82_FR_39923 82 FR 39762 - Fish and Fish Product Import Provisions of the Marine Mammal Protection Act List of Foreign Fisheries

82 FR 39762 - Fish and Fish Product Import Provisions of the Marine Mammal Protection Act List of Foreign Fisheries

DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Federal Register Volume 82, Issue 161 (August 22, 2017)

Page Range39762-39776
FR Document2017-17671

NMFS is publishing its draft List of Foreign Fisheries (LOFF) for 2017, as required by the regulations implementing the Fish and Fish Product Import Provisions of the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA). The draft LOFF reflects available information on marine mammal interactions in commercial fisheries exporting fish and fish products to the United States. NMFS has classified each commercial fishery included in the draft LOFF into one of two categories based upon frequency and likelihood of incidental mortality and serious injury of marine mammals that is likely to occur incidental to each fishery. Fisheries are classified as either exempt or export. The classification of a fishery on the draft and final LOFF will determine which regulatory requirements will be applicable to that fishery to enable the nation to receive a comparability finding necessary to export fish and fish products to the United States from that particular fishery. The draft LOFF can be found at www.nmfs.noaa.gov/ia/species/ marine_mammals/mmpaloff.html.

Federal Register, Volume 82 Issue 161 (Tuesday, August 22, 2017)
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 161 (Tuesday, August 22, 2017)]
[Notices]
[Pages 39762-39776]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2017-17671]


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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

[Docket No. 170706630-7630-01]
RIN 0648-XF538


Fish and Fish Product Import Provisions of the Marine Mammal 
Protection Act List of Foreign Fisheries

AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and 
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.

ACTION: Notice of availability; request for comments.

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SUMMARY: NMFS is publishing its draft List of Foreign Fisheries (LOFF) 
for 2017, as required by the regulations implementing the Fish and Fish 
Product Import Provisions of the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA). 
The draft LOFF reflects available information on marine mammal 
interactions in commercial fisheries exporting fish and fish products 
to the United States. NMFS has classified each commercial fishery 
included in the draft LOFF into one of two categories based upon 
frequency and likelihood of incidental mortality and serious injury of 
marine mammals that is likely to occur incidental to each fishery. 
Fisheries are classified as either exempt or export. The classification 
of a fishery on the draft and final LOFF will determine which 
regulatory requirements will be applicable to that fishery to enable 
the nation to receive a comparability finding necessary to export fish 
and fish products to the United States from that particular fishery. 
The draft LOFF can be found at www.nmfs.noaa.gov/ia/species/marine_mammals/mmpaloff.html.

DATES: Written comments must be received by 5 p.m. Eastern Time on 
October 23, 2017.

ADDRESSES: You may submit comments on this document, identified by 
NOAA-NMFS-2017-0084, by either of the following methods:
    1. Electronic Submissions: Submit all electronic comments via the 
Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-2017-0084, click the ``Comment Now!'' icon, 
complete the required fields and enter or attach your comments.
    2. Mail: Submit written comments to: Director, Office of 
International Affairs and Seafood Inspection, Attn: MMPA List of 
Foreign Fisheries, NMFS, F/IASI, 1315 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, 
MD 20910.
    Instructions: Comments sent by any other method, to any other 
address or individual, or received after the end of the comment period, 
may not be considered. All comments received are a part of the public 
record and will generally be posted for public viewing on 
www.regulations.gov without change. All personal identifying 
information (e.g., name, address, etc.), confidential business 
information, or otherwise sensitive information submitted voluntarily 
by the sender will be publicly accessible. NMFS will accept anonymous 
comments (enter ``N/A'' in the required fields if you wish to remain 
anonymous). Attachments to electronic comments will be accepted in 
Microsoft Word, Excel, or Adobe portable document file (PDF) formats 
only.
    NMFS will consider all comments and information received during the 
comment period in preparing a final LOFF. NMFS will also seek input 
from nations on the draft LOFF at bilateral and multilateral meetings, 
as appropriate.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Nina Young, NMFS F/IASI at 
[email protected] or 301-427-8383.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In August 2016, NMFS published a final rule 
(81 FR 54390; August 15, 2016) implementing the fish and fish product 
import provisions (section 101(a)(2)) of the Marine Mammal Protection 
Act (MMPA). This rule established conditions for evaluating a 
harvesting nation's regulatory programs to address incidental and 
intentional mortality and serious injury of marine mammals in fisheries 
operated by nations that export fish and fish products to the United 
States.
    Under this rule, fish or fish products cannot be imported into the 
United States from commercial fishing operations, which result in the

[[Page 39763]]

incidental mortality or serious injury of marine mammals in excess of 
United States standards. Such fish and fish products from export and 
exempt fisheries identified by the Assistant Administrator for 
Fisheries in the LOFF can only be imported into the United States if 
the harvesting nation has applied for and received a comparability 
finding from NMFS. The rule established procedures that a harvesting 
nation must follow and conditions it must meet to receive a 
comparability finding for a fishery. The rule also established 
provisions for intermediary nations to ensure that such nations do not 
import and re-export to the United States fish or fish products that 
are subject to an import prohibition.

What is the List of Foreign Fisheries?

    Based on information provided by nations, industry, the public, and 
other readily available sources, NMFS has identified nations with 
commercial fishing operations that export fish and fish products to the 
United States and has classified each of those fisheries based on their 
frequency of marine mammal interactions as either ``exempt'' or 
``export'' fisheries (see definitions below). The entire list of these 
export and exempt fisheries, organized by nation (or subsidiary 
jurisdiction), constitutes the LOFF.

Why is the LOFF important?

    Under the MMPA, the United States prohibits imports of commercial 
fish or fish products caught in commercial fishing operations resulting 
in the incidental killing or serious injury (bycatch) of marine mammals 
in excess of United States standards (16 U.S.C. 1371(a)(2)). NMFS 
published regulations implementing these MMPA import provisions in 
August 2016 (81 FR 54390, August 15, 2016). The regulations apply to 
any foreign nation with fisheries exporting fish and fish products to 
the United States, either directly or through an intermediary nation.
    The LOFF is an integral part of the process for implementing the 
import provisions of the MMPA. As described below, the LOFF lists 
foreign commercial fisheries that export fish and fish products to the 
United States and that have been classified as either ``export'' or 
``exempt'' based on the frequency and likelihood of interactions or 
incidental mortality and serious injury of marine mammal. A harvesting 
nation must apply for and receive a comparability finding for each of 
its export and exempt fisheries to continue to export fish and fish 
products from those fisheries to the United States. For all fisheries, 
in order to receive a comparability finding under this program, the 
harvesting nation must prohibit intentional killing of marine mammals 
in the course of commercial fishing operations in the fishery or 
demonstrate that it has procedures to reliably certify that exports of 
fish and fish products to the United States were not harvested in 
association with the intentional killing or serious injury of marine 
mammals.

What do the classifications of ``exempt fishery'' and ``export 
fishery'' mean?

    The classifications of ``exempt fishery'' or ``export fishery'' 
determine the criteria that a particular nation's fishery must meet to 
receive a comparability finding for that fishery. A comparability 
finding is required for both exempt and export fisheries, but the 
criteria differ.
    The criteria for an exempt fishery to receive a comparability 
finding are limited only to those conditions related to the prohibition 
of intentional killing or injury of marine mammals (see 50 CFR 
216.24(h)(6)(iii)(A)). To receive a comparability finding, export 
fisheries, must comply with those criteria and also maintain regulatory 
programs comparable in effectiveness to the U.S. regulatory program for 
reducing incidental marine mammal bycatch (see 50 CFR 216.24(h)(6)).

What is the five-year exemption period?

    NMFS included a five-year exemption period (which began 1 January, 
2017) in this process to allow foreign harvesting nations time to 
develop, as appropriate, regulatory programs comparable in 
effectiveness to U.S. programs at reducing marine mammal bycatch. 
During this exemption period, NMFS, based on the final LOFF, and in 
consultation with the Secretary of State, will consult with harvesting 
nations with commercial fishing operations identified as export or 
exempt fisheries for purposes of notifying the harvesting nation of the 
requirements of the MMPA. NMFS will continue to urge harvesting nations 
to gather information about marine mammal bycatch in their commercial 
fisheries to inform the next draft and final LOFF. NMFS will re-
evaluate foreign commercial fishing operations and publish a notice of 
availability of the draft for public comment, and a notice of 
availability of the final revised LOFF in the Federal Register the year 
prior to the expiration of the exemption period (2020).
    If, during the five-year exemption period, the United States 
determines that a marine mammal stock is immediately and significantly 
adversely affected by an export fishery, NMFS may use its emergency 
rulemaking authority to institute an import ban on these products.

How will NMFS classify a fishery if a harvesting nation does not 
provide information?

    In instances where information on the commercial fishing operations 
and the frequency and likelihood of bycatch in a fishery has not been 
provided by the nation or is not readily available, NMFS may determine 
whether a fishery is an exempt or export fishery by evaluating the 
fishery using information such as fishing techniques, gear used, 
methods used to deter marine mammals, target species, seasons and areas 
fished, qualitative data from logbooks or fisher reports, stranding 
data, the species and distribution of marine mammals in the area, or 
other factors.
    As anticipated, information on the frequency or likelihood of 
interactions or bycatch in most foreign fisheries was lacking or 
incomplete. In the absence of such information, NMFS used the 
information noted above to classify fisheries, which may include 
drawing analogies to similar U.S. fisheries and gear types interacting 
with similar marine mammal stocks. Where no analogous fishery or 
fishery information exists, NMFS classified the commercial fishing 
operation as an export fishery until such time as information comes 
available to properly classify the fishery. NMFS may reclassify a 
fishery if a harvesting nation provides, during the comment period, 
reliable information to reclassify the fishery or such information is 
readily available to NMFS in the course of preparing a revised LOFF.

Instructions to Nations Reviewing the Draft LOFF

    In the LOFF, the vast majority, 3272 fisheries, are classified as 
export fisheries in accordance with 50 CFR 216.24(h)(3) and 216.3. To 
ensure the appropriate classification of their fisheries, nations 
should review the LOFF at www.nmfs.noaa.gov/ia/species/marine_mammals/mmpaloff.html together with this Federal Register notice carefully and 
submit detailed comments on their commercial fishing and processing 
operations. In this Federal Register notice, NMFS provides detailed 
information on the information reviewed to create the LOFF, the 
criteria used to classify a fishery as exempt or export, and the 
assumptions made to determine such classifications based on the 
information submitted or found readily available.

