Notice of Availability of a Draft Environmental Impact Statement for the Issuance of an Incidental Take Statement Under the Endangered Species Act for Salmon Fisheries in Southeast Alaska Subject to the 2019 Pacific Salmon Treaty Agreement and Funding to the State of Alaska To Implement the 2019 Pacific Salmon Treaty Agreement, 5210-5211 [2024-01606]
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5210
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
[RTID 0648–XD625]
Notice of Availability of a Draft
Environmental Impact Statement for
the Issuance of an Incidental Take
Statement Under the Endangered
Species Act for Salmon Fisheries in
Southeast Alaska Subject to the 2019
Pacific Salmon Treaty Agreement and
Funding to the State of Alaska To
Implement the 2019 Pacific Salmon
Treaty Agreement
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; availability of a draft
environmental impact statement;
request for written comments.
AGENCY:
A Notice of Intent to prepare
this draft environmental impact
statement (DEIS) was published in the
Federal Register on October 4, 2023.
This DEIS is prepared pursuant to the
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) to assess the environmental
impacts associated with NMFS issuing
an incidental take statement (ITS) under
section 7 of the Endangered Species Act
(ESA) that would exempt take of
threatened or endangered ESA-listed
species by participants in Southeast
Alaska (SEAK) salmon fisheries that are
subject to the 2019 Pacific Salmon
Treaty (PST) Agreement. This DEIS also
assesses the environmental impacts of
NMFS funding grants to the State of
Alaska (State) to monitor and manage
the SEAK salmon fisheries and salmon
stocks subject to the 2019 PST
Agreement. If warranted, NMFS would
issue an ITS, consistent with
requirements of the ESA, as part of a
consultation on two agency actions
related to the 2019 PST Agreement,
including the funding to the State. That
consultation would conclude with the
issuance of a biological opinion (BiOp)
that evaluates the effects of those agency
actions on ESA-listed species and
critical habitat. This DEIS directly
responds to a court order and analyzes
the effects of the proposed issuance of
an ITS for those two agency actions.
DATES: NMFS requests comments on
this DEIS. All comments must be
received by 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on
March 11, 2024.
ADDRESSES: This document is available
on the National Marine Fisheries
Service Alaska Region website at:
https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:02 Jan 25, 2024
Jkt 262001
resource/document/environmentalimpact-statement-issuance-incidentaltake-statement-salmon and at https://
www.regulations.gov by entering docket
number ‘‘NOAA–NMFS–2023–0152’’ in
the search bar.
You may submit comments on the
DEIS identified by NOAA–NMFS–2023–
0152 by any of the following methods:
• Electronic Submission: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to
https://www.regulations.gov and enter
NOAA–NMFS–2023–0152 in the Search
box. Click the ‘‘Comment’’ icon,
complete the required fields and enter
or attach your comments.
• Mail: Submit written comments to
Gretchen Herrington, Assistant Regional
Administrator, Sustainable Fisheries
Division, Alaska Region NMFS, Attn:
Susan Meyer. Mail comments to P.O.
Box 21668, Juneau, AK 99802–1668.
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 by NMFS. All comments
received are a part of the public record,
and will generally be posted for public
viewing on https://www.regulations.gov
without change. All personal identifying
information (e.g., name, address),
confidential business information, or
otherwise sensitive information
submitted voluntarily by the sender is
publicly accessible. NMFS will accept
anonymous comments (enter ‘‘N/A’’ in
the required fields if you wish to remain
anonymous).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kelly Cates, telephone: 907–586–7221;
email: kelly.cates@noaa.gov; or Bridget
Mansfield, telephone: 907–586–7221;
email: bridget.mansfield@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This EIS
directly responds to court orders to
provide decision-makers and the public
with an assessment of the
environmental, economic, and social
impacts of alternative approaches to the
issuance of an ITS under Section 7 of
the ESA that would exempt take of
threatened or endangered ESA-listed
species by participants in SEAK salmon
fisheries that are subject to the 2019 PST
Agreement.
