Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act Provisions; Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Northeast Multispecies Fishery; Framework Adjustment 65, 34810-34821 [2023-11494]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 31, 2023 / Proposed Rules
Martha Williams,
Director, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
[FR Doc. 2023–11471 Filed 5–30–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4333–15–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 648
[Docket No. 230524–0138]
RIN 0648–BL95
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
Provisions; Fisheries of the
Northeastern United States; Northeast
Multispecies Fishery; Framework
Adjustment 65
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
This action proposes to
approve and implement Framework
Adjustment 65 to the Northeast
Multispecies Fishery Management Plan.
This rule proposes to revise the
rebuilding plan for Gulf of Maine cod,
set catch limits for 16 of the 20
multispecies (groundfish) stocks, and
make a temporary modification to the
accountability measures for Georges
Bank cod. This action also corrects
erroneous regulations and removes
outdated regulations. This action is
necessary to respond to updated
scientific information and to achieve the
goals and objectives of the fishery
management plan. The proposed
measures are intended to help prevent
overfishing, rebuild overfished stocks,
achieve optimum yield, and ensure that
management measures are based on the
best scientific information available.
DATES: Comments must be received by
5 p.m. EST on June 15, 2023.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by NOAA–NMFS–2023–0021,
by the following method:
• Electronic Submission: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to
www.regulations.gov and enter NOAA–
NMFS–2023–0021 in the Search box.
Click on the ‘‘Comment’’ icon, complete
the required fields, and enter or attach
your comments.
Instructions: Comments sent by any
other method, to any other address or
individual, or received after the end of
the comment period, may not be
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SUMMARY:
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considered. All comments received are
a part of the public record and will
generally be posted for public viewing
on www.regulations.gov without change.
All personal identifying information
(e.g., name, address, etc.), confidential
business information, or otherwise
sensitive information submitted
voluntarily by the sender will be
publicly accessible. You may submit
anonymous comments by entering
‘‘N/A’’ in the required fields if you wish
to remain anonymous.
Copies of Framework Adjustment 65,
including the draft Environmental
Assessment, the Regulatory Impact
Review, and the Regulatory Flexibility
Act Analysis prepared by the New
England Fishery Management Council
in support of this action, are available
from Thomas A. Nies, Executive
Director, New England Fishery
Management Council, 50 Water Street,
Mill 2, Newburyport, MA 01950. The
supporting documents are also
accessible via the internet at: https://
www.nefmc.org/management-plans/
northeast-multispecies or https://
www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Liz
Sullivan, Fishery Policy Analyst, phone:
978–282–8493; email: Liz.Sullivan@
noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Summary of Proposed Measures
This action would implement the
management measures in Framework
Adjustment 65 to the Northeast
Multispecies Fishery Management Plan
(FMP). The New England Fishery
Management Council reviewed the
proposed regulations and deemed them
consistent with, and necessary to
implement, Framework 65 in a May 4,
2023, letter from Council Chairman Eric
Reid to Regional Administrator Michael
Pentony. Under the Magnuson-Stevens
Act, on behalf of the Secretary of
Commerce, the Greater Atlantic
Regional Fisheries Office’s Regional
Administrator approves, disapproves, or
partially approves measures that the
Council proposes, based on consistency
with the Act and other applicable law.
NMFS reviews proposed regulations for
consistency with the fishery
management plan, plan amendment, the
Magnuson-Stevens Act and other
applicable law. The Regional
Administrator is seeking comments on
these proposed regulations and intends
to promulgate the final regulations after
careful consideration of any submitted
comments. Through Framework 65, the
Council proposes to:
• Revise the rebuilding plan for Gulf
of Maine (GOM) cod;
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• Set shared U.S./Canada quotas for
Georges Bank (GB) yellowtail flounder
and eastern GB cod and haddock for
fishing years 2023 and 2024;
• Set specifications, including catch
limits for 16 groundfish stocks: GB
haddock, GOM haddock, Southern New
England/Mid-Atlantic (SNE/MA)
yellowtail flounder, Cape Cod (CC)/
GOM yellowtail flounder, American
plaice, witch flounder, GB winter
flounder, GOM winter flounder, SNE/
MA winter flounder, pollock, ocean
pout, Atlantic halibut, and Atlantic
wolffish for fishing years 2023–2025, GB
cod and GB yellowtail flounder for
fishing years 2023–2024; and white
hake for fishing year 2023;
• Remove the management
uncertainty buffer for sectors for GOM
haddock and white hake, if the at-sea
monitoring (ASM) target coverage level
is set at 90 percent or greater for the
2023 fishing year only; and
• Make a temporary modification to
the accountability measures (AM) for
GB cod.
This action also proposes regulatory
corrections that are not part of
Framework 65, but that may be
considered and implemented under
section 305(d) authority in the
Magnuson-Stevens Act to make changes
necessary to carry out the FMP. NMFS
is proposing these corrections in
conjunction with the Framework 65
proposed measures for expediency
purposes. These proposed corrections
are described in Regulatory Corrections
under Secretarial Authority.
Rebuilding Plan for Gulf of Maine Cod
Framework 65 would revise the
rebuilding plan for GOM cod. The
current rebuilding plan for GOM cod, as
implemented by Framework 51 to the
FMP (79 FR 22421, April 22, 2014), has
a target date of 2024. On August 13,
2021, the Regional Administrator
notified the Council that the stock was
not making adequate rebuilding
progress. The deadline to implement a
rebuilding plan is August 13, 2023.
The Magnuson-Stevens Act requires
that overfished stocks be rebuilt as
quickly as possible, not to exceed 10
years when biologically possible,
accounting for the status and biology of
the stocks, the needs of fishing
communities, and the interaction of the
overfished stock within the marine
ecosystem. Rebuilding plans must have
at least a 50-percent probability of
success. Selection of a rebuilding plan
with a higher probability of success is
one way of addressing uncertainty, but
this does not affect the standard used in
the future to determine whether a stock
is rebuilt. The minimum rebuilding time
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 31, 2023 / Proposed Rules
(Tmin) is the amount of time a stock is
expected to take to rebuild to the
biomass (B) associated with maximum
sustainable yield (MSY) in the absence
of any fishing mortality (F). The actual
timeline set with a rebuilding plan
(Ttarget) may be greater than Tmin, but
cannot exceed the maximum rebuilding
time (Tmax). Tmax is 10 years if Tmin is
less than 10 years. In situations where
Tmin exceeds 10 years, Tmax establishes
a maximum time for rebuilding that is
linked to the biology of the stock.
The GOM cod rebuilding program
proposed in this action would rebuild
the stock within 10 years, or by 2033,
which is the maximum time period
allowed by the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
Projections suggest the stock could
rebuild in 7 years at an F of zero.
Fishing mortality of zero for GOM cod
is currently technologically and
economically impracticable given
available gear, fishing methods, fishery
management capability, and the
multispecies nature of the commercial
and recreational fishery. In addition to
these factors, other biological and
economic factors were identified and
considered by the Council in setting
Ttarget = Tmax. First, recent recruitment
estimates for this stock have been below
average, and recruitment may be lower
than assumed in the rebuilding
projections, making the Tmin projections
(7 years at F = 0) likely to be overly
optimistic. There is uncertainty around
the stock’s natural mortality, and under
one of the two approved models (Mramp, M=0.4), the stock cannot rebuild
in the rebuilding projections. Long-term
projections for many groundfish stocks
have tended to be overly optimistic,
such that future levels of biomass are
overestimated and fishing mortality is
underestimated. Additionally, recent
commercial utilization of the GOM cod
annual catch limit (ACL) is high,
indicating that the stock is an important
component of the fishing industry; a
longer rebuilding period considers the
needs of the fishing communities as
much as practicable. The proposed
rebuilding plan for GOM cod would set
Frebuild at 60 percent of FMSY with a 70-
percent probability of achieving BMSY
under the M=0.2 model.
As part of the revised rebuilding plan
for GOM cod, we propose to remove
regulations at 50 CFR 648.90(a)(2)(iv),
which include a review process for the
rebuilding plans for GOM cod and
American plaice. The revised rebuilding
plan for GOM cod does not contain this
Council review process, but is still
subject to Secretarial review for
determining adequate rebuilding
progress. As of 2019, American plaice is
rebuilt and no longer in a rebuilding
plan, making this regulation
unnecessary.
Fishing Years 2023 and 2024 Shared
U.S./Canada Quotas
Management of Transboundary Georges
Bank Stocks
Eastern GB cod, eastern GB haddock,
and GB yellowtail flounder are jointly
managed with Canada under the United
States/Canada Resource Sharing
Understanding. The Transboundary
Management Guidance Committee
(TMGC) is a government-industry
committee made up of representatives
from the United States and Canada. For
historical information about the TMGC
see: https://www.bio.gc.ca/info/intercol/
tmgc-cogst/index-en.php. Each year, the
TMGC recommends a shared quota for
each stock based on the most recent
stock information and the TMGC’s
harvest strategy. The TMGC’s harvest
strategy for setting catch levels is to
maintain a low to neutral risk (less than
50 percent) of exceeding the fishing
mortality limit for each stock. The
harvest strategy also specifies that when
stock conditions are poor, fishing
mortality should be further reduced to
promote stock rebuilding. The shared
quotas are allocated between the United
States and Canada based on a formula
that considers historical catch (10percent weighting) and the current
resource distribution (90-percent
weighting).
For GB yellowtail flounder, the
Council’s Scientific and Statistical
Committee (SSC) also recommends an
acceptable biological catch (ABC) for the
stock. The ABC is typically used to
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inform the U.S. TMGC’s discussions
with Canada for the annual shared
quota. Although the stock is jointly
managed with Canada, and the TMGC
recommends annual shared quotas, the
Council may not set catch limits that
would exceed the SSC’s
recommendation. The SSC does not
recommend ABCs for eastern GB cod
and haddock because they are
management units of the total GB cod
and haddock stocks. The SSC
recommends overall ABCs for the total
GB cod and haddock stocks. The shared
U.S./Canada quota for eastern GB cod
and haddock is included in these
overall ABCs, and must be consistent
with the SSC’s recommendation for the
total GB stocks.
2023 and 2024 U.S./Canada Quotas
The Transboundary Resources
Assessment Committee assessed the
three transboundary stocks in July 2022,
and detailed summaries of these
assessments can be found at: https://
www.nefsc.noaa.gov/assessments/trac/.
The TMGC met in September 2022 to
recommend shared quotas for 2023
based on the updated assessments, and
made recommendations for eastern GB
cod and GB yellowtail flounder. The
Council adopted the TMGC’s
recommendations in Framework 65. The
TMGC was unable to reach consensus
on the most appropriate combined
Canada/U.S. quota for eastern GB
haddock. Instead, the Council selected a
U.S. quota based on the shared quota
supported by the U.S. delegation and
the established method of determining
the allocation for each country (42
percent of 3,619 mt), and supported
using 2,320 mt as an estimate of
possible Canadian catch.
Framework 65 proposes to set the
same shared quotas for a second year
(i.e., for fishing year 2024) as
placeholders, with the expectation that
those quotas will be reviewed annually
and new recommendations will be
received from the TMGC. The proposed
2023 and 2024 shared U.S./Canada
quotas, and each country’s allocation,
are listed in Table 1.
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TABLE 1—PROPOSED 2023 AND 2024 FISHING YEARS U.S./CANADA QUOTAS (MT, LIVE WEIGHT) AND PERCENT OF
QUOTA ALLOCATED TO EACH COUNTRY
Quota
Eastern GB
cod
Eastern GB
haddock
Total Shared Quota .......................
U.S. Quota .....................................
Canadian Quota .............................
520 ................................................
135 (26 percent) ...........................
385 (74 percent) ...........................
No agreement ...............................
1,520 .............................................
2,320 (estimate) ............................
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GB Yellowtail
flounder
200.
106 (53 percent).
94 (47 percent).
31MYP1
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 31, 2023 / Proposed Rules
The proposed 2023 U.S. quotas for the
three shared stocks represent decreases
compared to 2022: Eastern GB cod by
15.6 percent, eastern GB haddock by 77
percent, and GB yellowtail flounder by
13 percent. For a more detailed
discussion of the TMGC’s 2023 catch
advice, including a description of each
country’s quota share, see the TMGC’s
guidance document that will be posted
at: https://www.greateratlantic.
fisheries.noaa.gov/.
The regulations implementing the
U.S./Canada Resource Sharing
Understanding require deducting any
overages of the U.S. quota for eastern GB
cod, eastern GB haddock, or GB
yellowtail flounder from the U.S. quota
in the following fishing year. If catch
information for the 2022 fishing year
indicates that the U.S. fishery exceeded
its quota for any of the shared stocks, we
will reduce the respective U.S. quotas
for the 2023 fishing year in a future
management action, as close to May 1,
2023, as possible. If any fishery that is
allocated a portion of the U.S. quota
exceeds its allocation and causes an
overage of the overall U.S. quota, the
overage reduction would be applied
only to that fishery’s allocation in the
following fishing year. This ensures that
catch by one component of the overall
fishery does not negatively affect
another component of the overall
fishery.
Catch Limits for Fishing Years 2023–
2025
Summary of the Proposed Catch Limits
Tables 2 through 11 show the
proposed catch limits for the 2023–2025
fishing years. A brief summary of how
these catch limits were developed is
provided below. More details on the
proposed catch limits for each
groundfish stock can be found in
Appendix II (Calculation of Northeast
Multispecies Annual Catch Limits, FY
2023–FY 2025) to the Framework 65
Environmental Assessment (see
ADDRESSES for information on how to
get this document).
Through Framework 65, the Council
proposes to adopt catch limits for 13
stocks for the 2023–2025 fishing years
and for white hake for the 2023 fishing
year, based on stock assessments
completed in 2022, and catch limits for
GB cod and GB yellowtail flounder for
fishing years 2023–2024. Framework 61
(86 FR 40353, July 28, 2021) previously
set 2023 quotas for redfish, northern
windowpane flounder, and southern
windowpane flounder based on
assessments conducted in 2020, and
those would remain in place.
Framework 63 (87 FR 42375, July 15,
2022) previously set the 2023–2024
quota for GOM cod, based on an
assessment conducted in 2021, and that
would also remain in place. Table 2
provides an overview of which catch
limits, if any, would change, as
proposed in Framework 65, as well as
when the stock was most recently
assessed. Table 3 provides the percent
change in the 2023 catch limit
compared to the 2022 fishing year.
TABLE 2—CHANGES TO CATCH LIMITS, AS PROPOSED IN FRAMEWORK 65
Most recent
assessment
Stock
GB Cod .....................................................
GOM Cod ..................................................
GB Haddock .............................................
GOM Haddock ..........................................
GB Yellowtail Flounder .............................
SNE/MA Yellowtail Flounder .....................
CC/GOM Yellowtail Flounder ....................
American Plaice ........................................
Witch Flounder ..........................................
GB Winter Flounder ..................................
GOM Winter Flounder ..............................
SNE/MA Winter Flounder .........................
Redfish ......................................................
White Hake ...............................................
Pollock ......................................................
N. Windowpane Flounder .........................
S. Windowpane Flounder .........................
Ocean Pout ...............................................
Atlantic Halibut ..........................................
Atlantic Wolffish ........................................
2021
2021
2022
2022
2022
2022
2022
2022
2022
2022
2022
2022
2020
2022
2022
2020
2020
2022
2022
2022
Proposed change in
framework 65
New 2023–2024 ABC.
Adjust sub-components, 2023–2024 catch limit set by Framework 63.
New 2023–2025 ABC.
New 2023–2025 ABC.
New 2023–2024 ABC.
New 2023–2025 ABC.
New 2023–2025 ABC.
New 2023–2025 ABC.
New 2023–2025 ABC.
New 2023–2025 ABC.
New 2023–2025 ABC.
New 2023–2025 ABC.
No change: 2023 catch limit set by Framework 61.
New 2023 ABC.
New 2023–2025 ABC.
Adjust sub-components, 2023 catch limit set by Framework 61.
Adjust sub-components, 2023 catch limit set by Framework 61.
New 2023–2025 ABC.