[[Page 39764]]

    If a nation or entity wishes to advocate for a change in the 
classification of a fishery, the nation or entity should provide 
detailed information about the fishery, summaries of observer or 
logbook data, information on analogous fisheries where marine mammal 
bycatch may or may not occur, and detailed documentary evidence to 
support its claims, including, whenever possible, peer-reviewed data on 
marine mammal bycatch and impacts of bycatch to marine mammal 
population abundance. NMFS recommends that nations make specific edits 
in the appropriate column to the draft LOFF and provide references and 
supporting information.
Instructions for Freshwater and Inland Fisheries
    Fisheries that occur solely in fresh water outside any marine 
mammal habitat, and inland aquaculture operations, are exempt from this 
rule. If any such fisheries have been included in the LOFF, nations 
should indicate such fisheries and provide the necessary documentary 
evidence so NMFS can remove them from the LOFF as appropriate.
Instructions for Data Sets Listed as ``None Provided''
    Many nations either did not provide information or provided 
incomplete information. Where no information was provided, NMFS 
labelled that data set as ``none provided.'' Nations are strongly 
encouraged to provide that information during the public comment 
period. In particular, NMFS is lacking information for many fisheries 
on gear type, area of operation, marine mammal species that a fishery 
may encounter or entangle as bycatch, and bycatch estimates for many 
species. This information is critical for properly classifying the 
fishery. When no information was provided, NMFS used other readily 
available information to define a fishery. Nations are urged to review 
both information supplied by the nation or discovered by NMFS, 
especially those nations that did not provide information or provided 
incomplete information.
    NMFS also urges nations to provide the area of operation for both 
wild-caught fisheries and aquaculture operations for all the fisheries 
listed. It is particularly important for nations to provide information 
on the location of aquaculture operations (e.g., open ocean, lagoon, or 
pond) and the type of aquaculture operation (e.g., pens, cages, or 
lines); without this information, NMFS cannot properly classify an 
aquaculture operation.
Instructions for Reviewing Gear Type and Operational Areas
    In developing the LOFF, NMFS divided the fisheries by gear type 
because certain gears are documented as posing a greater risk of having 
marine mammal bycatch than others. Subdividing fishery information in 
this manner may not account for the actual or estimated number of 
vessels. Nations should review the number of vessels licensed to fish 
with a particular gear type and provide comments or revised estimates 
of vessels licensed to fish with that gear type.
    Some fisheries in the LOFF are likely multi-species fisheries but 
are currently classified separately by fish species. If a fishery 
listed has multiple target species (e.g., demersal fish or large 
pelagics) and is represented more than once on the LOFF, nations should 
consider consolidating those fisheries to accurately reflect the multi-
species nature of that fishery. For example, cod and haddock fisheries 
that are classified separately can be designated as multispecies 
groundfish fishery (including cod, haddock, etc.). NMFS encourages 
nations to aggregate those fisheries that are listed separately into a 
broader fishery designation, as appropriate, and provide NMFS with a 
list of fish species that are captured in that fishery and its 
operational details (e.g., coastal pelagic gillnet fishery).
    NMFS also urges nations to group or list fisheries, not based on 
the product exported but on the actual target species of the fishery. 
If an exported fish or fish product is not a target of a fishery but 
rather is a bycatch of that fishery, nations should note that 
information. NMFS prefers avoiding consolidating gear types together 
due to the different risk gear types pose to marine mammals, but would 
consider aggregating fisheries by target species or area, based on a 
nation's recommendations.
    NMFS separated fisheries into specific areas of operation. Our 
experience indicates that marine mammal bycatch can differ depending on 
a fishery's area of operation and its overlap with marine mammal 
populations. NMFS urges nations to review the area of operation listed 
for each fishery and aggregate fisheries of the same gear type into 
larger areas of operation (e.g., encompassing more bays or management 
zones) where appropriate. NMFS recommends avoiding collapsing areas 
into larger management areas unless it is appropriate to do so and 
would not result in a fishery with marine mammal bycatch disadvantaging 
one or more fisheries that do not pose the same level of risk.
Instructions for High Seas Fisheries Operating Within a Regional 
Fishery Management Organization, Intergovernmental Agreement, or Access 
Agreement
    NMFS attempted to identify fisheries that are operating within a 
convention area of a regional fishery management organization (RFMO) or 
are associated with an intergovernmental agreement. NMFS requests that 
nations identify which fisheries are operating or authorized under an 
RFMO or intergovernmental agreement and provide information on 
conservation and management measures that specifically govern the 
bycatch of marine mammals in that organization. This information will 
further assist in the classification of fisheries and determinations 
related to future comparability findings.
    Many nations have access agreements with other nations that permit 
them to fish within the EEZ or territorial waters of another nation 
(see annex on global tuna catch and access agreements in supporting 
documents at www.nmfs.noaa.gov/ia/species/marine_mammals/mmpaloff.html).
    In most cases, nations did not provide information distinguishing 
between vessels permitted to fish in their own territorial waters from 
their national vessels fishing in distant waters under some type of 
access agreement. NMFS strongly encourages nation to identify which 
fisheries are operating under access agreements in distant waters or 
within the EEZ of another nation and the reporting requirements for 
such fisheries.
Instruction for Nations That Are Processing Fish and Fish Products
    For the purposes of identifying intermediary nations (discussed 
below), if a nation exports a fish or fish product to the United States 
for which it is only the processor, and the fish in that product is 
harvested elsewhere, NMFS strongly encourages nations or other entities 
to identify those products and the source fisheries and nations for 
those products. Providing this information will result in NMFS re-
classifying a nation as an intermediary nation for that specific fish 
or fish product.
Instructions for Fisheries With No Specific Target Species
    Nations will note that there are products for which NMFS has been 
unable to find information (e.g., gear type and area of operation), and 
there

[[Page 39765]]

are fisheries that have been documented in the literature as having 
marine mammal bycatch associated with a nation and gear type but for 
which no target species of fish or fish products was identified. NMFS 
urges nations to provide the information that is lacking and as much 
detail as possible about the fishery, its operational characteristics, 
and its interactions with marine mammals, including applicable 
references.
Instructions for Which Fisheries Should be Included in the LOFF
    NMFS urges nations to examine their exports to the United States 
over the last decade and include all fisheries which have, are, or may 
in the future be the source of fish and fish products exported to the 
United States. To ensure that no fisheries are overlooked in this 
process, nations should be as inclusive as possible. Nations or other 
entities should provide all the documentation and applicable references 
necessary to support any proposed modifications to the fisheries in the 
LOFF. Providing such information will ensure an accurate classification 
of each fishery in the final LOFF and avoid requiring a nation to 
develop a regulatory program for a fishery classified as an export 
fishery because the nation failed to provide information.
Instructions for Non-Nation Entities
    NMFS welcomes the input of the public, non-governmental 
organizations, and scientists. These entities can provide critical 
information about marine mammal bycatch in global fisheries and efforts 
to mitigate such bycatch. NMFS requests that when such entities comment 
on the LOFF, they provide as much detail and supporting documentary 
evidence as possible. While there are references in the literature to 
marine mammal bycatch in certain foreign fisheries, it may be that fish 
and fish products originating from those fisheries are not exported to 
the United States (e.g., artisanal or coastal fisheries for domestic 
consumption). NMFS would like to receive information on which fish and 
fish products are exported to the United States and the frequency of 
marine mammal interactions or bycatch in those fisheries.
Further Direction and Instructions
    NMFS urges all nations and all stakeholders to review the criteria, 
assumptions, and global classifications that follow in this Federal 
Register notice, to more completely understand the classifications and 
rationale in the LOFF.

Definitions

What is a ``comparability finding?''

    A comparability finding is a finding by NMFS that the harvesting 
nation for an export or exempt fishery has met the applicable 
conditions specified in the regulations (see 50 CFR 216.24(h)) subject 
to the additional considerations for comparability findings set out in 
the regulations. A comparability finding is required for a nation to 
export fish and fish products to the United States. In order to receive 
a comparability finding for an export fishery, the harvesting nation 
must maintain a regulatory program with respect to that fishery that is 
comparable in effectiveness to the U.S. regulatory program for reducing 
incidental marine mammal bycatch. This may be met by maintaining a 
regulatory program that includes measures that are comparable, or that 
effectively achieve comparable results, to the regulatory program under 
which the analogous U.S. fishery operates.

What is the definition of an ``export fishery?''

    The definition of export fishery can be found in the implementing 
regulations for section 101(a)(2) of the MMPA (see 50 CFR 216.3). NMFS 
considers ``export'' fisheries to be functionally equivalent to 
Category I and II fisheries under the U.S. regulatory program (see 
definitions at 50 CFR 229.2). The definition of an export fishery is 
summarized below.
    NMFS defines ``export fishery'' as a foreign commercial fishing 
operation determined by the Assistant Administrator to be the source of 
exports of commercial fish and fish products to the United States that 
have more than a remote likelihood of incidental mortality and serious 
injury of marine mammals in the course of its commercial fishing 
operations.
    Where reliable information on the frequency of incidental mortality 
and serious injury of marine mammals caused by the commercial fishing 
operation is not provided by the harvesting nation, the Assistant 
Administrator may determine the likelihood of incidental mortality and 
serious injury as more than remote by evaluating information concerning 
factors such as fishing techniques, gear used, methods used to deter 
marine mammals, target fish species, seasons and areas fished, 
qualitative data from logbooks or fisher reports, stranding data, the 
species and distribution of marine mammals in the area, or other 
factors.
    Commercial fishing operations not specifically identified in the 
current LOFF as either exempt or export fisheries are deemed to be 
export fisheries until a revised LOFF is posted, unless the harvesting 
nation provides the Assistant Administrator with information to 
properly classify the foreign commercial fishing operation. The 
Assistant Administrator may also request additional information from 
the harvesting nation, as well as consider other relevant information 
about such commercial fishing operations and the frequency of 
incidental mortality and serious injury of marine mammals, to properly 
classify the foreign commercial fishing operation.

What is the definition of an ``exempt fishery?''

    The definition of exempt fishery can be found in the implementing 
regulations for section 101(a)(2) of the MMPA (see 50 CFR 216.3). NMFS 
considers ``exempt'' fisheries to be functionally equivalent to 
Category III fisheries under the U.S. regulatory program (see 
definitions at 50 CFR 229.2). The definition of an exempt fishery is 
summarized below.
    NMFS defines an exempt fishery as a foreign commercial fishing 
operation determined by the Assistant Administrator to be the source of 
exports of commercial fish and fish products to the United States that 
have a remote likelihood of, or no known, incidental mortality and 
serious injury of marine mammals in the course of commercial fishing 
operations. A commercial fishing operation that has a remote likelihood 
of causing incidental mortality and serious injury of marine mammals is 
one that, collectively with other foreign fisheries exporting fish and 
fish products to the United States, causes the annual removal of:
    (1) Ten percent or less of any marine mammal stock's bycatch limit, 
or
    (2) More than ten percent of any marine mammal stock's bycatch 
limit, yet that fishery by itself removes one percent or less of that 
stock's bycatch limit annually, or
    (3) Where reliable information has not been provided by the 
harvesting nation on the frequency of incidental mortality and serious 
injury of marine mammals caused by the commercial fishing operation, 
the Assistant Administrator may determine whether the likelihood of 
incidental mortality and serious injury is ``remote'' by evaluating 
information such as fishing techniques, gear used, methods to deter 
marine mammals, target fish species, seasons and areas fished, 
qualitative data from logbooks or fisher reports, stranding data, the 
species and distribution of marine mammals in the area, or other

[[Page 39766]]

factors at the discretion of the Assistant Administrator.
    A foreign fishery will not be classified as an exempt fishery 
unless the Assistant Administrator has reliable information from the 
harvesting nation, or other information to support such a finding.

