82_FR_24101 82 FR 24001 - Marketing Order Regulating the Handling of Spearmint Oil Produced in the Far West; Salable Quantities and Allotment Percentages for the 2017-2018 Marketing Year

82 FR 24001 - Marketing Order Regulating the Handling of Spearmint Oil Produced in the Far West; Salable Quantities and Allotment Percentages for the 2017-2018 Marketing Year

DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Agricultural Marketing Service

Federal Register Volume 82, Issue 100 (May 25, 2017)

Page Range24001-24009
FR Document2017-10679

This final rule implements a recommendation from the Far West Spearmint Oil Administrative Committee (Committee) to establish the quantity of spearmint oil produced in the Far West, by class, that handlers may purchase from, or handle on behalf of, producers during the 2017-2018 marketing year, which begins on June 1, 2017. The Far West production area includes the states of Washington, Idaho, Oregon, and designated parts of Nevada and Utah. The Committee locally administers the marketing order and is comprised of spearmint oil producers operating within the area of production. This action establishes salable quantities and allotment percentages for Class 1 (Scotch) spearmint oil of 774,645 pounds and 36 percent, respectively, and for Class 3 (Native) spearmint oil of 1,075,051 pounds and 44 percent, respectively. The Committee recommended these salable quantities and allotment percentages to help maintain stability in the spearmint oil market.

Federal Register, Volume 82 Issue 100 (Thursday, May 25, 2017)
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 100 (Thursday, May 25, 2017)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 24001-24009]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2017-10679]


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DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE

Agricultural Marketing Service

7 CFR Part 985

[Doc. No. AMS-SC-16-0107; SC17-985-1 FR]


Marketing Order Regulating the Handling of Spearmint Oil Produced 
in the Far West; Salable Quantities and Allotment Percentages for the 
2017-2018 Marketing Year

AGENCY: Agricultural Marketing Service, USDA.

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: This final rule implements a recommendation from the Far West 
Spearmint Oil Administrative Committee (Committee) to establish the 
quantity of spearmint oil produced in the Far West, by class, that 
handlers may purchase from, or handle on behalf of, producers during 
the 2017-2018 marketing year, which begins on June 1, 2017. The Far 
West production area includes the states of Washington, Idaho, Oregon, 
and designated parts of Nevada and Utah. The Committee locally 
administers the marketing order and is comprised of spearmint oil 
producers operating within the area of production. This action 
establishes salable quantities and allotment percentages for Class 1 
(Scotch) spearmint oil of 774,645 pounds and 36 percent, respectively, 
and for Class 3 (Native) spearmint oil of 1,075,051 pounds and 44 
percent, respectively. The Committee recommended these salable 
quantities and allotment percentages to help maintain stability in the 
spearmint oil market.

DATES: Effective May 26, 2017.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dale Novotny, Marketing Specialist, or 
Gary Olson, Regional Director, Northwest Marketing Field Office, 
Marketing Order and Agreement Division, Specialty Crops Program, AMS, 
USDA;

[[Page 24002]]

Telephone: (503) 326-2724, Fax: (503) 326-7440, or Email: 
[email protected] or [email protected].
    Small businesses may request information on complying with this 
regulation by contacting Richard Lower, Marketing Order and Agreement 
Division, Specialty Crops Program, AMS, USDA, 1400 Independence Avenue 
SW., STOP 0237, Washington, DC 20250-0237; Telephone: (202) 720-2491, 
Fax: (202) 720-8938, or Email: [email protected].

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This final rule is issued under Marketing 
Order No. 985 (7 CFR part 985), as amended, regulating the handling of 
spearmint oil produced in the Far West (Washington, Idaho, Oregon, and 
designated parts of Nevada and Utah), hereinafter referred to as the 
``order.'' The order is effective under the Agricultural Marketing 
Agreement Act of 1937, as amended (7 U.S.C. 601-674), hereinafter 
referred to as the ``Act.''
    The Department of Agriculture (USDA) is issuing this final rule in 
conformance with Executive Orders 12866, 13771, 13563, and 13175. This 
rule does not meet the definition of a significant regulatory action 
contained in section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866, and is not subject 
to review by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Additionally, 
because this rule does not meet the definition of a significant 
regulatory action it does not trigger the requirements contained in 
Executive Order 13771. See OMB's Memorandum titled ``Interim Guidance 
Implementing Section 2 of the Executive Order of January 30, 2017 
titled `Reducing Regulation and Controlling Regulatory Costs'[thinsp]'' 
(February 2, 2017).
    This final rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 12988, 
Civil Justice Reform. This final rule is not intended to have 
retroactive effect. Under the order now in effect, salable quantities 
and allotment percentages may be established for classes of spearmint 
oil produced in the Far West. This final rule will establish the 
quantity of spearmint oil produced in the Far West, by class, which 
handlers may purchase from, or handle on behalf of, producers during 
the 2017-2018 marketing year, which begins on June 1, 2017.
    The Act provides that administrative proceedings must be exhausted 
before parties may file suit in court. Under section 608c(15)(A) of the 
Act, any handler subject to an order may file with USDA a petition 
stating that the order, any provision of the order, or any obligation 
imposed in connection with the order is not in accordance with law and 
request a modification of the order or to be exempted therefrom. A 
handler is afforded the opportunity for a hearing on the petition. 
After the hearing, USDA would rule on the petition. The Act provides 
that the district court of the United States in any district in which 
the handler is an inhabitant, or has his or her principal place of 
business, has jurisdiction to review USDA's ruling on the petition, 
provided an action is filed not later than 20 days after the date of 
the entry of the ruling.
    The Far West Spearmint Oil Administrative Committee (Committee) 
meets annually in the fall to adopt a marketing policy for the ensuing 
marketing year or years. In determining such marketing policy, the 
Committee considers a number of factors, including, but not limited to, 
the current and projected supply, estimated future demand, production 
costs, and producer prices for all classes of spearmint oil. Input from 
spearmint oil handlers and producers regarding prospective marketing 
conditions for the upcoming year is considered as well.
    If the Committee's marketing policy considerations indicate a need 
for regulating the quantity of any or all classes of spearmint oil 
marketed, the Committee subsequently recommends to USDA the 
establishment of a salable quantity and allotment percentage for such 
class or classes of oil in the forthcoming marketing year. 
Recommendations for volume regulation are intended to ensure that 
market requirements for Far West spearmint oil are satisfied and 
orderly marketing conditions are maintained.
    The salable quantity represents the total amount of each class of 
spearmint oil that handlers may purchase from, or handle on behalf of, 
producers during the marketing year. The allotment percentage is the 
percentage used to calculate each producer's prorated share of the 
salable quantity. It is derived by dividing the salable quantity for 
each class of spearmint oil by the total of all producers' allotment 
bases for the same class of oil. Each producer's annual allotment of 
salable spearmint oil is calculated by multiplying their respective 
total allotment base by the allotment percentage for each class of 
spearmint oil. A producer's allotment base is their quantified share of 
the spearmint oil market based on a statistical representation of past 
spearmint oil production, with accommodation for reasonable, normal 
adjustments to such base as prescribed by the Committee and approved by 
USDA.
    Salable quantities and allotment percentages are established at 
levels intended to fulfill market requirements and to maintain orderly 
marketing conditions. Committee recommendations for volume regulation 
are made well in advance of the period in which the regulations are to 
be effective, thereby allowing producers the chance to adjust their 
production decisions accordingly.
    Pursuant to authority in Sec. Sec.  985.50, 985.51, and 985.52 of 
the order, the full eight-member Committee met on October 19, 2016, and 
recommended salable quantities and allotment percentages for both 
classes of oil for the 2017-2018 marketing year. By a vote of 6-2, the 
Committee recommended the establishment of a salable quantity and 
allotment percentage for Scotch spearmint oil of 774,645 pounds and 36 
percent, respectively. The two Committee members that voted in 
opposition to the recommendation both supported volume regulation, but 
at higher levels than were proposed. They felt that a nearly 20 percent 
year-over-year reduction in the salable quantity and allotment 
percentage for Scotch spearmint oil was too severe.
    For Native spearmint oil, with a unanimous vote (7-0, with the 
public member abstaining), the Committee recommended the establishment 
of a salable quantity and allotment percentage of 1,075,051 pounds and 
44 percent, respectively. Pursuant to Sec.  985.29(a), seven members of 
the Committee constitute a quorum and six concurring votes are required 
to pass a motion.
    This final rule establishes the amount of Scotch and Native 
spearmint oil that handlers may purchase from, or handle on behalf of, 
producers during the 2017-2018 marketing year, which begins on June 1, 
2017. Salable quantities and allotment percentages have been placed 
into effect each season since the order's inception in 1980.

Class 1 (Scotch) Spearmint Oil

    As noted above, the Committee recommended a salable quantity of 
Scotch spearmint oil of 774,645 pounds and an allotment percentage of 
36 percent for the upcoming 2017-2018 marketing year. To arrive at 
these recommendations, the Committee utilized 2017-2018 sales estimates 
for Scotch spearmint oil, as provided by several of the industry 
handlers, historical and current Scotch spearmint oil production, 
inventory statistics, and international market data obtained from 
consultants for the spearmint oil industry.

[[Page 24003]]

    The trade demand estimate for Far West Scotch spearmint oil was 
revised during the 2016-2017 marketing year from an initial estimate of 
900,000 pounds to the current estimate of 950,000 pounds. Trade demand 
is expected to decrease from the 950,000 pounds anticipated in the 
2016-2017 marketing year to 925,000 pounds in the 2017-2018 marketing 
year. Industry reports indicate that the decreased trade demand 
estimate is the result of decreased consumer demand for spearmint-
flavored products, especially chewing gum in China and India, as fruit 
flavors are becoming preferential to consumers. In addition, better 
than expected production of spearmint oil in competing markets, most 
notably Canada and the U.S. Midwest, have also factored into the 
Committee's assessment of the market.
    Production of Far West Scotch spearmint oil declined from 1,229,258 
pounds in 2015 to an estimated 1,113,346 pounds in 2016. Production 
over the last three seasons has exceeded sales, leading to a gradual 
build in the salable carry-in of Scotch spearmint oil. Scotch spearmint 
oil held in the reserve pool, which was completely depleted at the 
beginning of the 2014-2015 marketing year, has also been gradually 
increasing over the past three years.
    Carry-in represents the amount of salable spearmint oil produced, 
but not marketed, in a previous year or years that is available for 
sale in the current year under a previous year's annual allotment. 
Under volume regulation, spearmint oil that is designated as salable 
continues to be available to the market until it is sold and may be 
marketed at any time at the discretion of the owner. Spearmint oil held 
in reserve, however, is spearmint oil that has been produced in excess 
of a producer's marketing year allotment that can only be released into 
the market under certain circumstances.
    Salable carry-in is the primary measure of excess spearmint oil 
supply under the order as it represents overproduction in prior years 
that is currently available to the market without restriction. 
Spearmint oil held in the reserve pool is a lesser indicator of excess 
supply, as it is spearmint oil that is not available to the market in 
the current marketing year without an increase in the salable quantity 
and allotment percentage.
    The Committee estimates that there will be 174,507 pounds of 
salable carry-in of Scotch spearmint oil on June 1, 2017. If correct, 
this figure would be up 8,739 pounds from the 165,768 pounds carried in 
the previous year on June 1, 2016. The Committee estimates that salable 
carry-in will decrease to 24,152 pounds at the beginning of the 2018-
2019 marketing year, if current market conditions and projections are 
maintained.
    This anticipated level of carry-in (24,152 pounds) would be below 
the quantity that the Committee considers favorable (generally 150,000 
pounds). However, the Committee believes that this lower salable carry-
in is manageable given the strong production of spearmint in the 
current marketing year and the quantity of Scotch spearmint oil held in 
the reserve pool that could be released into the market if the industry 
experiences an unexpected increase in demand.
    The Committee reported that there was 15,937 pounds of Scotch 
spearmint oil held in the reserve pool as of May 31, 2016. The 
Committee expects the reserve pool to increase to 204,691 pounds by May 
31, 2017. This quantity of reserve oil should be an adequate buffer to 
supply the market if necessary.
    The Committee estimates the total available supply of Scotch oil 
for the 2017-2018 marketing year to be 949,152 pounds (174,507 pounds 
of estimated carry-in plus 774,645 pounds of recommended salable 
quantity). The 2017-2018 Scotch spearmint oil salable quantity of 
774,645 pounds recommended by the Committee represents a decrease of 
184,066 pounds from the salable quantity established the previous 
marketing year (958,711 pounds).
    The Committee estimates the 2017-2018 marketing year trade demand 
for Scotch spearmint oil at 925,000 pounds. As stated previously, the 
Committee expects that there will be 174,507 pounds of available carry-
in of Scotch spearmint oil on June 1, 2017. That carry-in, when 
combined with the recommended 2017-2018 marketing year salable quantity 
of 774,645 pounds, will result in a total supply of 949,152 pounds of 
Scotch spearmint oil for the 2017-2018 marketing year. This quantity of 
Scotch spearmint oil is expected to fully satisfy estimated market 
demand of 925,000 pounds and is estimated to leave 24,152 pounds as 
carry-out from the 2017-2018 marketing year to be used as carry-in for 
the 2018-2019 marketing year.
    The Committee's stated intent in the use of marketing order volume 
regulation provisions for Scotch spearmint oil is to keep adequate 
supplies available to meet market needs and maintain orderly marketing 
conditions. The recommended salable quantity of Scotch spearmint oil 
for the upcoming marketing year is less than the salable quantity 
established for the previous year. Even so, the Committee expects that 
the market will be fully supplied for the 2017-2018 marketing year.
    The Committee believes that the recommended salable quantity will 
adequately meet demand, as well as result in a reasonable carry-in for 
the following year. The Committee developed its recommendation for the 
Scotch spearmint oil salable quantity and allotment percentage for the 
2017-2018 marketing year based on the information discussed above, as 
well as the computational data outlined below.
    (A) Estimated carry-in of Scotch spearmint oil on June 1, 2017: 
174,507 pounds. This figure is the difference between the revised 2016-
2017 marketing year total available supply of 1,124,507 pounds and the 
revised 2016-2017 marketing year estimated trade demand of 950,000 
pounds.
    (B) Estimated trade demand of Scotch spearmint oil for the 2017-
2018 marketing year: 925,000 pounds. This figure was established at the 
Committee meeting held on October 19, 2016. The average estimated trade 
demand derived from six production area producer meetings held prior to 
the main meeting on October 19, 2016, was 960,400, which is 8,000 
pounds more than the average of trade demand estimates submitted by 
handlers (952,400 pounds). Far West Scotch spearmint oil sales have 
averaged 1,021,786 pounds per year over the last three years, and 
987,639 pounds over the last five years. Given the anticipated market 
conditions for the coming year, the Committee decided it was prudent to 
anticipate the lower trade demand at 925,000 pounds. Should the 
initially established volume regulation levels prove insufficient to 
adequately supply the market, the Committee has the authority to 
recommend intra-seasonal increases, as were undertaken in the 2014-2015 
marketing year, and several other previous marketing years.
    (C) Salable quantity of Scotch spearmint oil required from the 
2017-2018 marketing year production: 750,493 pounds. This figure is the 
difference between the estimated 2017-2018 marketing year trade demand 
(925,000 pounds) and the estimated carry-in on June 1, 2017 (174,507 
pounds). This salable quantity represents the minimum amount of Scotch 
spearmint oil that may be needed to satisfy estimated demand for the 
coming year.
    (D) Total estimated allotment base of Scotch spearmint oil for the 
2017-2018 marketing year: 2,151,792 pounds. This figure represents a 
one-percent increase over the 2016-2017 total allotment base