New 2023–2025 ABC.
New 2023–2025 ABC.
N = Northern; S = Southern
TABLE 3—PROPOSED FISHING YEARS 2023–2025 OVERFISHING LIMITS AND ACCEPTABLE BIOLOGICAL CATCHES
[mt, live weight]
2023
Stock
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OFL
GB Cod ....................................................
GOM Cod .................................................
GB Haddock .............................................
GOM Haddock .........................................
GB Yellowtail Flounder ............................
SNE/MA Yellowtail Flounder ....................
CC/GOM Yellowtail Flounder ...................
American Plaice .......................................
Witch Flounder .........................................
GB Winter Flounder .................................
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U.S. ABC
UNK
853
18,482
2,515
UNK
55
1,436
7,316
UNK
2,361
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519
551
11,901
1,936
106
40
1,115
5,699
1,256
1,702
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Percent
change from
2022
51
0
¥85
¥83
¥13
82
35
102
¥15
180
Sfmt 4702
2024
OFL
UNK
980
17,768
2,655
UNK
89
1,279
7,091
UNK
2,153
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2025
U.S. ABC
519
551
11,638
2,038
106
40
992
5,520
1,256
1,549
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OFL
U.S. ABC
....................
....................
15,096
2,627
....................
345
1,184
6,763
UNK
2,100
....................
....................
9,962
2,017
....................
40
915
5,270
1,256
1,490
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 31, 2023 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 3—PROPOSED FISHING YEARS 2023–2025 OVERFISHING LIMITS AND ACCEPTABLE BIOLOGICAL CATCHES—
Continued
[mt, live weight]
2023
Stock
OFL
GOM Winter Flounder ..............................
SNE/MA Winter Flounder ........................
Redfish .....................................................
White Hake ..............................................
Pollock ......................................................
N. Windowpane Flounder ........................
S. Windowpane Flounder ........................
Ocean Pout ..............................................
Atlantic Halibut .........................................
Atlantic Wolffish .......................................
U.S. ABC
1,072
1,186
13,229
2,650
19,617
UNK
513
125
UNK
124
804
627
9,967
1,845
15,016
160
384
87
86
93
Percent
change from
2022
62
38
¥1
¥13
¥11
0
0
0
¥15
1
2024
2025
OFL
U.S. ABC
OFL
U.S. ABC
1,072
1,425
....................
....................
18,208
....................
....................
125
UNK
124
804
627
....................
....................
13,940
....................
....................
87
86
93
1,072
1,536
....................
....................
17,384
....................
....................
125
UNK
124
804
627
....................
....................
13,294
....................
....................
87
86
93
UNK = Unknown
Note: An empty cell indicates no OFL/ABC is adopted for that year. These catch limits would be set in a future action.
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Overfishing Limits and Acceptable
Biological Catches
The overfishing limit (OFL) is
calculated to set the maximum amount
of fish that can be caught in a year,
without constituting overfishing. The
ABC is typically set lower than the OFL
to account for scientific uncertainty. For
GB cod, GB haddock, and GB yellowtail
flounder, the total ABC is reduced by
the amount of the Canadian quota (see
Table 1 for the Canadian and U.S. shares
of these stocks). Although the TMGC
recommendations were only for fishing
year 2023, the portion of the shared
quota that would be allocated to Canada
(or assumed for Canada, in the case of
GB haddock) in fishing year 2023 was
used to project the U.S. portions of the
ABCs for these three stocks for 2024.
This avoids artificially inflating the U.S.
ABC up to the total ABC for the 2024
fishing year. The TMGC will make new
recommendations for 2024, which
would replace any quotas for these
stocks set in this action. Additionally,
although GB winter flounder, white
hake, and Atlantic halibut are not
jointly managed with Canada, there is
some Canadian catch of these stocks.
Because the total ABC must account for
all sources of fishing mortality, expected
Canadian catch of GB winter flounder
(38 mt), white hake (52 mt), and
Atlantic halibut (74 mt) is deducted
from the total ABC. The U.S. ABC is the
amount available to the U.S. fishery
after accounting for Canadian catch (see
Table 3). For stocks without Canadian
catch, the U.S. ABC is equal to the total
ABC.
The OFLs are currently unknown for
GB cod, GB yellowtail flounder, witch
flounder, northern windowpane
flounder, and Atlantic halibut. For 2023,
the SSC recommended maintaining the
unknown OFL for GB cod, GB yellowtail
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flounder, witch flounder, and Atlantic
halibut. Empirical stock assessments are
used for these five stocks, and these
assessments can no longer provide
quantitative estimates of the status
determination criteria, nor were
appropriate proxies for stock status
determination able to be developed. In
the temporary absence of an OFL, in this
and previous actions, we have
considered recent catch data and
estimated trends in stock biomass as an
indication that the catch limits derived
from ABCs are sufficiently managing
fishing mortality at a rate that is
preventing overfishing. The SSC
recommended setting the GB cod ABC
based on an average between the output
of the iSmooth (previously referred to as
‘‘PlanBsmooth’’) approach and the total
calendar year catch from 2020, which
results in an increase (approximately 20
percent) from the previously set ABC
value. Despite this increase, the SSC
states that its recommendation is
intended to support stock rebuilding by
maintaining low catches relative to
historic levels. The SSC noted that the
fishing mortality in the GB yellowtail
flounder fishery does not appear to be
limiting stock recovery. However, the
continued low stock biomass and poor
recruitment for this stock warrant
maintaining low catch levels. For witch
flounder, the SSC supported the
continued use of the swept-area biomass
average and fixed harvest fraction for
setting the ABC, noting that the target
harvest fraction is low relative to the
historic harvest fraction for this stock
and that the recommended ABC for
witch flounder is not likely to result in
overfishing. While the catch multiplier
for Atlantic halibut remains below 1 for
the last four years, despite reductions in
ABC advice, the SSC highlighted the
uncertainty of Canadian catch estimates
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and stated that the recommended ABC
is not likely to result in overfishing. For
each of these stocks, the Council has
relied on the SSC to provide advice on
the likelihood of preventing overfishing
and promoting rebuilding under the
proposed ABCs. Based on these
considerations, we have preliminarily
determined that these ABCs are a
sufficient limit for preventing
overfishing and are consistent with the
National Standards. This action does
not propose any changes to the status
determination criteria for these stocks.
Subsequent to submitting Framework
65 to NMFS for review and rulemaking,
at its April meeting the New England
Council made a new request for NMFS
to implement an emergency rule under
section 305(c) of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act to increase the ABC for GOM
haddock based on concerns regarding
the economic impacts of the low quota
proposed in this action. We are
considering this separately from
Framework 65, and therefore it is not
discussed further here.
ABC for Georges Bank Cod
The GB cod 2021 management track
assessment followed the iSmooth
approach, using updated commercial
fishery catch data through calendar year
2020 and updated research survey
indices of abundance through 2021. In
Framework 63, the Council decided to
set the GB cod ABC at 754 mt for only
one year (fishing year 2022), requiring
the Council to make a new
recommendation for fishing years 2023
and 2024 in the current framework. The
SSC met in August 2022 to discuss
alternatives for the GB cod ABC for
fishing years 2023 and 2024, and a
majority of the SSC recommended an
ABC of 904 mt, the average between the
output of the iSmooth and the 2020
calendar year catch of GB cod (based on
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the 2021 assessment). The Council
selected 904 mt as its preferred option
for the GB cod ABC.
The Council’s EA for Framework 65
states that the 904 mt ABC would
reduce, but not eliminate, adverse
economic impacts, compared to the
fishing year 2022 ABC of 754 mt. The
Council included an updated analysis in
its Framework 65 submission, applying
the iSmooth approach using fall 2021
and spring 2022 surveys and catch data
through 2021, consistent with the
methodology and data sources used by
the SSC when recommending the
fishing year 2022 ABC. This updated
analysis resulted in an amount that is 74
mt higher than the 904-mt ABC
recommended by the Council. The
Council did not revise its
recommendation with the higher
amount. Instead, it has demonstrated
that the 904-mt ABC recommendation
would contribute to stock rebuilding
while having a low probability of
overfishing. The sector component of
the fishery will have a high (90-percent)
target coverage level of monitoring in
fishing year 2023, which is anticipated
to help ensure the accuracy of
commercial catch data.
Annual Catch Limits
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
Development of Annual Catch Limits
The U.S. ABC for each stock is
divided among the various fishery
components to account for all sources of
fishing mortality. An estimate of catch
expected from state waters and the other
sub-component (e.g., non-groundfish
fisheries or some recreational
groundfish fisheries) is deducted from
the U.S. ABC. The remaining portion of
the U.S. ABC is distributed to the
fishery components that receive an
allocation for the stock. Components of
the fishery that receive an allocation
have a sub-ACL set by reducing their
portion of the ABC to account for
management uncertainty and are subject
to AMs if they exceed their respective
catch limit during the fishing year. For
GOM cod and haddock only, the U.S.
ABC is first divided between the
commercial and recreational fisheries,
before being further divided into subcomponents and sub-ACLs. This process
is described fully in Appendix II of the
Framework 65 Environmental
Assessment.
Recreational Catch Target for GB Cod
GB cod is not allocated to the
recreational fishery. Instead, a catch
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:10 May 30, 2023
Jkt 259001
target is set and used to calculate the
amount deducted to account for state
and other sub-component catch.
Framework 65 proposes to set the GB
cod recreational catch target based on
the proportional change to the GB cod
U.S. ABC from fishing year 2022 to
2023. Under the Council’s preferred
alternative of a 904-mt GB cod ABC, the
recreational catch target would be 113
mt, which is an increase from the 75-mt
catch target set for fishing year 2022.
Framework 63 modified the
regulatory process for the Regional
Administrator to adjust recreational
measures to prevent the recreational
catch target from being exceeded for
fishing years 2023 and 2024. Any
change to the recreational measures for
GB cod would be implemented through
a separate rulemaking.
Sector and Common Pool Allocations
For stocks allocated to sectors, the
commercial groundfish sub-ACL is
further divided into the non-sector
(common pool) sub-ACL and the sector
sub-ACL, based on the total vessel
enrollment in sectors and the
cumulative potential sector
contributions (PSC) associated with
those sectors. The sector and common
pool sub-ACLs proposed in this action
are based on final fishing year 2023
sector rosters. All permits enrolled in a
sector, and the vessels associated with
those permits, had until April 30, 2023,
to withdraw from a sector and fish in
the common pool for the 2023 fishing
year. In addition to the enrollment
delay, all permits that change
ownership after the roster deadline were
able to join a sector (or change sector)
through April 30, 2023.
Management Uncertainty Buffer for
Sectors
In Framework 65, the Council
proposes to remove the management
uncertainty buffer for the sector subACL for GOM haddock and white hake,
for only the 2023 fishing year, if the atsea monitoring (ASM) coverage target is
90 percent or higher. The Council’s goal
is to mitigate the economic impacts of
the ACLs for these two stocks by
increasing the sector sub-ACLs if the
ASM coverage target is high enough to
reduce uncertainty. Amendment 23 (87
FR 75852, December 9, 2022)
implemented a measure to set the
management uncertainty buffer for the
sector sub-ACL for each allocated
groundfish stock to zero. In years that
the ASM coverage target is set at 100
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
percent, the management uncertainty
buffer will default to zero for the sector
sub-ACL for allocated stocks, unless the
Council’s consideration of the 100percent coverage target warrants
specifying a different management
uncertainty buffer in order to prevent
exceeding the sub-ACL. The process by
which the Council evaluates and sets
management uncertainty buffers was
unchanged by Amendment 23 and the
Council may adjust management
uncertainty buffers in future actions.
On March 16, 2023, the Regional
Administrator announced that the
fishing year 2023 ASM coverage target
will be 90 percent. Therefore, if this
measure is approved, sectors’ sub-ABCs
for GOM haddock and white hake
would not be reduced to account for the
management uncertainty for fishing year
2023 (see Table 4). The fishery would
remain accountable for remaining
within the sub-ACLs allocated to it for
both stocks affected by this measure,
and the removal of the management
uncertainty buffer for the sectors alone
is not likely to cause the ABC or OFL
to be exceeded. The revised
management uncertainty buffers apply
only to sectors and not to the common
pool component of the fishery or other
sub-ACLs or sub-components for any
stocks. In the case of GOM haddock, the
recreational fishery and common pool
fishery would both retain a management
uncertainty buffer; for white hake, only
the common pool fishery would have a
management uncertainty buffer applied.
Therefore, a certain level of uncertainty
buffer will continue to exist for each
stock’s ACL.
Common Pool Total Allowable Catches
The common pool sub-ACL for each
allocated stock (except for SNE/MA
winter flounder) is further divided into
trimester TACs. Table 7 summarizes the
common pool trimester TACs proposed
in this action.
Incidental catch TACs are also
specified for certain stocks of concern
(i.e., stocks that are overfished or subject
to overfishing) for common pool vessels
fishing in the special management
programs (i.e., special access programs
(SAP) and the Regular B Days-at-Sea
(DAS) Program), in order to limit the
catch of these stocks under each
program. Tables 8 through 11
summarize the proposed Incidental
Catch TACs for each stock and the
distribution of these TACs to each
special management program.
E:\FR\FM\31MYP1.SGM
31MYP1
34815
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 31, 2023 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 4—PROPOSED CATCH LIMITS FOR THE 2023 FISHING YEAR
[mt, live weight]
Stock
GB Cod ...................
GOM Cod ................
GB Haddock ............
GOM Haddock * ......
GB Yellowtail Flounder ........................
SNE/MA Yellowtail
Flounder ...............
CC/GOM Yellowtail
Flounder ...............
American Plaice ......
Witch Flounder ........
GB Winter Flounder
GOM Winter Flounder ........................
SNE/MA Winter
Flounder ...............
Redfish ....................
White Hake * ............
Pollock .....................
N. Windowpane
Flounder ...............
S. Windowpane
Flounder ...............
Ocean Pout .............
Atlantic Halibut ........
Atlantic Wolffish .......
Total
ACL
Groundfish
sub-ACL
Sector
sub-ACL
Common
pool
sub-ACL
Recreational
sub-ACL
Midwater
trawl
fishery
Scallop
fishery
Smallmesh
fisheries
State
waters
subcomponent
Other
subcomponent
A to H
A+B+C
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
500
522
11,301
1,888
375
470
11,080
1,818
364
268
10,829
1,183
11
11
251
25
........................
192
........................
610
..................
..................
221
18
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
42
48
0
45
83
3.4
0
6.4
103
84
80
4.5
........................
..................
16.5
2.0
0.0
0.0
38
33
25
8.1
........................
..................
2.7
..................
0.2
2.0
1,063
5,417
1,196
1,651
985
5,360
1,145
1,634
931
5,210
1,104
1,585
54
150
41
50
........................
........................
........................
........................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
34
29
19
0
45
29
31
17
772
607
519
88
........................
..................
..................
..................
153
12.1
604
9,469
1,844
14,325
441
9,469
1,826
13,124
387
9,369
1,808
13,001
53
99
18
123
........................
........................
........................
........................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
19
0
0
676
144
0
19
526
150
105
na
105
........................
..................
31
..................
0.8
13
371
83
83
87
45
49
64
87
na
na
na
na
45
49
64
87
........................
........................
........................
........................
..................
..................
..................
..................
129
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
13
0
17
0
184
34
1.3
0
na: not allocated to sectors
* GOM haddock and white hake catch limits are based on the removal of the management uncertainty buffer.
TABLE 5—PROPOSED CATCH LIMITS FOR THE 2024 FISHING YEAR *
[mt, live weight]
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
Stock
GB Cod ...................
GOM Cod ................
GB Haddock ............
GOM Haddock ........
GB Yellowtail Flounder ........................
SNE/MA Yellowtail
Flounder ...............
CC/GOM Yellowtail
Flounder ...............
American Plaice ......
Witch Flounder ........
GB Winter Flounder
GOM Winter Flounder ........................
SNE/MA Winter
Flounder ...............
Pollock .....................
Ocean Pout .............
Atlantic Halibut ........
Atlantic Wolffish .......