Developing the 2017 Draft List of Foreign Fisheries

How is the List of Foreign Fisheries organized?

    NMFS organized the LOFF by harvesting nation (or subsidiary 
jurisdiction), then exempt fisheries, export fisheries, and export 
fisheries with no information. The fisheries listed contain defining 
factors including geographic location of harvest, gear-type, target 
species or a combination thereof. The LOFF also includes a list of the 
marine mammals that interact with each commercial fishing operation, 
where known, and, when available, indicates the level of incidental 
mortality and serious injury of marine mammals in each commercial 
fishing operation.

What sources of information did NMFS use to classify the commercial 
fisheries included in the draft LOFF?

    NMFS reviewed and considered documentation provided by nations; the 
public; and other sources of information, where available, including 
fishing vessel records; reports of on-board fishery observers; 
information from off-loading facilities, port-side government 
officials, enforcement, transshipment vessel workers and fish 
importers; government vessel registries; RFMOs or intergovernmental 
agreement documents, reports, national reports, and statistical 
document programs; appropriate catch certification programs; Food and 
Agricultural Organization (FAO)documents and profiles; and published 
literature and reports on commercial fishing operations with 
intentional or incidental mortality and serious injury of marine 
mammals. NMFS has used these sources of information and any other 
readily available information to classify the fisheries as ``export'' 
or ``exempt'' fisheries to develop the LOFF.

How did NMFS obtain the information used to classify fisheries included 
in the draft LOFF?

    First, NMFS identified imports of fish and fish products by nation 
using the U.S. foreign trade database for commercial fisheries imports 
found at: http://www.st.nmfs.noaa.gov/commercial-fisheries/foreign-trade/. Second, in December 2016 NMFS notified in writing each nation 
with commercial fishing or processing operations that export fish or 
fish products to the United States to request that within 90 days of 
notification, by April 1, 2017, the nation submit information about 
commercial fishing or processing operations. NMFS included in that 
notification a list of fish and fish products imported into the United 
States from that nation during the past several years.
    For commercial fishing operations, NMFS requested information on 
the number of participants, number of vessels, gear type, target 
species, area of operation, fishing season, and any information 
regarding the frequency of marine mammal incidental mortality and 
serious injury, including programs to assess marine mammal populations 
or bycatch. NMFS also requested that nations submit copies of any laws, 
decrees, regulations, or measures to reduce incidental mortality and 
serious injury of marine mammals in their commercial fishing operations 
or prohibit the intentional killing or injury of marine mammals.
    NMFS also evaluated information submitted by the nations and the 
public in response to Federal Register Notice (82 FR 2961, January 10, 
2017) seeking information on foreign commercial fishing operations that 
export fish and fish products to the United States and the frequency of 
incidental and intentional mortality and serious injury of marine 
mammals in those fisheries.

How did NMFS determine which species or stocks are included as 
incidentally or intentionally killed or seriously injured in a fishery?

    The LOFF includes a list of marine mammal species and/or stocks 
incidentally or intentionally killed or injured in a commercial fishing 
operation. The list of species and/or stocks incidentally or 
intentionally killed or injured includes ``serious'' and ``non-
serious'' documented injuries and interactions with fishing gear, 
including interactions such as depredation.
    NMFS reviewed information submitted by nations and readily 
available scientific information including co-occurrence models 
demonstrating distributional overlap of the commercial fishing 
operations and marine mammals to determine which species or stocks to 
include as incidentally or intentionally killed or seriously injured in 
or interacting with a fishery. NMFS also reviewed, when available, 
injury determination reports, bycatch estimation reports, observer 
data, logbook data, disentanglement network data, fisher self-reports, 
and the information referenced in the definition of exempt and export 
fishery (see above or 50 CFR 216.3).

How often will NMFS revise the List of Foreign Fisheries?

    NMFS has developed this draft LOFF and intends to publish a notice 
of the availability of the final LOFF in the Federal Register by 
January 1, 2018. NMFS will re-evaluate foreign commercial fishing 
operations and publish a notice of availability of the draft for public 
comment, and a notice of availability of the final revised LOFF in the 
Federal Register the year prior to the expiration of the exemption 
period (2020). NMFS will revise the final LOFF, as appropriate, and 
publish a notice of availability in the Federal Register every four 
years thereafter. In revising the list, NMFS may reclassify a fishery 
if new, substantive information indicates the need to re-examine and 
possibly reclassify a fishery. After publication of the LOFF, if a 
nation wishes to commence exporting fish and fish products to the 
United States from a fishery not on the LOFF, that fishery will be 
classified as an export fishery until the next LOFF is published and 
will be provided a provisional comparability finding for a period not 
to exceed twelve months. If a harvesting nation can provide the 
reliable information necessary to classify the commercial fishing 
operation at the time of the request for a provisional comparability 
finding or prior to the expiration of the provisional comparability 
finding, NMFS will classify the fishery in accordance with the 
definitions. The provisions for new entrants are discussed in the 
regulations implementing section 101(a)(2) of the MMPA (see 50 CFR 
216.24(h)(8)(vi)).

How can a classification be changed?

    To change a fishery's classification, nations or other interested 
stakeholders must provide observer data, logbook summaries, or reports 
that specifically indicate the presence or absence of marine mammal 
interactions, quantify such interactions wherever possible, provide 
additional information on the location and operation of the fishery 
(e.g., nearshore in less than three meters of water), details about the 
gear type and how it is used, maps showing the distribution of marine 
mammals and the operational area of the fishery; information regarding 
marine mammal populations and the biological impact of that fishery on 
those populations, and/or any other documentation that clearly 
demonstrates that a fishery is either an export or exempt fishery.

[[Page 39767]]

The Intersection of the LOFF and Other Statutes Certifying Bycatch

What is the relationship between the MMPA import rule, the LOFF, and 
the affirmative finding process and yellowfin tuna purse seine 
fisheries in the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean?

    Dolphin (family Delphinidae) incidental mortality and serious 
injury in eastern tropical Pacific yellowfin tuna purse seine fisheries 
are covered by section 101(a)(2)(B) and Title III of the MMPA (16 
U.S.C. 1371(a)(2)(B) and 16 U.S.C. 1411-1417), implemented at 50 CFR 
216.24(a)-(g). Nations must still comply with those provisions and 
receive an affirmative finding in order to export tuna to the United 
States. Tuna purse seine fishing vessels fishing for tuna with a 
carrying capacity of 400 short tons or greater that are governed by the 
Agreement for the International Dolphin Conservation Program (AIDCP) 
are not included in the LOFF, and are not required to apply for and 
receive a comparability finding. Purse seine vessels under 400 short 
tons and vessels using all other gear types operating in the eastern 
tropical Pacific must comply with the MMPA import rule. These fisheries 
are included in the LOFF and must apply for and receive a comparability 
finding.

What is the intersection of the U.S. shrimp certification program 
(Section 609 of Pub. L. 101-162) with the MMPA import rule?

    Section 609 of Public Law 101-162 (``Sec. 609'') prohibits imports 
of certain categories of shrimp unless the President annually certifies 
to the Congress by May 1, 1991, and annually thereafter, that either: 
(1) The harvesting nation has adopted a program governing the 
incidental taking of sea turtles in its commercial shrimp fishery 
comparable to the program in effect in the United States and has an 
incidental take rate comparable to that of the United States; or (2) 
the particular fishing environment of the harvesting nation does not 
pose a threat of the incidental taking of sea turtles. On May 1, 2017, 
the Department of State certified that 13 shrimp-harvesting nations and 
four fisheries have a regulatory program comparable to that of the 
United States governing the incidental taking of the relevant species 
of sea turtles in the course of commercial shrimp harvesting and that 
the particular fishing environments of 26 shrimp-harvesting nations, 
one economy, and three fisheries do not pose a threat of the incidental 
taking of covered sea turtles in the course of such harvesting (83 FR 
21295 May 5, 2017). All nations exporting wild-caught shrimp and shrimp 
products to the United States, regardless of whether they are certified 
under this provision, must also comply with the MMPA import rule, be 
included on the LOFF, and have a comparability finding. Nations in 
compliance with the MMPA import rule, but not certified under Public 
Law 101-162, cannot export wild-caught shrimp to the United States.

Classification Criteria, Rationale, and Process Used To Classify 
Fisheries

Process When Incidental Mortality and Serious Injury Estimates and 
Bycatch Limits Are Available

    If estimates of the total incidental mortality and serious injury 
were available and a bycatch limit calculated for a marine mammal 
stock, NMFS used the quantitative and tiered analysis to classify 
foreign commercial fishing operations as export or exempt fisheries 
under the category definition within 50 CFR 229.2 and the procedures 
used to categorize U.S. fisheries as Category I, II, or III, at http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/interactions/lof/.

Process When Only Incidental Mortality and Serious Injury Estimates 
Were Available

    In the majority of cases, however, NMFS either did not receive any 
information or found that the information provided was incomplete, 
lacking detail regarding marine mammal interactions, and lacking 
quantitative information on the frequency of interactions. Where 
nations provided estimates of bycatch (incidental or intentional 
mortality or serious injury) or NMFS found estimates of bycatch in 
published literature, national reports, or through other readily 
available sources, NMFS classified the fishery as an export fishery if 
the information indicated that there was a likelihood that the 
mortality and serious injury was more than remote. The code or 
designation in the LOFF for the determination ``presence of bycatch'' 
is recorded as ``P'' in the LOFF.

Alternative Approaches When Estimates of Marine Mammal Bycatch Are 
Unavailable

    Because bycatch estimates were lacking for most fisheries, NMFS 
relied on three considerations to assess the likelihood of bycatch or 
interaction with marine mammals, including: (1) Co-occurrence, the 
spatial and seasonal distribution and overlap of marine mammals and 
fishing operations; (2) analogous gear, evaluation of records of 
bycatch and assessment of risk, where such information exists, in 
analogous U.S. and international fisheries or gear types; and (3) 
overarching classifications, evaluation of gears and fishing operations 
and their risk of marine mammal bycatch (see section below for further 
discussion). Published scientific literature provides numerous risk 
assessments of marine mammal bycatch in fisheries, routinely using 
these approaches to estimate marine mammal mortality rates, identify 
information gaps, set priorities for conservation, and transfer 
technology for deterring marine mammals from gear and catch. Findings 
from the most recent publications cited in this Federal Register 
notice, often demonstrate level of risk by location, season, fishery, 
and gear. A summary of the information used to support the designations 
described below is available in the annotated bibliography and the 
expanded LOFF with references and comments, at www.nmfs.noaa.gov/ia/species/marine_mammals/mmpaloff.html.