[[Page 24004]]

of 2,130,487 pounds as prescribed by the order under Sec.  
985.53(d)(1). The one-percent increase equals 21,305 pounds of Scotch 
spearmint oil. This total estimated allotment base is generally revised 
each year on June 1 due to producer base being lost because of the bona 
fide effort production provisions of Sec.  985.53(e). The adjustment is 
usually minimal.
    (E) Computed Scotch spearmint oil allotment percentage for the 
2017-2018 marketing year: 34.9 percent. This percentage is computed by 
dividing the minimum required salable quantity (750,493 pounds) by the 
total estimated allotment base (2,151,792 pounds).
    (F) Recommended Scotch spearmint oil allotment percentage for the 
2017-2018 marketing year: 36 percent. This is the Committee's 
recommendation and is based on the computed allotment percentage (34.9 
percent), and input from producers and handlers at the October 19, 
2016, meeting. The recommended 36 percent allotment percentage reflects 
the Committee's belief that the computed percentage (34.9 percent) may 
not adequately supply the potential 2017-2018 Scotch spearmint oil 
market demand.
    (G) Recommended Scotch spearmint oil salable quantity for the 2017-
2018 marketing year: 774,645 pounds. This figure is the product of the 
recommended salable allotment percentage (36 percent) and the total 
estimated allotment base (2,151,792 pounds) for the 2017-2018 marketing 
year.
    (H) Estimated total available supply of Scotch spearmint oil for 
the 2017-2018 marketing year: 949,152 pounds. This figure is the sum of 
the 2017-2018 recommended salable quantity (774,645 pounds) and the 
estimated carry-in on June 1, 2017 (174,507 pounds).

Class 3 (Native) Spearmint Oil

    The Committee also recommended a 2017-2018 Native spearmint oil 
salable quantity of 1,075,051 pounds and an allotment percentage of 44 
percent at the October 19, 2016, meeting. These figures represent a 
decrease of 134,495 pounds and 6 percent, respectively, from the 
salable quantity and allotment percentage established for the previous 
marketing year. To formulate this recommendation, the Committee 
utilized Native spearmint oil sales estimates for the 2017-2018 
marketing year, as provided by several of the industry's handlers, as 
well as historical and current Native spearmint oil market statistics.
    The Committee estimates that there will be 1,094,659 pounds of 
Native spearmint oil in the reserve pool on June 1, 2017. This figure, 
which is the excess Native spearmint oil production held in reserve by 
producers, is 499,305 pounds higher than the reserve pool held by 
producers on June 1, 2016. This would be the highest reserve pool level 
since 2004. Reserve pool levels of Native spearmint oil had been slowly 
moving toward the level that the Committee believes is optimal for the 
industry prior to the increases experienced in 2015 and 2016. The large 
year over year increase in Native spearmint oil held in reserve (84 
percent) is the result of substantially increased production and only 
moderately increased industry trade demand.
    Far West Native spearmint oil production was estimated at 1,510,936 
pounds in 2015, compared to 1,694,684 pounds estimated for 2016. 
Although total estimated acres of Native spearmint production decreased 
by 164 acres, yield per acre has risen from 145.8 in 2015 to 166.2 
pounds per acre this year. Conversely, sales of Native spearmint oil, 
which were increasing at about a 4 percent rate from 2009 to 2014, 
dropped by 12 percent for the 2015-2016 marketing year.
    Despite Committee statistics that indicate a sharp drop for Far 
West Native spearmint oil sales from the previous marketing year (2015-
2016), monthly sales, to date, for the 2016-2017 marketing year have 
been moderately stronger. The Committee expects this trend to continue, 
even as imports of spearmint oil are also rising. Canada more than 
doubled its shipments of spearmint oil into the U.S. market from 2014 
to 2015, and Chinese shipments are up 14 percent over the same period. 
While it is a common practice for buyers to mix U.S. and foreign-
produced oils to create a final product with a certain flavor profile, 
the greatest percentage of oil in those blends continues to be from the 
Far West. The Committee and the industry expect that practice to 
continue into the future.
    One exception to the rising trend in spearmint oil imports, India 
has reduced shipments over the last two years. Recent reports used by 
the Committee indicate that spearmint oil produced in India is 
improving in quality, yet decreasing in acreage. Indian spearmint oil 
is increasingly regarded as an alternative to high quality, Far West 
Native spearmint oil, but production problems have limited its 
importation into the U.S. market. As a result, imports from India, 
while still in demand, decreased in the past year. However, spearmint 
oil from India may return as a major threat to the Far West Native 
spearmint oil industry's domestic market share in the future.
    One of the factors considered by the Committee when it estimated 
trade demand was that sales of mint products, both domestically and 
abroad, have slowed down. This is largely the result of slowing 
economies in Europe and Asia. In addition, demand is expected to be 
impacted by the purchasing patterns of end users. Over the last several 
years, end users may have been building reserve stocks of Far West oil 
when prices were low as a hedge against future price increases. End 
users of spearmint oil are expected to continue to rely on Far West 
production as their main source of high quality Native spearmint oil, 
but demand may be at lower quantities moving forward in response to the 
current market factors. However, Committee members remain optimistic 
that demand will rise again in the long term.
    As such, spearmint oil handlers, who regularly help predict trade 
demand for Far West Native spearmint oil, estimate demand to range 
between 1,300,000 and 1,400,000 pounds (with an average of 1,320,000 
pounds) for the 2017-2018 marketing year. This estimate is the same as 
the estimate for the previous marketing year. The Committee used the 
handlers' input when it estimated the 2017-2018 marketing year Native 
spearmint oil trade demand to be 1,250,000 pounds. This figure is 
25,000 pounds less than the figure used in the previous marketing year 
and approximately 75,000 pounds below the 3-year average sales figure 
(1,324,560 pounds).
    The estimated carry-in of 189,820 pounds of Native spearmint oil on 
June 1, 2017, in conjunction with the Committee recommended salable 
quantity of 1,075,051 pounds, results in an estimated total available 
supply of 1,264,871 pounds of Native spearmint oil during the 2017-2018 
marketing year. With estimated trade demand of 1,250,000 pounds for the 
2017-2018 marketing year, the Committee projects that 14,871 pounds of 
Native spearmint oil will be carried into the 2018-2019 marketing year, 
a reduction of 174,909 pounds from the estimated 2017-2018 marketing 
year carry-in. The Committee estimates that there will be 1,094,659 
pounds of Native spearmint oil held in the reserve pool at the 
beginning of the 2017-2018 marketing year. Should the industry 
experience an unexpected increase in trade demand during the 2017-2018 
marketing year, Native spearmint oil in the reserve pool could be 
released to satisfy that demand.
    The Committee's stated intent in the use of marketing order volume

[[Page 24005]]

regulation provisions for Native spearmint oil is to keep adequate 
supplies available to meet market needs while maintaining orderly 
marketing conditions. With that in mind, the Committee developed its 
recommendation for the Native spearmint oil salable quantity and 
allotment percentage for the 2017-2018 marketing year based on the 
information discussed above, as well as the data outlined below.
    (A) Estimated carry-in of Native spearmint oil on June 1, 2017: 
189,820 pounds. This figure is the difference between the revised 2016-
2017 marketing year total available supply of 1,430,820 pounds and the 
revised 2016-2017 marketing year estimated trade demand of 1,241,000 
pounds.
    (B) Estimated trade demand of Native spearmint oil for the 2017-
2018 marketing year: 1,250,000 pounds. This estimate was established by 
the Committee and is based on input from producers at six Native 
spearmint oil production area meetings held in mid-October 2016, as 
well as estimates provided by handlers and other meeting participants 
at the October 19, 2016, main meeting. This figure represents a 
decrease of 25,000 pounds from the previous year's estimate. The 
average estimated trade demand for Native spearmint oil from the six 
production area grower's meetings was 1,287,500 pounds, whereas the 
handlers' estimates ranged from 1,300,000 to 1,400,000 pounds. The 
average of Far West Native spearmint oil sales over the last three 
years is 1,324,560 pounds. However, the quantity marketed over the most 
recent full marketing year, 2015-2016, was 1,241,140 pounds. The 
Committee chose to be conservative in the establishment of its trade 
demand estimate for the 2017-2018 marketing year to avoid oversupplying 
the market in the face of increasing production.
    (C) Salable quantity of Native spearmint oil required from the 
2017-2018 marketing year production: 1,060,180 pounds. This figure is 
the difference between the estimated 2017-2018 marketing year estimated 
trade demand (1,250,000 pounds) and the estimated carry-in on June 1, 
2017 (189,820 pounds). This is the minimum amount of Native spearmint 
oil that the Committee believes will be required to meet the 
anticipated 2017-2018 marketing year trade demand.
    (D) Total estimated allotment base of Native spearmint oil for the 
2017-2018 marketing year: 2,443,297 pounds. This figure represents a 
one-percent increase over the 2016-2017 total allotment base of 
2,419,106 pounds as prescribed by the order in Sec.  985.53(d)(1). The 
one-percent increase equals 24,191 pounds of Native spearmint oil. This 
estimate is generally revised each year on June 1 due to producer base 
being lost because of the bona fide effort production provisions of 
Sec.  985.53(e). The revision is usually minimal.
    (E) Computed Native spearmint oil allotment percentage for the 
2017-2018 marketing year: 43.4 percent. This percentage is calculated 
by dividing the required salable quantity (1,060,180 pounds) by the 
total estimated allotment base (2,443,297 pounds) for the 2017-2018 
marketing year.
    (F) Recommended Native spearmint oil allotment percentage for the 
2017-2018 marketing year: 44 percent. This is the Committee's 
recommendation based on the computed allotment percentage (43.4 
percent), the average of the computed allotment percentage figures from 
the six production area meetings (46.7 percent), and input from 
producers and handlers at the October 19, 2016, meeting. The 
recommended 44 percent allotment percentage is also based on the 
Committee's belief that the computed percentage (43.4 percent) may not 
adequately supply the potential market for Native spearmint oil in the 
2017-2018 marketing year.
    (G) Recommended Native spearmint oil 2017-2018 marketing year 
salable quantity: 1,075,051 pounds. This figure is the product of the 
recommended allotment percentage (44 percent) and the total estimated 
allotment base (2,443,297 pounds).
    (H) Estimated available supply of Native spearmint oil for the 
2017-2018 marketing year: 1,264,871 pounds. This figure is the sum of 
the 2017-2018 recommended salable quantity (1,075,051 pounds) and the 
estimated carry-in on June 1, 2017 (189,820 pounds).
    Under volume regulation, the salable quantity is the total quantity 
of each class of spearmint oil that handlers may purchase from, or 
handle on behalf of, producers during a marketing year. Each producer 
is allotted a share of the salable quantity by applying the allotment 
percentage to the producer's allotment base for the applicable class of 
spearmint oil.
    The Committee's recommended Scotch and Native spearmint oil salable 
quantities and allotment percentages of 774,645 pounds and 36 percent, 
and 1,075,051 pounds and 44 percent, respectively, are based on the 
goal of maintaining market stability. The Committee anticipates that 
this goal will be achieved by matching the available supply of each 
class of spearmint oil to the estimated demand of each, thus avoiding 
extreme fluctuations in inventories and prices.
    The salable quantities established by this final rule are not 
expected to cause a shortage of spearmint oil supplies. Any 
unanticipated or additional market demand for spearmint oil which may 
develop during the marketing year could be satisfied by an intra-
seasonal increase in the salable quantity. The order contains a 
provision in Sec.  985.51 for intra-seasonal increases to allow the 
Committee the flexibility to respond quickly to changing market 
conditions.
    Under volume regulation, producers who produce more than their 
annual allotments during the marketing year may transfer such excess 
spearmint oil to producers who have produced less than their annual 
allotment. In addition, on December 1 of each year, producers that have 
not transferred their excess spearmint oil to other producers must 
place their excess spearmint oil production into the reserve pool to be 
released in the future in accordance with market needs and under the 
Committee's direction.
    This regulation is similar to regulations issued in prior seasons. 
The average initial allotment percentage for the five most recent 
marketing years for both Scotch and Native spearmint oil is 52.6 
percent.
    In conjunction with the issuance of this final rule, USDA has 
reviewed the Committee's marketing policy statement for the 2017-2018 
marketing year. The Committee's marketing policy statement, a 
requirement whenever the Committee recommends volume regulation, fully 
meets the intent of Sec.  985.51(b) of the order.
    During its discussion of potential 2017-2018 salable quantities and 
allotment percentages, the Committee considered: (1) The estimated 
quantity of salable oil of each class held by producers and handlers; 
(2) the estimated demand for each class of oil; (3) the prospective 
production of each class of oil; (4) the total of allotment bases of 
each class of oil for the current marketing year and the estimated 
total of allotment bases of each class for the ensuing marketing year; 
(5) the quantity of reserve oil, by class, in storage; (6) producer 
prices of oil, including prices for each class of oil; and (7) general 
market conditions for each class of oil, including whether the 
estimated season average price to producers is likely to exceed parity. 
Conformity with USDA's ``Guidelines for Fruit, Vegetable, and Specialty 
Crop Marketing Orders'' (http://www.ams.usda.gov/publications/content/1982-guidelines-fruit-vegetable-marketing-orders) has also been 
reviewed and confirmed.

