Request for Information; National Strategy for a Sustainable Ocean Economy, 42111-42113 [2023-13839]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 124 / Thursday, June 29, 2023 / Notices
IV. Conclusions
Accordingly, the Commission has
determined that, pursuant to 10 CFR
70.17(a), the exemption is authorized by
law, will not endanger life or property
or the common defense and security,
and is otherwise in the interest of the
public. Therefore, the Commission
hereby grants TMI–2 Solutions an
exemption from 10 CFR 70.24 during
decommissioning.
Dated: June 26, 2023.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Jane E. Marshall,
Director, Division of Decommissioning,
Uranium Recovery and Waste Programs,
Office of Nuclear Material Safety and
Safeguards.
[FR Doc. 2023–13882 Filed 6–28–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
POSTAL REGULATORY COMMISSION
[Docket Nos. MC2023–174 and CP2023–178;
MC2023–175 and CP2023–179; MC2023–176
and CP2023–180]
New Postal Products
Postal Regulatory Commission.
Notice.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Commission is noticing a
recent Postal Service filing for the
Commission’s consideration concerning
a negotiated service agreement. This
notice informs the public of the filing,
invites public comment, and takes other
administrative steps.
DATES: Comments are due: July 5, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments
electronically via the Commission’s
Filing Online system at https://
www.prc.gov. Those who cannot submit
comments electronically should contact
the person identified in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section by
telephone for advice on filing
alternatives.
SUMMARY:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
David A. Trissell, General Counsel, at
202–789–6820.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
II. Docketed Proceeding(s)
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
I. Introduction
The Commission gives notice that the
Postal Service filed request(s) for the
Commission to consider matters related
to negotiated service agreement(s). The
request(s) may propose the addition or
removal of a negotiated service
agreement from the Market Dominant or
the Competitive product list, or the
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17:21 Jun 28, 2023
Jkt 259001
modification of an existing product
currently appearing on the Market
Dominant or the Competitive product
list.
Section II identifies the docket
number(s) associated with each Postal
Service request, the title of each Postal
Service request, the request’s acceptance
date, and the authority cited by the
Postal Service for each request. For each
request, the Commission appoints an
officer of the Commission to represent
the interests of the general public in the
proceeding, pursuant to 39 U.S.C. 505
(Public Representative). Section II also
establishes comment deadline(s)
pertaining to each request.
The public portions of the Postal
Service’s request(s) can be accessed via
the Commission’s website (https://
www.prc.gov). Non-public portions of
the Postal Service’s request(s), if any,
can be accessed through compliance
with the requirements of 39 CFR
3011.301.1
The Commission invites comments on
whether the Postal Service’s request(s)
in the captioned docket(s) are consistent
with the policies of title 39. For
request(s) that the Postal Service states
concern Market Dominant product(s),
applicable statutory and regulatory
requirements include 39 U.S.C. 3622, 39
U.S.C. 3642, 39 CFR part 3030, and 39
CFR part 3040, subpart B. For request(s)
that the Postal Service states concern
Competitive product(s), applicable
statutory and regulatory requirements
include 39 U.S.C. 3632, 39 U.S.C. 3633,
39 U.S.C. 3642, 39 CFR part 3035, and
39 CFR part 3040, subpart B. Comment
deadline(s) for each request appear in
section II.
II. Docketed Proceeding(s)
1. Docket No(s).: MC2023–174 and
CP2023–178; Filing Title: USPS Request
to Add Priority Mail, First-Class Package
Service & Parcel Select Contract 30 to
Competitive Product List and Notice of
Filing Materials Under Seal; Filing
Acceptance Date: June 23, 2023; Filing
Authority: 39 U.S.C. 3642, 39 CFR
3040.130 through 3040.135, and 39 CFR
3035.105; Public Representative:
Christopher C. Mohr; Comments Due:
July 5, 2023.
2. Docket No(s).: MC2023–175 and
CP2023–179; Filing Title: USPS Request
to Add First-Class Package Service &
Parcel Select Contract 3 to Competitive
Product List and Notice of Filing
Materials Under Seal; Filing Acceptance
Date: June 23, 2023; Filing Authority: 39
1 See Docket No. RM2018–3, Order Adopting
Final Rules Relating to Non-Public Information,
June 27, 2018, Attachment A at 19–22 (Order No.