Co-Occurrence Evaluation

    The co-occurrence of marine mammal populations with a commercial 
fishing operation can be a measure of risk. NMFS evaluated, when 
available, the distribution and spatial overlap of marine mammal 
populations and commercial fishing operations to determine whether the 
probability for marine mammal interactions or bycatch in that fishery 
is more than remote. Resources that NMFS used to consider co-occurrence 
include OBIS-SEAMAP http://seamap.env.duke.edu/, http://www.hsi.org/assets/pdfs/mapping_marine_mammals.pdf and http://www.conservationecologylab.com/uploads/1/9/7/6/19763887/lewison_et_al_2014.pdf. Additional sources in peer reviewed literature 
that provide documentation of co-occurrence are Komoroske & Lewison 
2015; FAO 2010; Watson et al. 2006; Read et al., 2006; Reeves et al., 
2004. The code or designation for ``co-occurrence'' is recorded as ``C/
O'' in the LOFF.

Analogous Gear Evaluation

    Where a nation did not provide documentation or information was not 
readily available on the amount of marine mammal bycatch in a fishery 
or the co-occurrence, NMFS classified a fishery as exempt or export by 
analogy to similar U.S. or international fisheries and gear types 
interacting with similar marine mammal stocks. NMFS consulted the 
United States' domestic MMPA List of Fisheries when classifying by 
analogy international fisheries http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/interactions/fisheries/2017_list_of_

[[Page 39768]]

fisheries_lof.html. NMFS also evaluated other relevant information 
including, but not limited to: Fishing techniques, gear used, methods 
used to deter marine mammals, target fish species, seasons and areas 
fished, qualitative data from logbooks or fisher reports, stranding 
data, the species and distribution of marine mammals in the area, or 
other factors. The code or designation for the determination 
``analogous gear'' is recorded as ``A/G'' in the LOFF. Gear types 
commonly used in U.S. fisheries, such as longline, gillnet, purse 
seine, trawl, and pot/trap, were identified as ``analogous gear'' in 
the justification section of the LOFF. Gear types not commonly used in 
U.S. waters, such as Danish seine, ring nets, lift nets or large pound 
nets off Southeast Asia, however, could not be compared to an analogous 
gear or fishery in the United States.

Classification in the Absence of Information

    When no analogous gear, fishery, or fishery information existed, or 
insufficient information was provided by the nation, and information 
was not readily available, NMFS classified the commercial fishing 
operation as an export fishery per the definition of ``export fishery'' 
at 50 CFR 216.3. These fishing operations will remain classified as 
export fisheries until the harvesting nation provides the reliable 
information necessary to classify properly the fishery or, in the 
course of revising the LOFF, such information becomes readily available 
to NMFS. The code or designation for the determination ``no 
information'' is recorded as ``N/I'' in the LOFF.

Multiple Codes and Additional Terms in the LOFF

    In some cases, NMFS recorded multiple codes as the rationale for a 
fishery classification. For example, NMFS may have received 
insufficient information from a nation, still lacks information in some 
columns, yet classified the fishery by analogy. In that instance, the 
codes used to classify the fishery would be: ``N/I, A/G.''
    Additional terms in the LOFF include ``none provided,'' ``no 
information,'' and ``none documented''. ``None provided'' indicates the 
nation did not provide information and no information could be found 
through research and literature searches. ``None documented'' indicates 
that neither the nation nor reference material have documented 
interactions with marine mammals either through observers or logbooks. 
``No information'' indicates that the nation provided information but 
did not specifically provide information on the marine mammal species 
interacting with a fishery or estimates of marine mammal bycatch.

Overarching Classifications

    Below is a discussion of the overarching fishery classifications of 
gillnets, longlines, purse seines, trawls, and aquaculture, and their 
interactions with marine mammals.

Gillnets

    Because the available information indicates that there is a 
likelihood that the mortality and serious injury caused by gillnets is 
more than remote, NMFS has classified all gillnet fisheries as export 
fisheries in the draft LOFF. Several U.S. gillnet fisheries, which are 
analogous to some fisheries considered in the LOFF, have been 
categorized as Category I fisheries under the MMPA. Records show that 
between 1990 and 2011, bycatch in gillnets continues to affect many 
dolphins (odontocetes); namely 56 of the 74 recognized species (75%) 
have been bycaught in gillnets (Reeves et al. 2013). Additionally, 
records indicate that nine species of the 14 recognized species of 
whales have been bycaught in gillnets. For seals and sea lions, 14 of 
the 18 extant species of phocid seals were captured in gillnets; and of 
the 14 species of otariid seals and sea lions (including one extinct 
species), seven have been bycaught in gillnets (Reeves et al. 2013). 
Since 1990, marine mammal bycatch in gillnets has increased and 
consistently poses a significant risk to marine mammals (Reeves et al. 
2013). In particular, Lewison et al. (2014) found that gillnets for 
finfish have high bycatch intensity in various fishing regions of the 
world.
    International and regional marine mammal and fishery management 
organizations such as ACCOBAMS (2008), ASCOBANS (2009), CMS (2011), FAO 
(2000), ICES (2013), IOTC (2014), and IWC (2004) have conducted 
workshops, collected information, and published findings documenting 
the high risk gillnets pose to marine mammals.
    Based on the available information, NMFS has designated all gillnet 
fisheries as export fisheries. Nations wishing to challenge this 
designation must provide observer or logbook data sufficient to refute 
this determination. When possible, NMFS requests nations provide 
documentation that demonstrates that a gillnet fishery poses a remote 
likelihood of incidental mortality and serious injury to marine 
mammals.

Longlines

    Because the available information indicates that there is a 
likelihood that the mortality and serious injury caused by longlines is 
more than remote, NMFS classified all longline fisheries as export 
fisheries. U.S. longline fisheries, which are analogous to some 
fisheries considered in the LOFF, have been categorized as Category I 
fisheries under the MMPA.
    In longline fisheries, hooking, entanglement, and boat strikes 
account for some mortality and serious injury, but not all interactions 
or depredation may have this result. Interactions of marine mammals 
with longline fisheries are likely to be under-reported (Clarke 2014). 
Though not as great a threat for cetaceans globally as compared with 
other gear types, longline bycatch is a threat to several species and 
populations, including false killer whales (Pseudorca crassidens), 
Risso's dolphin (Grampus griseus), and pilot whales (Globicephala spp.) 
in the Northwest Atlantic (Werner 2015). Killer whales (Orcinus orca) 
and sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus) appear to be the main species 
involved with demersal longline fisheries at higher latitudes, while 
false killer whales (Pseudorca crassidens) and pilot whales 
(Globicephala spp.) appear to be the primary species involved with 
pelagic longline fisheries at lower latitudes (Hamer 2012).
    In a 2010 bycatch workshop with tuna RFMOs, the FAO found that 
progress on quantifying tuna RFMO fishery impacts on marine mammal 
populations and related progress in mitigating or reducing the 
mortality has been slow, because the priority for fishers is the 
adoption of measures to reduce or eliminate depredation and gear damage 
(FAO 2010). In tuna longline fisheries, which represent a significant 
portion of fisheries that export seafood to the United States, 
cetaceans are occasionally entangled and hooked. Any entanglement could 
be mitigated by the use of voluntary or mandated best practices to 
avoid bycatch by the tuna fishing industry; however, to date, the 
application of such techniques has been limited (Gilman 2011).
    Only through an evaluation of the bycatch rate and a determination 
of overall risk of bycatch associated with longline fishing can 
definitive case-by-case classifications be made for longline fisheries. 
NMFS invites nations who are parties and cooperating non-parties to 
RFMOs to join us in urging their respective RFMOs to undertake, as a 
research priority, such a risk assessment and analyze logbook and 
observer data

[[Page 39769]]

to analyze the marine mammal bycatch risk posed by longline fisheries.
    NMFS designated all longline fisheries as export fisheries. Nations 
wishing to challenge this designation must provide observer or logbook 
data sufficient to refute this determination. When possible, NMFS 
requests that nations provide documentation that demonstrates that a 
longline fishery poses a remote likelihood of incidental mortality and 
serious injury to marine mammals.

Purse Seines

    Because the available information indicates that there is a 
likelihood that the mortality and serious injury caused by purse seines 
is more than remote, NMFS classified several types of purse seine 
fisheries as export fisheries. Purse seine gear is documented to have 
marine mammal bycatch globally (Anderson 2014, Hall 2013, NOAA Tech 
Memo 2011). A portion of tuna exported to the United States is captured 
with purse seines, documented to have marine mammal bycatch (Anderson 
2014, Gilman 2011, IOTC 2010). Marine mammal interactions have been 
documented in purse seine fisheries other than those for tuna, 
including anchovy (Gonzales 2015), sardine (Prajith 2014), and small 
scale coastal fisheries for various species (Mustika, 2014, Kiszka 
2008).
    Purse seine fisheries for tuna are, with some exceptions, managed 
through RFMOs according to agreements entered into by member nations. 
Five tuna RFMOs manage fisheries in the Southern Ocean, Indian Ocean, 
Eastern Tropical Pacific, Western and Central Pacific, and Atlantic. 
Only three RFMOs have adopted measures to mitigate marine mammal 
bycatch in purse seine fisheries or prohibit entirely the intentional 
encirclement of marine mammals with purse seines. Specifically, the 
Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission serves as the secretariat for 
the International Dolphin Conservation Program; the Indian Ocean Tuna 
Commission prohibits members from intentionally setting on cetaceans; 
and the Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission also prohibits 
intentionally setting on schools associated with cetaceans, and 
requires reasonable steps to ensure safe release of marine mammals. The 
International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas and the 
Commission for the Conservation of Southern Bluefin Tuna do not 
prescribe marine mammal conservation measures.
    NMFS designated most non-tuna purse seine fisheries as export 
fisheries. Purse seine fisheries outside tuna RFMO areas of 
jurisdiction are designated as export fisheries. Tuna fisheries within 
the jurisdiction of RFMOs lacking measures that prohibit intentional 
encirclement are export fisheries. Tuna fisheries within the 
jurisdiction of RFMOs with measures that prohibit intentional 
encirclement are exempt fisheries, unless information submitted by 
nations or readily available scientific information shows that the 
fishery has more than a remote likelihood of incidental mortality and 
serious injury of marine mammals in the course of its commercial 
fishing operations. Nations wishing to challenge these designations 
must provide observer or logbook data sufficient to refute this 
determination. When possible, NMFS requests nations provide 
documentation that demonstrates that purse seine gear in a particular 
fishery poses a remote likelihood of incidental mortality and serious 
injury to marine mammals.