[[Page 24006]]

    The establishment of these salable quantities and allotment 
percentages allows for anticipated market needs. In determining 
anticipated market needs, the Committee considered historical sales, as 
well as changes and trends in production and demand. This rule also 
provides producers with information on the amount of spearmint oil that 
should be produced for the 2017 production season in order to meet 
anticipated market demand.

Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis

    Pursuant to requirements set forth in the Regulatory Flexibility 
Act (RFA) (5 U.S.C. 601-612), the Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS) 
has considered the economic impact of this action on small entities. 
Accordingly, AMS has prepared this final regulatory flexibility 
analysis.
    The purpose of the RFA is to fit regulatory actions to the scale of 
businesses subject to such actions in order that small businesses will 
not be unduly or disproportionately burdened. Marketing orders issued 
pursuant to the Act, and the rules issued thereunder, are unique in 
that they are brought about through group action of essentially small 
entities acting on their own behalf.
    There are eight spearmint oil handlers subject to regulation under 
the order, approximately 41 producers of Scotch spearmint oil, and 
approximately 94 producers of Native spearmint oil in the regulated 
production area. Small agricultural service firms are defined by the 
Small Business Administration (SBA) as those having annual receipts of 
less than $7,500,000, and small agricultural producers are defined as 
those having annual receipts of less than $750,000 (13 CFR 121.201).
    Based on the SBA's definition of small entities, the Committee 
estimates that two of the eight handlers regulated by the order could 
be considered small entities. Most of the handlers are large 
corporations involved in the international trading of essential oils 
and the products of essential oils. In addition, the Committee 
estimates that 12 of the 41 Scotch spearmint oil producers, and 31 of 
the 94 Native spearmint oil producers could be classified as small 
entities under the SBA definition. Thus, a majority of handlers and 
producers of Far West spearmint oil may not be classified as small 
entities.
    This final rule establishes the quantity of spearmint oil produced 
in the Far West, by class, which handlers may purchase from, or handle 
on behalf of, producers during the 2017-2018 marketing year. The 
Committee recommended this rule to help maintain stability in the 
spearmint oil market by matching supply to estimated demand, thereby 
avoiding extreme fluctuations in supplies and prices. Establishing 
quantities that may be purchased or handled during the marketing year 
through volume regulations allows producers to coordinate their 
spearmint oil production with the expected market demand. Authority for 
this action is provided in Sec. Sec.  985.50, 985.51, and 985.52 of the 
order.
    The Far West spearmint oil industry is characterized by producers 
whose farming operations generally involve more than one commodity, and 
whose income from farming operations is not exclusively dependent on 
the production of spearmint oil. A typical spearmint oil producing 
operation has enough acreage for rotation such that the total acreage 
required to produce the crop is about one-third spearmint and two-
thirds rotational crops. Thus, the typical spearmint oil producer has 
to have considerably more acreage than is planted to spearmint during 
any given season. Crop rotation is an essential cultural practice in 
the production of spearmint oil for purposes of weed, insect, and 
disease control. To remain economically viable with the added costs 
associated with spearmint oil production, a majority of spearmint oil 
producing farms fall into the SBA category of large businesses.
    Small spearmint oil producers generally are not as extensively 
diversified as larger ones and, as such, are more at risk from market 
fluctuations. Such small producers generally need to market their 
entire annual production of spearmint oil and are not financially able 
to hold spearmint oil for sale in future years. In addition, small 
producers generally do not have a large assortment of other crops to 
cushion seasons with poor spearmint oil returns.
    Conversely, large diversified producers have the potential to 
endure one or more seasons of poor spearmint oil markets because income 
from alternate crops could support their operation for a period of 
time. Reasonable assurance of a stable price and market provides all 
producing entities with the ability to maintain proper cash flow and to 
meet annual expenses.
    Costs to producers and handlers, large and small, resulting from 
this rule are expected to be offset by the benefits derived from a more 
stable market and increased returns. The benefits of this rule are 
expected to be equally available to all producers and handlers 
regardless of their size.
    Instability in the spearmint oil sub-sector of the mint industry is 
much more likely to originate on the supply side than the demand side. 
Fluctuations in yield and acreage planted from season to season tend to 
be larger than fluctuations in the amount purchased by handlers. 
Historically, demand for spearmint oil tends to change slowly from year 
to year.
    Demand for spearmint oil at the farm level is derived from retail 
demand for spearmint-flavored products such as chewing gum, toothpaste, 
and mouthwash. The manufacturers of these products are by far the 
largest users of spearmint oil. However, spearmint flavoring is 
generally a very minor component of the products in which it is used, 
so changes in the raw product price have little impact on the retail 
prices for those goods.
    In 2013, 2014, and 2015, the Committee set salable percentages at 
levels that resulted in most, if not all, of the spearmint oil 
production being made available to the market. This was in response to 
the increased demand for spearmint oil from the Far West due to 
increased utilization by end users and the reduced supply of spearmint 
oil coming from other production areas, both domestic and foreign.
    Although there is still strong demand for spearmint oil, competing 
areas (mainly Canada) have experienced better than expected production 
in 2015 and 2016, and will create some marketing pressure for spearmint 
oil from the Far West. In addition, the slowing of international 
markets for spearmint-flavored products has negatively impacted the 
demand for domestically produced spearmint oil. Thus, the lower salable 
quantities and allotment percentages recommended by the Committee for 
the 2017-2018 marketing year are intended to be responsive to the 
changing environment of the spearmint oil market.
    In the late 1990s, the Committee recommended higher than normal 
salable quantities and allotment percentages in hopes of gaining market 
share. This approach did not work. In the following years, the salable 
quantities and allotment percentages were established at lower levels 
in order to reduce the excess spearmint oil production and resulting 
build-up of inventory. In order to avoid a similar scenario moving 
forward, the Committee, relying heavily on the information provided to 
them by spearmint oil handlers during the October 19, 2016, meeting, 
ultimately recommended reducing the 2017-2018 marketing year salable 
quantities and allotment percentages from the previous

[[Page 24007]]

year to better align the available supply with market demand.
    The Committee reported that recent producer prices for spearmint 
oil are $16.50 to $18.00 per pound. Average producer prices for all 
types of spearmint oil for the production years 2013-2015 at $18.79, 
$19.21, and $18.32 per pound, respectively. These are computed price 
averages for Washington, Oregon, and Idaho combined, based on USDA's 
National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) data.
    Spearmint oil production tends to be cyclical. Prior to the 
inception of the marketing order in 1980, extreme variability in 
producer prices was common. For example, the season average producer 
price for Washington Native spearmint oil in 1971 was $3.00 per pound. 
By 1975, the producer price had risen to $11.00 per pound, an increase 
of over 260 percent in just four years. Such fluctuations were not 
unusual in the spearmint oil industry in the years leading up to the 
promulgation of the order. For most producers, this was an untenable 
situation. Years of relatively high spearmint oil production, with 
demand remaining relatively stable, led to periods in which large 
producer stocks of unsold spearmint oil depressed producer prices. 
Shortages and high prices followed in subsequent years, as producers 
responded to price signals by cutting back production.
    After establishment of the order, the supply and price variability 
in the spearmint oil market moderated. During the 25-year period from 
1982 to 2006, the season average producer price for Native spearmint 
oil ranged from a high of $11.10 to a low of $9.00 per pound, or a 
difference of 23 percent. No change in producer price from one year to 
the next during this period was more than $1.00 per pound. This is a 
remarkable record of price stability. From 2006 to 2008, when 
production contracts tied to input costs were prevalent in the 
industry, the annual average Native spearmint oil producer price jumped 
by $3.80 per pound. During this time period, prices for fuel, 
fertilizer, and labor increased dramatically, resulting in higher 
contracted producer prices, and a resulting concurrent increase in the 
overall season average producer price for the industry.
    The significant variability of the spearmint oil market is 
illustrated by the fact that the coefficient of variation, or CV (a 
standard measure of variability), of Far West spearmint oil producer 
prices for the period 1980-2015 (when the marketing order was in 
effect) is 0.24, compared to 0.36 for the decade prior to the 
promulgation of the order (1970-79) and 0.49 for the prior 20-year 
period (1960-79). The coefficient of variation, as presented herein, 
was calculated by USDA from information provided by the Committee and 
NASS. This analysis provides an indication of the price stabilizing 
impact of the marketing order as higher CV values correspond to greater 
variability.
    According to information compiled by the Committee, the lowest 
level of production in a marketing year since the establishment of the 
order was about 47 percent of the 36-year average (1.96 million pounds 
from 1980 through 2015) and the largest crop was approximately 157 
percent of the 36-year average. A key consequence is that, in years of 
oversupply and low prices, the season average producer price of 
spearmint oil is below the average cost of production (as measured by 
the Washington State University Cooperative Extension Service).
    The wide fluctuations in supply and prices that result from the 
cyclical nature of the spearmint oil industry, which were even more 
pronounced before the creation of the order, can create liquidity 
problems for some producers. The order was designed to reduce the price 
impacts of the cyclical swings in production. However, producers have 
been less able to weather these cycles in recent years because of 
increases to production costs. While prices for spearmint oil have been 
relatively steady, the cost of production has increased to the extent 
that plans to plant spearmint may be postponed or vacated indefinitely. 
Producers may also be enticed by the prices of alternative crops and 
their lower cost of production.
    In an effort to stabilize prices, the spearmint oil industry uses 
the volume regulation mechanisms authorized under the order. This 
authority allows the Committee to recommend a salable quantity and 
allotment percentage for each class of oil for the upcoming marketing 
year. The salable quantity for each class of oil is the total volume of 
spearmint oil produced in a marketing year that producers may sell 
during that same marketing year. The allotment percentage for each 
class of spearmint oil is derived by dividing the salable quantity by 
the total allotment base.
    Each producer is then issued an annual allotment certificate, in 
pounds, for the applicable class of oil. This is calculated by 
multiplying the producer's allotment base by the applicable allotment 
percentage. This is the amount of oil of each applicable class that the 
producer can market under the order.
    By December 1 of each year, the Committee identifies any oil that 
individual producers have produced above the volume specified on annual 
allotment certificates. Prior to December 1, such excess oil can be 
transferred to another producer to fill a deficiency in that producer's 
annual allotment as provided for in Sec.  985.156(a).
    The order allows limited quantities of excess oil to be sold by one 
producer to another producer to fill production deficiencies during a 
marketing year. A deficiency occurs when on-farm production is less 
than a producer's annual allotment. When a producer has a deficiency, 
the producer may utilize their own reserve pool oil to fill that 
deficiency, or excess production (production of spearmint oil in excess 
of the producer's annual allotment) from another producer may also be 
secured to fill the deficiency. As mentioned previously, all of these 
provisions need to be exercised prior to December 1 of each year.
    Excess spearmint oil not transferred to another producer to fill a 
deficiency is held in storage and, on December 1, is added to the 
reserve pool administered by the Committee pursuant to Sec.  985.157. 
The Committee maintains the reserve pool for each class of spearmint 
oil. Once spearmint oil is placed in the reserve pool, such spearmint 
oil cannot enter the market during that marketing year unless USDA 
approves a Committee recommendation to increase the salable quantity 
and allotment percentage for a certain class of oil, subsequently 
making a portion of the reserve pool of that class of spearmint oil 
available to the market. Without an increase in the salable quantity 
and allotment percentage, spearmint oil placed in the reserve pool 
cannot be removed from the reserve pool and marketed in the marketing 
year in which it is initially placed in the reserve pool. However, 
producers may dispose of reserve spearmint oil from their own 
production, and held in their own account, under certain provisions in 
subsequent marketing years under the supervision of the Committee.
    While the Committee administers the reserve pool of spearmint oil, 
ownership and physical possession of spearmint oil held in reserve does 
not transfer to the Committee. The Committee accounts for, and controls 
the release of, reserve spearmint oil, but does not take title to, nor 
dispose of, any such oil of its own accord or for its own benefit. 
Producers, at their sole discretion, make the decisions regarding the 
disposition of

