NMFS published a final
rule on in-season action announcement procedures for PBF (88 FR 5273).
Due to an error on the deadline for comment submissions, NMFS did not
see, and therefore did not respond, to a public comment submitted
during the public comment period of the proposed rule. Upon learning of
this error, NMFS immediately took steps to issue this correction to the
final rule that addresses the comment.
Classification
The NMFS Assistant Administrator has determined that this final
rule is consistent with the Tuna Conventions Act and other applicable
laws.
This final rule has been determined to be not significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
Section 553(b)(B) of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA)
authorizes agencies to dispense with notice and comment procedures for
rules when the agency for ``good cause'' finds that those procedures
are ``impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest.''
The Assistant Administrator for Fisheries determined that there is good
cause to waive prior notice and an opportunity for public comment on
this action because this action is simply to correct an inadvertent
error in the January 27 final rule (88 FR 5273) that would not change
the final action. Immediate correction of the error is necessary to
adequately respond to public comments received during the proposed
rulemaking stage in accordance with the APA.
Under section 553(d) of the APA, an agency must delay the effective
date of regulations for 30 days after the date of publication, unless
the agency finds good cause to make the regulations effective sooner.
For the same reasons stated above, the Assistant Administrator for
Fisheries has determined good cause exists to waive the 30-day delay in
the date of effectiveness. This correction only addresses a public
comment but does not change the action in the January 27 final rule,
which became effective on February 27, 2023, and NMFS does not
anticipate in-season action on PBF until spring 2023 at the earliest.
Delaying effectiveness of the January 27 final rule due to this
correction would result in confusion among fishery participants and
increase the risk of exceeding PBF catch limits, and would therefore be
contrary to public interest.
The Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 603 and 604, requires an
agency to prepare an initial and a final regulatory flexibility
analysis whenever an agency is required by section 553 of the APA or
any other law to publish a general notice of proposed rulemaking.
Because NMFS found good cause under section 553(b)(3)(B) of the APA to
forgo publication of a notice of proposed rulemaking, the regulatory
flexibility analyses described in 5 U.S.C. 603 and 604 are not required
for this rulemaking.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This final rule contains no collection of information requirements
under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
Correction
In FR Rule Doc. 2023-01447 (88 FR 5273), appearing in the Federal
Register on Friday, January 27, 2023, the following corrections are
made:
1. On page 5273, in the second column, in the second paragraph, the
last sentence is revised to read, ``NMFS received two public comments
on the proposed rule, which are addressed later in this preamble.''
2. On page 5273, in the third column, above the Classification
section, a new section is added to read as follows:
Public Comments and Responses
NMFS received two public comments on the proposed rule. One
comment, from an individual commenter, voiced general support for
management actions to conserve Pacific bluefin tuna (PBF). The other
comment, from the Center for Biological Diversity, asserted that NMFS
has failed to consider the impacts to protected species of the proposed
rule and asked NMFS to delay publication of the final rule until an
updated Endangered Species Act (ESA) consultation on the impacts of the
drift gillnet fleet on humpback whales is ``complete.'' NMFS has
considered the comment and will not change the final rule to implement
the previously described revision in regulations. The comment included
two main components, and NMFS' response to each component is below.
Component 1: The commenter asserts that, because drift gillnet
catches of PBF have increased, NMFS mischaracterized these catches as
``incidental.'' The commenter also states that this is illustrated by
NMFS characterizing the purse seine fleet as targeting PBF when the
majority of the purse seine-caught landings, or tuna landings, are not
PBF.
NMFS Response to Component 1: NMFS acknowledges the drift gillnet
fleet off of the West Coast catches and retains various marketable
species, including PBF. Drift gillnet has a long history of catching
PBF incidentally, and it has always been a marketable species that
contributes to drift gillnet revenues (see Pacific Fisheries
Information Network [PacFIN] Apex Reports Highly Migratory Species SAFE
Reports 003 and 009 at https://pacfin.psmfc.org/). PBF have become more
abundant in U.S. waters in recent years and, therefore, are more likely
to be caught. Additionally, this coincides with a reduction in landings
(PacFIN) in recent years and anecdotal evidence from fishermen that
swordfish were locally less abundant off California in 2021 and 2022,
which may be the cause for the landings composition presented in the
comment.
[[Page 18257]]
The final rule had two parts: (1) amend the in-season action
announcement procedures to allow for quicker in-season action that
would improve NMFS' ability to remain within the internationally-agreed
PBF catch limit, and (2) disincentivize regulatory discards by allowing
fish already on board to be landed within 24 hours of any in-season
actions to reduce trip limits.
Regarding the second part, only the purse seine fleet is likely to
be affected. The existing trip limit scheme in accordance with a final
rule published on August 5, 2022 (87 FR 47939) that is applicable to
2022-2024 reduces the trip limit as cumulative catches in the year
reach thresholds. The lowest trip limit in 2023-2024 will be 3 metric
tons, after which the next threshold reached would result in the
fishery closing. In recent years, no drift gillnet (DGN) vessel has
caught more than 3 mt of PBF in a single trip. Therefore, the component
allowing 24 hours to land fish after in-season actions to reduce trip
limits would not apply to DGN because that fleet would only be impacted
by the in-season action to close the fishery. Furthermore, as noted in
the proposed rule, allowing vessels to land or transship fish on board
for 24 hours after the in-season action notice is consistent with the
policy in the event of a fishery closure, which has been in place since
2014, and reduces the likelihood of regulatory discards. NMFS will
consider using a different term other than ``incidental'' to describe
the DGN PBF fishing activities in future rulemakings; however, any
changes in the use of the term will not impact implementation of the
final rule.