Trawl

    Because the available information indicates that there is a 
likelihood that the mortality and serious injury caused by trawl 
fisheries is more than remote, NMFS classified several types of trawl 
fisheries as export fisheries. U.S. trawl fisheries with marine mammal 
bycatch, which are analogous to some fisheries considered in the LOFF 
have been categorized as Category II fisheries under the MMPA.
    Trawl fisheries, including bottom, mid-water, and pelagic trawls, 
have been documented to globally interact with marine mammals (Peltier 
et al. 2016, Komoroske & Lewison 2015, Read 2014, Brown 2014). 
Pinnipeds are more likely to be entangled in industrial pair and 
pelagic trawl fisheries (Machado 2015, Lobao-Tello et al. 2013). ICES 
(2010) has identified pelagic trawl nets as posing a risk of cetacean 
bycatch. Northridge et al. (2011) documented bycatch of harbor 
porpoises, bottlenose dolphins, common dolphins, pilot whales, minke 
whales, grey and harbor seals in mid-water and pair trawl fisheries in 
the North Atlantic. Trawl bycatch intensity was found to be higher in 
certain regions (Lewison et al. 2014).
    Nations wishing to challenge that designation must provide observer 
or logbook data sufficient to refute this determination. When possible, 
NMFS requests nations provide documentation that demonstrates that a 
trawl fishery poses a remote likelihood of incidental mortality and 
serious injury to marine mammals.

Aquaculture

    Based on the available information, NMFS has designated most 
aquaculture operations for which nations submitted information as 
exempt fisheries unless there is a record of entanglement or 
intentional killing in such aquaculture operations. Because the MMPA 
import rule applies to aquaculture facilities sited in marine mammal 
habitat, where deterrence measures (e.g., anti-predator nets) may 
incidentally or intentionally kill and seriously injury marine mammals, 
NMFS evaluated an array of aquaculture operations, some of which have 
no analogous operations or characteristics to operations in the United 
States. Aquaculture operations for finfish (especially salmon), 
mollusks, seaweed, and other species are proliferating globally. Since 
1990, annual production of salmonid farms has increased from 299,000 to 
1,900,000 tons (FAO 2012), and accompanying this expansion has been an 
increase in conflicts with marine mammals, especially pinnipeds. 
Pinniped depredation is a major problem at many aquaculture facilities 
in Europe, Chile, Australia, and South Africa (Kemper et al. 2003). 
Some nations use anti-predator nets as a deterrent.
    In some aquaculture operations, bycatch of marine mammals in anti-
predator nets occurs occasionally, although direct killing, harassment, 
and exclusion from preferred habitat may pose more serious problems for 
marine mammal populations (Kemper et al. 2003). Fatal entanglements of 
odontocetes in aquaculture anti-predator nets appear to be infrequent; 
however, dolphin deaths in such nets have been reported from salmon and 
tuna facilities in Australia and Chile (Kemper et al. 2003).
    Literature documenting marine mammal interactions and the risk of 
marine mammal interactions with aquaculture equipment, or fish cages is 
lacking. For net pens and fish cages, the most damaging marine mammal 
interactions are with pinnipeds, while dolphins, porpoises and whales 
are viewed as a minor threat. Dolphins have been documented feeding on 
wild fish attracted to marine fish farms off Italy but were not 
reported to predate the caged fish (D[iacute]az L[oacute]pez et al. 
2005). In a five-year study of Italian sea bass, sea bream, and meagre 
cages, D[iacute]az L[oacute]pez (2012) observed individually identified 
dolphins to assess patterns of habitat use and farm fidelity. Dolphins 
near farms typically foraged on wild fish concentrated in the farm but 
also fed on discarded or escaping fish during harvesting operations. 
Annual dolphin mortality was 1.5 per year, and five animals were found 
entangled in nets during the study period. The potential for marine 
mammals to become

[[Page 39770]]

entangled and drown in farm structures or lines is a concern 
(W[uuml]rsig and Gailey 2002). From surveys at marine fish farms off 
Italy, D[iacute]az L[oacute]pez and Shirai (2007) estimated one 
bottlenose dolphin mortality per month due to entanglement with farm 
nets.
    Mussel aquaculture is a growing industry, with coastal and offshore 
waters being utilized for mussel aquaculture farms. This form of 
aquaculture uses ropes in the water column that pose an entanglement 
risk to marine mammals, particularly whales, although the extent of the 
risk is undetermined. In 2015, a Pacific right whale was documented 
entangled in, but successfully disentangled and released from, the 
grow-out ropes of mussel farm gear in Korea (Young, 2015). A Bryde's 
whale was entangled in mussel spat lines off the coast of New Zealand 
(Lloyd 2003). A humpback calf was found entangled in mussel spat-
collecting rope off Western Australia but was disentangled and released 
(Groom & Coughran, 2012). Finally, a humpback whale died from 
entanglement in single dropper spat- collectors at an experimental 
mussel farm in northwest Iceland (Young, 2015). Given this information, 
the placement of aquaculture farms in waters that are critical habitats 
and migratory routes for endangered species, can increase the risk of 
entanglements, and in so doing can change the classification of the 
aquaculture operation.
    Review of the NMFS U. S. Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico Marine Mammal 
Stock Assessments (Waring et al. 2012, 2015) finds very few verified 
instances of marine mammals being injured by or entangled in 
aquaculture gear. U.S aquaculture facilities are Category III 
fisheries, because there are no known incidental mortalities or serious 
injuries of marine mammals in these operations, and they are considered 
to have a remote likelihood of marine mammal interactions. Therefore, 
by analogy, NMFS is proposing to classify all aquaculture operations 
for which nations provided information (or for which scientific 
information is readily available) as exempt in the LOFF, absent 
information and evidence that a particular aquaculture operation has 
more than a remote likelihood of incidental mortality and serious 
injury of marine mammals, NMFS is seeking comment on this 
classification. However, NMFS has classified as export fisheries 
aquaculture facilities with a record of entanglement or a history of 
intentional killing. A harvesting nation must demonstrate that all 
aquaculture operations, regardless of their classification, sited in 
marine mammal habitat or interacting with marine mammals, are 
prohibited from the intentional killing or serious injury of marine 
mammals in the course of aquaculture operations or have established 
procedures to reliably certify that exports of fish and fish products 
to the United States are not the product of an intentional killing or 
serious injury of a marine mammal.
    While NMFS desires more information about the environmental risk of 
these operations, particularly mussel rope and cage aquaculture, to 
marine mammals and urges the industry to develop mitigation techniques 
to avoid potential entanglements or reduce their severity, the 
documented interactions have been mostly non-life threatening. 
Nevertheless, in developing the LOFF, NMFS has evaluated, and will 
continue to evaluate, aquaculture operations on a case-by-case basis, 
considering the operation's measures to reduce interactions, prohibit 
intentional mortality, and reduce incidental mortality and serious 
injury of marine mammals (e.g., use of anti-predator nets and the 
prohibition on intentional killing).

Fisheries or Gear Types Excluded From This Rule or That are Generally 
Listed as Exempt

    In the implementing regulations and the LOFF, NMFS has defined 
``commercial fishing operation'' as: Vessels or entities that catch, 
take, or harvest fish (as defined in section 3 of the Magnuson-Stevens 
Fishery Conservation and Management Act (16 U.S.C. 1802)) from the 
marine environment (or other areas where marine mammals occur) that 
results in the sale or barter of all or part of the fish caught, taken 
or harvested. The term includes aquaculture activities that interact 
with or occur in marine mammal habitat. Consequently, this rule does 
not apply to any land-based or freshwater aquaculture operations; these 
commercial fishing operations do not occur in marine mammal habitat.
    Additionally, there are several gear types in the U.S. List of 
Fisheries that are consistently and broadly classified as category III 
fisheries with no documented marine mammal catch (see http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/interactions/fisheries/2016_list_of_fisheries_lof.html#table3_cat3). NMFS has classified those 
fisheries as Category III because there are often no known incidental 
mortalities or serious injuries of marine mammals in these fisheries, 
and there is a remote likelihood of marine mammal mortalities and 
serious injuries given that the fishing method or gear is highly 
selective. These include:

 handline
 harpoon
 hook and line
 pole and line
 spearfishing
 aquarium collecting
 cast net
 hand collection
 loop net
 rake/tongs
 diving

    By analogy, NMFS classified these gear types as exempt in the LOFF.

What was the process for notification and the classification for 
fisheries where nations failed to provide information?

    NMFS first informed nations of the requirements of the MMPA import 
rule and the process to develop the LOFF via a cable sent to all 
trading partners in September 2016. On December 21, 2016, NMFS sent a 
letter to the Washington, DC embassy of each trading partner officially 
requesting the information needed to create the LOFF. The letter 
included explicit details about the type of information needed. From 
March through June 2017, NMFS followed up on these requests by phone, 
emails, and in some cases, visits to embassies in the United States, 
requesting information on nation's fisheries that export to the United 
States. Additionally, NMFS searched readily available information, 
including FAO documents, in an attempt to classify fisheries for which 
nations failed to provide sufficient information or provided no 
information at all. If nations submit information during this comment 
period on the draft LOFF, NMFS will consider this information when 
developing the final LOFF.
    As discussed above, NMFS classified as export fisheries all 
fisheries from nations that failed to respond to requests for 
information or provided insufficient information about a fishery and 
for which information was not readily available as stipulated in the 
implementing regulations defining export and exempt fishery (see 50 CFR 
216.3 Definitions of Export and Exempt Fishery).

Nations that Failed to Provide Information

    The following nations failed to provide information on their 
fisheries, and NMFS did not find available information to classify 
their fisheries; consequently, NMFS classified all these nations' 
fisheries as export fisheries (see 50 CFR 216.3 Definitions of Export 
and Exempt Fishery).

     British Virgin Islands (BVI) failed to provide data for 
exports of marine fish,

[[Page 39771]]

toothfish, snapper and squid. BVI maintains that it does not export 
fish and fish products to the United States.
     Cameroon failed to provide data for exports of 
groundfish (cod, cusk, haddock, hake, pollock, sole), mackerel, 
herring, snail, mussels, oysters, crawfish, crustaceans, tilapia, 
and shrimp. These species may be harvested with longlines and 
gillnets. Indications of marine mammal bycatch in longlines (Werner 
2014) and gillnets (Ayissi et al. 2014) are documented; however, the 
target species for these gear types are not identified in the 
literature for Cameroon.
     China also did not provide information, and the data 
readily available and used to classify China's fisheries that export 
to the United States may not accurately characterize existing 
aquaculture operations, processing operations, and wild-capture 
fisheries.
     Haiti failed to provide data for exports of conch, 
coral, crab, lobster, molluscs, sea cucumbers, and shrimp. Haiti has 
not exported fish or fish products to the United States since 2012.