4679).
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U.S.C. 3642, 39 CFR 3040.130 through
3040.135, and 39 CFR 3035.105; Public
Representative: Kenneth R. Moeller;
Comments Due: July 5, 2023.
3. Docket No(s).: MC2023–176 and
CP2023–180; Filing Title: USPS Request
to Add First-Class Package Service &
Parcel Select Contract 4 to Competitive
Product List and Notice of Filing
Materials Under Seal; Filing Acceptance
Date: June 23, 2023; Filing Authority: 39
U.S.C. 3642, 39 CFR 3040.130 through
3040.135, and 39 CFR 3035.105; Public
Representative: Kenneth R. Moeller;
Comments Due: July 5, 2023.
This Notice will be published in the
Federal Register.
Erica A. Barker,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023–13835 Filed 6–28–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7710–FW–P
OFFICE OF SCIENCE AND
TECHNOLOGY POLICY
Request for Information; National
Strategy for a Sustainable Ocean
Economy
Office of Science and
Technology Policy (OSTP).
ACTION: Notice of request for
information (RFI).
AGENCY:
The Office of Science and
Technology Policy (OSTP) and the
Council on Environmental Quality
(CEQ), on behalf of the interagency
Ocean Policy Committee (OPC), request
input from all interested parties to
inform the development of a National
Strategy for a Sustainable Ocean
Economy (National Strategy). The
National Strategy will describe the
vision, goals, and high-level actions for
a robust, equitable, secure, sustainable
ocean economy enabled by healthy,
resilient ocean ecosystems. It will build
on current Federal, Tribal, Territorial,
State, and regional sustainable ocean
management practices and identify
needs and opportunities to enhance
these efforts with new and emerging
science, technology, knowledge, and
policy. Through this request for
information (RFI), the Ocean Policy
Committee seeks public input on what
the goals and outcomes of the National
Strategy should be, and how the Federal
Government can best advance
sustainable management of ocean,
coastal, and Great Lakes resources and
ecosystems of the United States.
DATES: Responses are due by 11:59 p.m.
Eastern Time on August 28, 2023.
Submissions received after the deadline
may not be taken into consideration.
SUMMARY:
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 124 / Thursday, June 29, 2023 / Notices
Comments must be
submitted via the Federal eRulemaking
Portal at regulations.gov. However, if
you require an accommodation or
cannot otherwise submit your
comments via regulations.gov, please
contact the program contact person
listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT. OSTP will not accept
comments by fax or by email, or
comments submitted after the comment
period closes. To ensure that OSTP does
not receive duplicate copies, please
submit your comments only once.
Additionally, please include the Docket
ID at the top of your comments.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
www.regulations.gov to submit your
comments electronically. Information
on how to use Regulations.gov,
including instructions for accessing
agency documents, submitting
comments, and viewing the docket, is
available on the site under ‘‘FAQ’’
(https://www.regulations.gov/faq).
Privacy Note: OSTP’s policy is to
make all comments received from
members of the public available for
public viewing in their entirety on the
Federal eRulemaking Portal at
www.regulations.gov. Therefore,
commenters should be careful to
include in their comments only
information that they wish to make
publicly available. OSTP requests that
no proprietary information, copyrighted
information, or personally identifiable
information be submitted in response to
this RFI.
Instructions: Response to this RFI is
voluntary. Each individual or
organization is requested to submit only
one response. Commenters can respond
to one or many questions. Submissions
are suggested to not exceed the
equivalent of five (5) pages in 12 point
or larger font. Submissions should
clearly indicate which questions are
being addressed. Responses should
include the name of the person(s) or
organization(s) filing the response.
Responses containing references,
studies, research, and other empirical
data that are not widely published
should include copies of or electronic
links to the referenced materials.
Responses containing profanity,
vulgarity, threats, or other inappropriate
language or content will not be
considered.