Total
ACL
Groundfish
sub-ACL
Sector
sub-ACL
Common
pool
sub-ACL
Recreational
sub-ACL
Midwater
trawl
fishery
Scallop
fishery
Smallmesh
fisheries
State
waters
subcomponent
Other
subcomponent
A to H
A+B+C
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
500
522
11,052
1,925
375
470
10,835
1,852
364
268
10,590
1,183
11
11
245
26
........................
192
........................
643
..................
..................
217
19
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
42
48
0
47
83
3
0
7
103
84
80
4.5
........................
..................
17
2.0
0
0
38
33
25
8.1
........................
..................
2.7
..................
0.2
2.0
946
5,247
1,196
1,503
877
5,192
1,145
1,488
828
5,046
1,104
1,442
48
145
41
45
........................
........................
........................
........................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
30
28
19
0
40
28
31
16
772
607
519
88
........................
..................
..................
..................
153
12.1
604
13,299
83
83
87
441
12,184
49
64
87
387
12,070
na
na
na
53
114
49
64
87
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
19
627
0
17
0
144
488
34
1.3
0
na: not allocated to sectors
* Northeast multispecies stocks not included in Table 5 do not have catch limits approved or proposed for fishing year 2024.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:10 May 30, 2023
Jkt 259001
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E:\FR\FM\31MYP1.SGM
31MYP1
34816
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 31, 2023 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 6—PROPOSED CATCH LIMITS FOR THE 2025 FISHING YEAR *
[mt, live weight]
Stock
GB Haddock ............
GOM Haddock ........
SNE/MA Yellowtail
Flounder ...............
CC/GOM Yellowtail
Flounder ...............
American Plaice ......
Witch Flounder ........
GB Winter Flounder
GOM Winter Flounder ........................
SNE/MA Winter
Flounder ...............
Pollock .....................
Ocean Pout .............
Atlantic Halibut ........
Atlantic Wolffish .......
Total
ACL
Groundfish
sub-ACL
Sector
sub-ACL
Common
pool
sub-ACL
Recreational
sub-ACL
Midwater
trawl
fishery
Scallop
fishery
Smallmesh
fisheries
State
waters
subcomponent
Other
subcomponent
A to H
A+B+C
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
9,460
1,905
9,275
1,833
9,065
1,171
210
26
........................
636
185
19
..................
..................
..................
..................
0
47
0
7
38
33
25
8
........................
..................
3
..................
0
2
873
5,009
1,196
1,446
808
4,957
1,145
1,431
764
4,818
1,104
1,387
45
139
41
44
........................
........................
........................
........................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
28
26
19
0
37
26
31
15
772
607
519
88
........................
..................
..................
..................
153
12.1
604
12,683
83
83
87
441
11,619
49
64
87
387
11,510
na
na
na
53
109
49
64
87
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
19
598
0
17
0
144
465
34
1.3
0
na: not allocated to sectors
* Northeast multispecies stocks not included in Table 6 do not have catch limits approved or proposed for fishing year 2025.
TABLE 7—PROPOSED FISHING YEARS 2023–2025 COMMON POOL TRIMESTER TACS
[mt, live weight]
2023
2024
2025
Stock
Trimester 1
Trimester 2
Trimester 3
Trimester 1
Trimester 2
Trimester 3
Trimester 1
Trimester 2
Trimester 3
3.0
5.2
67.6
6.6
0.9
1.7
31.0
111.0
22.6
4.0
32.7
24.8
6.7
34.4
3.6
3.5
82.7
6.4
1.4
2.3
14.1
12.0
8.2
12.0
33.6
30.8
5.5
42.9
4.1
1.9
100.2
11.6
2.3
4.1
9.2
27.0
10.3
33.9
22.1
43.7
5.5
45.4
3.0
5.2
66.1
7.0
0.9
1.7
27.6
107.5
22.6
3.6
32.7
....................
....................
31.9
3.6
3.5
80.8
6.7
1.4
2.3
12.6
11.6
8.2
10.9
33.6
....................
....................
39.9
4.1
1.9
98.0
12.2
2.3
4.1
8.2
26.2
10.3
30.8
22.1
....................
....................
42.1
....................
....................
56.6
6.9
....................
1.7
25.5
102.6
22.6
3.5
32.7
....................
....................
30.4
....................
....................
69.2
6.7
....................
2.3
11.6
11.1
8.2
10.5
33.6
....................
....................
38.0
....................
....................
83.9
12.1
....................
4.1
7.6
25.0
10.3
29.6
22.1
....................
....................
40.2
GB Cod .....................................
GOM Cod ..................................
GB Haddock ..............................
GOM Haddock ..........................
GB Yellowtail Flounder .............
SNE/MA Yellowtail Flounder .....
CC/GOM Yellowtail Flounder ....
American Plaice ........................
Witch Flounder ..........................
GB Winter Flounder ..................
GOM Winter Flounder ...............
Redfish ......................................
White Hake ................................
Pollock .......................................
TABLE 8—PROPOSED COMMON POOL INCIDENTAL CATCH TACS FOR THE 2023–2025 FISHING YEARS
[mt, live weight]
Percentage of
common pool
sub-ACL
Stock
GB Cod ............................................................................................................
GOM Cod .........................................................................................................
GB Yellowtail Flounder ....................................................................................
CC/GOM Yellowtail Flounder ...........................................................................
American Plaice ...............................................................................................
Witch Flounder .................................................................................................
SNE/MA Winter Flounder ................................................................................
2023
1.68
1
2
1
5
5
1
2024
0.18
0.11
0.09
0.54
7.50
2.06
0.53
2025
0.18
0.11
0.09
0.48
7.27
2.06
0.53
........................
........................
........................
0.45
6.94
2.06
0.53
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
TABLE 9—PERCENTAGE OF INCIDENTAL CATCH TACS DISTRIBUTED TO EACH SPECIAL MANAGEMENT PROGRAM
Regular B
DAS
Program
(%)
Stock
GB Cod ....................................................................................................................................................................
GOM Cod .................................................................................................................................................................
GB Yellowtail Flounder ............................................................................................................................................
CC/GOM Yellowtail Flounder ..................................................................................................................................
American Plaice .......................................................................................................................................................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:10 May 30, 2023
Jkt 259001
PO 00000
Frm 00025
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\31MYP1.SGM
31MYP1
60
100
50
100
100
Eastern
U.S./CA
Haddock SAP
(%)
40
n/a
50
n/a
n/a
34817
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 31, 2023 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 9—PERCENTAGE OF INCIDENTAL CATCH TACS DISTRIBUTED TO EACH SPECIAL MANAGEMENT PROGRAM—
Continued
Regular B
DAS
Program
(%)
Stock
Witch Flounder .........................................................................................................................................................
SNE/MA Winter Flounder ........................................................................................................................................
Eastern
U.S./CA
Haddock SAP
(%)
100
100
n/a
n/a
TABLE 10—PROPOSED FISHING YEARS 2023–2025 INCIDENTAL CATCH TACS FOR EACH SPECIAL MANAGEMENT
PROGRAM
[mt, live weight]
Regular B DAS Program
Eastern U.S./Canada Haddock SAP
Stock
2023
GB Cod ....................................................
GOM Cod .................................................
GB Yellowtail Flounder ............................
CC/GOM Yellowtail Flounder ...................
American Plaice .......................................
Witch Flounder .........................................
SNE/MA Winter Flounder ........................
2024
0.11
0.11
0.05
0.54
7.50
2.06
0.53
2025
0.11
0.11
0.05
0.48
7.27
2.06
0.53
2023
........................
........................
........................
0.45
6.94
2.06
0.53
2024
0.07
n/a
0.05
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
2025
0.07
n/a
0.05
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
........................
n/a
........................
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
TABLE 11—PROPOSED FISHING YEARS 2023–2025 REGULAR B DAS PROGRAM QUARTERLY INCIDENTAL CATCH TACS
[mt, live weight]
2023
Stock
GB Cod .............
GOM Cod ..........
GB Yellowtail
Flounder .........
CC/GOM
Yellowtail
Flounder .........
American Plaice
Witch Flounder ..
SNE/MA Winter
Flounder .........
1st
Quarter
(13%)
2nd
Quarter
(29%)
2024
3rd
Quarter
(29%)
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
1st
Quarter
(13%)
2nd
Quarter
(29%)
3rd
Quarter
(29%)
4th
Quarter
(29%)
1st
Quarter
(13%)
2nd
Quarter
(29%)
3rd
Quarter
(29%)
4th
Quarter
(29%)
0.01
0.01
0.03
0.03
0.03
0.03
0.03
0.03
0.01
0.01
0.03
0.03
0.03
0.03
0.03
0.03
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
0.01
0.01
0.01
0.01
0.01
0.01
0.01
0.01
................
................
................
................
0.07
0.98
0.27
0.16
2.18
0.60
0.16
2.18
0.60
0.16
2.18
0.60
0.06
0.94
0.27
0.14
2.11
0.60
0.14
2.11
0.60
0.14
2.11
0.60
0.06
0.90
0.27
0.13
2.01
0.60
0.13
2.01
0.60
0.13
2.01
0.60
0.07
0.15
0.15
0.15
0.07
0.15
0.15
0.15
0.07
0.15
0.15
0.15
Temporary Modification to
Accountability Measures for GB Cod
As described above, a portion of the
ABC is set aside to account for an
estimate of catch in state waters
(including both commercial and
recreational vessels) and catch in federal
waters by the other non-specified
fisheries (including non-groundfish
commercial and recreational groundfish
vessels). For allocated groundfish
stocks, there are no accountability
measures for the state and other subcomponents; an overage to the ACL
results in accountability measures for
the allocated components of the
groundfish fishery. If the overall ACL
for a stock is exceeded, the amount of
the overage due to catch from vessels
fishing in state waters or other, nonspecified fisheries is distributed
between the allocated components of
the groundfish fishery. Each
VerDate Sep<11>2014
4th
Quarter
(29%)
2025
16:10 May 30, 2023
Jkt 259001
component’s attributed share of the
overage is added to that component’s
catch to determine whether the AM for
that component is triggered and the
resulting overage amount. For the
commercial fishery (sectors and
common pool), the AM due to an
overage is payback in a subsequent
fishing year.
Framework 65 would temporarily
modify the AMs for GB cod when an
ACL overage that occurs in fishing years
2022–2024 is (in part or entirely) due to
vessels fishing in state waters or other,
non-specified fisheries. If in the year
following the overage (Year 2), the ACL
is not achieved or exceeded by any
amount, the ACL underage would be
proportionately applied to each
component’s share of the overage from
Year 1. While the preliminary AM (i.e.,
payback) would be implemented at the
beginning of Year 3, any reduction to
PO 00000
Frm 00026
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
the overage (due to the underage in Year
2) would be made through an in-season
adjustment as soon as possible in Year
3.
For example, if an ACL overage
occurred in fishing year 2022, due to (in
part or entirely) excess catch from the
state or other sub-components, NMFS
would determine the amount of this
overage after the end of fishing year
2022, i.e., in fishing year 2023. NMFS
would then proportionately apply the
excessive catch attributed to the state
and other-subcomponents to catch from
the allocated groundfish fisheries; in the
case of GB cod, this would be sectors
and the common pool. If the resulting
sum of sector catch plus the sectors’
share of the state or other subcomponent’s overage resulted in an
overage of the sector sub-ACL, sectors
would be required to pay back this
overage, pound for pound. The same
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would be done for the common pool’s
catch and share of the state and other
sub-components’ overage. Under the
modification proposed in this action,
however, if there were an underage of
the ACL in fishing year 2023, this
underage would be distributed between
sectors and the common pool. The
overage payback would be implemented
at the start of fishing year 2024, but
NMFS would implement the reduction
of the payback due to the 2023 ACL
underage through an in-season
adjustment in 2024.
Regulatory Corrections Under
Secretarial Authority
This rule corrects an error in the
northeast regulations for monitoring
service providers. We are making this
correction consistent with section
305(d) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act,
which provides that the Secretary of
Commerce may promulgate regulations
necessary to ensure that amendments to
an FMP are carried out in accordance
with the FMP and the MagnusonStevens Act. This change is necessary to
correct the regulations detailing
insurance requirements for monitoring
companies to reference the national
requirements.
On September 8, 2022, NMFS
published a final rule (87 FR 54902) that
implemented national insurance
requirements for observer providers at
50 CFR 600.748 and revised the
northeast regional monitoring program
regulations at § 648.11(h)(3)(vii) to
reference the newly established national
insurance requirements. The final rule
implementing Amendment 23 to the
Northeast Multispecies FMP (87 FR
75852, December 9, 2022) inadvertently
overwrote the northeast regional
monitoring program regulations that
referred to the national insurance
requirements. This rule corrects the
regulations at § 648.11(h)(3)(vii)(A) to
reference the national insurance
requirements. This correction is
necessary to eliminate confusion and
ensure the northeast monitoring
program is consistent with the national
insurance requirements.
Framework 65 would also make
minor changes in the regulations. It
would remove regulatory text that is
specific to previous fishing years.
Specifically, this action would remove a
sentence in 50 CFR
648.90(a)(4)(iii)(H)(2) that is specific to
the allocation of certain stocks for
fishing years 2010 and 2011, and
remove the paragraphs at
§ 648.90(a)(5)(iv)(B) through (D) that are
specific to temporary (up through
fishing year 2020) modifications to the
triggers for the Atlantic sea scallop
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fishery’s AMs for certain flatfish stocks.
It would correct sections of the
regulations (§§ 648.87(b)(1)(i)(A) and
648.90(a)(4)(iii)(F)) that refer to the
northern and southern windowpane
flounder as GOM/GB and SNE/MA
windowpane flounder, respectively,
which is inconsistent with other
sections of the regulations. It would
remove a section of text that describes
the Fippenies Ledge Area that was
moved to a different section of the
regulations, but not deleted from
§ 648.87(c)(2)(i)(A). It would correct
several citations in §§ 648.87(c)(2)(i) and
648.86(c) to paragraphs within
§ 648.90(a)(5)(i) that were redesignated
in a previous action, but the citations
were not updated.
Classification
Pursuant to section 304(b)(1)(A) of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, the NMFS
Assistant Administrator has made a
preliminary determination that this
proposed rule is consistent with
Framework 65, other provisions of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other
applicable law, subject to further
consideration after public comment. In
making the final determination, the
Regional Administrator will consider
the data, views, and comments received
during the public comment period.
NMFS finds that a 15-day comment
period for this action provides a
reasonable opportunity for public
participation in this action, while also
ensuring that the final specifications are
in place as close to start of the
groundfish fishing year on May 1, 2023,
as possible. This action was developed
by the New England Fishery
Management Council as part of the
annual Framework Adjustment process,
during which final action was taken in
December 2022. However, due to the
need for additional analysis regarding
the measures proposed in Framework
65, the Council was not able to submit
the final Framework until April 18,
2023. This action could not be proposed
sooner as a result of the delays in
submission. Stakeholder and industry
groups have been involved with the
development of this action and have
participated in public meetings
throughout the past year. A prolonged
comment period and subsequent
potential delay in implementation
would be contrary to the public interest,
as it would leave in place default quotas
for some stocks that do not already have
specifications for fishing year 2023,
rather than replacing them with the
quotas proposed in this rule, which are
based on the best available science. For
multiple stocks, the fishery is operating
under lower quotas than those proposed
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in Framework 65, and an extended
delay could limit economic
opportunities for the fishery, as well as
lead to confusion and uncertainty.
Providing timely access to these stocks
is also a potential safely issue. A
significant portion of fishing activity
occurs in early summer, due to better
weather, and for some smaller vessels,
summer may be the only season in
which they are able to participate in the
fishery.
This proposed rule has been
determined to be not significant for
purposes of Executive Order (E.O.)
12866.
An Initial Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis (IRFA) was prepared for this
proposed rule, as required by section
603 of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5
U.S.C. 603. The IRFA describes the
economic impact that this proposed rule
would have on small entities, including
small businesses, and also determines
ways to minimize these impacts. The
IRFA includes this section of the
preamble to this rule and analyses
contained in Framework 63 and its
accompanying EA/RIR/IRFA. A copy of
the full analysis is available from the
Council (see ADDRESSES). A summary of
the IRFA follows.