Pacific Salmon Treaty and SEAK
Salmon Fishery Management
The PST provides a framework for the
management of salmon fisheries in the
U.S. and Canada and regulates the
salmon fisheries that occur in the ocean
and inland waters of Oregon,
Washington, British Columbia, the
Yukon, and southeast Alaska, and the
rivers that flow into these waters. The
PO 00000
Frm 00011
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
PST established fishing regimes that set
upper limits on intercepting fisheries,
defined as fisheries in one country that
harvest salmon originating in another
country, and sometimes include
provisions that apply to the
management of the Parties’ nonintercepting fisheries as well. The
overall purpose of the regimes is to
accomplish the conservation,
production, and harvest allocation
objectives set forth in the PST. These
objectives are designed to prevent
overfishing, provide for each country to
benefit from production originating in
its waters, avoid undue disruption of
existing fisheries, and reduce
interceptions to the extent practicable.
Each Party to the PST must
implement the fisheries management
framework domestically. Salmon
fisheries in both Federal and state
waters off SEAK are managed consistent
with the 2019 PST Agreement. For
Federal fisheries occurring in the
Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) off the
coast of SEAK, the U.S. does this
through implementation of provisions of
the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act and
the Fishery Management Plan for the
Salmon Fisheries in the EEZ off Alaska
(FMP). The FMP establishes two
management areas, the East Area and
the West Area with a border at Cape
Suckling. In the East Area, the FMP
delegates management of the
commercial troll and sport salmon
fisheries that occur in the EEZ to the
State and prohibits commercial salmon
fishing with net gear in the EEZ.
NMFS does not manage the salmon
fisheries that occur in state waters
(internal waters and marine waters from
shore to 3 nautical miles (approximately
6 kilometers) offshore) of SEAK. The
State of Alaska Department of Fish and
Game (ADF&G) manages salmon troll,
net, personal use, and sport fisheries
subject to the PST’s conservation,
production, and harvest allocation
objectives in state waters. The SEAK
commercial salmon fisheries occurring
in state waters include troll, purse seine,
drift gillnet, and set gillnet fisheries.
The State’s management of salmon
fisheries, including harvest monitoring,
stock assessment, and transboundary
river enhancement necessary to
implement the 2019 PST Agreement, is
partially funded through Federal grants
dispersed by NOAA.
ESA Consultation and Litigation
History
In response to the 2019 PST
Agreement, NMFS consulted under
section 7 of the ESA on three actions:
E:\FR\FM\26JAN1.SGM
26JAN1
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Notices
• Delegation of management authority
over salmon fisheries in the SEAK EEZ
to the State of Alaska on the basis of
new information regarding the effects of
the action and the contemporary status
of impacted ESA-listed species;
• Federal funding through grants to
the State of Alaska for the State’s
management of commercial and sport
salmon fisheries and transboundary
river enhancement necessary to
implement the 2019 PST Agreement;
and,
• Federal funding of a conservation
program to support critical Puget Sound
Chinook stocks and Southern Resident
Killer Whales (SRKW) related to the
2019 PST Agreement, one component of
which included funding of a prey
increase program for SRKW.
The Federal funding of the
conservation program to support Puget
Sound Chinook stocks and SRKW was
a separate action from the two Federal
actions related to the SEAK salmon
fisheries (delegation and funding). In
2019, NMFS completed the consultation
and issued the 2019 BiOp and ITS. In
the 2019 BiOp, NMFS concluded that
the actions were not likely to jeopardize
the continued existence of any of the
ESA-listed species and that the actions
were not likely to destroy or adversely
modify designated critical habitat for
any of the listed species. NMFS issued
an ITS in the 2019 BiOp for take
associated with the Federal actions
related to the SEAK salmon fisheries,
compliance with which would exempt
participants in these fisheries from the
ESA’s prohibition on the incidental take
of threatened and endangered species.
In 2020, the Wild Fish Conservancy
(WFC)filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District
Court for the Western District of
Washington challenging the 2019 BiOp
(Wild Fish Conservancy v. Quan, No.