Please note that the U.S. Government
will not pay for response preparation, or
for the use of any information contained
in the response. A response to this RFI
will not be viewed as a binding
commitment to develop or pursue the
project or ideas discussed.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
ADDRESSES:
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17:21 Jun 28, 2023
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Deerin Babb-Brott, OSTP Asst. Director
for Ocean Policy, (202) 456–3267.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background: The Nation’s ocean,
coasts, and Great Lakes support strong
local economies and provide goodpaying jobs, healthy food, carbon
storage, energy, recreation, culture and
heritage, transportation, trade, mobility
for our armed forces, natural protection
from storm surge and floods, and
numerous other benefits. But many of
these benefits are not inexhaustible, and
the ocean is vulnerable to the impacts
of human activity. The myriad impacts
of climate change, habitat and
biodiversity loss, and ocean pollution,
for example, continue to degrade the
health, productivity, and resilience of
ocean ecosystems and make clear the
integral connection between a healthy
ocean, coasts, and Great Lakes and the
health, prosperity, security, and wellbeing of all Americans.
To address these continuing
challenges, the Administration is
committed to advancing the science,
knowledge, tools, and activities that
support sustainable policies,
management, and practices as solutions.
Because the challenges are numerous
and their scale is great—for example,
the country’s ocean, coastal, and Great
Lakes areas cover as much area as the
terrestrial United States—solving them
will require a whole-of-country effort,
with critical roles for Tribal Nations,
local, State, and Territorial
governments, the private sector,
academia, non-governmental
organizations, a wide range of
stakeholders, and the public. Actions to
address these challenges are being
developed and implemented across the
country—at all scales, by governments,
organizations, businesses, academia,
and people of all kinds who are
developing new science and tools,
recognizing the critical importance of
Indigenous Knowledge, building new
technologies, and employing policies,
management, and practices that
prioritize sustainable outcomes and
reflect the resilience,
interconnectedness, value, and
productivity of natural systems. Ocean
policies, management, and practices
focused on achieving healthy
communities, ecosystems, and
economies are needed to provide
abundant co-benefits, including goodpaying jobs, thriving communities, and
healthy ocean ecosystems that support
future discovery and innovation. These
solutions can also provide an
opportunity to advance more equitable
access to the benefits provided by the
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ocean to people, and to create and
sustain a diverse workforce.
To engage the Nation in developing a
vision, goals, and high-level actions for
sustainable management of the ocean,
coasts, and Great Lakes, the Ocean
Policy Committee, a Congressionally
mandated, Cabinet-level interagency
committee charged with coordinating
Federal ocean policy (https://
www.noaa.gov/interagency-oceanpolicy), will develop a National Strategy
for a Sustainable Ocean Economy
(National Strategy) in consultation with
federally recognized Tribes and input
from governments, civil society, the
private sector, and the public. The
National Strategy will: (1) describe a
vision and goals for sustainable
management of the U.S. ocean, coasts,
and Great Lakes; (2) characterize and
assess needs and opportunities to
achieve the vision and goals; (3) identify
existing and new high-level actions by
Federal, Tribal, State, Territorial,
regional, and local governments that can
advance sustainable management; and
(4) describe how those actions will be
implemented to engage and build on the
work of and partnerships with civil
society, the private sector, and the
public.
Examples of subject matter that may
be addressed by the National Strategy
include, but are not necessarily limited
to: ocean food and human health; ocean
energy and resources; ocean-based
tourism; ocean transportation; new
ocean industries; climate change;
marine and coastal ecosystems; ocean
pollution; equity and environmental
justice; ocean literacy and skills;
economic valuation of coastal and ocean
natural capital; ocean science and
technology; ocean finance; Indigenous
Knowledge, ancestral and historical
areas of importance, and national
security.