Description of the Reasons Why Action
by the Agency Is Being Considered and
Statement of the Objectives of, and
Legal Basis for, This Proposed Rule
This action proposes management
measures, including annual catch limits,
for the multispecies fishery in order to
prevent overfishing, rebuild overfished
groundfish stocks, and achieve optimum
yield in the fishery. A complete
description of the action, why it is being
considered, and the legal basis for this
action are contained in Framework 65,
and elsewhere in the preamble to this
proposed rule, and are not repeated
here.
Description and Estimate of the Number
of Small Entities to Which This
Proposed Rule Would Apply
The proposed rule would impact the
commercial and recreational groundfish,
Atlantic sea scallop, small-mesh
multispecies, Atlantic herring, and
large-mesh non-groundfish fisheries.
Individually permitted vessels may hold
permits for several fisheries, harvesting
species of fish that are regulated by
several different FMPs, beyond those
impacted by the proposed action.
Furthermore, multiple-permitted vessels
and/or permits may be owned by
entities affiliated by stock ownership,
common management, identity of
interest, contractual relationships, or
economic dependency. For the purposes
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of the Regulatory Flexibility Act
analysis, the ownership entities, not the
individual vessels, are considered to be
the regulated entities.
As of June 1, 2022, NMFS had issued
681 commercial limited-access
groundfish permits associated with
vessels (including those in confirmation
of permit history (CPH)), 610 party/
charter groundfish permits, 699 limited
access and general category Atlantic sea
scallop permits, 717 small-mesh
multispecies permits, 73 Atlantic
herring permits, and 758 large-mesh
non-groundfish permits (limited access
summer flounder and scup permits).
Therefore, this action potentially
regulates 3,538 permits. When
accounting for overlaps between
fisheries, this number falls to 2,027
permitted vessels. Each vessel may be
individually owned or part of a larger
corporate ownership structure and, for
RFA purposes, it is the ownership entity
that is ultimately regulated by the
proposed action. Ownership entities are
identified on June 1st of each year based
on the list of all permit numbers, for the
most recent complete calendar year, that
have applied for any type of Greater
Atlantic Federal fishing permit. The
current ownership data set is based on
calendar year 2021 permits and contains
gross sales associated with those
permits for calendar years 2019 through
2021.
For RFA purposes only, NMFS has
established a small business size
standard for businesses, including their
affiliates, whose primary industry is
commercial fishing (see 50 CFR 200.2).
A business primarily engaged in
commercial fishing (NAICS code 11411)
is classified as a small business if it is
independently owned and operated, is
not dominant in its field of operation
(including its affiliates), and has
combined annual receipts not in excess
of $11 million for all its affiliated
operations worldwide. The
determination as to whether the entity
is large or small is based on the average
annual revenue for the three years from
2019 through 2021. The Small Business
Administration (SBA) has established
size standards for all other major
industry sectors in the U.S., including
for-hire fishing (NAICS code 487210).
These entities are classified as small
businesses if combined annual receipts
are not in excess of $8.0 million for all
its affiliated operations. As with
commercial fishing businesses, the
annual average of the three most recent
years (2019–2021) is utilized in
determining annual receipts for
businesses primarily engaged in for-hire
fishing.
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34819
Based on the ownership data, 1,506
distinct business entities hold at least
one permit that the proposed action
potentially regulates. All 1,506 business
entities identified could be directly
regulated by this proposed action. Of
these 1,506 entities, 865 are commercial
fishing entities, 274 are for-hire entities,
and 367 did not have revenues (were
inactive in 2021). Of the 865
commercial fishing entities, 854 are
categorized as small entities and 11 are
categorized as large entities, per the
NMFS guidelines. Furthermore, 515 of
these commercial fishing entities held
limited access groundfish permits, with
512 of these entities being classified as
small businesses and 3 of these entities
being classified as large businesses. All
274 for-hire entities are categorized as
small businesses.
sector portion of the commercial
groundfish trips, which is $41.7 million
more than No Action, but $4.0 million
less than fishing year 2021. Small
entities engaged in common pool
groundfish fishing may be negatively
impacted by the proposed action as
well. Likewise, small entities engaged in
the recreational groundfish fishery are
also likely to be negatively impacted.
These negative impacts for both
commercial and recreational groundfish
entities are driven primarily by a
substantial decline in the ACL for GOM
haddock for fishing year 2023. While
this decline is expected to result in
short-term negative impacts, decreased
GOM haddock catch in fishing year
2023 is expected to yield long-term
positive impacts through stock
rebuilding.
Description of the Projected Reporting,
Record-Keeping, and Other Compliance
Requirements of This Proposed Rule
The proposed action does not contain
any new collection-of-information
requirements under the Paperwork
Reduction Act (PRA).
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 648
Fisheries, Fishing, Recordkeeping,
and reporting requirements.
Federal Rules Which May Duplicate,
Overlap, or Conflict With This Proposed
Rule
The proposed action does not
duplicate, overlap, or conflict with any
other Federal rules.
Description of Significant Alternatives
to the Proposed Action Which
Accomplish the Stated Objectives of
Applicable Statutes and Which
Minimize Any Significant Economic
Impact on Small Entities
The economic impacts of each
proposed measure are discussed in more
detail in sections 6.5 and 7.12 of the
Framework 65 Environmental
Assessment (see ADDRESSES) and are not
repeated here. The Council considered
several options within the proposed
GOM cod rebuilding plan, including a
Frebuild that are lower (50 percent of
FMSY) and higher (70 and 75 percent of
FMSY). The quotas that were set by
Framework 63 remain in place for
fishing years 2023–2024, and the
proposed rebuilding strategy for GOM
cod is expected to positively impact the
groundfish fishery in the long-term
through stock rebuilding. For the
updated groundfish specifications, the
Council also considered two lower ABC
for GB cod, which would have greater
negative economic impacts than the
preferred alternative. There are no
significant alternatives that would
minimize the economic impacts. The
proposed action is predicted to generate
$74.2 million in gross revenues on the
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Dated: May 24, 2023.
Samuel D. Rauch, III
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, NMFS proposes to amend 50
CFR part 648 as follows:
PART 648—FISHERIES OF THE
NORTHEASTERN UNITED STATES
1. The authority citation for part 648
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
2. In § 648.11, revise paragraph
(h)(3)(vii)(A) to read as follows:
■
§ 648.11
Monitoring coverage.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) * * *
(3) * * *
(vii) * * *
(A) A monitoring service provider
must hold insurance specified at
§ 600.748(b) and (c) of this chapter.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. In § 648.86, revise paragraph (c) to
read as follows:
§ 648.86 NE Multispecies possession
restrictions.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Atlantic halibut. A vessel issued a
NE multispecies permit under
§ 648.4(a)(1) may land or possess on
board no more than one Atlantic halibut
per trip, provided the vessel complies
with other applicable provisions of this
part, unless otherwise specified in
§ 648.90(a)(5)(i)(F).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 4. Amend § 648.87 by:
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a. Revising paragraph (b)(1)(i)(A) and
the first sentence of paragraph (c)(2)(i);
and
■ b. Removing paragraphs (c)(2)(i)(A)
and (B).
The revisions read as follows:
■
§ 648.87
Sector allocation.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) * * *
(A) Allocated stocks. Each sector shall
be allocated a TAC in the form of an
ACE for each NE multispecies stock,
with the exception of Atlantic halibut,
ocean pout, windowpane flounder (both
the northern and southern stocks), and
Atlantic wolffish based upon the
cumulative PSCs of vessels/permits
participating in each sector during a
particular fishing year, as described in
paragraph (b)(1)(i)(E) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) Regulations that may not be
exempted for sector participants. The
Regional Administrator may not exempt
participants in a sector from the
following Federal fishing regulations:
Specific times and areas within the NE
multispecies year-round closure areas;
permitting restrictions (e.g., vessel
upgrades, etc.); gear restrictions
designed to minimize habitat impacts
(e.g., roller gear restrictions, etc.);
reporting requirements; and AMs
specified in § 648.90(a)(5)(i)(D) through
(H). * * *
*
*
*
*
*
■ 5. Amend § 648.90 by:
■ a. Removing and reserving paragraph
(a)(2)(iv);
■ b. Revising paragraphs (a)(4)(iii)(A)
and (B), (a)(4)(iii)(F), the introductory
text of paragraph (a)(4)(iii)(H),
paragraphs (a)(4)(iii)(H)(1)(i) and
(a)(4)(iii)(H)(2), the second sentence of
paragraph (a)(5)(i)(D), and paragraph
(a)(5)(ii);
■ c. Removing and reserving paragraph
(a)(5)(iv)(B); and
■ d. Removing paragraphs (a)(5)(iv)(C)
and (D).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 648.90 NE multispecies assessment,
framework procedures and specifications,
and flexible area action system.
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*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(4) * * *
(iii) * * *
(A) Regulated species or ocean pout
catch by vessels operating only in state
waters. The catch of regulated species or
ocean pout that is expected to be
harvested by vessels operating only in
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state waters that have not been issued a
Federal NE multispecies permit and are
not subject to the regulations specified
in this part, as well as the recreational
catch of regulated species or ocean pout
that occurs in state waters, unless
otherwise specified in paragraph
(a)(4)(iii)(H)(1)(i) of this section, shall be
deducted from the ABC/ACL of each
regulated species or ocean pout stock
pursuant to the process for specifying
ABCs and ACLs, as described in this
paragraph (a)(4).
(B) Regulated species or ocean pout
catch by other, non-specified fisheries.
Regulated species or ocean pout catch
by other, non-specified fisheries,
including, but not limited to, exempted
fisheries that occur in Federal waters,
fisheries harvesting exempted species
specified in § 648.80(b)(3), and
recreational fisheries that occur in
Federal waters, unless otherwise
specified in paragraph (a)(4)(iii)(H)(1)(i)
of this section, shall be deducted from
the ABC/ACL of each regulated species
or ocean pout stock, pursuant to the
process to specify ABCs and ACLs
described in this paragraph (a)(4),
unless otherwise specified in
paragraphs (a)(4)(iii)(C) through (G) of
this section. The catch of these nonspecified sub-components of the ACL
shall be monitored using data collected
pursuant to this part. If catch from such
fisheries exceeds the amount specified
in this paragraph (a)(4)(iii)(B), AMs
shall be developed to prevent the
overall ACL for each stock from being
exceeded, pursuant to the framework
adjustment process specified in this
section.
*
*
*
*
*
(F) Southern windowpane flounder
catch by exempted fisheries. Southern
windowpane flounder catch by other,
non-specified fisheries, including, but
not limited to, exempted fisheries that
occur in Federal waters and fisheries
harvesting exempted species specified
in § 648.80(b)(3), shall be deducted from
the ABC/ACL for southern windowpane
flounder pursuant to the process to
specify ABCs and ACLs, as described in
this paragraph (a)(4). The specific value
of the sub-components of the ABC/ACL
for southern windowpane flounder
distributed to these other fisheries shall
be specified pursuant to the biennial
adjustment process specified in
paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(H) Regulated species or ocean pout
catch by the NE multispecies
commercial and recreational fisheries.
Unless otherwise specified in the ACL
recommendations developed pursuant
to paragraph (a)(4)(i) of this section,
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after all of the deductions and
considerations specified in paragraphs
(a)(4)(iii)(A) through (G) and
(a)(4)(iii)(H)(1) of this section, the
remaining ABC/ACL for each regulated
species or ocean pout stock shall be
allocated to the NE multispecies
commercial fishery, pursuant to
paragraph (a)(4)(iii)(H)(2) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(1) * * *
(i) Stocks allocated. Unless otherwise
specified in this paragraph
(a)(4)(iii)(H)(1), the ABCs/ACLs for
GOM cod and GOM haddock set
pursuant to paragraph (a)(4) of this
section shall be divided between
commercial and recreational
components, based upon the average
proportional catch of each component
for each stock during fishing years 2001
through 2006.
*
*
*
*
*
(2) Commercial allocation. Unless
otherwise specified in this paragraph
(a)(4)(iii)(H)(2), the ABC/ACL for
regulated species or ocean pout stocks
available to the commercial NE
multispecies fishery, after consideration
of the recreational allocation pursuant
to paragraph (a)(4)(iii)(H)(1) of this
section, shall be divided between
vessels operating under approved sector
operations plans, as described at
§ 648.87(c), and vessels operating under
the provisions of the common pool, as
defined in this part, based upon the
cumulative PSCs of vessels participating
in sectors calculated pursuant to
§ 648.87(b)(1)(i)(E). The ABC/ACL of
each regulated species or ocean pout
stocks not allocated to sectors pursuant
to § 648.87(b)(1)(i)(E) (i.e., Atlantic
halibut, ocean pout, windowpane
flounder, and Atlantic wolffish) that is
available to the commercial NE
multispecies fishery shall be allocated
entirely to the common pool, and catch
from sector and common pool vessels
shall be attributed to this allocation.
Unless otherwise specified in paragraph
(a)(5) of this section, regulated species
or ocean pout catch by common pool
and sector vessels shall be deducted
from the sub-ACL/ACE allocated
pursuant to this paragraph
(a)(4)(iii)(H)(2) for the purposes of
determining whether adjustments to
common pool measures are necessary,
pursuant to the common pool AMs
specified in § 648.82(n), or whether
sector ACE overages must be deducted,
pursuant to § 648.87(b)(1)(iii).
*
*
*
*
*
(5) * * *
(i) * * *
(D) AMs for both stocks of
windowpane flounder, ocean pout,
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Atlantic halibut, and Atlantic wolffish.
* * * If the overall ACL for any of these
stocks is exceeded, NMFS shall
implement the appropriate AM, as
specified in paragraphs (a)(5)(i)(D)
through (H) of this section, in a
subsequent fishing year, consistent with
the APA. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(ii) AMs due to excessive catch of
regulated species or ocean pout by state
and other, non-specified fisheries. At
the end of the NE multispecies fishing
year, NMFS will evaluate whether the
catch of any stock of regulated species
or ocean pout by vessels operating only
in state waters or in other, non-specified
fisheries, as defined in paragraphs
(a)(4)(iii)(A) and (B) of this section,
exceeds the sub-component of the ACL
for that stock.
(A) AMs if the overall ACL for a
regulated species or ocean pout stock is
exceeded. If the catch of any stock of
regulated species or ocean pout by
vessels operating only in state waters or
in other, non-specified fisheries exceeds
the sub-component of the ACL for that
stock, and the overall ACL for that stock
is exceeded, then the amount of the
overage of the overall ACL for that stock
attributed to catch from vessels
operating only in state waters or in
other, non-specified fisheries, as defined
in paragraphs (a)(4)(iii)(A) and (B) of
this section, shall be distributed among
components of the NE multispecies
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fishery based upon each component’s
share of that stock’s ACL available to the
NE multispecies fishery pursuant to
paragraph (a)(4)(iii)(H) of this section.
Each component’s share of the ACL
overage for a particular stock would be
then added to the catch of that stock by
each component of the NE multispecies
fishery. If the resulting sum of catch of
that stock for each component of the
fishery exceeds that individual
component’s share of that stock’s ACL
specified pursuant to paragraph
(a)(4)(iii)(H) of this section, then the
AMs specified in paragraphs (a)(5)(i)(A)
through (C) of this section shall take
effect, as applicable, unless otherwise
specified in paragraph (a)(5)(ii)(C) of
this section.
(B) AMs if the overall ACL for a
regulated species or ocean pout stock is
not exceeded. If the catch of any stock
of regulated species or ocean pout by
vessels operating only in state waters or
in other, non-specified fisheries, as
defined in paragraphs (a)(4)(iii)(A) and
(B) of this section, exceeds the subcomponent of the ACL for that stock,
but the overall ACL for that stock is not
exceeded, even after consideration of
the catch of that stock by other subcomponents of the fishery, then the
AMs specified in this paragraph
(a)(5)(ii) shall not take effect.