[[Page 24008]]

oil held in the reserve pool under any one of three possible 
mechanisms.
    Section 985.57(b) details the conditions under which a producer may 
dispose of their reserve pool spearmint oil. First, producers may 
utilize reserve oil from their own production to fill intra-seasonal 
increases in the allotment percentage and salable quantity. Second, 
producers may fill an ensuing year's annual allotment from spearmint 
oil held in the reserve pool. Lastly, producers may exchange salable 
oil of the same class and quantity of reserve oil from their own 
production to rotate stock, so long as the Committee is properly 
notified and the oil is properly identified.
    In any given year, the total available supply of spearmint oil is 
composed of current production plus salable carryover stocks from the 
previous crop. The Committee seeks to maintain market stability by 
balancing supply and demand, and to close the marketing year with an 
appropriate level of salable spearmint oil to carry over into the 
subsequent marketing year. If the industry has production in excess of 
the salable quantity, the reserve pool absorbs the surplus quantity of 
spearmint oil, thereby withholding it from the market, unless such oil 
is needed to fill unanticipated intra-seasonal increases in demand. In 
this way, excess spearmint oil is not allowed to oversupply the market 
and create price instability. Likewise, if production is insufficient 
in any given year to fully supply the market with spearmint oil, the 
reserve pool oil can be released to satisfy the market demand until 
production can be increased.
    Therefore, under its provisions, the order may attempt to stabilize 
prices by (1) regulating supply and establishing reserves in high 
production years, thus minimizing the price-depressing effect that 
excess producer stocks have on unsold spearmint oil, and (2) ensuring 
that stocks are available in short supply years when prices would 
otherwise increase dramatically. Reserve pool stocks, which increase in 
high production years, are drawn down in years where the crop is short.
    An econometric model generated by USDA was used to assess the 
impact that volume regulation has on the prices producers receive for 
their commodity. Without volume regulation, spearmint oil markets would 
likely be over-supplied. This could result in low producer prices and a 
large volume of oil stored and carried over to the next crop year. The 
model estimates how much lower producer prices would likely be in the 
absence of volume regulation.
    The Committee estimated trade demand for the 2017-2018 marketing 
year for both classes of oil at 2,175,000 pounds, and that the expected 
combined salable carry-in will be 364,327 pounds. This results in a 
combined required salable quantity of 1,810,673 pounds (2,175,000 
pounds of total trade demand less 364,327 pounds of total carry-in) for 
the 2017-2018 marketing year. Under volume regulation, total sales of 
spearmint oil by producers for the 2017-2018 marketing year will be 
held to 2,214,023 pounds (the recommended salable quantity for both 
classes of spearmint oil of 1,849,696 pounds plus 364,327 pounds of 
carry-in). This total available supply of 2,214,023 pounds should be 
more than adequate to supply the 2,175,000 pounds of anticipated total 
trade demand for spearmint oil. In addition, as of June 1, 2016, the 
total reserve pool for both classes of spearmint oil stood at 611,291 
pounds. Furthermore, that quantity is expected to rise over the course 
of the 2016-2017 marketing year. Should trade demand increase 
unexpectedly during the 2017-2018 marketing year, reserve pool 
spearmint oil could be released into the market to supply that increase 
in demand.
    The recommended allotment percentages, upon which 2017-2018 
producer allotments are based, are 36 percent for Scotch spearmint oil 
and 44 percent for Native spearmint oil. Without volume regulation, 
producers would not be held to these allotment levels, and could 
produce and sell an unrestricted quantity of spearmint oil. The USDA 
econometric model estimated that the season average producer price per 
pound (from both classes of spearmint oil) would decline about $2.45 
per pound as a result of the higher quantities of spearmint oil that 
would be produced and marketed without volume regulation. The surplus 
situation for the spearmint oil market that would exist without volume 
regulation in 2017-2018 also would likely dampen prospects for improved 
producer prices in future years because of the buildup in stocks.
    The use of volume regulation allows the industry to fully supply 
spearmint oil markets while avoiding the negative consequences of over-
supplying these markets. The use of volume regulation is believed to 
have little or no effect on consumer prices of products containing 
spearmint oil and would not result in fewer retail sales of such 
products.
    The Committee discussed alternatives to the recommendations 
contained in this rule for both classes of spearmint oil. The Committee 
discussed and rejected the idea of not regulating any volume for both 
classes of spearmint oil because of the severe price-depressing effects 
that would likely occur without volume regulation. The alternative to 
establish salable quantities and allotment percentages at the 2016-2017 
marketing year's levels was discussed, but not put to any motion, for 
both classes of oil. The Committee also discussed and considered 
salable quantities and allotment percentages that were above and below 
the levels that were ultimately recommended for Scotch spearmint oil. 
Ultimately, the action taken by the Committee was to decrease the 
salable quantities and allotment percentages for both Class 1 and Class 
3 spearmint oil from the current 2016-2017 marketing year levels.
    As noted earlier, the Committee's recommendation to establish 
salable quantities and allotment percentages for both classes of 
spearmint oil was made after careful consideration of all available 
information including: (1) The estimated quantity of salable oil of 
each class held by producers and handlers; (2) the estimated demand for 
each class of oil; (3) the prospective production of each class of oil; 
(4) the total of allotment bases of each class of oil for the current 
marketing year and the estimated total of allotment bases of each class 
for the ensuing marketing year; (5) the quantity of reserve oil, by 
class, in storage; (6) producer prices of oil, including prices for 
each class of oil; and (7) general market conditions for each class of 
oil, including whether the estimated season average price to producers 
is likely to exceed parity.
    Based on its review, the Committee believes that the salable 
quantities and allotment percentages recommended will achieve the 
objectives sought. The Committee also believes that, should there be no 
volume regulation in effect for the upcoming marketing year, the Far 
West spearmint oil industry would return to the pronounced cyclical 
price patterns that occurred prior to the promulgation of the order. As 
previously stated, annual salable quantities and allotment percentages 
have been issued for both classes of spearmint oil since the order's 
inception. The salable quantities and allotment percentages established 
herein are expected to facilitate the goal of maintaining orderly 
marketing conditions for Far West spearmint oil for the 2017-2018 and 
future marketing years.
    In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 
Chapter 35), the order's information collection requirements have been

[[Page 24009]]

previously approved by OMB and assigned OMB No. 0581-0178, Vegetable 
and Specialty Crops. No changes are necessary in those requirements as 
a result of this action. Should any changes become necessary, they 
would be submitted to OMB for approval.
    This final rule establishes the salable quantities and allotment 
percentages for Class 1 (Scotch) spearmint oil and Class 3 (Native) 
spearmint oil produced in the Far West during the 2017-2018 marketing 
year. Accordingly, this action will not impose any additional reporting 
or recordkeeping requirements on either small or large spearmint oil 
producers or handlers. As with all Federal marketing order programs, 
reports and forms are periodically reviewed to reduce information 
requirements and duplication by industry and public sector agencies.
    As noted in the initial regulatory flexibility analysis, USDA has 
not identified any relevant Federal rules that duplicate, overlap, or 
conflict with this rule.
    AMS is committed to complying with the E-Government Act, to promote 
the use of the internet and other information technologies to provide 
increased opportunities for citizen access to Government information 
and services, and for other purposes.
    In addition, the Committee's meeting was widely publicized 
throughout the spearmint oil industry and all interested persons were 
invited to attend the meeting and participate in Committee 
deliberations on all issues. Like all Committee meetings, the October 
19, 2016, meeting was a public meeting and all entities, both large and 
small, were able to express views on the issues presented.
    A proposed rule concerning this action was published in the Federal 
Register on March 31, 2017 (82 FR 16001). A copy of the rule was 
provided to Committee staff, who in turn made it available to all Far 
West spearmint oil producers, handlers, and interested persons. 
Finally, the rule was made available through the internet by USDA and 
the Office of the Federal Register. A 30-day comment period ending May 
1, 2017, was provided to allow interested persons to respond to the 
proposal. No comments were received.
    A small business guide on complying with fruit, vegetable, and 
specialty crop marketing agreements and orders may be viewed at: http://www.ams.usda.gov/rules-regulations/moa/small-businesses. Any questions 
about the compliance guide should be sent to Richard Lower at the 
previously mentioned address in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT 
section.
    After consideration of all relevant matter presented, including the 
information and recommendations submitted by the Committee and other 
available information, it is hereby found that this rule, as 
hereinafter set forth, will tend to effectuate the declared policy of 
the Act.
    It is further found that good cause exists for not postponing the 
effective date of this rule until 30 days after publication in the 
Federal Register (5 U.S.C. 553) because the 2017-2018 marketing year 
starts on June 1, 2017, and handlers will need to begin purchasing the 
spearmint oil allotted under this rulemaking. Further, handlers are 
aware of this rule, which was recommended at a public meeting. Finally, 
a 30-day comment period was provided for in the proposed rule, and no 
comments were received.

List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 985

    Marketing agreements, Oils and fats, Reporting and recordkeeping 
requirements, Spearmint oil.
    For the reasons set forth in the preamble, 7 CFR part 985 is 
amended as follows:

PART 985--MARKETING ORDER REGULATING THE HANDLING OF SPEARMINT OIL 
PRODUCED IN THE FAR WEST

0
1. The authority citation for part 985 continues to read as follows:

    Authority:  7 U.S.C. 601-674.


0
2. Section 985.236 is added to read as follows:


Sec.  985.236  Salable quantities and allotment percentages--2017-2018 
marketing year.

    The salable quantity and allotment percentage for each class of 
spearmint oil during the marketing year beginning on June 1, 2017, 
shall be as follows:
    (a) Class 1 (Scotch) oil--a salable quantity of 774,645 pounds and 
an allotment percentage of 36 percent.
    (b) Class 3 (Native) oil--a salable quantity of 1,075,051 pounds 
and an allotment percentage of 44 percent.

    Dated: May 19, 2017.
Bruce Summers,
Acting Administrator, Agricultural Marketing Service.
[FR Doc. 2017-10679 Filed 5-24-17; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 3410-02-P



                        Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 100 / Thursday, May 25, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                               24001

     instead, it shifted the outdated                        import regulations to the safeguard                   PARTS 944, 980, AND 999—
     requirements contained in § 980.212 to                  section for imported vegetables was                   [AMENDED]
     the more appropriate safeguard                          administrative in nature and did not
     procedures section in § 980.501. Most                   change the practice that has existed for              ■ Accordingly, the interim rule that
     importers and receivers already file FV–                many years. Should any changes to form                amended 7 CFR parts 944, 980, and 999
     6 forms electronically with AMS, while                  FV–6 become necessary in the future,                  that was published at 81 FR 87409 on
     some paper forms are still submitted to                 they would be submitted to OMB for                    December 5, 2016, is adopted as a final
     AMS. In 2015, AMS estimates it                          approval.                                             rule, without change.
     received five electronic FV–6 forms and                    This rule will not impose any                        Dated: May 19, 2017.
     no paper FV–6 forms for approximately                   additional reporting or recordkeeping
                                                                                                                   Bruce Summers,
     14,900 pounds of exempt tomatoes.                       requirements on either small or large
                                                                                                                   Acting Administrator, Agricultural Marketing
        As part of the full implementation of                importers or receivers of commodities
                                                                                                                   Service.
     ITDS, importers and receivers report                    exempt from 8e regulations. As with all
                                                                                                                   [FR Doc. 2017–10678 Filed 5–24–17; 8:45 am]
     exempt shipments through CBP’s                          import regulations, reports and forms
     Automated Commercial Environment                        are periodically reviewed to reduce                   BILLING CODE 3410–02–P

     (ACE) system and AMS’ Compliance                        information requirements and
     and Enforcement Management System                       duplication by industry and public
     (CEMS). CEMS was developed by AMS                       sector agencies. In addition, USDA has                DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
     to replace AMS’ Marketing Order                         not identified any relevant Federal rules             Agricultural Marketing Service
     Online System (MOLS), an online                         that duplicate, overlap, or conflict with
     system that was used from its                           this rule.                                            7 CFR Part 985
     implementation in 2008 until it was                        Further, importers are already familiar
     replaced by CEMS in 2016. An                            with the long-existing process and                    [Doc. No. AMS–SC–16–0107; SC17–985–1
     affirmation of interim rule as final rule               requirement to file FV–6 forms for                    FR]
     was published in the Federal Register                   commodities exempt from 8e
     on June 25, 2015, (80 FR 36465) that                    regulations. Also, the import trade is                Marketing Order Regulating the
     provided for the electronic submission                  fully aware of the ITDS initiative, which             Handling of Spearmint Oil Produced in
     of FV–6 forms, a practice that has                      is designed to streamline and automate                the Far West; Salable Quantities and
     existed since MOLS was implemented                      the filing of import shipment data.                   Allotment Percentages for the 2017–
     in 2008 but was not reflected in the                       Comments on the interim rule were                  2018 Marketing Year
     regulations. This action imposes no                     required to be received on or before                  AGENCY:  Agricultural Marketing Service,
     additional burden on importers and                      February 3, 2017. No comments were                    USDA.
     receivers of exempt tomatoes.                           received. Therefore, for the reasons
                                                                                                                   ACTION: Final rule.
        Regarding alternatives to this action,               given in the interim rule, we are
     AMS determined that these changes to                    adopting the interim rule as a final rule,            SUMMARY:   This final rule implements a
     the regulations were needed to comply                   without change.                                       recommendation from the Far West
     with ITDS requirements. Moving an                          To view the interim rule, go to:                   Spearmint Oil Administrative
     outdated, paper-based exempt form-                      https://www.regulations.gov/                          Committee (Committee) to establish the
     filing requirement from the import                      document?D=AMS-SC-16-0083-0001.                       quantity of spearmint oil produced in
     tomato regulations to the safeguard                        This action also affirms information               the Far West, by class, that handlers
     section of the vegetable import                         contained in the interim rule concerning              may purchase from, or handle on behalf
     regulations standardized the regulations                Executive Orders 12866, 12988, 13175,                 of, producers during the 2017–2018
     and properly provided for the current                   and 13563; the Paperwork Reduction                    marketing year, which begins on June 1,
     requirement of filing a paper or                        Act (44 U.S.C. Chapter 35); and the E-                2017. The Far West production area
     electronic form FV–6, which benefits                    Gov Act (44 U.S.C. 101).                              includes the states of Washington,
     importers and receivers who import                         After consideration of all relevant
                                                                                                                   Idaho, Oregon, and designated parts of
     these exempt tomatoes. In addition,                     material presented, it is found that
                                                                                                                   Nevada and Utah. The Committee
     changing the pistachio regulations by                   finalizing the interim rule, without
                                                                                                                   locally administers the marketing order
     removing the paper-based ‘‘stamp and                    change, as published in the Federal
                                                                                                                   and is comprised of spearmint oil
     fax’’ requirement streamlined the                       Register (81 FR 87409, December 5,
                                                                                                                   producers operating within the area of
     regulations and reduced the burden on                   2016) will tend to effectuate the
                                                                                                                   production. This action establishes
     the trade. The other administrative                     declared policy of the Act.
                                                                                                                   salable quantities and allotment
     changes made in the interim rule
                                                             List of Subjects                                      percentages for Class 1 (Scotch)
     provided the import trade with accurate
                                                                                                                   spearmint oil of 774,645 pounds and 36
     information.                                            7 CFR Part 944
        In accordance with the Paperwork                                                                           percent, respectively, and for Class 3
                                                               Avocados, Food grades and standards,                (Native) spearmint oil of 1,075,051
     Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C.                        Grapefruit, Grapes, Imports, Kiwifruit,
     Chapter 35), the information collection                                                                       pounds and 44 percent, respectively.
                                                             Olives, Oranges.                                      The Committee recommended these
     requirements for the form FV–6 (for
     commodities exempt from 8e                              7 CFR Part 980                                        salable quantities and allotment
     requirements) have been previously                                                                            percentages to help maintain stability in
                                                               Food grades and standards, Imports,                 the spearmint oil market.
     approved by OMB and assigned OMB                        Marketing agreements, Onions, Potatoes,
     No. 0581–0167 (Specific Commodities                                                                           DATES: Effective May 26, 2017.
                                                             Tomatoes.
     Imported into United States Exempt                                                                            FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dale
     From Import Regulations). No changes                    7 CFR Part 999                                        Novotny, Marketing Specialist, or Gary
     in the requirements for the FV–6 form                     Dates, Filberts, Food grades and                    Olson, Regional Director, Northwest
     as a result of this action are necessary.               standards, Imports, Nuts, Pistachios,                 Marketing Field Office, Marketing Order
     The shift of the requirements for                       Prunes, Raisins, Reporting and                        and Agreement Division, Specialty
     exempt-use filings from the tomato                      recordkeeping requirements, Walnuts.                  Crops Program, AMS, USDA;