2:20–CV–417–RAJ–MLP (W.D. Wash.)).
WFC alleged NMFS violated the ESA
and NEPA. On August 8, 2022, the
district court found that NMFS violated
both the ESA and NEPA (Wild Fish
Conservancy v. Quan, No. 2:20–CV–
417–RAJ–MLP, 2021 WL 8445587 (W.D.
Wash. Sept. 27, 2021), report and
recommendation adopted, No. 2:20–CV–
417–RAJ, 2022 WL 3155784 (W.D.
Wash. Aug. 8, 2022)).
With respect to NEPA, the court
concluded NMFS failed to conduct a
NEPA analysis for the issuance of the
ITS with the 2019 BiOp. The court also
concluded that NMFS failed to conduct
adequate NEPA analysis for the
adoption of the prey increase program.
The court remanded to the agency to
address its conclusions regarding these
NEPA, as well as the ESA, deficiencies.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:02 Jan 25, 2024
Jkt 262001
As part of its effort to address the
court’s orders on remand, NMFS
intends to conduct a new ESA section
7 consultation on the effects from the
federal actions related to the SEAK
salmon fisheries (delegation and
funding), and if warranted, would issue
a new ITS as part of that consultation.
Compliance with a new ITS would
exempt participants in the SEAK
salmon fisheries under the 2019 PST
Agreement from the ESA’s prohibition
on the incidental take of threatened and
endangered species.
Draft Environmental Impact Statement
This DEIS responds specifically to the
court order with respect to the stated
failure to prepare an analysis pursuant
to NEPA for the issuance of the ITS for
the SEAK salmon fisheries. This DEIS
analyzes the effects of a reasonable
range of alternatives for the proposed
issuance of a new ITS.
In light of the nexus between the
court’s orders on the ESA and NEPA
deficiencies and in light of NMFS’s
ongoing disbursement of funds to the
State, this EIS also evaluates the effects
of the following actions under
consultation:
• NMFS’s delegation of management
authority over salmon fisheries in the
EEZ in SEAK to the State of Alaska
under the Salmon FMP; and
• Federal funding through grants to
the State of Alaska for the State’s
management of commercial and sport
salmon fisheries and transboundary
river enhancement necessary to
implementation of the 2019 PST
Agreement. This is also a second
proposed action considered as a
component of the alternatives.
Ultimately, this DEIS provides an
assessment of the environmental,
economic, and social impacts of the
SEAK salmon fisheries in federal and
state waters, even though none of the
federal actions directly authorize the
fisheries, because NMFS expects these
impacts to occur from the operation of
the salmon fisheries in SEAK that are
prosecuted pursuant to the 2019 PST
Agreement, facilitated by proposed
Federal funding of grants to the State
under the 2019 PST Agreement, and
proposed to be exempted from liability
for incidental takes of ESA listed
species through the issuance of a new
ITS.
Since the primary Federal action
here—the issuance of the ITS—would
exempt incidental take of ESA-listed
species that occur in compliance with
the ITS, the DEIS focuses on effects to
those species (both ESA-listed salmon
and ESA-listed marine mammals). In
addition, the DEIS also analyzes the
PO 00000
Frm 00012
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
5211
impacts of the SEAK salmon fisheries
on non-ESA-listed salmon, marine
mammals, habitat, seabirds, greenhouse
gas emissions and climate change. The
DEIS also analyzes the impacts of the
alternatives on fishery participants,
communities, and Alaska Native tribes.
NMFS is also preparing a separate EIS
for the expenditure of Federal funding
to for the prey increase program for
SRKW (88 FR 54301, August 10, 2023).
For more information about that EIS, see
https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/action/
review-prey-increase-program-southernresident-killer-whales.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: January 23, 2024.
Everett Wayne Baxter,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2024–01606 Filed 1–25–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
[RTID 0648–XD664]
Pacific Fishery Management Council;
Public Meeting
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of public online meeting.