(C) AMs for GB cod due to excessive
catch by non-allocated fisheries. For any
overages of the GB cod ACL in the
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34821
2022–2024 fishing years, the amount of
overage of the overall ACL for GB cod
attributed to catch from vessels
operating only in state waters or in
other, non-specified fisheries, as defined
in paragraphs (a)(4)(iii)(A) and (B) of
this section, would be reduced by any
underage of the GB cod ACL in the
fishing year following the overage, in
order to determine the total amount that
must be added to the catch by
components of the NE multispecies
fishery, as specified in paragraph
(a)(5)(i)(A) of this section. If the full
ACL of GB cod is caught or exceeded in
the fishing year following an overage, no
reduction to this amount would be
made. For example, if in 2023 NMFS
determines that 100 mt of GB cod catch
by vessels operating only in state waters
or in other, non-specified fisheries in
fishing year 2022 has contributed to an
ACL overage, NMFS would implement
the AMs specified in paragraph
(a)(5)(ii)(A) of this section at the
beginning of fishing year 2024. If 2023
fishing year-end data showed that total
catch of GB cod in fishing year 2023 was
25 mt below the 2023 ACL, NMFS
would reduce the 100-mt overage
amount by that 25-mt amount (down to
75 mt) in an in-season adjustment to the
2024 sub-ACLs, as specified in
paragraph (a)(5)(i)(A) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2023–11494 Filed 5–30–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 104 (Wednesday, May 31, 2023)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 34810-34821]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-11494]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 648
[Docket No. 230524-0138]
RIN 0648-BL95
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act
Provisions; Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Northeast
Multispecies Fishery; Framework Adjustment 65
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This action proposes to approve and implement Framework
Adjustment 65 to the Northeast Multispecies Fishery Management Plan.
This rule proposes to revise the rebuilding plan for Gulf of Maine cod,
set catch limits for 16 of the 20 multispecies (groundfish) stocks, and
make a temporary modification to the accountability measures for
Georges Bank cod. This action also corrects erroneous regulations and
removes outdated regulations. This action is necessary to respond to
updated scientific information and to achieve the goals and objectives
of the fishery management plan. The proposed measures are intended to
help prevent overfishing, rebuild overfished stocks, achieve optimum
yield, and ensure that management measures are based on the best
scientific information available.
DATES: Comments must be received by 5 p.m. EST on June 15, 2023.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by NOAA-NMFS-2023-0021,
by the following method:
Electronic Submission: Submit all electronic public
comments via the Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to www.regulations.gov
and enter NOAA-NMFS-2023-0021 in the Search box. Click on the
``Comment'' icon, complete the required fields, and enter or attach
your comments.
Instructions: Comments sent by any other method, to any other
address or individual, or received after the end of the comment period,
may not be considered. All comments received are a part of the public
record and will generally be posted for public viewing on
www.regulations.gov without change. All personal identifying
information (e.g., name, address, etc.), confidential business
information, or otherwise sensitive information submitted voluntarily
by the sender will be publicly accessible. You may submit anonymous
comments by entering ``N/A'' in the required fields if you wish to
remain anonymous.
Copies of Framework Adjustment 65, including the draft
Environmental Assessment, the Regulatory Impact Review, and the
Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis prepared by the New England Fishery
Management Council in support of this action, are available from Thomas
A. Nies, Executive Director, New England Fishery Management Council, 50
Water Street, Mill 2, Newburyport, MA 01950. The supporting documents
are also accessible via the internet at: https://www.nefmc.org/management-plans/northeast-multispecies or https://www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Liz Sullivan, Fishery Policy Analyst,
phone: 978-282-8493; email: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Summary of Proposed Measures
This action would implement the management measures in Framework
Adjustment 65 to the Northeast Multispecies Fishery Management Plan
(FMP). The New England Fishery Management Council reviewed the proposed
regulations and deemed them consistent with, and necessary to
implement, Framework 65 in a May 4, 2023, letter from Council Chairman
Eric Reid to Regional Administrator Michael Pentony. Under the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, on behalf of the Secretary of Commerce, the
Greater Atlantic Regional Fisheries Office's Regional Administrator
approves, disapproves, or partially approves measures that the Council
proposes, based on consistency with the Act and other applicable law.
NMFS reviews proposed regulations for consistency with the fishery
management plan, plan amendment, the Magnuson-Stevens Act and other
applicable law. The Regional Administrator is seeking comments on these
proposed regulations and intends to promulgate the final regulations
after careful consideration of any submitted comments. Through
Framework 65, the Council proposes to:
Revise the rebuilding plan for Gulf of Maine (GOM) cod;
Set shared U.S./Canada quotas for Georges Bank (GB)
yellowtail flounder and eastern GB cod and haddock for fishing years
2023 and 2024;
Set specifications, including catch limits for 16
groundfish stocks: GB haddock, GOM haddock, Southern New England/Mid-
Atlantic (SNE/MA) yellowtail flounder, Cape Cod (CC)/GOM yellowtail
flounder, American plaice, witch flounder, GB winter flounder, GOM
winter flounder, SNE/MA winter flounder, pollock, ocean pout, Atlantic
halibut, and Atlantic wolffish for fishing years 2023-2025, GB cod and
GB yellowtail flounder for fishing years 2023-2024; and white hake for
fishing year 2023;
Remove the management uncertainty buffer for sectors for
GOM haddock and white hake, if the at-sea monitoring (ASM) target
coverage level is set at 90 percent or greater for the 2023 fishing
year only; and
Make a temporary modification to the accountability
measures (AM) for GB cod.
This action also proposes regulatory corrections that are not part
of Framework 65, but that may be considered and implemented under
section 305(d) authority in the Magnuson-Stevens Act to make changes
necessary to carry out the FMP. NMFS is proposing these corrections in
conjunction with the Framework 65 proposed measures for expediency
purposes. These proposed corrections are described in Regulatory
Corrections under Secretarial Authority.
Rebuilding Plan for Gulf of Maine Cod
Framework 65 would revise the rebuilding plan for GOM cod. The
current rebuilding plan for GOM cod, as implemented by Framework 51 to
the FMP (79 FR 22421, April 22, 2014), has a target date of 2024. On
August 13, 2021, the Regional Administrator notified the Council that
the stock was not making adequate rebuilding progress. The deadline to
implement a rebuilding plan is August 13, 2023.
The Magnuson-Stevens Act requires that overfished stocks be rebuilt
as quickly as possible, not to exceed 10 years when biologically
possible, accounting for the status and biology of the stocks, the
needs of fishing communities, and the interaction of the overfished
stock within the marine ecosystem. Rebuilding plans must have at least
a 50-percent probability of success. Selection of a rebuilding plan
with a higher probability of success is one way of addressing
uncertainty, but this does not affect the standard used in the future
to determine whether a stock is rebuilt. The minimum rebuilding time
[[Page 34811]]
(Tmin) is the amount of time a stock is expected to take to
rebuild to the biomass (B) associated with maximum sustainable yield
(MSY) in the absence of any fishing mortality (F). The actual timeline
set with a rebuilding plan (Ttarget) may be greater than
Tmin, but cannot exceed the maximum rebuilding time
(Tmax). Tmax is 10 years if Tmin is
less than 10 years. In situations where Tmin exceeds 10
years, Tmax establishes a maximum time for rebuilding that
is linked to the biology of the stock.
The GOM cod rebuilding program proposed in this action would
rebuild the stock within 10 years, or by 2033, which is the maximum
time period allowed by the Magnuson-Stevens Act. Projections suggest
the stock could rebuild in 7 years at an F of zero. Fishing mortality
of zero for GOM cod is currently technologically and economically
impracticable given available gear, fishing methods, fishery management
capability, and the multispecies nature of the commercial and
recreational fishery. In addition to these factors, other biological
and economic factors were identified and considered by the Council in
setting Ttarget = Tmax. First, recent recruitment
estimates for this stock have been below average, and recruitment may
be lower than assumed in the rebuilding projections, making the
Tmin projections (7 years at F = 0) likely to be overly
optimistic. There is uncertainty around the stock's natural mortality,
and under one of the two approved models (M-ramp, M=0.4), the stock
cannot rebuild in the rebuilding projections. Long-term projections for
many groundfish stocks have tended to be overly optimistic, such that
future levels of biomass are overestimated and fishing mortality is
underestimated. Additionally, recent commercial utilization of the GOM
cod annual catch limit (ACL) is high, indicating that the stock is an
important component of the fishing industry; a longer rebuilding period
considers the needs of the fishing communities as much as practicable.
The proposed rebuilding plan for GOM cod would set Frebuild
at 60 percent of FMSY with a 70-percent probability of
achieving BMSY under the M=0.2 model.
As part of the revised rebuilding plan for GOM cod, we propose to
remove regulations at 50 CFR 648.90(a)(2)(iv), which include a review
process for the rebuilding plans for GOM cod and American plaice. The
revised rebuilding plan for GOM cod does not contain this Council
review process, but is still subject to Secretarial review for
determining adequate rebuilding progress. As of 2019, American plaice
is rebuilt and no longer in a rebuilding plan, making this regulation
unnecessary.
Fishing Years 2023 and 2024 Shared U.S./Canada Quotas
Management of Transboundary Georges Bank Stocks
Eastern GB cod, eastern GB haddock, and GB yellowtail flounder are
jointly managed with Canada under the United States/Canada Resource
Sharing Understanding. The Transboundary Management Guidance Committee
(TMGC) is a government-industry committee made up of representatives
from the United States and Canada. For historical information about the
TMGC see: https://www.bio.gc.ca/info/intercol/tmgc-cogst/index-en.php.
Each year, the TMGC recommends a shared quota for each stock based on
the most recent stock information and the TMGC's harvest strategy. The
TMGC's harvest strategy for setting catch levels is to maintain a low
to neutral risk (less than 50 percent) of exceeding the fishing
mortality limit for each stock. The harvest strategy also specifies
that when stock conditions are poor, fishing mortality should be
further reduced to promote stock rebuilding. The shared quotas are
allocated between the United States and Canada based on a formula that
considers historical catch (10-percent weighting) and the current
resource distribution (90-percent weighting).
For GB yellowtail flounder, the Council's Scientific and
Statistical Committee (SSC) also recommends an acceptable biological
catch (ABC) for the stock. The ABC is typically used to inform the U.S.
TMGC's discussions with Canada for the annual shared quota. Although
the stock is jointly managed with Canada, and the TMGC recommends
annual shared quotas, the Council may not set catch limits that would
exceed the SSC's recommendation. The SSC does not recommend ABCs for
eastern GB cod and haddock because they are management units of the
total GB cod and haddock stocks. The SSC recommends overall ABCs for
the total GB cod and haddock stocks. The shared U.S./Canada quota for
eastern GB cod and haddock is included in these overall ABCs, and must
be consistent with the SSC's recommendation for the total GB stocks.
2023 and 2024 U.S./Canada Quotas
The Transboundary Resources Assessment Committee assessed the three
transboundary stocks in July 2022, and detailed summaries of these
assessments can be found at: https://www.nefsc.noaa.gov/assessments/trac/. The TMGC met in September 2022 to recommend shared quotas for
2023 based on the updated assessments, and made recommendations for
eastern GB cod and GB yellowtail flounder. The Council adopted the
TMGC's recommendations in Framework 65. The TMGC was unable to reach
consensus on the most appropriate combined Canada/U.S. quota for
eastern GB haddock. Instead, the Council selected a U.S. quota based on
the shared quota supported by the U.S. delegation and the established
method of determining the allocation for each country (42 percent of
3,619 mt), and supported using 2,320 mt as an estimate of possible
Canadian catch.
Framework 65 proposes to set the same shared quotas for a second
year (i.e., for fishing year 2024) as placeholders, with the
expectation that those quotas will be reviewed annually and new
recommendations will be received from the TMGC. The proposed 2023 and
2024 shared U.S./Canada quotas, and each country's allocation, are
listed in Table 1.
Table 1--Proposed 2023 and 2024 Fishing Years U.S./Canada Quotas (mt, live weight) and Percent of Quota
Allocated to Each Country
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Quota Eastern GB cod Eastern GB haddock GB Yellowtail flounder
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Shared Quota................... 520.................... No agreement........... 200.
U.S. Quota........................... 135 (26 percent)....... 1,520.................. 106 (53 percent).
Canadian Quota....................... 385 (74 percent)....... 2,320 (estimate)....... 94 (47 percent).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 34812]]
The proposed 2023 U.S. quotas for the three shared stocks represent
decreases compared to 2022: Eastern GB cod by 15.6 percent, eastern GB
haddock by 77 percent, and GB yellowtail flounder by 13 percent. For a
more detailed discussion of the TMGC's 2023 catch advice, including a
description of each country's quota share, see the TMGC's guidance
document that will be posted at: https://www.greateratlantic.fisheries.noaa.gov/.
The regulations implementing the U.S./Canada Resource Sharing
Understanding require deducting any overages of the U.S. quota for
eastern GB cod, eastern GB haddock, or GB yellowtail flounder from the
U.S. quota in the following fishing year. If catch information for the
2022 fishing year indicates that the U.S. fishery exceeded its quota
for any of the shared stocks, we will reduce the respective U.S. quotas
for the 2023 fishing year in a future management action, as close to
May 1, 2023, as possible. If any fishery that is allocated a portion of
the U.S. quota exceeds its allocation and causes an overage of the
overall U.S. quota, the overage reduction would be applied only to that
fishery's allocation in the following fishing year. This ensures that
catch by one component of the overall fishery does not negatively
affect another component of the overall fishery.
Catch Limits for Fishing Years 2023-2025
Summary of the Proposed Catch Limits
Tables 2 through 11 show the proposed catch limits for the 2023-
2025 fishing years. A brief summary of how these catch limits were
developed is provided below. More details on the proposed catch limits
for each groundfish stock can be found in Appendix II (Calculation of
Northeast Multispecies Annual Catch Limits, FY 2023-FY 2025) to the
Framework 65 Environmental Assessment (see ADDRESSES for information on
how to get this document).
Through Framework 65, the Council proposes to adopt catch limits
for 13 stocks for the 2023-2025 fishing years and for white hake for
the 2023 fishing year, based on stock assessments completed in 2022,
and catch limits for GB cod and GB yellowtail flounder for fishing
years 2023-2024. Framework 61 (86 FR 40353, July 28, 2021) previously
set 2023 quotas for redfish, northern windowpane flounder, and southern
windowpane flounder based on assessments conducted in 2020, and those
would remain in place. Framework 63 (87 FR 42375, July 15, 2022)
previously set the 2023-2024 quota for GOM cod, based on an assessment
conducted in 2021, and that would also remain in place. Table 2
provides an overview of which catch limits, if any, would change, as
proposed in Framework 65, as well as when the stock was most recently
assessed. Table 3 provides the percent change in the 2023 catch limit
compared to the 2022 fishing year.
Table 2--Changes to Catch Limits, as Proposed in Framework 65
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Most recent Proposed change in
Stock assessment framework 65
------------------------------------------------------------------------
GB Cod......................... 2021 New 2023-2024 ABC.
GOM Cod........................ 2021 Adjust sub-components,
2023-2024 catch limit
set by Framework 63.
GB Haddock..................... 2022 New 2023-2025 ABC.
GOM Haddock.................... 2022 New 2023-2025 ABC.
GB Yellowtail Flounder......... 2022 New 2023-2024 ABC.
SNE/MA Yellowtail Flounder..... 2022 New 2023-2025 ABC.
CC/GOM Yellowtail Flounder..... 2022 New 2023-2025 ABC.
American Plaice................ 2022 New 2023-2025 ABC.
Witch Flounder................. 2022 New 2023-2025 ABC.
GB Winter Flounder............. 2022 New 2023-2025 ABC.
GOM Winter Flounder............ 2022 New 2023-2025 ABC.
SNE/MA Winter Flounder......... 2022 New 2023-2025 ABC.
Redfish........................ 2020 No change: 2023 catch
limit set by Framework
61.
White Hake..................... 2022 New 2023 ABC.
Pollock........................ 2022 New 2023-2025 ABC.
N. Windowpane Flounder......... 2020 Adjust sub-components,
2023 catch limit set
by Framework 61.