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     24002              Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 100 / Thursday, May 25, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

     Telephone: (503) 326–2724, Fax: (503)                   the order is not in accordance with law                  Salable quantities and allotment
     326–7440, or Email: DaleJ.Novotny@                      and request a modification of the order               percentages are established at levels
     ams.usda.gov or GaryD.Olson@                            or to be exempted therefrom. A handler                intended to fulfill market requirements
     ams.usda.gov.                                           is afforded the opportunity for a hearing             and to maintain orderly marketing
        Small businesses may request                         on the petition. After the hearing, USDA              conditions. Committee
     information on complying with this                      would rule on the petition. The Act                   recommendations for volume regulation
     regulation by contacting Richard Lower,                 provides that the district court of the               are made well in advance of the period
     Marketing Order and Agreement                           United States in any district in which                in which the regulations are to be
     Division, Specialty Crops Program,                      the handler is an inhabitant, or has his              effective, thereby allowing producers
     AMS, USDA, 1400 Independence                            or her principal place of business, has               the chance to adjust their production
     Avenue SW., STOP 0237, Washington,                      jurisdiction to review USDA’s ruling on               decisions accordingly.
     DC 20250–0237; Telephone: (202) 720–                    the petition, provided an action is filed                Pursuant to authority in §§ 985.50,
     2491, Fax: (202) 720–8938, or Email:                    not later than 20 days after the date of              985.51, and 985.52 of the order, the full
     Richard.Lower@ams.usda.gov.                             the entry of the ruling.                              eight-member Committee met on
     SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This final                      The Far West Spearmint Oil                         October 19, 2016, and recommended
     rule is issued under Marketing Order                    Administrative Committee (Committee)                  salable quantities and allotment
     No. 985 (7 CFR part 985), as amended,                   meets annually in the fall to adopt a                 percentages for both classes of oil for the
     regulating the handling of spearmint oil                marketing policy for the ensuing                      2017–2018 marketing year. By a vote of
     produced in the Far West (Washington,                   marketing year or years. In determining               6–2, the Committee recommended the
     Idaho, Oregon, and designated parts of                  such marketing policy, the Committee                  establishment of a salable quantity and
     Nevada and Utah), hereinafter referred                  considers a number of factors,                        allotment percentage for Scotch
     to as the ‘‘order.’’ The order is effective             including, but not limited to, the current            spearmint oil of 774,645 pounds and 36
     under the Agricultural Marketing                        and projected supply, estimated future                percent, respectively. The two
     Agreement Act of 1937, as amended (7                    demand, production costs, and producer                Committee members that voted in
     U.S.C. 601–674), hereinafter referred to                prices for all classes of spearmint oil.              opposition to the recommendation both
     as the ‘‘Act.’’                                         Input from spearmint oil handlers and                 supported volume regulation, but at
        The Department of Agriculture                        producers regarding prospective                       higher levels than were proposed. They
     (USDA) is issuing this final rule in                    marketing conditions for the upcoming                 felt that a nearly 20 percent year-over-
     conformance with Executive Orders                       year is considered as well.                           year reduction in the salable quantity
     12866, 13771, 13563, and 13175. This                       If the Committee’s marketing policy                and allotment percentage for Scotch
     rule does not meet the definition of a                  considerations indicate a need for                    spearmint oil was too severe.
     significant regulatory action contained                 regulating the quantity of any or all                    For Native spearmint oil, with a
     in section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866,               classes of spearmint oil marketed, the                unanimous vote (7–0, with the public
     and is not subject to review by the                     Committee subsequently recommends to                  member abstaining), the Committee
     Office of Management and Budget                         USDA the establishment of a salable                   recommended the establishment of a
     (OMB). Additionally, because this rule                  quantity and allotment percentage for                 salable quantity and allotment
     does not meet the definition of a                       such class or classes of oil in the                   percentage of 1,075,051 pounds and 44
     significant regulatory action it does not               forthcoming marketing year.                           percent, respectively. Pursuant to
     trigger the requirements contained in                   Recommendations for volume                            § 985.29(a), seven members of the
     Executive Order 13771. See OMB’s                        regulation are intended to ensure that                Committee constitute a quorum and six
     Memorandum titled ‘‘Interim Guidance                    market requirements for Far West                      concurring votes are required to pass a
     Implementing Section 2 of the Executive                 spearmint oil are satisfied and orderly               motion.
     Order of January 30, 2017 titled                        marketing conditions are maintained.                     This final rule establishes the amount
     ‘Reducing Regulation and Controlling                       The salable quantity represents the                of Scotch and Native spearmint oil that
     Regulatory Costs’ ’’ (February 2, 2017).                total amount of each class of spearmint               handlers may purchase from, or handle
        This final rule has been reviewed                    oil that handlers may purchase from, or               on behalf of, producers during the
     under Executive Order 12988, Civil                      handle on behalf of, producers during                 2017–2018 marketing year, which
     Justice Reform. This final rule is not                  the marketing year. The allotment                     begins on June 1, 2017. Salable
     intended to have retroactive effect.                    percentage is the percentage used to                  quantities and allotment percentages
     Under the order now in effect, salable                  calculate each producer’s prorated share              have been placed into effect each season
     quantities and allotment percentages                    of the salable quantity. It is derived by             since the order’s inception in 1980.
     may be established for classes of                       dividing the salable quantity for each
                                                                                                                   Class 1 (Scotch) Spearmint Oil
     spearmint oil produced in the Far West.                 class of spearmint oil by the total of all
     This final rule will establish the                      producers’ allotment bases for the same                 As noted above, the Committee
     quantity of spearmint oil produced in                   class of oil. Each producer’s annual                  recommended a salable quantity of
     the Far West, by class, which handlers                  allotment of salable spearmint oil is                 Scotch spearmint oil of 774,645 pounds
     may purchase from, or handle on behalf                  calculated by multiplying their                       and an allotment percentage of 36
     of, producers during the 2017–2018                      respective total allotment base by the                percent for the upcoming 2017–2018
     marketing year, which begins on June 1,                 allotment percentage for each class of                marketing year. To arrive at these
     2017.                                                   spearmint oil. A producer’s allotment                 recommendations, the Committee
        The Act provides that administrative                 base is their quantified share of the                 utilized 2017–2018 sales estimates for
     proceedings must be exhausted before                    spearmint oil market based on a                       Scotch spearmint oil, as provided by
     parties may file suit in court. Under                   statistical representation of past                    several of the industry handlers,
     section 608c(15)(A) of the Act, any                     spearmint oil production, with                        historical and current Scotch spearmint
     handler subject to an order may file                    accommodation for reasonable, normal                  oil production, inventory statistics, and
     with USDA a petition stating that the                   adjustments to such base as prescribed                international market data obtained from
     order, any provision of the order, or any               by the Committee and approved by                      consultants for the spearmint oil
     obligation imposed in connection with                   USDA.                                                 industry.


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                        Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 100 / Thursday, May 25, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                       24003

        The trade demand estimate for Far                    salable carry-in will decrease to 24,152              previous year. Even so, the Committee
     West Scotch spearmint oil was revised                   pounds at the beginning of the 2018–                  expects that the market will be fully
     during the 2016–2017 marketing year                     2019 marketing year, if current market                supplied for the 2017–2018 marketing
     from an initial estimate of 900,000                     conditions and projections are                        year.
     pounds to the current estimate of                       maintained.                                              The Committee believes that the
     950,000 pounds. Trade demand is                            This anticipated level of carry-in                 recommended salable quantity will
     expected to decrease from the 950,000                   (24,152 pounds) would be below the                    adequately meet demand, as well as
     pounds anticipated in the 2016–2017                     quantity that the Committee considers                 result in a reasonable carry-in for the
     marketing year to 925,000 pounds in the                 favorable (generally 150,000 pounds).                 following year. The Committee
     2017–2018 marketing year. Industry                      However, the Committee believes that                  developed its recommendation for the
     reports indicate that the decreased trade               this lower salable carry-in is manageable             Scotch spearmint oil salable quantity
     demand estimate is the result of                        given the strong production of                        and allotment percentage for the 2017–
     decreased consumer demand for                           spearmint in the current marketing year               2018 marketing year based on the
     spearmint-flavored products, especially                 and the quantity of Scotch spearmint oil              information discussed above, as well as
     chewing gum in China and India, as                      held in the reserve pool that could be                the computational data outlined below.
     fruit flavors are becoming preferential to              released into the market if the industry                 (A) Estimated carry-in of Scotch
     consumers. In addition, better than                     experiences an unexpected increase in                 spearmint oil on June 1, 2017: 174,507
     expected production of spearmint oil in                 demand.                                               pounds. This figure is the difference
     competing markets, most notably                            The Committee reported that there                  between the revised 2016–2017
     Canada and the U.S. Midwest, have also                  was 15,937 pounds of Scotch spearmint                 marketing year total available supply of
     factored into the Committee’s                           oil held in the reserve pool as of May                1,124,507 pounds and the revised 2016–
     assessment of the market.                               31, 2016. The Committee expects the                   2017 marketing year estimated trade
        Production of Far West Scotch                        reserve pool to increase to 204,691                   demand of 950,000 pounds.
     spearmint oil declined from 1,229,258                   pounds by May 31, 2017. This quantity                    (B) Estimated trade demand of Scotch
     pounds in 2015 to an estimated                          of reserve oil should be an adequate                  spearmint oil for the 2017–2018
     1,113,346 pounds in 2016. Production                    buffer to supply the market if necessary.             marketing year: 925,000 pounds. This
     over the last three seasons has exceeded                   The Committee estimates the total                  figure was established at the Committee
     sales, leading to a gradual build in the                available supply of Scotch oil for the                meeting held on October 19, 2016. The
     salable carry-in of Scotch spearmint oil.               2017–2018 marketing year to be 949,152                average estimated trade demand derived
     Scotch spearmint oil held in the reserve                pounds (174,507 pounds of estimated                   from six production area producer
     pool, which was completely depleted at                  carry-in plus 774,645 pounds of                       meetings held prior to the main meeting
     the beginning of the 2014–2015                          recommended salable quantity). The                    on October 19, 2016, was 960,400,
     marketing year, has also been gradually                 2017–2018 Scotch spearmint oil salable                which is 8,000 pounds more than the
     increasing over the past three years.                   quantity of 774,645 pounds                            average of trade demand estimates
        Carry-in represents the amount of                    recommended by the Committee                          submitted by handlers (952,400
     salable spearmint oil produced, but not                 represents a decrease of 184,066 pounds               pounds). Far West Scotch spearmint oil
     marketed, in a previous year or years                   from the salable quantity established the             sales have averaged 1,021,786 pounds
     that is available for sale in the current               previous marketing year (958,711                      per year over the last three years, and
     year under a previous year’s annual                     pounds).                                              987,639 pounds over the last five years.
     allotment. Under volume regulation,                        The Committee estimates the 2017–                  Given the anticipated market conditions
     spearmint oil that is designated as                     2018 marketing year trade demand for                  for the coming year, the Committee
     salable continues to be available to the                Scotch spearmint oil at 925,000 pounds.               decided it was prudent to anticipate the
     market until it is sold and may be                      As stated previously, the Committee                   lower trade demand at 925,000 pounds.
     marketed at any time at the discretion                  expects that there will be 174,507                    Should the initially established volume
     of the owner. Spearmint oil held in                     pounds of available carry-in of Scotch                regulation levels prove insufficient to
     reserve, however, is spearmint oil that                 spearmint oil on June 1, 2017. That                   adequately supply the market, the
     has been produced in excess of a                        carry-in, when combined with the                      Committee has the authority to
     producer’s marketing year allotment                     recommended 2017–2018 marketing                       recommend intra-seasonal increases, as
     that can only be released into the market               year salable quantity of 774,645 pounds,              were undertaken in the 2014–2015
     under certain circumstances.                            will result in a total supply of 949,152              marketing year, and several other
        Salable carry-in is the primary                      pounds of Scotch spearmint oil for the                previous marketing years.
     measure of excess spearmint oil supply                  2017–2018 marketing year. This                           (C) Salable quantity of Scotch
     under the order as it represents                        quantity of Scotch spearmint oil is                   spearmint oil required from the 2017–
     overproduction in prior years that is                   expected to fully satisfy estimated                   2018 marketing year production:
     currently available to the market                       market demand of 925,000 pounds and                   750,493 pounds. This figure is the
     without restriction. Spearmint oil held                 is estimated to leave 24,152 pounds as                difference between the estimated 2017–
     in the reserve pool is a lesser indicator               carry-out from the 2017–2018 marketing                2018 marketing year trade demand
     of excess supply, as it is spearmint oil                year to be used as carry-in for the 2018–             (925,000 pounds) and the estimated
     that is not available to the market in the              2019 marketing year.                                  carry-in on June 1, 2017 (174,507
     current marketing year without an                          The Committee’s stated intent in the               pounds). This salable quantity
     increase in the salable quantity and                    use of marketing order volume                         represents the minimum amount of
     allotment percentage.                                   regulation provisions for Scotch                      Scotch spearmint oil that may be
        The Committee estimates that there                   spearmint oil is to keep adequate                     needed to satisfy estimated demand for
     will be 174,507 pounds of salable carry-                supplies available to meet market needs               the coming year.
     in of Scotch spearmint oil on June 1,                   and maintain orderly marketing                           (D) Total estimated allotment base of
     2017. If correct, this figure would be up               conditions. The recommended salable                   Scotch spearmint oil for the 2017–2018
     8,739 pounds from the 165,768 pounds                    quantity of Scotch spearmint oil for the              marketing year: 2,151,792 pounds. This
     carried in the previous year on June 1,                 upcoming marketing year is less than                  figure represents a one-percent increase
     2016. The Committee estimates that                      the salable quantity established for the              over the 2016–2017 total allotment base