AGENCY:
The Pacific Fishery
Management Council’s (Pacific Council)
Ad-Hoc Klamath River Fall Chinook
Workgroup will hold an online meeting.
DATES: The online meeting will be held
Tuesday, February 13, 2024, from 9 a.m.
until 3 p.m., Pacific standard time, or
until business for the day concludes.
ADDRESSES: This meeting will be held
online. Specific meeting information,
including directions on how to join the
meeting and system requirements will
be provided in the meeting
announcement on the Pacific Council’s
website (see www.pcouncil.org). You
may send an email to Mr. Kris
Kleinschmidt (kris.kleinschmidt@
noaa.gov) or contact him at (503) 820–
2280, extension 412 for technical
assistance.
Council address: Pacific Fishery
Management Council, 7700 NE
Ambassador Place, Suite 101, Portland,
OR 97220–1384.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Robin Ehlke, Staff Officer, Pacific
Council; telephone: (503) 820–2410.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
primary purpose of the meeting is to
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\26JAN1.SGM
26JAN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 18 (Friday, January 26, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 5210-5211]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-01606]
[[Page 5210]]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
[RTID 0648-XD625]
Notice of Availability of a Draft Environmental Impact Statement
for the Issuance of an Incidental Take Statement Under the Endangered
Species Act for Salmon Fisheries in Southeast Alaska Subject to the
2019 Pacific Salmon Treaty Agreement and Funding to the State of Alaska
To Implement the 2019 Pacific Salmon Treaty Agreement
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; availability of a draft environmental impact statement;
request for written comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: A Notice of Intent to prepare this draft environmental impact
statement (DEIS) was published in the Federal Register on October 4,
2023. This DEIS is prepared pursuant to the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA) to assess the environmental impacts associated with
NMFS issuing an incidental take statement (ITS) under section 7 of the
Endangered Species Act (ESA) that would exempt take of threatened or
endangered ESA-listed species by participants in Southeast Alaska
(SEAK) salmon fisheries that are subject to the 2019 Pacific Salmon
Treaty (PST) Agreement. This DEIS also assesses the environmental
impacts of NMFS funding grants to the State of Alaska (State) to
monitor and manage the SEAK salmon fisheries and salmon stocks subject
to the 2019 PST Agreement. If warranted, NMFS would issue an ITS,
consistent with requirements of the ESA, as part of a consultation on
two agency actions related to the 2019 PST Agreement, including the
funding to the State. That consultation would conclude with the
issuance of a biological opinion (BiOp) that evaluates the effects of
those agency actions on ESA-listed species and critical habitat. This
DEIS directly responds to a court order and analyzes the effects of the
proposed issuance of an ITS for those two agency actions.
DATES: NMFS requests comments on this DEIS. All comments must be
received by 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on March 11, 2024.
ADDRESSES: This document is available on the National Marine Fisheries
Service Alaska Region website at: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/resource/document/environmental-impact-statement-issuance-incidental-take-statement-salmon and at https://www.regulations.gov by entering
docket number ``NOAA-NMFS-2023-0152'' in the search bar.
You may submit comments on the DEIS identified by NOAA-NMFS-2023-
0152 by any of the following methods:
Electronic Submission: Submit all electronic public
comments via the Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to https://www.regulations.gov and enter NOAA-NMFS-2023-0152 in the Search box.
Click the ``Comment'' icon, complete the required fields and enter or
attach your comments.
Mail: Submit written comments to Gretchen Herrington,
Assistant Regional Administrator, Sustainable Fisheries Division,
Alaska Region NMFS, Attn: Susan Meyer. Mail comments to P.O. Box 21668,
Juneau, AK 99802-1668.