At the Federal level, the National
Strategy will take into account current
actions related to the sustainability of
the nation’s ocean, coasts, and Great
Lakes, including, but not necessarily
limited to: the Ocean Climate Action
Plan (https://www.whitehouse.gov/wpcontent/uploads/2023/03/OceanClimate-Action-Plan_Final.pdf), the
National Nature Assessment (https://
www.globalchange.gov/nna), and the
National Strategy to Develop Statistics
for Environmental-Economic Decisions
(https://www.whitehouse.gov/ostp/
news-updates/2023/01/19/fact-sheetbiden-harris-administration-releasesnational-strategy-to-put-nature-on-thenations-balance-sheet/).The Ocean
Policy Committee is coordinating the
development of the National Strategy in
conjunction with the United States’
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 124 / Thursday, June 29, 2023 / Notices
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
participation in the ‘‘High Level Panel
for a Sustainable Ocean Economy’’
(Ocean Panel; https://oceanpanel.org/),
committing with 16 other nations to
develop sustainable ocean plans for
their marine areas under national
jurisdiction. This initiative aims to
advance the prosperity, health, and
security of participating nations through
the sustainable management of their
marine areas, and to provide a range of
examples that can be considered as
potential models by other nations. The
U.S. National Strategy will serve as a
sustainable ocean plan for the purposes
of the Ocean Panel initiative.
Questions To Inform Development of
the Strategy
Respondents may provide information
for one or as many topics below as they
choose. Submissions should clearly
indicate which questions are being
addressed. An interagency work group
under the Ocean Policy Committee and
co-led by the Department of the Interior
and the Department of the Navy, in
partnership with the CEQ and OSTP,
and other Federal agencies and entities,
will develop the National Strategy with
input from, Tribal Nations, local, State,
and Territorial governments, the private
sector, academia, non-governmental
organizations, a wide range of
stakeholders, and the public. The
workgroup is seeking input from the
public on high-level goals and how to
achieve them in the following areas:
• Sustainable Ocean Economy. What
should the national vision and highlevel goals be for a sustainable ocean
economy? Are there successful regional
or local efforts that could be applied
nation-wide? What elements or
activities do you consider critical to a
sustainable ocean economy? Are there
other topics beyond those listed above
(e.g., ocean food; ocean energy and
resources; ocean-based tourism; ocean
transportation; new ocean industries;
climate change; marine and coastal
ecosystems; ocean pollution; equity and
environmental justice; ocean literacy
and skills; economic valuation of the
ocean’s natural capital; ocean science,
technology; ocean finance; Indigenous
Knowledge and ancestral and historical
areas of importance; and national
security) that should be addressed?
• Ocean, Coasts, and Great Lakes
Priorities. What are your priorities for
sustainable management of the ocean,
coasts, and Great Lakes at a local, state,
Tribal, territorial, regional, and/or
national scale? What key challenges do
you face in achieving them? Are your
priorities for ocean, coastal, and Great
Lakes management reflected in existing
workplans, strategy documents, or other
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materials? What practices/tactics are
you employing or would you need to
employ to meet those priorities?
• An Informed and Responsive
National Strategy. Are there gaps in our
knowledge of the ocean, coasts, and
Great Lakes that need to be addressed to
support sustainable ocean management?
Are there opportunities to improve how
we manage the use of marine
ecosystems to maximize their benefits
while minimizing human impacts on
them? For example, and as relevant only
to the U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone,
how can the United States advance its
commitment to a precautionary
approach to seabed mining and other
emerging ocean industries? What comanagement and co-stewardship
practices are needed to meet ocean,
coasts, and Great Lakes sustainability?
• Additional Considerations. Is there
anything else you would like to be
considered in the development of the
National Strategy?
Please note that this RFI is designed
to complement existing Federal
activities in this space. Previous
relevant comments submitted to the
RFIs for the Ocean Climate Action Plan
(https://www.federalregister.gov/
documents/2022/10/04/2022-21480/
ocean-climate-action-plan) and the
National Nature Assessment (https://
www.federalregister.gov/documents/
2022/10/31/2022-23593/framing-thenational-nature-assessment) will also be
considered to inform the development
of the National Strategy.
Dated: June 26, 2023.
Stacy Murphy,
Deputy Chief Operations Officer/Security
Officer.
[FR Doc. 2023–13839 Filed 6–28–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3270–F1–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[SEC File No. 270–323, OMB Control No.