S. Windowpane Flounder......... 2020 Adjust sub-components,
2023 catch limit set
by Framework 61.
Ocean Pout..................... 2022 New 2023-2025 ABC.
Atlantic Halibut............... 2022 New 2023-2025 ABC.
Atlantic Wolffish.............. 2022 New 2023-2025 ABC.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
N = Northern; S = Southern
Table 3--Proposed Fishing Years 2023-2025 Overfishing Limits and Acceptable Biological Catches
[mt, live weight]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2023 Percent 2024 2025
Stock -------------------------- change from ---------------------------------------------------
OFL U.S. ABC 2022 OFL U.S. ABC OFL U.S. ABC
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GB Cod....................................................... UNK 519 51 UNK 519 ........... ...........
GOM Cod...................................................... 853 551 0 980 551 ........... ...........
GB Haddock................................................... 18,482 11,901 -85 17,768 11,638 15,096 9,962
GOM Haddock.................................................. 2,515 1,936 -83 2,655 2,038 2,627 2,017
GB Yellowtail Flounder....................................... UNK 106 -13 UNK 106 ........... ...........
SNE/MA Yellowtail Flounder................................... 55 40 82 89 40 345 40
CC/GOM Yellowtail Flounder................................... 1,436 1,115 35 1,279 992 1,184 915
American Plaice.............................................. 7,316 5,699 102 7,091 5,520 6,763 5,270
Witch Flounder............................................... UNK 1,256 -15 UNK 1,256 UNK 1,256
GB Winter Flounder........................................... 2,361 1,702 180 2,153 1,549 2,100 1,490
[[Page 34813]]
GOM Winter Flounder.......................................... 1,072 804 62 1,072 804 1,072 804
SNE/MA Winter Flounder....................................... 1,186 627 38 1,425 627 1,536 627
Redfish...................................................... 13,229 9,967 -1 ........... ........... ........... ...........
White Hake................................................... 2,650 1,845 -13 ........... ........... ........... ...........
Pollock...................................................... 19,617 15,016 -11 18,208 13,940 17,384 13,294
N. Windowpane Flounder....................................... UNK 160 0 ........... ........... ........... ...........
S. Windowpane Flounder....................................... 513 384 0 ........... ........... ........... ...........
Ocean Pout................................................... 125 87 0 125 87 125 87
Atlantic Halibut............................................. UNK 86 -15 UNK 86 UNK 86
Atlantic Wolffish............................................ 124 93 1 124 93 124 93
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
UNK = Unknown
Note: An empty cell indicates no OFL/ABC is adopted for that year. These catch limits would be set in a future action.
Overfishing Limits and Acceptable Biological Catches
The overfishing limit (OFL) is calculated to set the maximum amount
of fish that can be caught in a year, without constituting overfishing.
The ABC is typically set lower than the OFL to account for scientific
uncertainty. For GB cod, GB haddock, and GB yellowtail flounder, the
total ABC is reduced by the amount of the Canadian quota (see Table 1
for the Canadian and U.S. shares of these stocks). Although the TMGC
recommendations were only for fishing year 2023, the portion of the
shared quota that would be allocated to Canada (or assumed for Canada,
in the case of GB haddock) in fishing year 2023 was used to project the
U.S. portions of the ABCs for these three stocks for 2024. This avoids
artificially inflating the U.S. ABC up to the total ABC for the 2024
fishing year. The TMGC will make new recommendations for 2024, which
would replace any quotas for these stocks set in this action.
Additionally, although GB winter flounder, white hake, and Atlantic
halibut are not jointly managed with Canada, there is some Canadian
catch of these stocks. Because the total ABC must account for all
sources of fishing mortality, expected Canadian catch of GB winter
flounder (38 mt), white hake (52 mt), and Atlantic halibut (74 mt) is
deducted from the total ABC. The U.S. ABC is the amount available to
the U.S. fishery after accounting for Canadian catch (see Table 3). For
stocks without Canadian catch, the U.S. ABC is equal to the total ABC.
The OFLs are currently unknown for GB cod, GB yellowtail flounder,
witch flounder, northern windowpane flounder, and Atlantic halibut. For
2023, the SSC recommended maintaining the unknown OFL for GB cod, GB
yellowtail flounder, witch flounder, and Atlantic halibut. Empirical
stock assessments are used for these five stocks, and these assessments
can no longer provide quantitative estimates of the status
determination criteria, nor were appropriate proxies for stock status
determination able to be developed. In the temporary absence of an OFL,
in this and previous actions, we have considered recent catch data and
estimated trends in stock biomass as an indication that the catch
limits derived from ABCs are sufficiently managing fishing mortality at
a rate that is preventing overfishing. The SSC recommended setting the
GB cod ABC based on an average between the output of the iSmooth
(previously referred to as ``PlanBsmooth'') approach and the total
calendar year catch from 2020, which results in an increase
(approximately 20 percent) from the previously set ABC value. Despite
this increase, the SSC states that its recommendation is intended to
support stock rebuilding by maintaining low catches relative to
historic levels. The SSC noted that the fishing mortality in the GB
yellowtail flounder fishery does not appear to be limiting stock
recovery. However, the continued low stock biomass and poor recruitment
for this stock warrant maintaining low catch levels. For witch
flounder, the SSC supported the continued use of the swept-area biomass
average and fixed harvest fraction for setting the ABC, noting that the
target harvest fraction is low relative to the historic harvest
fraction for this stock and that the recommended ABC for witch flounder
is not likely to result in overfishing. While the catch multiplier for
Atlantic halibut remains below 1 for the last four years, despite
reductions in ABC advice, the SSC highlighted the uncertainty of
Canadian catch estimates and stated that the recommended ABC is not
likely to result in overfishing. For each of these stocks, the Council
has relied on the SSC to provide advice on the likelihood of preventing
overfishing and promoting rebuilding under the proposed ABCs. Based on
these considerations, we have preliminarily determined that these ABCs
are a sufficient limit for preventing overfishing and are consistent
with the National Standards. This action does not propose any changes
to the status determination criteria for these stocks.
Subsequent to submitting Framework 65 to NMFS for review and
rulemaking, at its April meeting the New England Council made a new
request for NMFS to implement an emergency rule under section 305(c) of
the Magnuson-Stevens Act to increase the ABC for GOM haddock based on
concerns regarding the economic impacts of the low quota proposed in
this action. We are considering this separately from Framework 65, and
therefore it is not discussed further here.
ABC for Georges Bank Cod
The GB cod 2021 management track assessment followed the iSmooth
approach, using updated commercial fishery catch data through calendar
year 2020 and updated research survey indices of abundance through
2021. In Framework 63, the Council decided to set the GB cod ABC at 754
mt for only one year (fishing year 2022), requiring the Council to make
a new recommendation for fishing years 2023 and 2024 in the current
framework. The SSC met in August 2022 to discuss alternatives for the
GB cod ABC for fishing years 2023 and 2024, and a majority of the SSC
recommended an ABC of 904 mt, the average between the output of the
iSmooth and the 2020 calendar year catch of GB cod (based on
[[Page 34814]]
the 2021 assessment). The Council selected 904 mt as its preferred
option for the GB cod ABC.
The Council's EA for Framework 65 states that the 904 mt ABC would
reduce, but not eliminate, adverse economic impacts, compared to the
fishing year 2022 ABC of 754 mt. The Council included an updated
analysis in its Framework 65 submission, applying the iSmooth approach
using fall 2021 and spring 2022 surveys and catch data through 2021,
consistent with the methodology and data sources used by the SSC when
recommending the fishing year 2022 ABC. This updated analysis resulted
in an amount that is 74 mt higher than the 904-mt ABC recommended by
the Council. The Council did not revise its recommendation with the
higher amount. Instead, it has demonstrated that the 904-mt ABC
recommendation would contribute to stock rebuilding while having a low
probability of overfishing. The sector component of the fishery will
have a high (90-percent) target coverage level of monitoring in fishing
year 2023, which is anticipated to help ensure the accuracy of
commercial catch data.
Annual Catch Limits
Development of Annual Catch Limits
The U.S. ABC for each stock is divided among the various fishery
components to account for all sources of fishing mortality. An estimate
of catch expected from state waters and the other sub-component (e.g.,
non-groundfish fisheries or some recreational groundfish fisheries) is
deducted from the U.S. ABC. The remaining portion of the U.S. ABC is
distributed to the fishery components that receive an allocation for
the stock. Components of the fishery that receive an allocation have a
sub-ACL set by reducing their portion of the ABC to account for
management uncertainty and are subject to AMs if they exceed their
respective catch limit during the fishing year. For GOM cod and haddock
only, the U.S. ABC is first divided between the commercial and
recreational fisheries, before being further divided into sub-
components and sub-ACLs. This process is described fully in Appendix II
of the Framework 65 Environmental Assessment.
Recreational Catch Target for GB Cod
GB cod is not allocated to the recreational fishery. Instead, a
catch target is set and used to calculate the amount deducted to
account for state and other sub-component catch. Framework 65 proposes
to set the GB cod recreational catch target based on the proportional
change to the GB cod U.S. ABC from fishing year 2022 to 2023. Under the
Council's preferred alternative of a 904-mt GB cod ABC, the
recreational catch target would be 113 mt, which is an increase from
the 75-mt catch target set for fishing year 2022.
Framework 63 modified the regulatory process for the Regional
Administrator to adjust recreational measures to prevent the
recreational catch target from being exceeded for fishing years 2023
and 2024. Any change to the recreational measures for GB cod would be
implemented through a separate rulemaking.
Sector and Common Pool Allocations
For stocks allocated to sectors, the commercial groundfish sub-ACL
is further divided into the non-sector (common pool) sub-ACL and the
sector sub-ACL, based on the total vessel enrollment in sectors and the
cumulative potential sector contributions (PSC) associated with those
sectors. The sector and common pool sub-ACLs proposed in this action
are based on final fishing year 2023 sector rosters. All permits
enrolled in a sector, and the vessels associated with those permits,
had until April 30, 2023, to withdraw from a sector and fish in the
common pool for the 2023 fishing year. In addition to the enrollment
delay, all permits that change ownership after the roster deadline were
able to join a sector (or change sector) through April 30, 2023.
Management Uncertainty Buffer for Sectors
In Framework 65, the Council proposes to remove the management
uncertainty buffer for the sector sub-ACL for GOM haddock and white
hake, for only the 2023 fishing year, if the at-sea monitoring (ASM)
coverage target is 90 percent or higher. The Council's goal is to
mitigate the economic impacts of the ACLs for these two stocks by
increasing the sector sub-ACLs if the ASM coverage target is high
enough to reduce uncertainty. Amendment 23 (87 FR 75852, December 9,
2022) implemented a measure to set the management uncertainty buffer
for the sector sub-ACL for each allocated groundfish stock to zero. In
years that the ASM coverage target is set at 100 percent, the
management uncertainty buffer will default to zero for the sector sub-
ACL for allocated stocks, unless the Council's consideration of the
100-percent coverage target warrants specifying a different management
uncertainty buffer in order to prevent exceeding the sub-ACL. The
process by which the Council evaluates and sets management uncertainty
buffers was unchanged by Amendment 23 and the Council may adjust
management uncertainty buffers in future actions.
On March 16, 2023, the Regional Administrator announced that the
fishing year 2023 ASM coverage target will be 90 percent. Therefore, if
this measure is approved, sectors' sub-ABCs for GOM haddock and white
hake would not be reduced to account for the management uncertainty for
fishing year 2023 (see Table 4). The fishery would remain accountable
for remaining within the sub-ACLs allocated to it for both stocks
affected by this measure, and the removal of the management uncertainty
buffer for the sectors alone is not likely to cause the ABC or OFL to
be exceeded. The revised management uncertainty buffers apply only to
sectors and not to the common pool component of the fishery or other
sub-ACLs or sub-components for any stocks. In the case of GOM haddock,
the recreational fishery and common pool fishery would both retain a
management uncertainty buffer; for white hake, only the common pool
fishery would have a management uncertainty buffer applied. Therefore,
a certain level of uncertainty buffer will continue to exist for each
stock's ACL.
Common Pool Total Allowable Catches
The common pool sub-ACL for each allocated stock (except for SNE/MA
winter flounder) is further divided into trimester TACs. Table 7
summarizes the common pool trimester TACs proposed in this action.
Incidental catch TACs are also specified for certain stocks of
concern (i.e., stocks that are overfished or subject to overfishing)
for common pool vessels fishing in the special management programs
(i.e., special access programs (SAP) and the Regular B Days-at-Sea
(DAS) Program), in order to limit the catch of these stocks under each
program. Tables 8 through 11 summarize the proposed Incidental Catch
TACs for each stock and the distribution of these TACs to each special
management program.
[[Page 34815]]
Table 4--Proposed Catch Limits for the 2023 Fishing Year
[mt, live weight]
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Midwater Small- State
Stock Total ACL Groundfish Sector sub- Common pool Recreational trawl Scallop mesh waters sub- Other sub-
sub-ACL ACL sub-ACL sub-ACL fishery fishery fisheries component component
A to H A + B + C A B C D E F G H
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GB Cod.......................................................... 500 375 364 11 .............. .......... .......... .......... 42 83
GOM Cod......................................................... 522 470 268 11 192 .......... .......... .......... 48 3.4
GB Haddock...................................................... 11,301 11,080 10,829 251 .............. 221 .......... .......... 0 0
GOM Haddock *................................................... 1,888 1,818 1,183 25 610 18 .......... .......... 45 6.4
GB Yellowtail Flounder.......................................... 103 84 80 4.5 .............. .......... 16.5 2.0 0.0 0.0
SNE/MA Yellowtail Flounder...................................... 38 33 25 8.1 .............. .......... 2.7 .......... 0.2 2.0
CC/GOM Yellowtail Flounder...................................... 1,063 985 931 54 .............. .......... .......... .......... 34 45
American Plaice................................................. 5,417 5,360 5,210 150 .............. .......... .......... .......... 29 29
Witch Flounder.................................................. 1,196 1,145 1,104 41 .............. .......... .......... .......... 19 31
GB Winter Flounder.............................................. 1,651 1,634 1,585 50 .............. .......... .......... .......... 0 17
GOM Winter Flounder............................................. 772 607 519 88 .............. .......... .......... .......... 153 12.1
SNE/MA Winter Flounder.......................................... 604 441 387 53 .............. .......... .......... .......... 19 144
Redfish......................................................... 9,469 9,469 9,369 99 .............. .......... .......... .......... 0 0
White Hake *.................................................... 1,844 1,826 1,808 18 .............. .......... .......... .......... 0 19
Pollock......................................................... 14,325 13,124 13,001 123 .............. .......... .......... .......... 676 526
N. Windowpane Flounder.......................................... 150 105 na 105 .............. .......... 31 .......... 0.8 13
S. Windowpane Flounder.......................................... 371 45 na 45 .............. .......... 129 .......... 13 184
Ocean Pout...................................................... 83 49 na 49 .............. .......... .......... .......... 0 34
Atlantic Halibut................................................ 83 64 na 64 .............. .......... .......... .......... 17 1.3
Atlantic Wolffish............................................... 87 87 na 87 .............. .......... .......... .......... 0 0
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
na: not allocated to sectors
* GOM haddock and white hake catch limits are based on the removal of the management uncertainty buffer.