Classification for Fisheries of Nations Identified as Solely 
Intermediary Nations

    NMFS defines an intermediary nation as a nation that imports fish 
or fish products from a fishery on the LOFF and re-exports such fish or 
fish products to the United States. To prevent any fish or fish 
products subject to import prohibitions authorized by the MMPA import 
rule from being imported into the United States from any intermediary 
nation, including a processing nation, NMFS includes provisions for 
intermediary nations (see 50 CFR 216.24 (h)(9)(iv)). NMFS requested 
that intermediary nations provide information on the fisheries and 
nations that are the source of any imported product that they process 
and export to the United States. Many nations failed to provide this 
information; NMFS continues to urge them to do so.
    Based on the information received or obtained, the following 
nations are solely intermediary nations: Belarus, Monaco, and 
Switzerland. Israel is predominantly an intermediary nation except for 
the export of seaweed, tuna, and freshwater species-derived caviar. 
Nations are encouraged to identify and indicate the fish and fish 
products for which they are acting as intermediary nations.

Nations That Do Not Have a Consistent History of Exporting Fish and 
Fish Products to the United States and Are Not Included in the List of 
Foreign Fisheries

    In reviewing the import data, information submitted by nations, and 
readily available information, NMFS identified twenty-five trading 
partners that either exported solely freshwater species or had a 
sporadic or inconsistent export history with the United States. Table 1 
summarizes the nations that NMFS has determined will not be included in 
the LOFF and are not subject to any of the requirements of the MMPA 
import rule. However, if any of these nations wish to export fish and 
fish products to the United States, they must contact NMFS and satisfy 
the requirements of the MMPA import rule.

    Table 1--Nations Suggested for Removal From the MMPA LOFF and the
                        Justification for Removal
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bolivia
    Justification--Landlocked nation, low level of U.S. fish imports
     from Bolivia.
    Detail--Landlocked nation. In 2006 & 2015, the U.S. imported fish
     and shellfish meal not for human consumption, and fish eggs only in
     2006. In 2013, Bolivia exported seaweed to the U.S.
    http://www.st.nmfs.noaa.gov/commercial-fisheries/foreign-trade/.
    http://www.fao.org/fi/oldsite/FCP/en/bol/profile.htm.
    http://www.fao.org/fishery/facp/BOL/en.
Bosnia Hercegovina
    Justification--Export conch (2015), grouper, snapper, and swordfish
     (2003).
    Detail--Very small amount of coastline on the Adriatic Sea. ``The
     role of maritime areas in the total national economy is very small.
     There are no exact figures on the performance of the economy but it
     is estimated (Strategy for development of tourism of Bosnia and
     Herzegovina) that the GDP from the maritime area of Bosnia and
     Herzegovina is less than 1 percent of the total GDP of the country
     (European Commission, 2014 H).''
    Fisheries are artisanal and sold domestically or captured for
     domestic aquaculture.
    http://www.fao.org/3/a-au016e.pdf.
    http://www.fao.org/fishery/facp/BIH/en.
Burkina Faso
    Justification--Landlocked; only export waxes.
    Detail--Have exported ``waxes, may include spermaceti'' to the U.S.
     in 2010, 2013, 2014, and 2016. Further consultation with NMFS
     Office of Science and Technology (S&T) and Customs and Border
     Protection (CBP) revealed that since cessation of commercial
     whaling and whale product imports, ``waxes'' encompasses waxes not
     derived from spermaceti whale oil, such as beeswax.
Cayman Islands
    Justification--Only toothfish exports which may be an error.
    Detail--Consultations with S&T, CBP, and NOAA experts on the
     Dissostichus catch documentation scheme indicate that attribution
     of toothfish catch to Cayman Islands is likely a recording error of
     ``last port'' vs. ``origin of product.'' NMFS contacted the
     Caymans, and they have no records of toothfish exports. Further,
     the catch documentation scheme ensures that toothfish cannot enter
     the United States without valid catch documentation.
Central African Republic (CAR)
    Justification--Landlocked, possible processor only.
    Detail--Exported processed squid in 2016, lobster, yellowfin and
     swordfish 2000-2001. Aquaculture for domestic use only. http://www.fao.org/3/a-au069e.pdf FAO indicates that CAR does not have an
     export market for fish products: Table 2.
    http://www.fao.org/fishery/facp/CAF/fr.
Chad
    Justification--Landlocked; Last 17 years only product exported was
     thickeners derived from seaweed (2015).
    Detail--Landlocked, local economy produces no exports of fish for
     human consumption to U.S. from Chad.
    http://www.fao.org/fishery/facp/TCD/fr.
Christmas Island, territory of Australia
    Justification--During the last 17 years exports have been sporadic,
     clam or crab in 2002, 2003, 2004, 2007, fish liver, roe 2016.
    Detail--Australia indicated that no export fisheries originate from
     Christmas Island.
Cocos Island
    Justification--Freshwater fish exports.

[[Page 39772]]

 
    Detail--Between 2000 and 2017, Cocos Island has exported tilapia
     once to the U.S. Australia noted hand collection of giant clam for
     aquaculture and re-seeding in the waters around Cocos Island, but
     these products are not entering the U.S. via Cocos Island.
Ethiopia
    Justification--Landlocked, only product exported is waxes.
    Detail--Consultation with NMFS S&T and CBP revealed that since
     cessation of commercial whaling and whale product imports,
     ``waxes'' encompasses wax that is not made from spermaceti whale
     oil, likely beeswax. Ethiopia confirmed the wax was beeswax.
    Ethiopian fisheries are entirely from aquaculture with limited
     exports.
    http://www.fao.org/fishery/facp/ETH/en.
French Guiana
    Justification--Freshwater fish in 2016, no exports to the U.S. 2001-
     2015.
    Details--Rule does not apply to freshwater fisheries.
Hungary
    Justification--Landlocked; Seaweed and other algae, historically
     caviar (2014).
    Details--Hungary has extensive inland capture fisheries, pond
     aquaculture, and fish farming. Carps are the most popular fish
     species in capture fisheries (54%) and pond aquaculture (82%) while
     African catfish is the dominant fish in intensive fish farming.
     Inland waters have high value predator species such as pikes,
     catfish and pike perch, which were not exported to the U.S. Given
     the inland nature of Hungarian fisheries, the export of seaweed is
     likely from inland freshwater aquaculture and fish farming and is
     therefore not included under this rule.
Kazakhstan
    Justification--Landlocked; Solely freshwater fisheries, some caviar.
    Details--The MMPA import rule does not apply to freshwater
     fisheries. The last U.S. import of caviar (aquaculture) was in
     2010. Aquaculture is on the rise, but fish farming is expensive to
     maintain and consequently results in very few exports.
    ftp://ftp.fao.org/FI/DOCUMENT/fcp/en/FI_CP_KZ.pdf.
Kyrgyzstan
    Justification--Landlocked; Oysters, canned (2004), dolphinfish and
     tilapia (2013), marine fish (2015).
    Details--In the last 17 years, U.S. importation records show imports
     for only the three years listed above. Import reports/records may
     be an error, generally there are no consistent seafood imports to
     the U.S. from this nation.
Macedonia
    Justification--Landlocked; Exported fish paste in 2016.
    Details--Exported fish paste (2016 and 2010), and processed tuna in
     2010. Their fisheries are entirely freshwater, for which the rule
     does not apply.
    ftp://ftp.fao.org/FI/DOCUMENT/fcp/en/FI_CP_MK.pdf.
Mali
    Justification--Landlocked, main export is waxes 2003 to 2015.
    Details--Mali exported to the U.S. grouper and processed fish in
     2009, and solely waxes were exported to the U.S. other years, with
     no exports to the U.S. between 2015-present.
    ftp://ftp.fao.org/FI/DOCUMENT/fcp/fr/FI_CP_ML.pdf (in French).
Moldova
    Justification--Landlocked; Export is aquaculture derived caviar.
    Details--Moldova exported tuna and caviar in 2012 and 2016, caviar
     only in 2015. FAO has no record of tuna or caviar harvest in
     Moldova:
    ftp://ftp.fao.org/FI/DOCUMENT/fcp/en/FI_CP_MD.pdf.
    It appears that most of the sturgeon caviar harvest is derived from
     aquaculture:
    http://www.aquatir.md/?lang=en (and other google searches).
Mongolia
    Justification--Landlocked, freshwater fisheries only.
    Details-- Mongolia exported to U.S. seaweed unfit for human
     consumption in 2016 (processed product). No FAO fishery profile.
     The MMPA import rule does not apply to freshwater inland fisheries.
Monserrat
    Justification--freshwater aquaculture; No exports to U.S. from 2000-
     2017 with exception of tuna in 2012.
    Details--It appears that Monserrat has no active commercial tuna
     fishery (http://waittinstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/5_Montserrat-Fisheries-Assessment-final.pdf, and targeted
     searches), no FAO fishery profile.
Serbia
    Justification--No exports 2000-17 with the exception of tuna in
     2012.
    Details--Landlocked, Rule does not apply to freshwater aquaculture.
     No FAO fishery profile. (http://www.fao.org/fishery/countrysector/naso_serbia/en). Do not and have not fished for tuna as members of
     International Convention for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas.
Slovakia
    Justification-- Landlocked; Freshwater pond aquaculture.
    Details-- U.S. does not import aquaculture product from Slovakia.
     The U.S. imported bigeye and yellowfin tuna in 2013 and pickled
     herring in 2014. Neither are products that Slovakia is likely
     harvesting or processing.
    ftp://ftp.fao.org/FI/DOCUMENT/fcp/en/FI_CP_SK.pdf.
Somalia
    Justification--U.S. imported shrimp in 2002, lobster (Homarus spp.)
     in 2004, and coral/shells in 2015.
    Details--The Homarus lobster is not native to the Indian Ocean;
     therefore, this product is likely a re-export or reporting error.
     Coral and shell fisheries are predominantly hand collection
     fisheries and have a remote likelihood of marine mammal
     interaction. NMFS was unable to find evidence of an existing shrimp
     fishery. Possible import recording issue as the U.S. is not
     actively importing any product from Somalia. (http://www.fao.org/fi/oldsite/FCP/en/SOM/profile.htm).
Tokelau Islands, Territory of New Zealand
    Justification--No commercial fisheries.
    Details--2000-2017 U.S. Trade Data shows records of exports of
     marine fish (2001, 2007, 2008, 2009) seabass (2010, 2011, 2012) and
     Bluefin tuna (2016). However, several reports indicate the absence
     of commercial fisheries operating in Tokelau (Dalzell et al., 1996;
     Passfield, 1998). All fishing activities are subsistence. In
     addition, seabass is not a species found in Tokelau. Tokelau does
     not have the food safety regulations to export fish to another
     nation and is not a flag state or port state.
Togo

[[Page 39773]]