3235–0362]
Proposed Collection; Comment
Request; Extension: Form 5—Annual
Statement of Beneficial Ownership
Upon Written Request Copies Available
From: Securities and Exchange
Commission, Office of FOIA Services,
100 F Street NE, Washington, DC
20549–2736
Notice is hereby given that, pursuant
to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.), the Securities
and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) has submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget this
request for extension of the previously
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42113
approved collection of information
discussed below.
Under Section 16(a) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (‘‘Exchange Act’’)
(15 U.S.C. 78a et seq.) every person who
is directly or indirectly the beneficial
owner of more than 10 percent of any
class of any equity security (other than
an exempted security) which registered
pursuant to Section 12 of the Exchange
Act, or who is a director or an officer of
the issuer of such security (collectively
‘‘reporting persons’’), must file
statements setting forth their security
holdings in the issuer with the
Commission. Form 5 (17 CFR 249.105)
is an annual statement of beneficial
ownership of securities. The
information disclosure provided on
Form 5 is mandatory. All information is
provided to the public for review. We
estimate that approximately 5,939
reporting persons file Form 5 annually
and we estimate that it takes
approximately one hour to prepare the
form for a total of 5,939 annual burden
hours.
An agency may conduct or sponsor,
and a person is not required to respond
to, a collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid control
number.
The public may view background
documentation for this information
collection at the following website:
www.reginfo.gov. Find this particular
information collection by selecting
‘‘Currently under 30-day Review—Open
for Public Comments’’ or by using the
search function. Written comments and
recommendations for the proposed
information collection should be sent
within 30 days of publication of this
notice by July 31, 2023 to (i)
www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain
and (ii) David Bottom, Director/Chief
Information Officer, Securities and
Exchange Commission, c/o John
Pezzullo, 100 F Street NE, Washington,
DC 20549, or by sending an email to:
PRA_Mailbox@sec.gov.
Dated: June 23, 2023.
J. Lynn Taylor,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023–13787 Filed 6–28–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 124 (Thursday, June 29, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 42111-42113]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-13839]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
OFFICE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY POLICY
Request for Information; National Strategy for a Sustainable
Ocean Economy
AGENCY: Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP).
ACTION: Notice of request for information (RFI).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) and the
Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ), on behalf of the interagency
Ocean Policy Committee (OPC), request input from all interested parties
to inform the development of a National Strategy for a Sustainable
Ocean Economy (National Strategy). The National Strategy will describe
the vision, goals, and high-level actions for a robust, equitable,
secure, sustainable ocean economy enabled by healthy, resilient ocean
ecosystems. It will build on current Federal, Tribal, Territorial,
State, and regional sustainable ocean management practices and identify
needs and opportunities to enhance these efforts with new and emerging
science, technology, knowledge, and policy. Through this request for
information (RFI), the Ocean Policy Committee seeks public input on
what the goals and outcomes of the National Strategy should be, and how
the Federal Government can best advance sustainable management of
ocean, coastal, and Great Lakes resources and ecosystems of the United
States.
DATES: Responses are due by 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on August 28, 2023.
Submissions received after the deadline may not be taken into
consideration.
[[Page 42112]]
ADDRESSES: Comments must be submitted via the Federal eRulemaking
Portal at regulations.gov. However, if you require an accommodation or
cannot otherwise submit your comments via regulations.gov, please
contact the program contact person listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT. OSTP will not accept comments by fax or by email, or comments
submitted after the comment period closes. To ensure that OSTP does not
receive duplicate copies, please submit your comments only once.
Additionally, please include the Docket ID at the top of your comments.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to www.regulations.gov to submit
your comments electronically. Information on how to use
Regulations.gov, including instructions for accessing agency documents,
submitting comments, and viewing the docket, is available on the site
under ``FAQ'' (https://www.regulations.gov/faq).
Privacy Note: OSTP's policy is to make all comments received from
members of the public available for public viewing in their entirety on
the Federal eRulemaking Portal at www.regulations.gov. Therefore,
commenters should be careful to include in their comments only
information that they wish to make publicly available. OSTP requests
that no proprietary information, copyrighted information, or personally
identifiable information be submitted in response to this RFI.