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 by NMFS. All comments received are a part of the
public record, and will generally be posted for public viewing on
https://www.regulations.gov without change. All personal identifying
information (e.g., name, address), confidential business information,
or otherwise sensitive information submitted voluntarily by the sender
is publicly accessible. NMFS will accept anonymous comments (enter ``N/
A'' in the required fields if you wish to remain anonymous).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kelly Cates, telephone: 907-586-7221;
email: [email protected]; or Bridget Mansfield, telephone: 907-586-
7221; email: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This EIS directly responds to court orders
to provide decision-makers and the public with an assessment of the
environmental, economic, and social impacts of alternative approaches
to the issuance of an ITS under Section 7 of the ESA that would exempt
take of threatened or endangered ESA-listed species by participants in
SEAK salmon fisheries that are subject to the 2019 PST Agreement.
Pacific Salmon Treaty and SEAK Salmon Fishery Management
The PST provides a framework for the management of salmon fisheries
in the U.S. and Canada and regulates the salmon fisheries that occur in
the ocean and inland waters of Oregon, Washington, British Columbia,
the Yukon, and southeast Alaska, and the rivers that flow into these
waters. The PST established fishing regimes that set upper limits on
intercepting fisheries, defined as fisheries in one country that
harvest salmon originating in another country, and sometimes include
provisions that apply to the management of the Parties' non-
intercepting fisheries as well. The overall purpose of the regimes is
to accomplish the conservation, production, and harvest allocation
objectives set forth in the PST. These objectives are designed to
prevent overfishing, provide for each country to benefit from
production originating in its waters, avoid undue disruption of
existing fisheries, and reduce interceptions to the extent practicable.
Each Party to the PST must implement the fisheries management
framework domestically. Salmon fisheries in both Federal and state
waters off SEAK are managed consistent with the 2019 PST Agreement. For
Federal fisheries occurring in the Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) off
the coast of SEAK, the U.S. does this through implementation of
provisions of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management
Act and the Fishery Management Plan for the Salmon Fisheries in the EEZ
off Alaska (FMP). The FMP establishes two management areas, the East
Area and the West Area with a border at Cape Suckling. In the East
Area, the FMP delegates management of the commercial troll and sport
salmon fisheries that occur in the EEZ to the State and prohibits
commercial salmon fishing with net gear in the EEZ.
NMFS does not manage the salmon fisheries that occur in state
waters (internal waters and marine waters from shore to 3 nautical
miles (approximately 6 kilometers) offshore) of SEAK. The State of
Alaska Department of Fish and Game (ADF&G) manages salmon troll, net,
personal use, and sport fisheries subject to the PST's conservation,
production, and harvest allocation objectives in state waters. The SEAK
commercial salmon fisheries occurring in state waters include troll,
purse seine, drift gillnet, and set gillnet fisheries. The State's
management of salmon fisheries, including harvest monitoring, stock
assessment, and transboundary river enhancement necessary to implement
the 2019 PST Agreement, is partially funded through Federal grants
dispersed by NOAA.
ESA Consultation and Litigation History
In response to the 2019 PST Agreement, NMFS consulted under section
7 of the ESA on three actions:
[[Page 5211]]
Delegation of management authority over salmon fisheries
in the SEAK EEZ to the State of Alaska on the basis of new information
regarding the effects of the action and the contemporary status of
impacted ESA-listed species;
Federal funding through grants to the State of Alaska for
the State's management of commercial and sport salmon fisheries and
transboundary river enhancement necessary to implement the 2019 PST
Agreement; and,
Federal funding of a conservation program to support
critical Puget Sound Chinook stocks and Southern Resident Killer Whales
(SRKW) related to the 2019 PST Agreement, one component of which
included funding of a prey increase program for SRKW.
The Federal funding of the conservation program to support Puget
Sound Chinook stocks and SRKW was a separate action from the two
Federal actions related to the SEAK salmon fisheries (delegation and
funding). In 2019, NMFS completed the consultation and issued the 2019
BiOp and ITS. In the 2019 BiOp, NMFS concluded that the actions were
not likely to jeopardize the continued existence of any of the ESA-
listed species and that the actions were not likely to destroy or
adversely modify designated critical habitat for any of the listed
species. NMFS issued an ITS in the 2019 BiOp for take associated with
the Federal actions related to the SEAK salmon fisheries, compliance
with which would exempt participants in these fisheries from the ESA's
prohibition on the incidental take of threatened and endangered
species.