 
    Justification--Few and inconsistent exports.
    Details--We found evidence that Togo's fisheries for shrimp are
     subsistence, artisanal fisheries; likewise, Togo's tuna fisheries
     are solely artisanal fisheries with no current active industrial
     fishery although foreign-flagged and IUU vessels target tuna in
     Togo's waters. Togo's sardine fishery consists of industrial trawl
     and artisanal beach seine operations, with no evidence that these
     are commercial and exporting fisheries (https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/legacy.seaaroundus/doc/Researcher+Publications/dpauly/PDF/2015/Working+Papers/MarineFisheriesTogo.pdf). Togo's
     snail (other than sea snail) are freshwater species for which the
     rule does not apply. Finally, the crustacean fishery is lagoon-
     based (artisanal and subsistence) with limited exports to
     international markets.
Uganda
    Justification--Landlocked, only export freshwater species.
    Details--From 2000-2009, U.S. Trade Data records show some processed
     marine fishery products imported to the U.S via Uganda; however
     from 2012 to 2017, exports have been exclusively Nile perch, a
     freshwater species for which the MMPA import rule does not apply.
Uzbekistan
    Justification--Landlocked; Freshwater species only.
    Details--No imports 2014-2017, in 2013 Uzbekistan exported
     freshwater species only; and, from 2009-2012, the predominant
     exports were freshwater fish species with some exports of processed
     ``marine fish.'' For freshwater species the MMPA import rule does
     not apply.
    http://www.fao.org/fishery/facp/UZB/en.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Assumptions Made in the Development of the LOFF

Fishery Products

    NMFS assumed that seafood products imported by the U.S. between the 
years 2000 and 2017 would be a reasonable basis for the list of target 
species included in the draft LOFF for each harvesting nation, unless 
the nation indicated that the fishery no longer occurs, the species is 
a re-export, (e.g., because the nation is only the processor for that 
fish or fish product), or the reported export of that seafood species/
product to the United States was a data reporting error. For those fish 
and fish products listed on the U.S. Trade database, NMFS initially 
assumed that a fishery was associated with those products and looked to 
exporting nations to confirm their status as either the harvesting 
nation, intermediary nation, or both.
    NMFS assumed that species or products that were associated with a 
gear type were wild caught and not aquacultured, with one exception. 
Unless occurring in the wild in a given country, NMFS assumed tilapia 
was produced by aquaculture operation.

Area of Operation

    To the extent possible, NMFS listed a harvesting nation's fisheries 
that take place in a foreign Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) or on the 
high seas under that harvesting nation's LOFF, rather than under the 
LOFF of the nation in whose EEZ the fishing took place.

Hand Collection Fisheries for Corals, Sponges, Shells

    Where no information was provided by a nation and the U.S. has 
imported corals, sponges, and/or shells from that nation, these 
fisheries were designated as a gear type of ``hand collection'' and 
subsequently labelled an exempt fishery. There is limited aquaculture 
of corals for export, though aquaculture-raised coral would also be 
hand collected and labelled an exempt fishery.

Duplication of Marine Mammal Interactions Based on Gear Type With No 
Associated Target Fishery Species

    Where nations did not indicate target species and failed to provide 
fishery information in the form of: (1) A gear type and associated 
marine mammal interaction, or (2) a gear type and specific area of 
operation with associated marine mammal interaction, NMFS assumed that 
any instance of that gear type for any target species, or that gear 
type operating in a specific area of operation for any corresponding 
target species also reported, had the same likelihood or prevalence of 
marine mammal interaction. Any species or bycatch numbers provided in 
these instances were copied across target fisheries. Nations are 
encouraged to notice where duplication may have occurred and provide 
documentation to support changes to the bycatch species or bycatch 
estimates.

Toothfish (Dissostichus spp.) Catch Documentation Scheme (CDS)

    Antarctic and Patagonian toothfish (Dissostichus spp.) are fished 
under a strict catch documentation scheme (CDS) in order to prevent 
trade in toothfish harvested in contravention of Convention on the 
Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR) Conservation 
measures. The CDS allows for supply chain tracking of toothfish from 
point of harvest. Only Members and nations that are Party to the 
Convention are permitted to participate in the CDS for toothfish with 
the exception of the Seychelles, which is the sole Non-Contracting 
Party (NCP), permitted to participate in the CDS. As in the case of the 
Cayman Islands discussed above, instances where the NOAA S&T and CBP 
import data indicated the U.S. received toothfish from an NCP were 
crosschecked against the CDS and were determined to likely be the 
result misreporting a vessel's ``last port'' as its ``point of 
origin.'' As the U.S. already prohibits the importation of toothfish 
without a valid Dissostichus Catch Document, NMFS discarded these cases 
from the LOFF. For more information, see https://www.ccamlr.org/en/compliance/catch-documentation-scheme-cds.

Summary

    NMFS reviewed information from or related to more than 160 trading 
partners. NMFS eliminated 25 nations from the LOFF (see Table 1 for a 
list of these nations and the rationale used for eliminating them from 
the LOFF). The draft LOFF is comprised of 138 nations for a total of 
720 exempt and 3,270 export fisheries. The LOFF, an expanded LOFF 
containing references, a list of Intermediary nations and their 
associated products, and list of fisheries and nations where the rule 
does not apply can found at www.nmfs.noaa.gov/ia/species/marine_mammals/mmpaloff.html. An annotated bibliography with supporting 
references can be found at www.nmfs.noaa.gov/ia/species/marine_mammals/mmpaloff.html.

Impact of the LOFF on Largest Trading Partners by Volume and Value

    Below is a table containing the twenty largest imports by volume 
and value, an assessment of the data they provided, and their risk of 
marine mammal bycatch. NMFS based its assessment of the quality of the 
data supplied by

[[Page 39774]]

nations based on the completeness and amount of detail in the 
information provided. The number of export and exempt fisheries is a 
tally of those fisheries after NMFS analysis of the LOFF. The overall 
risk of marine mammal bycatch is based on the type of gear most 
prevalent in the nation's fisheries and the information provided by 
those nations related to marine mammal fisheries interactions.
    Chile, Peru, Argentina, and Ecuador have large numbers of small 
gillnet, purse seine, and trawl vessels with marine mammal bycatch. 
Canada's pot fisheries for lobster and snow crab have high levels of 
large whale bycatch. Canada also has bycatch in its gillnet fisheries 
and permits the intentional killing of marine mammals in aquaculture 
operations. Indonesia, Thailand, and Vietnam have large processing and 
aquaculture sectors; their vulnerability lies in their apparent 
inability to assess and mitigate marine mammal bycatch. If these 
nations estimate their marine mammal bycatch or provide more detailed 
information about their fishery operations, NMFS may be able to 
reclassify as exempt additional fisheries.
    The Russian Federation, Japan, Mexico, and China provided little to 
no information to enable a full assessment of their fisheries and level 
of marine mammal risk. Japan's marine mammal bycatch is particularly 
large in its pound net fisheries, whereas the Russian Federation's 
bycatch is predominantly in its pot and trawl fisheries. Mexico's 
marine mammal bycatch includes its gillnet and trawl fisheries in the 
Gulf of Mexico and the Gulf of California. India's fishery bycatch is 
predominantly in its coastal gillnet fisheries which includes tens of 
thousands of vessels. Taiwan has bycatch in their longline fisheries 
and their drift gillnet fisheries. The United Kingdom has bycatch of 
harbor porpoise and common dolphins in gillnet and trawl fisheries.
    Nations, some not on this list, with a high level of documented 
marine mammal bycatch include South Korea (pound nets and gillnets); 
New Zealand (all gear types, especially trawl); and Australia (trawl 
and longline). However, NMFS recognizes that this evaluation may be 
highly influenced by the advanced assessment capabilities of these 
nations. New Zealand and Norway may be the only nations to have 
currently calculated a bycatch limit. Norway's information demonstrates 
bycatch of harbor porpoise, gray seal, and harbor seal in excess of the 
bycatch limit in its gillnet fisheries.

 Table 2--List of the Twenty Largest Imports by Volume and Value and an Assessment of the Data They Provided and
                                       Their Risk of Marine Mammal Bycatch
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                Number of
               Nation                    Quality of data      export/exempt     Overall risk of marine mammal
                                            supplied            fisheries                  bycatch
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Canada.............................  Excellent.............          163/82  Average/High.
China..............................  Poor..................           110/3  Unknown.
Indonesia..........................  Fair..................           13/25  Low.
Thailand...........................  Fair..................           76/12  Average.
Chile..............................  Good..................           46/39  Average/High.
India..............................  Poor..................            24/2  Unknown.
Vietnam............................  Fair..................           26/14  Low.
Ecuador............................  Good..................            21/6  High.
Mexico.............................  Fair..................           40/24  Average.
Russian Federation.................  Poor..................           114/0  Average/High.
Japan..............................  Poor..................          197/18  High.
Philippines........................  Good..................            16/4  Low.
Peru...............................  Good..................           70/34  Average/High.
Argentina..........................  Good..................            65/9  Average.
Iceland............................  Excellent.............            27/2  Average.
Honduras...........................  Poor..................             4/6  Unknown.
Taiwan.............................  Good..................            19/3  Average/High.
South Korea........................  Excellent.............          604/44  High.
New Zealand........................  Excellent.............           81/25  Average/High.
United Kingdom.....................  Good..................            56/8  Average/High.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Request for Input

    In addition to the requested information in this Federal Register 
notice, NMFS is interested in receiving public comment and supporting 
documentation in response to the following:

    1. Should all marine aquaculture involving lines, such as 
seaweed, mussels, oysters, and other shellfish be considered an 
exempt fishery? Why or why not?
    2. Should net pen aquaculture for tuna be considered an exempt 
fishery? Why or why not?
    3. Should net cage aquaculture for finfish be considered an 
exempt fishery? Why or why not?
    4. Should lift net or other such nets be considered an exempt 
fishery? Why or why not?
    5. Would nations prefer to submit their information in the form 
of a database?
    6. Should nations with only exempt fisheries be allowed to apply 
for a comparability finding every eight years rather than every four 
years?