Table 5--Proposed Catch Limits for the 2024 Fishing Year *
[mt, live weight]
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Midwater Small- State
Stock Total ACL Groundfish Sector sub- Common pool Recreational trawl Scallop mesh waters sub- Other sub-
sub-ACL ACL sub-ACL sub-ACL fishery fishery fisheries component component
A to H A + B + C A B C D E F G H
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GB Cod.......................................................... 500 375 364 11 .............. .......... .......... .......... 42 83
GOM Cod......................................................... 522 470 268 11 192 .......... .......... .......... 48 3
GB Haddock...................................................... 11,052 10,835 10,590 245 .............. 217 .......... .......... 0 0
GOM Haddock..................................................... 1,925 1,852 1,183 26 643 19 .......... .......... 47 7
GB Yellowtail Flounder.......................................... 103 84 80 4.5 .............. .......... 17 2.0 0 0
SNE/MA Yellowtail Flounder...................................... 38 33 25 8.1 .............. .......... 2.7 .......... 0.2 2.0
CC/GOM Yellowtail Flounder...................................... 946 877 828 48 .............. .......... .......... .......... 30 40
American Plaice................................................. 5,247 5,192 5,046 145 .............. .......... .......... .......... 28 28
Witch Flounder.................................................. 1,196 1,145 1,104 41 .............. .......... .......... .......... 19 31
GB Winter Flounder.............................................. 1,503 1,488 1,442 45 .............. .......... .......... .......... 0 16
GOM Winter Flounder............................................. 772 607 519 88 .............. .......... .......... .......... 153 12.1
SNE/MA Winter Flounder.......................................... 604 441 387 53 .............. .......... .......... .......... 19 144
Pollock......................................................... 13,299 12,184 12,070 114 .............. .......... .......... .......... 627 488
Ocean Pout...................................................... 83 49 na 49 .............. .......... .......... .......... 0 34
Atlantic Halibut................................................ 83 64 na 64 .............. .......... .......... .......... 17 1.3
Atlantic Wolffish............................................... 87 87 na 87 .............. .......... .......... .......... 0 0
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
na: not allocated to sectors
* Northeast multispecies stocks not included in Table 5 do not have catch limits approved or proposed for fishing year 2024.
[[Page 34816]]
Table 6--Proposed Catch Limits for the 2025 Fishing Year *
[mt, live weight]
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Midwater Small- State
Stock Total ACL Groundfish Sector sub- Common pool Recreational trawl Scallop mesh waters sub- Other sub-
sub-ACL ACL sub-ACL sub-ACL fishery fishery fisheries component component
A to H A + B + C A B C D E F G H
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GB Haddock...................................................... 9,460 9,275 9,065 210 .............. 185 .......... .......... 0 0
GOM Haddock..................................................... 1,905 1,833 1,171 26 636 19 .......... .......... 47 7
SNE/MA Yellowtail Flounder...................................... 38 33 25 8 .............. .......... 3 .......... 0 2
CC/GOM Yellowtail Flounder...................................... 873 808 764 45 .............. .......... .......... .......... 28 37
American Plaice................................................. 5,009 4,957 4,818 139 .............. .......... .......... .......... 26 26
Witch Flounder.................................................. 1,196 1,145 1,104 41 .............. .......... .......... .......... 19 31
GB Winter Flounder.............................................. 1,446 1,431 1,387 44 .............. .......... .......... .......... 0 15
GOM Winter Flounder............................................. 772 607 519 88 .............. .......... .......... .......... 153 12.1
SNE/MA Winter Flounder.......................................... 604 441 387 53 .............. .......... .......... .......... 19 144
Pollock......................................................... 12,683 11,619 11,510 109 .............. .......... .......... .......... 598 465
Ocean Pout...................................................... 83 49 na 49 .............. .......... .......... .......... 0 34
Atlantic Halibut................................................ 83 64 na 64 .............. .......... .......... .......... 17 1.3
Atlantic Wolffish............................................... 87 87 na 87 .............. .......... .......... .......... 0 0
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
na: not allocated to sectors
* Northeast multispecies stocks not included in Table 6 do not have catch limits approved or proposed for fishing year 2025.
Table 7--Proposed Fishing Years 2023-2025 Common Pool Trimester TACs
[mt, live weight]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2023 2024 2025
Stock --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trimester 1 Trimester 2 Trimester 3 Trimester 1 Trimester 2 Trimester 3 Trimester 1 Trimester 2 Trimester 3
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GB Cod............................. 3.0 3.6 4.1 3.0 3.6 4.1 ........... ........... ...........
GOM Cod............................ 5.2 3.5 1.9 5.2 3.5 1.9 ........... ........... ...........
GB Haddock......................... 67.6 82.7 100.2 66.1 80.8 98.0 56.6 69.2 83.9
GOM Haddock........................ 6.6 6.4 11.6 7.0 6.7 12.2 6.9 6.7 12.1
GB Yellowtail Flounder............. 0.9 1.4 2.3 0.9 1.4 2.3 ........... ........... ...........
SNE/MA Yellowtail Flounder......... 1.7 2.3 4.1 1.7 2.3 4.1 1.7 2.3 4.1
CC/GOM Yellowtail Flounder......... 31.0 14.1 9.2 27.6 12.6 8.2 25.5 11.6 7.6
American Plaice.................... 111.0 12.0 27.0 107.5 11.6 26.2 102.6 11.1 25.0
Witch Flounder..................... 22.6 8.2 10.3 22.6 8.2 10.3 22.6 8.2 10.3
GB Winter Flounder................. 4.0 12.0 33.9 3.6 10.9 30.8 3.5 10.5 29.6
GOM Winter Flounder................ 32.7 33.6 22.1 32.7 33.6 22.1 32.7 33.6 22.1
Redfish............................ 24.8 30.8 43.7 ........... ........... ........... ........... ........... ...........
White Hake......................... 6.7 5.5 5.5 ........... ........... ........... ........... ........... ...........
Pollock............................ 34.4 42.9 45.4 31.9 39.9 42.1 30.4 38.0 40.2
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 8--Proposed Common Pool Incidental Catch TACs for the 2023-2025 Fishing Years
[mt, live weight]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Percentage of
Stock common pool 2023 2024 2025
sub-ACL
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GB Cod.......................................... 1.68 0.18 0.18 ..............
GOM Cod......................................... 1 0.11 0.11 ..............
GB Yellowtail Flounder.......................... 2 0.09 0.09 ..............
CC/GOM Yellowtail Flounder...................... 1 0.54 0.48 0.45
American Plaice................................. 5 7.50 7.27 6.94
Witch Flounder.................................. 5 2.06 2.06 2.06
SNE/MA Winter Flounder.......................... 1 0.53 0.53 0.53
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 9--Percentage of Incidental Catch TACs Distributed to Each Special
Management Program
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Eastern U.S./
Stock Regular B DAS CA Haddock SAP
Program (%) (%)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
GB Cod.................................. 60 40
GOM Cod................................. 100 n/a
GB Yellowtail Flounder.................. 50 50
CC/GOM Yellowtail Flounder.............. 100 n/a
American Plaice......................... 100 n/a
[[Page 34817]]
Witch Flounder.......................... 100 n/a
SNE/MA Winter Flounder.................. 100 n/a
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 10--Proposed Fishing Years 2023-2025 Incidental Catch TACs for Each Special Management Program
[mt, live weight]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regular B DAS Program Eastern U.S./Canada Haddock SAP
Stock -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2023 2024 2025 2023 2024 2025
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GB Cod.................................................. 0.11 0.11 .............. 0.07 0.07 ..............
GOM Cod................................................. 0.11 0.11 .............. n/a n/a n/a
GB Yellowtail Flounder.................................. 0.05 0.05 .............. 0.05 0.05 ..............
CC/GOM Yellowtail Flounder.............................. 0.54 0.48 0.45 n/a n/a n/a
American Plaice......................................... 7.50 7.27 6.94 n/a n/a n/a
Witch Flounder.......................................... 2.06 2.06 2.06 n/a n/a n/a
SNE/MA Winter Flounder.................................. 0.53 0.53 0.53 n/a n/a n/a
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 11--Proposed Fishing Years 2023-2025 Regular B DAS Program Quarterly Incidental Catch TACs
[mt, live weight]
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2023 2024 2025
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Stock 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 1st 2nd 3rd 4th
Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter
(13%) (29%) (29%) (29%) (13%) (29%) (29%) (29%) (13%) (29%) (29%) (29%)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GB Cod...................................................... 0.01 0.03 0.03 0.03 0.01 0.03 0.03 0.03 ......... ......... ......... .........
GOM Cod..................................................... 0.01 0.03 0.03 0.03 0.01 0.03 0.03 0.03 ......... ......... ......... .........
GB Yellowtail Flounder...................................... 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 ......... ......... ......... .........
CC/GOM Yellowtail Flounder.................................. 0.07 0.16 0.16 0.16 0.06 0.14 0.14 0.14 0.06 0.13 0.13 0.13
American Plaice............................................. 0.98 2.18 2.18 2.18 0.94 2.11 2.11 2.11 0.90 2.01 2.01 2.01
Witch Flounder.............................................. 0.27 0.60 0.60 0.60 0.27 0.60 0.60 0.60 0.27 0.60 0.60 0.60
SNE/MA Winter Flounder...................................... 0.07 0.15 0.15 0.15 0.07 0.15 0.15 0.15 0.07 0.15 0.15 0.15
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Temporary Modification to Accountability Measures for GB Cod
As described above, a portion of the ABC is set aside to account
for an estimate of catch in state waters (including both commercial and
recreational vessels) and catch in federal waters by the other non-
specified fisheries (including non-groundfish commercial and
recreational groundfish vessels). For allocated groundfish stocks,
there are no accountability measures for the state and other sub-
components; an overage to the ACL results in accountability measures
for the allocated components of the groundfish fishery. If the overall
ACL for a stock is exceeded, the amount of the overage due to catch
from vessels fishing in state waters or other, non-specified fisheries
is distributed between the allocated components of the groundfish
fishery. Each component's attributed share of the overage is added to
that component's catch to determine whether the AM for that component
is triggered and the resulting overage amount. For the commercial
fishery (sectors and common pool), the AM due to an overage is payback
in a subsequent fishing year.
Framework 65 would temporarily modify the AMs for GB cod when an
ACL overage that occurs in fishing years 2022-2024 is (in part or
entirely) due to vessels fishing in state waters or other, non-
specified fisheries. If in the year following the overage (Year 2), the
ACL is not achieved or exceeded by any amount, the ACL underage would
be proportionately applied to each component's share of the overage
from Year 1. While the preliminary AM (i.e., payback) would be
implemented at the beginning of Year 3, any reduction to the overage
(due to the underage in Year 2) would be made through an in-season
adjustment as soon as possible in Year 3.
For example, if an ACL overage occurred in fishing year 2022, due
to (in part or entirely) excess catch from the state or other sub-
components, NMFS would determine the amount of this overage after the
end of fishing year 2022, i.e., in fishing year 2023. NMFS would then
proportionately apply the excessive catch attributed to the state and
other-subcomponents to catch from the allocated groundfish fisheries;
in the case of GB cod, this would be sectors and the common pool. If
the resulting sum of sector catch plus the sectors' share of the state
or other sub-component's overage resulted in an overage of the sector
sub-ACL, sectors would be required to pay back this overage, pound for
pound. The same
[[Page 34818]]
would be done for the common pool's catch and share of the state and
other sub-components' overage. Under the modification proposed in this
action, however, if there were an underage of the ACL in fishing year
2023, this underage would be distributed between sectors and the common
pool. The overage payback would be implemented at the start of fishing
year 2024, but NMFS would implement the reduction of the payback due to
the 2023 ACL underage through an in-season adjustment in 2024.
Regulatory Corrections Under Secretarial Authority
This rule corrects an error in the northeast regulations for
monitoring service providers. We are making this correction consistent
with section 305(d) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, which provides that
the Secretary of Commerce may promulgate regulations necessary to
ensure that amendments to an FMP are carried out in accordance with the
FMP and the Magnuson-Stevens Act. This change is necessary to correct
the regulations detailing insurance requirements for monitoring
companies to reference the national requirements.
On September 8, 2022, NMFS published a final rule (87 FR 54902)
that implemented national insurance requirements for observer providers
at 50 CFR 600.748 and revised the northeast regional monitoring program
regulations at Sec. 648.11(h)(3)(vii) to reference the newly
established national insurance requirements. The final rule
implementing Amendment 23 to the Northeast Multispecies FMP (87 FR
75852, December 9, 2022) inadvertently overwrote the northeast regional
monitoring program regulations that referred to the national insurance
requirements. This rule corrects the regulations at Sec.
648.11(h)(3)(vii)(A) to reference the national insurance requirements.
This correction is necessary to eliminate confusion and ensure the
northeast monitoring program is consistent with the national insurance
requirements.
Framework 65 would also make minor changes in the regulations. It
would remove regulatory text that is specific to previous fishing
years. Specifically, this action would remove a sentence in 50 CFR
648.90(a)(4)(iii)(H)(2) that is specific to the allocation of certain
stocks for fishing years 2010 and 2011, and remove the paragraphs at
Sec. 648.90(a)(5)(iv)(B) through (D) that are specific to temporary
(up through fishing year 2020) modifications to the triggers for the
Atlantic sea scallop fishery's AMs for certain flatfish stocks. It
would correct sections of the regulations (Sec. Sec.
648.87(b)(1)(i)(A) and 648.90(a)(4)(iii)(F)) that refer to the northern
and southern windowpane flounder as GOM/GB and SNE/MA windowpane
flounder, respectively, which is inconsistent with other sections of
the regulations. It would remove a section of text that describes the
Fippenies Ledge Area that was moved to a different section of the
regulations, but not deleted from Sec. 648.87(c)(2)(i)(A). It would
correct several citations in Sec. Sec. 648.87(c)(2)(i) and 648.86(c)
to paragraphs within Sec. 648.90(a)(5)(i) that were redesignated in a
previous action, but the citations were not updated.
Classification
Pursuant to section 304(b)(1)(A) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, the
NMFS Assistant Administrator has made a preliminary determination that
this proposed rule is consistent with Framework 65, other provisions of
the Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other applicable law, subject to further
consideration after public comment. In making the final determination,
the Regional Administrator will consider the data, views, and comments
received during the public comment period.
NMFS finds that a 15-day comment period for this action provides a
reasonable opportunity for public participation in this action, while
also ensuring that the final specifications are in place as close to
start of the groundfish fishing year on May 1, 2023, as possible. This
action was developed by the New England Fishery Management Council as
part of the annual Framework Adjustment process, during which final
action was taken in December 2022. However, due to the need for
additional analysis regarding the measures proposed in Framework 65,
the Council was not able to submit the final Framework until April 18,
2023. This action could not be proposed sooner as a result of the
delays in submission. Stakeholder and industry groups have been
involved with the development of this action and have participated in
public meetings throughout the past year. A prolonged comment period
and subsequent potential delay in implementation would be contrary to
the public interest, as it would leave in place default quotas for some
stocks that do not already have specifications for fishing year 2023,
rather than replacing them with the quotas proposed in this rule, which
are based on the best available science. For multiple stocks, the
fishery is operating under lower quotas than those proposed in
Framework 65, and an extended delay could limit economic opportunities
for the fishery, as well as lead to confusion and uncertainty.
Providing timely access to these stocks is also a potential safely
issue. A significant portion of fishing activity occurs in early
summer, due to better weather, and for some smaller vessels, summer may
be the only season in which they are able to participate in the
fishery.
This proposed rule has been determined to be not significant for
purposes of Executive Order (E.O.) 12866.
An Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) was prepared for
this proposed rule, as required by section 603 of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 603. The IRFA describes the economic impact
that this proposed rule would have on small entities, including small
businesses, and also determines ways to minimize these impacts. The
IRFA includes this section of the preamble to this rule and analyses
contained in Framework 63 and its accompanying EA/RIR/IRFA. A copy of
the full analysis is available from the Council (see ADDRESSES). A
summary of the IRFA follows.
Description of the Reasons Why Action by the Agency Is Being Considered
and Statement of the Objectives of, and Legal Basis for, This Proposed
Rule
This action proposes management measures, including annual catch
limits, for the multispecies fishery in order to prevent overfishing,
rebuild overfished groundfish stocks, and achieve optimum yield in the
fishery. A complete description of the action, why it is being
considered, and the legal basis for this action are contained in
Framework 65, and elsewhere in the preamble to this proposed rule, and
are not repeated here.
Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to Which This
Proposed Rule Would Apply
The proposed rule would impact the commercial and recreational
groundfish, Atlantic sea scallop, small-mesh multispecies, Atlantic
herring, and large-mesh non-groundfish fisheries. Individually
permitted vessels may hold permits for several fisheries, harvesting
species of fish that are regulated by several different FMPs, beyond
those impacted by the proposed action. Furthermore, multiple-permitted
vessels and/or permits may be owned by entities affiliated by stock
ownership, common management, identity of interest, contractual
relationships, or economic dependency. For the purposes
[[Page 34819]]
of the Regulatory Flexibility Act analysis, the ownership entities, not
the individual vessels, are considered to be the regulated entities.
As of June 1, 2022, NMFS had issued 681 commercial limited-access
groundfish permits associated with vessels (including those in
confirmation of permit history (CPH)), 610 party/charter groundfish
permits, 699 limited access and general category Atlantic sea scallop
permits, 717 small-mesh multispecies permits, 73 Atlantic herring
permits, and 758 large-mesh non-groundfish permits (limited access
summer flounder and scup permits). Therefore, this action potentially
regulates 3,538 permits. When accounting for overlaps between
fisheries, this number falls to 2,027 permitted vessels. Each vessel
may be individually owned or part of a larger corporate ownership
structure and, for RFA purposes, it is the ownership entity that is
ultimately regulated by the proposed action. Ownership entities are
identified on June 1st of each year based on the list of all permit
numbers, for the most recent complete calendar year, that have applied
for any type of Greater Atlantic Federal fishing permit. The current
ownership data set is based on calendar year 2021 permits and contains
gross sales associated with those permits for calendar years 2019
through 2021.
For RFA purposes only, NMFS has established a small business size
standard for businesses, including their affiliates, whose primary
industry is commercial fishing (see 50 CFR 200.2). A business primarily
engaged in commercial fishing (NAICS code 11411) is classified as a
small business if it is independently owned and operated, is not
dominant in its field of operation (including its affiliates), and has
combined annual receipts not in excess of $11 million for all its
affiliated operations worldwide. The determination as to whether the
entity is large or small is based on the average annual revenue for the
three years from 2019 through 2021. The Small Business Administration
(SBA) has established size standards for all other major industry
sectors in the U.S., including for-hire fishing (NAICS code 487210).
These entities are classified as small businesses if combined annual
receipts are not in excess of $8.0 million for all its affiliated
operations. As with commercial fishing businesses, the annual average
of the three most recent years (2019-2021) is utilized in determining
annual receipts for businesses primarily engaged in for-hire fishing.
Based on the ownership data, 1,506 distinct business entities hold
at least one permit that the proposed action potentially regulates. All
1,506 business entities identified could be directly regulated by this
proposed action. Of these 1,506 entities, 865 are commercial fishing
entities, 274 are for-hire entities, and 367 did not have revenues
(were inactive in 2021). Of the 865 commercial fishing entities, 854
are categorized as small entities and 11 are categorized as large
entities, per the NMFS guidelines. Furthermore, 515 of these commercial
fishing entities held limited access groundfish permits, with 512 of
these entities being classified as small businesses and 3 of these
entities being classified as large businesses. All 274 for-hire
entities are categorized as small businesses.
Description of the Projected Reporting, Record-Keeping, and Other
Compliance Requirements of This Proposed Rule
The proposed action does not contain any new collection-of-
information requirements under the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA).
Federal Rules Which May Duplicate, Overlap, or Conflict With This
Proposed Rule
The proposed action does not duplicate, overlap, or conflict with
any other Federal rules.
Description of Significant Alternatives to the Proposed Action Which
Accomplish the Stated Objectives of Applicable Statutes and Which
Minimize Any Significant Economic Impact on Small Entities
The economic impacts of each proposed measure are discussed in more
detail in sections 6.5 and 7.12 of the Framework 65 Environmental
Assessment (see ADDRESSES) and are not repeated here. The Council
considered several options within the proposed GOM cod rebuilding plan,
including a Frebuild that are lower (50 percent of
FMSY) and higher (70 and 75 percent of FMSY). The
quotas that were set by Framework 63 remain in place for fishing years
2023-2024, and the proposed rebuilding strategy for GOM cod is expected
to positively impact the groundfish fishery in the long-term through
stock rebuilding. For the updated groundfish specifications, the
Council also considered two lower ABC for GB cod, which would have
greater negative economic impacts than the preferred alternative. There
are no significant alternatives that would minimize the economic
impacts. The proposed action is predicted to generate $74.2 million in
gross revenues on the sector portion of the commercial groundfish
trips, which is $41.7 million more than No Action, but $4.0 million
less than fishing year 2021. Small entities engaged in common pool
groundfish fishing may be negatively impacted by the proposed action as
well. Likewise, small entities engaged in the recreational groundfish
fishery are also likely to be negatively impacted. These negative
impacts for both commercial and recreational groundfish entities are
driven primarily by a substantial decline in the ACL for GOM haddock
for fishing year 2023. While this decline is expected to result in
short-term negative impacts, decreased GOM haddock catch in fishing
year 2023 is expected to yield long-term positive impacts through stock
rebuilding.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 648
Fisheries, Fishing, Recordkeeping, and reporting requirements.
Dated: May 24, 2023.
Samuel D. Rauch, III
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, NMFS proposes to amend 50
CFR part 648 as follows:
PART 648--FISHERIES OF THE NORTHEASTERN UNITED STATES
0
1. The authority citation for part 648 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
0
2. In Sec. 648.11, revise paragraph (h)(3)(vii)(A) to read as follows:
Sec. 648.11 Monitoring coverage.
* * * * *
(h) * * *
(3) * * *
(vii) * * *
(A) A monitoring service provider must hold insurance specified at
Sec. 600.748(b) and (c) of this chapter.
* * * * *
0
3. In Sec. 648.86, revise paragraph (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 648.86 NE Multispecies possession restrictions.
* * * * *
(c) Atlantic halibut. A vessel issued a NE multispecies permit
under Sec. 648.4(a)(1) may land or possess on board no more than one
Atlantic halibut per trip, provided the vessel complies with other
applicable provisions of this part, unless otherwise specified in Sec.
648.90(a)(5)(i)(F).
* * * * *
0
4. Amend Sec. 648.87 by:
[[Page 34820]]
0
a. Revising paragraph (b)(1)(i)(A) and the first sentence of paragraph
(c)(2)(i); and
0
b. Removing paragraphs (c)(2)(i)(A) and (B).
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 648.87 Sector allocation.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) * * *
(A) Allocated stocks. Each sector shall be allocated a TAC in the
form of an ACE for each NE multispecies stock, with the exception of
Atlantic halibut, ocean pout, windowpane flounder (both the northern
and southern stocks), and Atlantic wolffish based upon the cumulative
PSCs of vessels/permits participating in each sector during a
particular fishing year, as described in paragraph (b)(1)(i)(E) of this
section.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) Regulations that may not be exempted for sector participants.
The Regional Administrator may not exempt participants in a sector from
the following Federal fishing regulations: Specific times and areas
within the NE multispecies year-round closure areas; permitting
restrictions (e.g., vessel upgrades, etc.); gear restrictions designed
to minimize habitat impacts (e.g., roller gear restrictions, etc.);
reporting requirements; and AMs specified in Sec. 648.90(a)(5)(i)(D)
through (H). * * *
* * * * *
0
5. Amend Sec. 648.90 by:
0
a. Removing and reserving paragraph (a)(2)(iv);
0
b. Revising paragraphs (a)(4)(iii)(A) and (B), (a)(4)(iii)(F), the
introductory text of paragraph (a)(4)(iii)(H), paragraphs
(a)(4)(iii)(H)(1)(i) and (a)(4)(iii)(H)(2), the second sentence of
paragraph (a)(5)(i)(D), and paragraph (a)(5)(ii);
0
c. Removing and reserving paragraph (a)(5)(iv)(B); and
0
d. Removing paragraphs (a)(5)(iv)(C) and (D).
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 648.90 NE multispecies assessment, framework procedures and
specifications, and flexible area action system.
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(4) * * *
(iii) * * *
(A) Regulated species or ocean pout catch by vessels operating only
in state waters. The catch of regulated species or ocean pout that is
expected to be harvested by vessels operating only in state waters that
have not been issued a Federal NE multispecies permit and are not
subject to the regulations specified in this part, as well as the
recreational catch of regulated species or ocean pout that occurs in
state waters, unless otherwise specified in paragraph
(a)(4)(iii)(H)(1)(i) of this section, shall be deducted from the ABC/
ACL of each regulated species or ocean pout stock pursuant to the
process for specifying ABCs and ACLs, as described in this paragraph
(a)(4).
(B) Regulated species or ocean pout catch by other, non-specified
fisheries. Regulated species or ocean pout catch by other, non-
specified fisheries, including, but not limited to, exempted fisheries
that occur in Federal waters, fisheries harvesting exempted species
specified in Sec. 648.80(b)(3), and recreational fisheries that occur
in Federal waters, unless otherwise specified in paragraph
(a)(4)(iii)(H)(1)(i) of this section, shall be deducted from the ABC/
ACL of each regulated species or ocean pout stock, pursuant to the
process to specify ABCs and ACLs described in this paragraph (a)(4),
unless otherwise specified in paragraphs (a)(4)(iii)(C) through (G) of
this section. The catch of these non-specified sub-components of the
ACL shall be monitored using data collected pursuant to this part. If
catch from such fisheries exceeds the amount specified in this
paragraph (a)(4)(iii)(B), AMs shall be developed to prevent the overall
ACL for each stock from being exceeded, pursuant to the framework
adjustment process specified in this section.
* * * * *
(F) Southern windowpane flounder catch by exempted fisheries.
Southern windowpane flounder catch by other, non-specified fisheries,
including, but not limited to, exempted fisheries that occur in Federal
waters and fisheries harvesting exempted species specified in Sec.
648.80(b)(3), shall be deducted from the ABC/ACL for southern
windowpane flounder pursuant to the process to specify ABCs and ACLs,
as described in this paragraph (a)(4). The specific value of the sub-
components of the ABC/ACL for southern windowpane flounder distributed
to these other fisheries shall be specified pursuant to the biennial
adjustment process specified in paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
* * * * *
(H) Regulated species or ocean pout catch by the NE multispecies
commercial and recreational fisheries. Unless otherwise specified in
the ACL recommendations developed pursuant to paragraph (a)(4)(i) of
this section, after all of the deductions and considerations specified
in paragraphs (a)(4)(iii)(A) through (G) and (a)(4)(iii)(H)(1) of this
section, the remaining ABC/ACL for each regulated species or ocean pout
stock shall be allocated to the NE multispecies commercial fishery,
pursuant to paragraph (a)(4)(iii)(H)(2) of this section.
* * * * *
(1) * * *
(i) Stocks allocated. Unless otherwise specified in this paragraph
(a)(4)(iii)(H)(1), the ABCs/ACLs for GOM cod and GOM haddock set
pursuant to paragraph (a)(4) of this section shall be divided between
commercial and recreational components, based upon the average
proportional catch of each component for each stock during fishing
years 2001 through 2006.
* * * * *
(2) Commercial allocation. Unless otherwise specified in this
paragraph (a)(4)(iii)(H)(2), the ABC/ACL for regulated species or ocean
pout stocks available to the commercial NE multispecies fishery, after
consideration of the recreational allocation pursuant to paragraph
(a)(4)(iii)(H)(1) of this section, shall be divided between vessels
operating under approved sector operations plans, as described at Sec.
648.87(c), and vessels operating under the provisions of the common
pool, as defined in this part, based upon the cumulative PSCs of
vessels participating in sectors calculated pursuant to Sec.
648.87(b)(1)(i)(E). The ABC/ACL of each regulated species or ocean pout
stocks not allocated to sectors pursuant to Sec. 648.87(b)(1)(i)(E)
(i.e., Atlantic halibut, ocean pout, windowpane flounder, and Atlantic
wolffish) that is available to the commercial NE multispecies fishery
shall be allocated entirely to the common pool, and catch from sector
and common pool vessels shall be attributed to this allocation. Unless
otherwise specified in paragraph (a)(5) of this section, regulated
species or ocean pout catch by common pool and sector vessels shall be
deducted from the sub-ACL/ACE allocated pursuant to this paragraph
(a)(4)(iii)(H)(2) for the purposes of determining whether adjustments
to common pool measures are necessary, pursuant to the common pool AMs
specified in Sec. 648.82(n), or whether sector ACE overages must be
deducted, pursuant to Sec. 648.87(b)(1)(iii).
* * * * *
(5) * * *
(i) * * *
(D) AMs for both stocks of windowpane flounder, ocean pout,
[[Page 34821]]
Atlantic halibut, and Atlantic wolffish. * * * If the overall ACL for
any of these stocks is exceeded, NMFS shall implement the appropriate
AM, as specified in paragraphs (a)(5)(i)(D) through (H) of this
section, in a subsequent fishing year, consistent with the APA. * * *
* * * * *
(ii) AMs due to excessive catch of regulated species or ocean pout
by state and other, non-specified fisheries. At the end of the NE
multispecies fishing year, NMFS will evaluate whether the catch of any
stock of regulated species or ocean pout by vessels operating only in
state waters or in other, non-specified fisheries, as defined in
paragraphs (a)(4)(iii)(A) and (B) of this section, exceeds the sub-
component of the ACL for that stock.
(A) AMs if the overall ACL for a regulated species or ocean pout
stock is exceeded. If the catch of any stock of regulated species or
ocean pout by vessels operating only in state waters or in other, non-
specified fisheries exceeds the sub-component of the ACL for that
stock, and the overall ACL for that stock is exceeded, then the amount
of the overage of the overall ACL for that stock attributed to catch
from vessels operating only in state waters or in other, non-specified
fisheries, as defined in paragraphs (a)(4)(iii)(A) and (B) of this
section, shall be distributed among components of the NE multispecies
fishery based upon each component's share of that stock's ACL available
to the NE multispecies fishery pursuant to paragraph (a)(4)(iii)(H) of
this section. Each component's share of the ACL overage for a
particular stock would be then added to the catch of that stock by each
component of the NE multispecies fishery. If the resulting sum of catch
of that stock for each component of the fishery exceeds that individual
component's share of that stock's ACL specified pursuant to paragraph
(a)(4)(iii)(H) of this section, then the AMs specified in paragraphs
(a)(5)(i)(A) through (C) of this section shall take effect, as
applicable, unless otherwise specified in paragraph (a)(5)(ii)(C) of
this section.
(B) AMs if the overall ACL for a regulated species or ocean pout
stock is not exceeded. If the catch of any stock of regulated species
or ocean pout by vessels operating only in state waters or in other,
non-specified fisheries, as defined in paragraphs (a)(4)(iii)(A) and
(B) of this section, exceeds the sub-component of the ACL for that
stock, but the overall ACL for that stock is not exceeded, even after
consideration of the catch of that stock by other sub-components of the
fishery, then the AMs specified in this paragraph (a)(5)(ii) shall not
take effect.
(C) AMs for GB cod due to excessive catch by non-allocated
fisheries. For any overages of the GB cod ACL in the 2022-2024 fishing
years, the amount of overage of the overall ACL for GB cod attributed
to catch from vessels operating only in state waters or in other, non-
specified fisheries, as defined in paragraphs (a)(4)(iii)(A) and (B) of
this section, would be reduced by any underage of the GB cod ACL in the
fishing year following the overage, in order to determine the total
amount that must be added to the catch by components of the NE
multispecies fishery, as specified in paragraph (a)(5)(i)(A) of this
section. If the full ACL of GB cod is caught or exceeded in the fishing
year following an overage, no reduction to this amount would be made.
For example, if in 2023 NMFS determines that 100 mt of GB cod catch by
vessels operating only in state waters or in other, non-specified
fisheries in fishing year 2022 has contributed to an ACL overage, NMFS
would implement the AMs specified in paragraph (a)(5)(ii)(A) of this
section at the beginning of fishing year 2024. If 2023 fishing year-end
data showed that total catch of GB cod in fishing year 2023 was 25 mt
below the 2023 ACL, NMFS would reduce the 100-mt overage amount by that
25-mt amount (down to 75 mt) in an in-season adjustment to the 2024
sub-ACLs, as specified in paragraph (a)(5)(i)(A) of this section.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2023-11494 Filed 5-30-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P