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     24004              Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 100 / Thursday, May 25, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

     of 2,130,487 pounds as prescribed by                    June 1, 2017. This figure, which is the               Native spearmint oil industry’s
     the order under § 985.53(d)(1). The one-                excess Native spearmint oil production                domestic market share in the future.
     percent increase equals 21,305 pounds                   held in reserve by producers, is 499,305                 One of the factors considered by the
     of Scotch spearmint oil. This total                     pounds higher than the reserve pool                   Committee when it estimated trade
     estimated allotment base is generally                   held by producers on June 1, 2016. This               demand was that sales of mint products,
     revised each year on June 1 due to                      would be the highest reserve pool level               both domestically and abroad, have
     producer base being lost because of the                 since 2004. Reserve pool levels of                    slowed down. This is largely the result
     bona fide effort production provisions of               Native spearmint oil had been slowly                  of slowing economies in Europe and
     § 985.53(e). The adjustment is usually                  moving toward the level that the                      Asia. In addition, demand is expected to
     minimal.                                                Committee believes is optimal for the                 be impacted by the purchasing patterns
        (E) Computed Scotch spearmint oil                    industry prior to the increases                       of end users. Over the last several years,
     allotment percentage for the 2017–2018                  experienced in 2015 and 2016. The large               end users may have been building
     marketing year: 34.9 percent. This                      year over year increase in Native                     reserve stocks of Far West oil when
     percentage is computed by dividing the                  spearmint oil held in reserve (84                     prices were low as a hedge against
     minimum required salable quantity                       percent) is the result of substantially               future price increases. End users of
     (750,493 pounds) by the total estimated                 increased production and only                         spearmint oil are expected to continue
     allotment base (2,151,792 pounds).                      moderately increased industry trade                   to rely on Far West production as their
        (F) Recommended Scotch spearmint                     demand.                                               main source of high quality Native
     oil allotment percentage for the 2017–                     Far West Native spearmint oil                      spearmint oil, but demand may be at
     2018 marketing year: 36 percent. This is                production was estimated at 1,510,936                 lower quantities moving forward in
     the Committee’s recommendation and is                   pounds in 2015, compared to 1,694,684                 response to the current market factors.
     based on the computed allotment                         pounds estimated for 2016. Although                   However, Committee members remain
     percentage (34.9 percent), and input                    total estimated acres of Native                       optimistic that demand will rise again
     from producers and handlers at the                      spearmint production decreased by 164                 in the long term.
     October 19, 2016, meeting. The                                                                                   As such, spearmint oil handlers, who
                                                             acres, yield per acre has risen from
     recommended 36 percent allotment                                                                              regularly help predict trade demand for
                                                             145.8 in 2015 to 166.2 pounds per acre
     percentage reflects the Committee’s                                                                           Far West Native spearmint oil, estimate
                                                             this year. Conversely, sales of Native
     belief that the computed percentage                                                                           demand to range between 1,300,000 and
                                                             spearmint oil, which were increasing at
     (34.9 percent) may not adequately                                                                             1,400,000 pounds (with an average of
                                                             about a 4 percent rate from 2009 to
     supply the potential 2017–2018 Scotch                                                                         1,320,000 pounds) for the 2017–2018
                                                             2014, dropped by 12 percent for the
     spearmint oil market demand.                                                                                  marketing year. This estimate is the
                                                             2015–2016 marketing year.
        (G) Recommended Scotch spearmint                                                                           same as the estimate for the previous
     oil salable quantity for the 2017–2018                     Despite Committee statistics that                  marketing year. The Committee used the
     marketing year: 774,645 pounds. This                    indicate a sharp drop for Far West                    handlers’ input when it estimated the
     figure is the product of the                            Native spearmint oil sales from the                   2017–2018 marketing year Native
     recommended salable allotment                           previous marketing year (2015–2016),                  spearmint oil trade demand to be
     percentage (36 percent) and the total                   monthly sales, to date, for the 2016–                 1,250,000 pounds. This figure is 25,000
     estimated allotment base (2,151,792                     2017 marketing year have been                         pounds less than the figure used in the
     pounds) for the 2017–2018 marketing                     moderately stronger. The Committee                    previous marketing year and
     year.                                                   expects this trend to continue, even as               approximately 75,000 pounds below the
        (H) Estimated total available supply                 imports of spearmint oil are also rising.             3-year average sales figure (1,324,560
     of Scotch spearmint oil for the 2017–                   Canada more than doubled its                          pounds).
     2018 marketing year: 949,152 pounds.                    shipments of spearmint oil into the U.S.                 The estimated carry-in of 189,820
     This figure is the sum of the 2017–2018                 market from 2014 to 2015, and Chinese                 pounds of Native spearmint oil on June
     recommended salable quantity (774,645                   shipments are up 14 percent over the                  1, 2017, in conjunction with the
     pounds) and the estimated carry-in on                   same period. While it is a common                     Committee recommended salable
     June 1, 2017 (174,507 pounds).                          practice for buyers to mix U.S. and                   quantity of 1,075,051 pounds, results in
                                                             foreign-produced oils to create a final               an estimated total available supply of
     Class 3 (Native) Spearmint Oil                          product with a certain flavor profile, the            1,264,871 pounds of Native spearmint
        The Committee also recommended a                     greatest percentage of oil in those blends            oil during the 2017–2018 marketing
     2017–2018 Native spearmint oil salable                  continues to be from the Far West. The                year. With estimated trade demand of
     quantity of 1,075,051 pounds and an                     Committee and the industry expect that                1,250,000 pounds for the 2017–2018
     allotment percentage of 44 percent at                   practice to continue into the future.                 marketing year, the Committee projects
     the October 19, 2016, meeting. These                       One exception to the rising trend in               that 14,871 pounds of Native spearmint
     figures represent a decrease of 134,495                 spearmint oil imports, India has                      oil will be carried into the 2018–2019
     pounds and 6 percent, respectively,                     reduced shipments over the last two                   marketing year, a reduction of 174,909
     from the salable quantity and allotment                 years. Recent reports used by the                     pounds from the estimated 2017–2018
     percentage established for the previous                 Committee indicate that spearmint oil                 marketing year carry-in. The Committee
     marketing year. To formulate this                       produced in India is improving in                     estimates that there will be 1,094,659
     recommendation, the Committee                           quality, yet decreasing in acreage.                   pounds of Native spearmint oil held in
     utilized Native spearmint oil sales                     Indian spearmint oil is increasingly                  the reserve pool at the beginning of the
     estimates for the 2017–2018 marketing                   regarded as an alternative to high                    2017–2018 marketing year. Should the
     year, as provided by several of the                     quality, Far West Native spearmint oil,               industry experience an unexpected
     industry’s handlers, as well as historical              but production problems have limited                  increase in trade demand during the
     and current Native spearmint oil market                 its importation into the U.S. market. As              2017–2018 marketing year, Native
     statistics.                                             a result, imports from India, while still             spearmint oil in the reserve pool could
        The Committee estimates that there                   in demand, decreased in the past year.                be released to satisfy that demand.
     will be 1,094,659 pounds of Native                      However, spearmint oil from India may                    The Committee’s stated intent in the
     spearmint oil in the reserve pool on                    return as a major threat to the Far West              use of marketing order volume


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                        Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 100 / Thursday, May 25, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                         24005

     regulation provisions for Native                        percent increase equals 24,191 pounds                 avoiding extreme fluctuations in
     spearmint oil is to keep adequate                       of Native spearmint oil. This estimate is             inventories and prices.
     supplies available to meet market needs                 generally revised each year on June 1                    The salable quantities established by
     while maintaining orderly marketing                     due to producer base being lost because               this final rule are not expected to cause
     conditions. With that in mind, the                      of the bona fide effort production                    a shortage of spearmint oil supplies.
     Committee developed its                                 provisions of § 985.53(e). The revision is            Any unanticipated or additional market
     recommendation for the Native                           usually minimal.                                      demand for spearmint oil which may
     spearmint oil salable quantity and                         (E) Computed Native spearmint oil                  develop during the marketing year
     allotment percentage for the 2017–2018                  allotment percentage for the 2017–2018                could be satisfied by an intra-seasonal
     marketing year based on the information                 marketing year: 43.4 percent. This                    increase in the salable quantity. The
     discussed above, as well as the data                    percentage is calculated by dividing the              order contains a provision in § 985.51
     outlined below.                                         required salable quantity (1,060,180                  for intra-seasonal increases to allow the
        (A) Estimated carry-in of Native                     pounds) by the total estimated allotment              Committee the flexibility to respond
     spearmint oil on June 1, 2017: 189,820                  base (2,443,297 pounds) for the 2017–                 quickly to changing market conditions.
     pounds. This figure is the difference                   2018 marketing year.                                     Under volume regulation, producers
     between the revised 2016–2017                              (F) Recommended Native spearmint                   who produce more than their annual
     marketing year total available supply of                oil allotment percentage for the 2017–                allotments during the marketing year
     1,430,820 pounds and the revised 2016–                  2018 marketing year: 44 percent. This is              may transfer such excess spearmint oil
     2017 marketing year estimated trade                     the Committee’s recommendation based                  to producers who have produced less
     demand of 1,241,000 pounds.                             on the computed allotment percentage                  than their annual allotment. In addition,
        (B) Estimated trade demand of Native                 (43.4 percent), the average of the                    on December 1 of each year, producers
     spearmint oil for the 2017–2018                         computed allotment percentage figures                 that have not transferred their excess
     marketing year: 1,250,000 pounds. This                  from the six production area meetings                 spearmint oil to other producers must
     estimate was established by the                                                                               place their excess spearmint oil
                                                             (46.7 percent), and input from
     Committee and is based on input from                                                                          production into the reserve pool to be
                                                             producers and handlers at the October
     producers at six Native spearmint oil                                                                         released in the future in accordance
                                                             19, 2016, meeting. The recommended 44
     production area meetings held in mid-                                                                         with market needs and under the
                                                             percent allotment percentage is also
     October 2016, as well as estimates                                                                            Committee’s direction.
                                                             based on the Committee’s belief that the                 This regulation is similar to
     provided by handlers and other meeting
                                                             computed percentage (43.4 percent) may                regulations issued in prior seasons. The
     participants at the October 19, 2016,
                                                             not adequately supply the potential                   average initial allotment percentage for
     main meeting. This figure represents a
                                                             market for Native spearmint oil in the                the five most recent marketing years for
     decrease of 25,000 pounds from the
                                                             2017–2018 marketing year.                             both Scotch and Native spearmint oil is
     previous year’s estimate. The average
     estimated trade demand for Native                          (G) Recommended Native spearmint                   52.6 percent.
     spearmint oil from the six production                   oil 2017–2018 marketing year salable                     In conjunction with the issuance of
     area grower’s meetings was 1,287,500                    quantity: 1,075,051 pounds. This figure               this final rule, USDA has reviewed the
     pounds, whereas the handlers’ estimates                 is the product of the recommended                     Committee’s marketing policy statement
     ranged from 1,300,000 to 1,400,000                      allotment percentage (44 percent) and                 for the 2017–2018 marketing year. The
     pounds. The average of Far West Native                  the total estimated allotment base                    Committee’s marketing policy
     spearmint oil sales over the last three                 (2,443,297 pounds).                                   statement, a requirement whenever the
     years is 1,324,560 pounds. However, the                    (H) Estimated available supply of                  Committee recommends volume
     quantity marketed over the most recent                  Native spearmint oil for the 2017–2018                regulation, fully meets the intent of
     full marketing year, 2015–2016, was                     marketing year: 1,264,871 pounds. This                § 985.51(b) of the order.
     1,241,140 pounds. The Committee chose                   figure is the sum of the 2017–2018                       During its discussion of potential
     to be conservative in the establishment                 recommended salable quantity                          2017–2018 salable quantities and
     of its trade demand estimate for the                    (1,075,051 pounds) and the estimated                  allotment percentages, the Committee
     2017–2018 marketing year to avoid                       carry-in on June 1, 2017 (189,820                     considered: (1) The estimated quantity
     oversupplying the market in the face of                 pounds).                                              of salable oil of each class held by
     increasing production.                                     Under volume regulation, the salable               producers and handlers; (2) the
        (C) Salable quantity of Native                       quantity is the total quantity of each                estimated demand for each class of oil;
     spearmint oil required from the 2017–                   class of spearmint oil that handlers may              (3) the prospective production of each
     2018 marketing year production:                         purchase from, or handle on behalf of,                class of oil; (4) the total of allotment
     1,060,180 pounds. This figure is the                    producers during a marketing year. Each               bases of each class of oil for the current
     difference between the estimated 2017–                  producer is allotted a share of the                   marketing year and the estimated total
     2018 marketing year estimated trade                     salable quantity by applying the                      of allotment bases of each class for the
     demand (1,250,000 pounds) and the                       allotment percentage to the producer’s                ensuing marketing year; (5) the quantity
     estimated carry-in on June 1, 2017                      allotment base for the applicable class of            of reserve oil, by class, in storage; (6)
     (189,820 pounds). This is the minimum                   spearmint oil.                                        producer prices of oil, including prices
     amount of Native spearmint oil that the                    The Committee’s recommended                        for each class of oil; and (7) general
     Committee believes will be required to                  Scotch and Native spearmint oil salable               market conditions for each class of oil,
     meet the anticipated 2017–2018                          quantities and allotment percentages of               including whether the estimated season
     marketing year trade demand.                            774,645 pounds and 36 percent, and                    average price to producers is likely to
        (D) Total estimated allotment base of                1,075,051 pounds and 44 percent,                      exceed parity. Conformity with USDA’s
     Native spearmint oil for the 2017–2018                  respectively, are based on the goal of                ‘‘Guidelines for Fruit, Vegetable, and
     marketing year: 2,443,297 pounds. This                  maintaining market stability. The                     Specialty Crop Marketing Orders’’
     figure represents a one-percent increase                Committee anticipates that this goal will             (http://www.ams.usda.gov/publications/
     over the 2016–2017 total allotment base                 be achieved by matching the available                 content/1982-guidelines-fruit-vegetable-
     of 2,419,106 pounds as prescribed by                    supply of each class of spearmint oil to              marketing-orders) has also been
     the order in § 985.53(d)(1). The one-                   the estimated demand of each, thus                    reviewed and confirmed.