Instructions: Response to this RFI is voluntary. Each individual or
organization is requested to submit only one response. Commenters can
respond to one or many questions. Submissions are suggested to not
exceed the equivalent of five (5) pages in 12 point or larger font.
Submissions should clearly indicate which questions are being
addressed. Responses should include the name of the person(s) or
organization(s) filing the response. Responses containing references,
studies, research, and other empirical data that are not widely
published should include copies of or electronic links to the
referenced materials. Responses containing profanity, vulgarity,
threats, or other inappropriate language or content will not be
considered.
Please note that the U.S. Government will not pay for response
preparation, or for the use of any information contained in the
response. A response to this RFI will not be viewed as a binding
commitment to develop or pursue the project or ideas discussed.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Deerin Babb-Brott, OSTP Asst. Director
for Ocean Policy, (202) 456-3267.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background: The Nation's ocean, coasts, and Great Lakes support
strong local economies and provide good-paying jobs, healthy food,
carbon storage, energy, recreation, culture and heritage,
transportation, trade, mobility for our armed forces, natural
protection from storm surge and floods, and numerous other benefits.
But many of these benefits are not inexhaustible, and the ocean is
vulnerable to the impacts of human activity. The myriad impacts of
climate change, habitat and biodiversity loss, and ocean pollution, for
example, continue to degrade the health, productivity, and resilience
of ocean ecosystems and make clear the integral connection between a
healthy ocean, coasts, and Great Lakes and the health, prosperity,
security, and well-being of all Americans.
To address these continuing challenges, the Administration is
committed to advancing the science, knowledge, tools, and activities
that support sustainable policies, management, and practices as
solutions. Because the challenges are numerous and their scale is
great--for example, the country's ocean, coastal, and Great Lakes areas
cover as much area as the terrestrial United States--solving them will
require a whole-of-country effort, with critical roles for Tribal
Nations, local, State, and Territorial governments, the private sector,
academia, non-governmental organizations, a wide range of stakeholders,
and the public. Actions to address these challenges are being developed
and implemented across the country--at all scales, by governments,
organizations, businesses, academia, and people of all kinds who are
developing new science and tools, recognizing the critical importance
of Indigenous Knowledge, building new technologies, and employing
policies, management, and practices that prioritize sustainable
outcomes and reflect the resilience, interconnectedness, value, and
productivity of natural systems. Ocean policies, management, and
practices focused on achieving healthy communities, ecosystems, and
economies are needed to provide abundant co-benefits, including good-
paying jobs, thriving communities, and healthy ocean ecosystems that
support future discovery and innovation. These solutions can also
provide an opportunity to advance more equitable access to the benefits
provided by the ocean to people, and to create and sustain a diverse
workforce.
To engage the Nation in developing a vision, goals, and high-level
actions for sustainable management of the ocean, coasts, and Great
Lakes, the Ocean Policy Committee, a Congressionally mandated, Cabinet-
level interagency committee charged with coordinating Federal ocean
policy (https://www.noaa.gov/interagency-ocean-policy), will develop a
National Strategy for a Sustainable Ocean Economy (National Strategy)
in consultation with federally recognized Tribes and input from
governments, civil society, the private sector, and the public. The
National Strategy will: (1) describe a vision and goals for sustainable
management of the U.S. ocean, coasts, and Great Lakes; (2) characterize
and assess needs and opportunities to achieve the vision and goals; (3)
identify existing and new high-level actions by Federal, Tribal, State,
Territorial, regional, and local governments that can advance
sustainable management; and (4) describe how those actions will be
implemented to engage and build on the work of and partnerships with
civil society, the private sector, and the public.
Examples of subject matter that may be addressed by the National
Strategy include, but are not necessarily limited to: ocean food and
human health; ocean energy and resources; ocean-based tourism; ocean
transportation; new ocean industries; climate change; marine and
coastal ecosystems; ocean pollution; equity and environmental justice;
ocean literacy and skills; economic valuation of coastal and ocean
natural capital; ocean science and technology; ocean finance;
Indigenous Knowledge, ancestral and historical areas of importance, and
national security.