Regarding the catch composition of the coastal purse seine fleet,
NMFS notes that catches of PBF have been restricted due to an
international rebuilding plan, whereas there are no international catch
limits for yellowfin tuna. There are periods where the coastal purse
seine fleet chooses to target species other than PBF (e.g., yellowfin
tuna, market squid) to make a larger profit, and it is not uncommon for
a purse seine vessel to catch more yellowfin tuna than PBF on a single
trip because NMFS has imposed restrictive trip limits for PBF.
Ultimately, the impacts of the rule will not change whether a fleet
targets PBF or catches and retains PBF incidentally because the trip
limits and in-season action procedures apply regardless of intention
when PBF was caught.
Component 2: The commenter argues that an ESA consultation is
necessary because the proposed rule ``could increase the time that
humpback whales co-occur with the California drift gillnet fishery, and
thus increase entanglement risk.'' The commenter notes that ``[t]he
proposed rule states that the intent behind the revised announcement
procedures is efficiency: `to allow for quicker in-season action in
part because the Pacific bluefin tuna fishery may catch a lot of the
catch limit in a short period of time.' '' The commenter goes on to
assert: ``A more efficient fishery--one that is managed to allow a lot
of Pacific bluefin tuna caught in a short period--is not necessarily
good for conservation. Specifically, indiscriminate fishing increases
the risk of entanglement for humpback whales. NMFS could reduce the
risk of entanglement of humpback whales by limiting the fishery well
before the vessels approach the bluefin tuna catch limits.''
NMFS response to Component 2: Contrary to the commenter's
suggestion, taking quicker in-season action will neither result in a
more efficient fishery in which a lot of PBF can be caught in a short
period, nor will it result in ``indiscriminate fishing'' that increases
the risk of entanglement for humpback whales. This final rule simply
increases NMFS' ability to take in-season action quickly to reduce trip
limits or close the fishery in a manner that aids the United States in
adhering to international catch limits while avoiding regulatory
discards.
With respect to the commenter's suggestion that NMFS could reduce
the risk of entanglement of humpback whales by limiting the fishery
well before vessels approach the catch limits, NMFS views this comment
as in part directed to the existing trip limit scheme applicable to
2022-2024 (87 FR 47939, August 5, 2022), as well as the announcement
procedures in the proposed rule (87 FR 70766, November 21, 2022). The
trip limit scheme was modeled on the management approach in 2021 (e.g.,
trip limits, quicker in-season action announcement, electronic landing
receipts). This was recommended by the Pacific Fishery Management
Council (PFMC) at its November 2021 meeting.
The PFMC recommendation and original proposed rule for 2022-2024
regulations intended to have quicker in-season action announcement
procedures to support operational flexibility and reduce the risk of
exceeding the internationally-agreed catch limits. NMFS proposed the
new in-season action procedures to adhere to the intent behind the
Council recommendation (87 FR 70766, November 21, 2022). Additional
history on the more recent approaches to managing PBF may be found in
the proposed rule for the 2021 regulations (86 FR 279, January 5, 2021)
and the proposed rule for the 2022-2024 regulations (87 FR 12409, March
4, 2022) for PBF. Among other things, these proposed rules explain that
relying solely on the Federal Register notice for in-season action
contributed to the United States exceeding its internationally-agreed
catch limit in 2017. Since then, NMFS implemented reduced trip limits
and, more recently, trip limits that reduce as cumulative catches for
the calendar year, quicker in-season action procedures, and a
requirement for PBF buyers to submit electronic landing receipts within
24 hours of a landing. Reducing trip limits or closing a fishery
earlier is outside the scope of this proposed rule because the
thresholds to take in-season action have already been implemented with
the August 5, 2022, final rule (87 FR 47939). While it is uncertain
whether the current characteristics of the PBF fishery will continue,
it is imperative we manage the fishery in a manner that improves NMFS'
ability to adhere to international catch limits.
3. On page 5273, in the third column, in the Classification
section, the paragraph under the header Economic Analyses is corrected
to read:
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, for purposes of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, this action would not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. The factual
basis for the certification was published in the proposed rule and is
not repeated here. No information received during the public comment
period changes the action from the proposed rule or NMFS' analysis. The
Center for Biological Diversity suggested that drift gillnet vessels
are incorrectly characterized as catching Pacific bluefin tuna
incidentally, however, whether characterized as incidentally catching
or targeting Pacific bluefin tuna in relatively small quantities does
not change the factual basis for the certification published.
Therefore, the initial certification published with the proposed rule--
that this rule is not expected to have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities--remains unchanged. As a result,
a regulatory flexibility analysis was not required and none was
prepared.
There are no other corrections to the final rule published on
January 27, 2023.
[[Page 18258]]
Dated: March 22, 2023.
Samuel D. Rauch, III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2023-06337 Filed 3-27-23; 8:45 am]
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