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     24006              Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 100 / Thursday, May 25, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

        The establishment of these salable                   recommended this rule to help maintain                   Instability in the spearmint oil sub-
     quantities and allotment percentages                    stability in the spearmint oil market by              sector of the mint industry is much
     allows for anticipated market needs. In                 matching supply to estimated demand,                  more likely to originate on the supply
     determining anticipated market needs,                   thereby avoiding extreme fluctuations in              side than the demand side. Fluctuations
     the Committee considered historical                     supplies and prices. Establishing                     in yield and acreage planted from
     sales, as well as changes and trends in                 quantities that may be purchased or                   season to season tend to be larger than
     production and demand. This rule also                   handled during the marketing year                     fluctuations in the amount purchased by
     provides producers with information on                  through volume regulations allows                     handlers. Historically, demand for
     the amount of spearmint oil that should                 producers to coordinate their spearmint               spearmint oil tends to change slowly
     be produced for the 2017 production                     oil production with the expected market               from year to year.
     season in order to meet anticipated                     demand. Authority for this action is                     Demand for spearmint oil at the farm
     market demand.                                          provided in §§ 985.50, 985.51, and                    level is derived from retail demand for
                                                             985.52 of the order.                                  spearmint-flavored products such as
     Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis                      The Far West spearmint oil industry                chewing gum, toothpaste, and
        Pursuant to requirements set forth in                is characterized by producers whose                   mouthwash. The manufacturers of these
     the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (5                 farming operations generally involve                  products are by far the largest users of
     U.S.C. 601–612), the Agricultural                       more than one commodity, and whose                    spearmint oil. However, spearmint
     Marketing Service (AMS) has                             income from farming operations is not                 flavoring is generally a very minor
     considered the economic impact of this                  exclusively dependent on the                          component of the products in which it
     action on small entities. Accordingly,                  production of spearmint oil. A typical                is used, so changes in the raw product
     AMS has prepared this final regulatory                  spearmint oil producing operation has                 price have little impact on the retail
     flexibility analysis.                                   enough acreage for rotation such that                 prices for those goods.
        The purpose of the RFA is to fit                     the total acreage required to produce the                In 2013, 2014, and 2015, the
     regulatory actions to the scale of                      crop is about one-third spearmint and                 Committee set salable percentages at
     businesses subject to such actions in                   two-thirds rotational crops. Thus, the                levels that resulted in most, if not all, of
     order that small businesses will not be                 typical spearmint oil producer has to                 the spearmint oil production being
     unduly or disproportionately burdened.                  have considerably more acreage than is                made available to the market. This was
     Marketing orders issued pursuant to the                 planted to spearmint during any given                 in response to the increased demand for
     Act, and the rules issued thereunder, are               season. Crop rotation is an essential                 spearmint oil from the Far West due to
     unique in that they are brought about                   cultural practice in the production of                increased utilization by end users and
     through group action of essentially                     spearmint oil for purposes of weed,                   the reduced supply of spearmint oil
     small entities acting on their own                      insect, and disease control. To remain                coming from other production areas,
     behalf.                                                 economically viable with the added                    both domestic and foreign.
        There are eight spearmint oil handlers               costs associated with spearmint oil                      Although there is still strong demand
     subject to regulation under the order,                  production, a majority of spearmint oil               for spearmint oil, competing areas
     approximately 41 producers of Scotch                    producing farms fall into the SBA                     (mainly Canada) have experienced
     spearmint oil, and approximately 94                     category of large businesses.                         better than expected production in 2015
     producers of Native spearmint oil in the                   Small spearmint oil producers                      and 2016, and will create some
     regulated production area. Small                        generally are not as extensively                      marketing pressure for spearmint oil
     agricultural service firms are defined by               diversified as larger ones and, as such,              from the Far West. In addition, the
     the Small Business Administration                       are more at risk from market                          slowing of international markets for
     (SBA) as those having annual receipts of                fluctuations. Such small producers                    spearmint-flavored products has
     less than $7,500,000, and small                         generally need to market their entire                 negatively impacted the demand for
     agricultural producers are defined as                   annual production of spearmint oil and                domestically produced spearmint oil.
     those having annual receipts of less than               are not financially able to hold                      Thus, the lower salable quantities and
     $750,000 (13 CFR 121.201).                              spearmint oil for sale in future years. In            allotment percentages recommended by
        Based on the SBA’s definition of                     addition, small producers generally do                the Committee for the 2017–2018
     small entities, the Committee estimates                 not have a large assortment of other                  marketing year are intended to be
     that two of the eight handlers regulated                crops to cushion seasons with poor                    responsive to the changing environment
     by the order could be considered small                  spearmint oil returns.                                of the spearmint oil market.
     entities. Most of the handlers are large                   Conversely, large diversified                         In the late 1990s, the Committee
     corporations involved in the                            producers have the potential to endure                recommended higher than normal
     international trading of essential oils                 one or more seasons of poor spearmint                 salable quantities and allotment
     and the products of essential oils. In                  oil markets because income from                       percentages in hopes of gaining market
     addition, the Committee estimates that                  alternate crops could support their                   share. This approach did not work. In
     12 of the 41 Scotch spearmint oil                       operation for a period of time.                       the following years, the salable
     producers, and 31 of the 94 Native                      Reasonable assurance of a stable price                quantities and allotment percentages
     spearmint oil producers could be                        and market provides all producing                     were established at lower levels in order
     classified as small entities under the                  entities with the ability to maintain                 to reduce the excess spearmint oil
     SBA definition. Thus, a majority of                     proper cash flow and to meet annual                   production and resulting build-up of
     handlers and producers of Far West                      expenses.                                             inventory. In order to avoid a similar
     spearmint oil may not be classified as                     Costs to producers and handlers, large             scenario moving forward, the
     small entities.                                         and small, resulting from this rule are               Committee, relying heavily on the
        This final rule establishes the quantity             expected to be offset by the benefits                 information provided to them by
     of spearmint oil produced in the Far                    derived from a more stable market and                 spearmint oil handlers during the
     West, by class, which handlers may                      increased returns. The benefits of this               October 19, 2016, meeting, ultimately
     purchase from, or handle on behalf of,                  rule are expected to be equally available             recommended reducing the 2017–2018
     producers during the 2017–2018                          to all producers and handlers regardless              marketing year salable quantities and
     marketing year. The Committee                           of their size.                                        allotment percentages from the previous


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                        Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 100 / Thursday, May 25, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                          24007

     year to better align the available supply               decade prior to the promulgation of the               class that the producer can market
     with market demand.                                     order (1970–79) and 0.49 for the prior                under the order.
        The Committee reported that recent                   20-year period (1960–79). The                            By December 1 of each year, the
     producer prices for spearmint oil are                   coefficient of variation, as presented                Committee identifies any oil that
     $16.50 to $18.00 per pound. Average                     herein, was calculated by USDA from                   individual producers have produced
     producer prices for all types of                        information provided by the Committee                 above the volume specified on annual
     spearmint oil for the production years                  and NASS. This analysis provides an                   allotment certificates. Prior to December
     2013–2015 at $18.79, $19.21, and $18.32                 indication of the price stabilizing                   1, such excess oil can be transferred to
     per pound, respectively. These are                      impact of the marketing order as higher               another producer to fill a deficiency in
     computed price averages for                             CV values correspond to greater                       that producer’s annual allotment as
     Washington, Oregon, and Idaho                           variability.                                          provided for in § 985.156(a).
     combined, based on USDA’s National                        According to information compiled by                   The order allows limited quantities of
     Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS)                  the Committee, the lowest level of                    excess oil to be sold by one producer to
     data.                                                   production in a marketing year since the              another producer to fill production
        Spearmint oil production tends to be                 establishment of the order was about 47               deficiencies during a marketing year. A
     cyclical. Prior to the inception of the                 percent of the 36-year average (1.96                  deficiency occurs when on-farm
     marketing order in 1980, extreme                        million pounds from 1980 through                      production is less than a producer’s
     variability in producer prices was                      2015) and the largest crop was                        annual allotment. When a producer has
     common. For example, the season                         approximately 157 percent of the 36-                  a deficiency, the producer may utilize
     average producer price for Washington                   year average. A key consequence is that,              their own reserve pool oil to fill that
     Native spearmint oil in 1971 was $3.00                  in years of oversupply and low prices,                deficiency, or excess production
     per pound. By 1975, the producer price                  the season average producer price of                  (production of spearmint oil in excess of
     had risen to $11.00 per pound, an                       spearmint oil is below the average cost               the producer’s annual allotment) from
     increase of over 260 percent in just four               of production (as measured by the                     another producer may also be secured to
     years. Such fluctuations were not                       Washington State University                           fill the deficiency. As mentioned
     unusual in the spearmint oil industry in                Cooperative Extension Service).                       previously, all of these provisions need
     the years leading up to the promulgation
                                                               The wide fluctuations in supply and                 to be exercised prior to December 1 of
     of the order. For most producers, this
                                                             prices that result from the cyclical                  each year.
     was an untenable situation. Years of
                                                             nature of the spearmint oil industry,                    Excess spearmint oil not transferred to
     relatively high spearmint oil
                                                             which were even more pronounced                       another producer to fill a deficiency is
     production, with demand remaining
                                                             before the creation of the order, can                 held in storage and, on December 1, is
     relatively stable, led to periods in which
     large producer stocks of unsold                         create liquidity problems for some                    added to the reserve pool administered
     spearmint oil depressed producer                        producers. The order was designed to                  by the Committee pursuant to § 985.157.
     prices. Shortages and high prices                       reduce the price impacts of the cyclical              The Committee maintains the reserve
     followed in subsequent years, as                        swings in production. However,                        pool for each class of spearmint oil.
     producers responded to price signals by                 producers have been less able to                      Once spearmint oil is placed in the
     cutting back production.                                weather these cycles in recent years                  reserve pool, such spearmint oil cannot
        After establishment of the order, the                because of increases to production costs.             enter the market during that marketing
     supply and price variability in the                     While prices for spearmint oil have been              year unless USDA approves a
     spearmint oil market moderated. During                  relatively steady, the cost of production             Committee recommendation to increase
     the 25-year period from 1982 to 2006,                   has increased to the extent that plans to             the salable quantity and allotment
     the season average producer price for                   plant spearmint may be postponed or                   percentage for a certain class of oil,
     Native spearmint oil ranged from a high                 vacated indefinitely. Producers may also              subsequently making a portion of the
     of $11.10 to a low of $9.00 per pound,                  be enticed by the prices of alternative               reserve pool of that class of spearmint
     or a difference of 23 percent. No change                crops and their lower cost of                         oil available to the market. Without an
     in producer price from one year to the                  production.                                           increase in the salable quantity and
     next during this period was more than                     In an effort to stabilize prices, the               allotment percentage, spearmint oil
     $1.00 per pound. This is a remarkable                   spearmint oil industry uses the volume                placed in the reserve pool cannot be
     record of price stability. From 2006 to                 regulation mechanisms authorized                      removed from the reserve pool and
     2008, when production contracts tied to                 under the order. This authority allows                marketed in the marketing year in
     input costs were prevalent in the                       the Committee to recommend a salable                  which it is initially placed in the reserve
     industry, the annual average Native                     quantity and allotment percentage for                 pool. However, producers may dispose
     spearmint oil producer price jumped by                  each class of oil for the upcoming                    of reserve spearmint oil from their own
     $3.80 per pound. During this time                       marketing year. The salable quantity for              production, and held in their own
     period, prices for fuel, fertilizer, and                each class of oil is the total volume of              account, under certain provisions in
     labor increased dramatically, resulting                 spearmint oil produced in a marketing                 subsequent marketing years under the
     in higher contracted producer prices,                   year that producers may sell during that              supervision of the Committee.
     and a resulting concurrent increase in                  same marketing year. The allotment                       While the Committee administers the
     the overall season average producer                     percentage for each class of spearmint                reserve pool of spearmint oil, ownership
     price for the industry.                                 oil is derived by dividing the salable                and physical possession of spearmint oil
        The significant variability of the                   quantity by the total allotment base.                 held in reserve does not transfer to the
     spearmint oil market is illustrated by                    Each producer is then issued an                     Committee. The Committee accounts
     the fact that the coefficient of variation,             annual allotment certificate, in pounds,              for, and controls the release of, reserve
     or CV (a standard measure of                            for the applicable class of oil. This is              spearmint oil, but does not take title to,
     variability), of Far West spearmint oil                 calculated by multiplying the                         nor dispose of, any such oil of its own
     producer prices for the period 1980–                    producer’s allotment base by the                      accord or for its own benefit. Producers,
     2015 (when the marketing order was in                   applicable allotment percentage. This is              at their sole discretion, make the
     effect) is 0.24, compared to 0.36 for the               the amount of oil of each applicable                  decisions regarding the disposition of