At the Federal level, the National Strategy will take into account
current actions related to the sustainability of the nation's ocean,
coasts, and Great Lakes, including, but not necessarily limited to: the
Ocean Climate Action Plan (https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/Ocean-Climate-Action-Plan_Final.pdf), the National
Nature Assessment (https://www.globalchange.gov/nna), and the National
Strategy to Develop Statistics for Environmental-Economic Decisions
(https://www.whitehouse.gov/ostp/news-updates/2023/01/19/fact-sheet-biden-harris-administration-releases-national-strategy-to-put-nature-on-the-nations-balance-sheet/).The Ocean Policy Committee is
coordinating the development of the National Strategy in conjunction
with the United States'
[[Page 42113]]
participation in the ``High Level Panel for a Sustainable Ocean
Economy'' (Ocean Panel; https://oceanpanel.org/), committing with 16
other nations to develop sustainable ocean plans for their marine areas
under national jurisdiction. This initiative aims to advance the
prosperity, health, and security of participating nations through the
sustainable management of their marine areas, and to provide a range of
examples that can be considered as potential models by other nations.
The U.S. National Strategy will serve as a sustainable ocean plan for
the purposes of the Ocean Panel initiative.
Questions To Inform Development of the Strategy
Respondents may provide information for one or as many topics below
as they choose. Submissions should clearly indicate which questions are
being addressed. An interagency work group under the Ocean Policy
Committee and co-led by the Department of the Interior and the
Department of the Navy, in partnership with the CEQ and OSTP, and other
Federal agencies and entities, will develop the National Strategy with
input from, Tribal Nations, local, State, and Territorial governments,
the private sector, academia, non-governmental organizations, a wide
range of stakeholders, and the public. The workgroup is seeking input
from the public on high-level goals and how to achieve them in the
following areas:
Sustainable Ocean Economy. What should the national vision
and high-level goals be for a sustainable ocean economy? Are there
successful regional or local efforts that could be applied nation-wide?
What elements or activities do you consider critical to a sustainable
ocean economy? Are there other topics beyond those listed above (e.g.,
ocean food; ocean energy and resources; ocean-based tourism; ocean
transportation; new ocean industries; climate change; marine and
coastal ecosystems; ocean pollution; equity and environmental justice;
ocean literacy and skills; economic valuation of the ocean's natural
capital; ocean science, technology; ocean finance; Indigenous Knowledge
and ancestral and historical areas of importance; and national
security) that should be addressed?
Ocean, Coasts, and Great Lakes Priorities. What are your
priorities for sustainable management of the ocean, coasts, and Great
Lakes at a local, state, Tribal, territorial, regional, and/or national
scale? What key challenges do you face in achieving them? Are your
priorities for ocean, coastal, and Great Lakes management reflected in
existing workplans, strategy documents, or other materials? What
practices/tactics are you employing or would you need to employ to meet
those priorities?
An Informed and Responsive National Strategy. Are there
gaps in our knowledge of the ocean, coasts, and Great Lakes that need
to be addressed to support sustainable ocean management? Are there
opportunities to improve how we manage the use of marine ecosystems to
maximize their benefits while minimizing human impacts on them? For
example, and as relevant only to the U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone, how
can the United States advance its commitment to a precautionary
approach to seabed mining and other emerging ocean industries? What co-
management and co-stewardship practices are needed to meet ocean,
coasts, and Great Lakes sustainability?
Additional Considerations. Is there anything else you
would like to be considered in the development of the National
Strategy?
Please note that this RFI is designed to complement existing
Federal activities in this space. Previous relevant comments submitted
to the RFIs for the Ocean Climate Action Plan (https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2022/10/04/2022-21480/ocean-climate-action-plan) and the National Nature Assessment (https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2022/10/31/2022-23593/framing-the-national-nature-assessment) will also be considered to inform the
development of the National Strategy.
Dated: June 26, 2023.
Stacy Murphy,
Deputy Chief Operations Officer/Security Officer.
[FR Doc. 2023-13839 Filed 6-28-23; 8:45 am]
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