In 2020, the Wild Fish Conservancy (WFC)filed a lawsuit in the U.S.
District Court for the Western District of Washington challenging the
2019 BiOp (Wild Fish Conservancy v. Quan, No. 2:20-CV-417-RAJ-MLP (W.D.
Wash.)). WFC alleged NMFS violated the ESA and NEPA. On August 8, 2022,
the district court found that NMFS violated both the ESA and NEPA (Wild
Fish Conservancy v. Quan, No. 2:20-CV-417-RAJ-MLP, 2021 WL 8445587
(W.D. Wash. Sept. 27, 2021), report and recommendation adopted, No.
2:20-CV-417-RAJ, 2022 WL 3155784 (W.D. Wash. Aug. 8, 2022)).
With respect to NEPA, the court concluded NMFS failed to conduct a
NEPA analysis for the issuance of the ITS with the 2019 BiOp. The court
also concluded that NMFS failed to conduct adequate NEPA analysis for
the adoption of the prey increase program. The court remanded to the
agency to address its conclusions regarding these NEPA, as well as the
ESA, deficiencies.
As part of its effort to address the court's orders on remand, NMFS
intends to conduct a new ESA section 7 consultation on the effects from
the federal actions related to the SEAK salmon fisheries (delegation
and funding), and if warranted, would issue a new ITS as part of that
consultation. Compliance with a new ITS would exempt participants in
the SEAK salmon fisheries under the 2019 PST Agreement from the ESA's
prohibition on the incidental take of threatened and endangered
species.
Draft Environmental Impact Statement
This DEIS responds specifically to the court order with respect to
the stated failure to prepare an analysis pursuant to NEPA for the
issuance of the ITS for the SEAK salmon fisheries. This DEIS analyzes
the effects of a reasonable range of alternatives for the proposed
issuance of a new ITS.
In light of the nexus between the court's orders on the ESA and
NEPA deficiencies and in light of NMFS's ongoing disbursement of funds
to the State, this EIS also evaluates the effects of the following
actions under consultation:
NMFS's delegation of management authority over salmon
fisheries in the EEZ in SEAK to the State of Alaska under the Salmon
FMP; and
Federal funding through grants to the State of Alaska for
the State's management of commercial and sport salmon fisheries and
transboundary river enhancement necessary to implementation of the 2019
PST Agreement. This is also a second proposed action considered as a
component of the alternatives.
Ultimately, this DEIS provides an assessment of the environmental,
economic, and social impacts of the SEAK salmon fisheries in federal
and state waters, even though none of the federal actions directly
authorize the fisheries, because NMFS expects these impacts to occur
from the operation of the salmon fisheries in SEAK that are prosecuted
pursuant to the 2019 PST Agreement, facilitated by proposed Federal
funding of grants to the State under the 2019 PST Agreement, and
proposed to be exempted from liability for incidental takes of ESA
listed species through the issuance of a new ITS.
Since the primary Federal action here--the issuance of the ITS--
would exempt incidental take of ESA-listed species that occur in
compliance with the ITS, the DEIS focuses on effects to those species
(both ESA-listed salmon and ESA-listed marine mammals). In addition,
the DEIS also analyzes the impacts of the SEAK salmon fisheries on non-
ESA-listed salmon, marine mammals, habitat, seabirds, greenhouse gas
emissions and climate change. The DEIS also analyzes the impacts of the
alternatives on fishery participants, communities, and Alaska Native
tribes.
NMFS is also preparing a separate EIS for the expenditure of
Federal funding to for the prey increase program for SRKW (88 FR 54301,
August 10, 2023). For more information about that EIS, see https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/action/review-prey-increase-program-southern-resident-killer-whales.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: January 23, 2024.
Everett Wayne Baxter,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable Fisheries, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2024-01606 Filed 1-25-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P