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     24008              Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 100 / Thursday, May 25, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

     oil held in the reserve pool under any                     The Committee estimated trade                      rejected the idea of not regulating any
     one of three possible mechanisms.                       demand for the 2017–2018 marketing                    volume for both classes of spearmint oil
        Section 985.57(b) details the                        year for both classes of oil at 2,175,000             because of the severe price-depressing
     conditions under which a producer may                   pounds, and that the expected                         effects that would likely occur without
     dispose of their reserve pool spearmint                 combined salable carry-in will be                     volume regulation. The alternative to
     oil. First, producers may utilize reserve               364,327 pounds. This results in a                     establish salable quantities and
     oil from their own production to fill                   combined required salable quantity of                 allotment percentages at the 2016–2017
     intra-seasonal increases in the allotment               1,810,673 pounds (2,175,000 pounds of                 marketing year’s levels was discussed,
     percentage and salable quantity.                        total trade demand less 364,327 pounds                but not put to any motion, for both
     Second, producers may fill an ensuing                   of total carry-in) for the 2017–2018                  classes of oil. The Committee also
     year’s annual allotment from spearmint                  marketing year. Under volume                          discussed and considered salable
     oil held in the reserve pool. Lastly,                   regulation, total sales of spearmint oil              quantities and allotment percentages
     producers may exchange salable oil of                   by producers for the 2017–2018                        that were above and below the levels
     the same class and quantity of reserve                  marketing year will be held to 2,214,023              that were ultimately recommended for
     oil from their own production to rotate                 pounds (the recommended salable                       Scotch spearmint oil. Ultimately, the
     stock, so long as the Committee is                      quantity for both classes of spearmint                action taken by the Committee was to
     properly notified and the oil is properly               oil of 1,849,696 pounds plus 364,327                  decrease the salable quantities and
     identified.                                             pounds of carry-in). This total available             allotment percentages for both Class 1
        In any given year, the total available               supply of 2,214,023 pounds should be                  and Class 3 spearmint oil from the
     supply of spearmint oil is composed of                  more than adequate to supply the                      current 2016–2017 marketing year
     current production plus salable                         2,175,000 pounds of anticipated total                 levels.
     carryover stocks from the previous crop.                trade demand for spearmint oil. In                       As noted earlier, the Committee’s
     The Committee seeks to maintain                         addition, as of June 1, 2016, the total               recommendation to establish salable
     market stability by balancing supply                    reserve pool for both classes of                      quantities and allotment percentages for
     and demand, and to close the marketing                  spearmint oil stood at 611,291 pounds.                both classes of spearmint oil was made
     year with an appropriate level of salable               Furthermore, that quantity is expected                after careful consideration of all
     spearmint oil to carry over into the                    to rise over the course of the 2016–2017              available information including: (1) The
     subsequent marketing year. If the                       marketing year. Should trade demand                   estimated quantity of salable oil of each
     industry has production in excess of the                increase unexpectedly during the 2017–                class held by producers and handlers;
     salable quantity, the reserve pool                      2018 marketing year, reserve pool                     (2) the estimated demand for each class
     absorbs the surplus quantity of                         spearmint oil could be released into the              of oil; (3) the prospective production of
     spearmint oil, thereby withholding it                   market to supply that increase in                     each class of oil; (4) the total of
     from the market, unless such oil is                     demand.                                               allotment bases of each class of oil for
     needed to fill unanticipated intra-                        The recommended allotment                          the current marketing year and the
     seasonal increases in demand. In this                   percentages, upon which 2017–2018                     estimated total of allotment bases of
     way, excess spearmint oil is not allowed                producer allotments are based, are 36                 each class for the ensuing marketing
     to oversupply the market and create                     percent for Scotch spearmint oil and 44               year; (5) the quantity of reserve oil, by
     price instability. Likewise, if production              percent for Native spearmint oil.                     class, in storage; (6) producer prices of
     is insufficient in any given year to fully              Without volume regulation, producers                  oil, including prices for each class of oil;
     supply the market with spearmint oil,                   would not be held to these allotment                  and (7) general market conditions for
     the reserve pool oil can be released to                 levels, and could produce and sell an                 each class of oil, including whether the
     satisfy the market demand until                         unrestricted quantity of spearmint oil.               estimated season average price to
     production can be increased.                            The USDA econometric model                            producers is likely to exceed parity.
        Therefore, under its provisions, the                 estimated that the season average                        Based on its review, the Committee
     order may attempt to stabilize prices by                producer price per pound (from both                   believes that the salable quantities and
     (1) regulating supply and establishing                  classes of spearmint oil) would decline               allotment percentages recommended
     reserves in high production years, thus                 about $2.45 per pound as a result of the              will achieve the objectives sought. The
     minimizing the price-depressing effect                  higher quantities of spearmint oil that               Committee also believes that, should
     that excess producer stocks have on                     would be produced and marketed                        there be no volume regulation in effect
     unsold spearmint oil, and (2) ensuring                  without volume regulation. The surplus                for the upcoming marketing year, the
     that stocks are available in short supply               situation for the spearmint oil market                Far West spearmint oil industry would
     years when prices would otherwise                       that would exist without volume                       return to the pronounced cyclical price
     increase dramatically. Reserve pool                     regulation in 2017–2018 also would                    patterns that occurred prior to the
     stocks, which increase in high                          likely dampen prospects for improved                  promulgation of the order. As
     production years, are drawn down in                     producer prices in future years because               previously stated, annual salable
     years where the crop is short.                          of the buildup in stocks.                             quantities and allotment percentages
        An econometric model generated by                       The use of volume regulation allows                have been issued for both classes of
     USDA was used to assess the impact                      the industry to fully supply spearmint                spearmint oil since the order’s
     that volume regulation has on the prices                oil markets while avoiding the negative               inception. The salable quantities and
     producers receive for their commodity.                  consequences of over-supplying these                  allotment percentages established
     Without volume regulation, spearmint                    markets. The use of volume regulation                 herein are expected to facilitate the goal
     oil markets would likely be over-                       is believed to have little or no effect on            of maintaining orderly marketing
     supplied. This could result in low                      consumer prices of products containing                conditions for Far West spearmint oil
     producer prices and a large volume of                   spearmint oil and would not result in                 for the 2017–2018 and future marketing
     oil stored and carried over to the next                 fewer retail sales of such products.                  years.
     crop year. The model estimates how                         The Committee discussed alternatives                  In accordance with the Paperwork
     much lower producer prices would                        to the recommendations contained in                   Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
     likely be in the absence of volume                      this rule for both classes of spearmint               Chapter 35), the order’s information
     regulation.                                             oil. The Committee discussed and                      collection requirements have been


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                        Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 100 / Thursday, May 25, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                         24009

     previously approved by OMB and                          the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT                   DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
     assigned OMB No. 0581–0178,                             section.
     Vegetable and Specialty Crops. No                                                                             Federal Aviation Administration
                                                               After consideration of all relevant
     changes are necessary in those                          matter presented, including the
     requirements as a result of this action.                                                                      14 CFR Part 5
                                                             information and recommendations
     Should any changes become necessary,                                                                          [Docket No. FAA–2009–0671; Amdt. No. 5–
                                                             submitted by the Committee and other
     they would be submitted to OMB for                                                                            1A]
                                                             available information, it is hereby found
     approval.
                                                             that this rule, as hereinafter set forth,             RIN 2120–AJ86
        This final rule establishes the salable
     quantities and allotment percentages for                will tend to effectuate the declared
                                                             policy of the Act.                                    Safety Management System for
     Class 1 (Scotch) spearmint oil and Class                                                                      Domestic, Flag and Supplemental
     3 (Native) spearmint oil produced in the                  It is further found that good cause
                                                                                                                   Operations Certificate Holders;
     Far West during the 2017–2018                           exists for not postponing the effective
                                                                                                                   Technical Amendment
     marketing year. Accordingly, this action                date of this rule until 30 days after
     will not impose any additional reporting                publication in the Federal Register (5                AGENCY:  Federal Aviation
     or recordkeeping requirements on either                 U.S.C. 553) because the 2017–2018                     Administration, DOT.
     small or large spearmint oil producers                  marketing year starts on June 1, 2017,                ACTION: Final rule; technical
     or handlers. As with all Federal                        and handlers will need to begin                       amendment.
     marketing order programs, reports and                   purchasing the spearmint oil allotted
     forms are periodically reviewed to                                                                            SUMMARY:   This technical amendment
                                                             under this rulemaking. Further,
     reduce information requirements and                                                                           corrects an error in the final rule titled
                                                             handlers are aware of this rule, which
     duplication by industry and public                                                                            Safety Management System for
                                                             was recommended at a public meeting.
     sector agencies.                                                                                              Domestic, Flag and Supplemental
                                                             Finally, a 30-day comment period was                  Operations Certificate Holders,
        As noted in the initial regulatory                   provided for in the proposed rule, and
     flexibility analysis, USDA has not                                                                            published on January 8, 2015. In that
                                                             no comments were received.                            rule, the FAA amended its regulations
     identified any relevant Federal rules
     that duplicate, overlap, or conflict with               List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 985                    to require air carriers conducting
     this rule.                                                                                                    domestic, flag and supplemental
        AMS is committed to complying with                     Marketing agreements, Oils and fats,                operations to put a safety management
     the E-Government Act, to promote the                    Reporting and recordkeeping                           system (SMS) in place by 2018.
     use of the internet and other                           requirements, Spearmint oil.                          DATES: This rule is effective May 25,
     information technologies to provide                       For the reasons set forth in the                    2017.
     increased opportunities for citizen                     preamble, 7 CFR part 985 is amended as                FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
     access to Government information and                    follows:                                              Scott Van Buren, Chief System Engineer
     services, and for other purposes.                                                                             for Aviation Safety, Office of Accident
        In addition, the Committee’s meeting                 PART 985—MARKETING ORDER                              Investigation and Prevention (AVP),
     was widely publicized throughout the                    REGULATING THE HANDLING OF                            Federal Aviation Administration, 800
     spearmint oil industry and all interested               SPEARMINT OIL PRODUCED IN THE                         Independence Avenue SW.,
     persons were invited to attend the                      FAR WEST                                              Washington, DC 20591; telephone: (202)
     meeting and participate in Committee                                                                          494–8417; facsimile: (202) 267–3992;
     deliberations on all issues. Like all                   ■ 1. The authority citation for part 985              email: scott.vanburen@faa.gov.
     Committee meetings, the October 19,                     continues to read as follows:                         SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
     2016, meeting was a public meeting and
     all entities, both large and small, were                    Authority: 7 U.S.C. 601–674.                      Good Cause for Immediate Adoption
     able to express views on the issues                                                                           Without Prior Notice
                                                             ■ 2. Section 985.236 is added to read as
     presented.                                              follows:                                                 Section 553(b)(3)(B) of the
        A proposed rule concerning this                                                                            Administrative Procedure Act (APA) (5
     action was published in the Federal                     § 985.236 Salable quantities and allotment            U.S.C. 551 et seq.) authorizes agencies
     Register on March 31, 2017 (82 FR                       percentages—2017–2018 marketing year.                 to dispense with notice and comment
     16001). A copy of the rule was provided                                                                       procedures for rules when the agency
                                                                The salable quantity and allotment
     to Committee staff, who in turn made it                                                                       for ‘‘good cause’’ finds that those
     available to all Far West spearmint oil                 percentage for each class of spearmint
                                                                                                                   procedures are ‘‘impracticable,
     producers, handlers, and interested                     oil during the marketing year beginning
                                                                                                                   unnecessary, or contrary to the public
     persons. Finally, the rule was made                     on June 1, 2017, shall be as follows:
                                                                                                                   interest.’’ Under this section, an agency,
     available through the internet by USDA                     (a) Class 1 (Scotch) oil—a salable                 upon finding good cause, may issue a
     and the Office of the Federal Register. A               quantity of 774,645 pounds and an                     final rule without seeking comment
     30-day comment period ending May 1,                     allotment percentage of 36 percent.                   prior to the rulemaking.
     2017, was provided to allow interested                     (b) Class 3 (Native) oil—a salable                    Section 553(d)(3) of the
     persons to respond to the proposal. No                  quantity of 1,075,051 pounds and an                   Administrative Procedure Act requires
     comments were received.                                                                                       that agencies publish a rule not less
                                                             allotment percentage of 44 percent.
        A small business guide on complying                                                                        than 30 days before its effective date,
     with fruit, vegetable, and specialty crop                 Dated: May 19, 2017.                                except as otherwise provided by the
     marketing agreements and orders may                     Bruce Summers,                                        agency for good cause found and
     be viewed at: http://www.ams.usda.gov/                  Acting Administrator, Agricultural Marketing          published with the rule.
     rules-regulations/moa/small-businesses.                 Service.                                                 This technical amendment corrects an
     Any questions about the compliance                      [FR Doc. 2017–10679 Filed 5–24–17; 8:45 am]           erroneous cross-reference in § 5.71(a)(6).
     guide should be sent to Richard Lower                   BILLING CODE 3410–02–P
                                                                                                                   This correction will not impose any
     at the previously mentioned address in                                                                        additional restrictions on the persons


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Document Created: 2018-11-08 08:52:30
Document Modified: 2018-11-08 08:52:30
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionFinal rule.
DatesEffective May 26, 2017.
ContactDale Novotny, Marketing Specialist, or Gary Olson, Regional Director, Northwest Marketing Field Office, Marketing Order and Agreement Division, Specialty Crops Program, AMS, USDA; Telephone: (503) 326-2724, Fax: (503) 326-7440, or Email: [email protected] or [email protected]
FR Citation82 FR 24001 
CFR AssociatedMarketing Agreements; Oils and Fats; Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements and Spearmint Oil

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