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Marine Mammals in U.S. Fisheries and a First Estimate of the 
Magnitude of Global Marine Mammal ByCatch. Conservation Biology 
Volume 20, No. 1, 163-169.
Reeves RR, Berggeren Per, Crespo Enrique, Gales Nick, Northridge 
Simon P, di Sciara Giuseppe, Perrin William, Read Andrew, Rogan 
Emer, Smith Brian, and Koen Waerebeek. 2004. Global Priorities for 
Reduction of Cetacean Bycatch. International Whaling Commission.SC/
56/Bc2. 56th Scientific Committee Meeting. Sorrento, Italy.
Reeves, Randall R, Kate McClellan, Timothy B. Werner. 2013 Marine 
Mammal Bycatch in Gillnet and Other Entangling Net Fisheries, 1990 
to 2011. Endangered Species Research Vol. 20: 71-97.
Waring, GT, Josephson E, Maze-Foley K, Rosel PE, Byrd B, Cole TVN, 
Engleby L, Garrison LP, Hatch J, Henry A, Horstman

[[Page 39776]]

SC, Litz J, Mullin KD, Orphanides C, Pace RM, Palka DL, Lyssikatos 
M. Wenzel FW (2015) Trends in Selected U.S. Atlantic and Gulf of 
Mexico Marine Mammal Stock Assessments--2014. NOAA Technical 
Memorandum NMFS-NE-23. Available at: www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/sars/pdf/ao2013_tm228.pdf. Accessed: 23 December 2015
Waring GT, Josephson E, Maze-Foley K, Rosel PE, Barry K, Byrd B, 
Cole TVN, Engleby L, Fairfield C, Garrison LP, Henry A, Hansen L, 
Litz J, Orphanides C, Pace RM, Palka DL, Rossman MC, Sinclair C, 
Wenzel FW (2012) U.S. Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico Marine Mammal 
Stock Assessments--2011. NOAA Technical Memorandum NMFS-NE-22. 
Available at: www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/pdfs/sars/ao2011.pdf. Accessed: 
23 December 2015
Watson RC, Revenga C, and Y Kura. 2006. Fishing Gear Associated with 
Global Marine Catches. Fisheries Research 79:97-102. Vancouver, BC. 
Doi:10.1016/j.fishres.2006.01.010
Werner (2014) Mitigating bycatch and depredation of marine mammals 
in longline fisheries. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 72:1576-1586.
W[uuml]rsig, B., and G.A. Gailey. 2002. Marine mammals and 
aquaculture: Conflicts and potential resolutions. Pages 45-59 in 
R.R. Stickney and J.P. McVey, editors. Responsible Marine 
Aquaculture. CAB International, New York.
Young, Madeline Olivia. 2015. Marine animal entanglements in mussel 
aquaculture gear, documented cases from mussel farming regions of 
the world including first-hand accounts from Iceland. Master's 
thesis. University of Akureyri, Iceland.

    Dated: August 16, 2017.
John Henderschedt,
Director, Office for International Affairs and Seafood Inspection, 
National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2017-17671 Filed 8-21-17; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 3510-22-P



                                                39762                               Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 161 / Tuesday, August 22, 2017 / Notices

                                                                                                                                                                                             Cash deposit
                                                                                                            Exporter 15                                                                      rate in effect    Federal Register notice
                                                                                                                                                                                                  (%)

                                                Sao Ta Foods Joint Stock Company, aka Fimex VN, aka Sao Ta Seafood Factory, aka Saota                                                                  4.78   AR10 Final Results.
                                                  Seafood Factory.
                                                Thong Thuan Company Limited, aka Cong Ty Tnhh Thong Thuan ..................................................                                           4.78   AR10 Final Results.
                                                Thuan Phuoc Seafoods and Trading Corporation, aka Thuan Phuoc Corp., aka Frozen Seafoods                                                               4.78   AR10 Final Results.
                                                  Factory No. 32, aka Seafoods and Foodstuff Factory, aka Seafoods and Foodstuff Factory
                                                  Vietnam, aka My Son Seafoods Factory.
                                                UTXI Aquatic Products Processing Corporation, aka UT XI Aquatic Products Processing Corpora-                                                           4.78   AR11 Final Results.
                                                  tion, aka UTXI Aquatic Products Processing Company, aka UT XI Aquatic Products Processing
                                                  Company, aka UTXI Co. Ltd., aka UTXI, aka UTXICO, aka Hoang Phuong Seafood Factory,
                                                  aka Hoang Phong Seafood Factory.
                                                Viet Foods Co., Ltd., aka Nam Hai Foodstuff and Export Company Ltd ..........................................                                          4.78   AR10   Final   Results.
                                                Vietnam Clean Seafood Corporation, aka Vina Cleanfood ................................................................                                 4.78   AR10   Final   Results.
                                                Viet Hai Seafood Co., Ltd., aka Vietnam Fish One Co., Ltd., aka Fish One ....................................                                          4.78   AR11   Final   Results.
                                                Viet I-Mei Frozen Foods Co., Ltd .......................................................................................................               4.78   AR10   Final   Results.



                                                   There have been no subsequent                                    SUMMARY:    NMFS is publishing its draft                                  Instructions: Comments sent by any
                                                administrative reviews completed for                                List of Foreign Fisheries (LOFF) for                                   other method, to any other address or
                                                the below-listed non-individually                                   2017, as required by the regulations                                   individual, or received after the end of
                                                examined company that qualified for a                               implementing the Fish and Fish Product                                 the comment period, may not be
                                                separate rate and is subject to this                                Import Provisions of the Marine                                        considered. All comments received are
                                                litigation; thus, the cash deposit rate of                          Mammal Protection Act (MMPA). The                                      a part of the public record and will
                                                6.94 percent, as recalculated in Remand                             draft LOFF reflects available                                          generally be posted for public viewing
                                                II, applies for this exporter.                                      information on marine mammal                                           on www.regulations.gov without change.
                                                                                                                    interactions in commercial fisheries                                   All personal identifying information
                                                                                             Cash deposit           exporting fish and fish products to the                                (e.g., name, address, etc.), confidential
                                                              Exporter                       rate in effect         United States. NMFS has classified each                                business information, or otherwise
                                                                                                  (%)
                                                                                                                    commercial fishery included in the draft                               sensitive information submitted
                                                BIM Seafood Joint Stock                                             LOFF into one of two categories based                                  voluntarily by the sender will be
                                                  Company ...........................                      6.94     upon frequency and likelihood of                                       publicly accessible. NMFS will accept
                                                                                                                    incidental mortality and serious injury                                anonymous comments (enter ‘‘N/A’’ in
                                                Notification to Interested Parties                                  of marine mammals that is likely to                                    the required fields if you wish to remain
                                                                                                                    occur incidental to each fishery.                                      anonymous). Attachments to electronic
                                                  This notice is issued and published in                            Fisheries are classified as either exempt                              comments will be accepted in Microsoft
                                                accordance with sections 516A(e)(1),                                or export. The classification of a fishery                             Word, Excel, or Adobe portable
                                                751(a)(1), and 777(i)(1) of the Act.                                on the draft and final LOFF will                                       document file (PDF) formats only.
                                                  Dated: August 15, 2017.                                           determine which regulatory                                                NMFS will consider all comments
                                                Gary Taverman,                                                      requirements will be applicable to that                                and information received during the
                                                Deputy Assistant Secretary for Antidumping                          fishery to enable the nation to receive a                              comment period in preparing a final
                                                and Countervailing Duty Operations,                                 comparability finding necessary to                                     LOFF. NMFS will also seek input from
                                                Performing the Non-exclusive Functions and                          export fish and fish products to the                                   nations on the draft LOFF at bilateral
                                                Duties of the Assistant Secretary for                               United States from that particular                                     and multilateral meetings, as
                                                Enforcement and Compliance.                                         fishery. The draft LOFF can be found at                                appropriate.
                                                [FR Doc. 2017–17629 Filed 8–21–17; 8:45 am]                         www.nmfs.noaa.gov/ia/species/marine_
                                                                                                                                                                                           FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                BILLING CODE 3510–DS–P                                              mammals/mmpaloff.html.
                                                                                                                                                                                           Nina Young, NMFS F/IASI at
                                                                                                                    DATES: Written comments must be
                                                                                                                                                                                           Nina.Young@noaa.gov or 301–427–
                                                                                                                    received by 5 p.m. Eastern Time on
                                                DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE                                                                                                                     8383.
                                                                                                                    October 23, 2017.
                                                                                                                    ADDRESSES: You may submit comments                                     SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:       In August
                                                National Oceanic and Atmospheric                                    on this document, identified by NOAA–                                  2016, NMFS published a final rule (81
                                                Administration                                                      NMFS–2017–0084, by either of the                                       FR 54390; August 15, 2016)
                                                [Docket No. 170706630–7630–01]                                      following methods:                                                     implementing the fish and fish product
                                                                                                                       1. Electronic Submissions: Submit all                               import provisions (section 101(a)(2)) of
                                                RIN 0648–XF538                                                      electronic comments via the Federal e-                                 the Marine Mammal Protection Act
                                                                                                                    Rulemaking Portal. Go to                                               (MMPA). This rule established
                                                Fish and Fish Product Import                                                                                                               conditions for evaluating a harvesting
                                                                                                                    www.regulations.gov/
                                                Provisions of the Marine Mammal                                                                                                            nation’s regulatory programs to address
                                                                                                                    #!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-2017-
                                                Protection Act List of Foreign                                                                                                             incidental and intentional mortality and
                                                                                                                    0084, click the ‘‘Comment Now!’’ icon,
                                                Fisheries
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                                                                                                                    complete the required fields and enter                                 serious injury of marine mammals in
                                                AGENCY:  National Marine Fisheries                                  or attach your comments.                                               fisheries operated by nations that export
                                                Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and                                   2. Mail: Submit written comments to:                                fish and fish products to the United
                                                Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),                                  Director, Office of International Affairs                              States.
                                                Commerce.                                                           and Seafood Inspection, Attn: MMPA                                        Under this rule, fish or fish products
                                                ACTION: Notice of availability; request
                                                                                                                    List of Foreign Fisheries, NMFS, F/IASI,                               cannot be imported into the United
                                                for comments.                                                       1315 East-West Highway, Silver Spring,                                 States from commercial fishing
                                                                                                                    MD 20910.                                                              operations, which result in the


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                                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 161 / Tuesday, August 22, 2017 / Notices                                            39763

                                                incidental mortality or serious injury of               all fisheries, in order to receive a                  affected by an export fishery, NMFS
                                                marine mammals in excess of United                      comparability finding under this                      may use its emergency rulemaking
                                                States standards. Such fish and fish                    program, the harvesting nation must                   authority to institute an import ban on
                                                products from export and exempt                         prohibit intentional killing of marine                these products.
                                                fisheries identified by the Assistant                   mammals in the course of commercial
                                                                                                                                                              How will NMFS classify a fishery if a
                                                Administrator for Fisheries in the LOFF                 fishing operations in the fishery or
                                                can only be imported into the United                    demonstrate that it has procedures to                 harvesting nation does not provide
                                                States if the harvesting nation has                     reliably certify that exports of fish and             information?
                                                applied for and received a comparability                fish products to the United States were                  In instances where information on the
                                                finding from NMFS. The rule                             not harvested in association with the                 commercial fishing operations and the
                                                established procedures that a harvesting                intentional killing or serious injury of              frequency and likelihood of bycatch in
                                                nation must follow and conditions it                    marine mammals.                                       a fishery has not been provided by the
                                                must meet to receive a comparability                                                                          nation or is not readily available, NMFS
                                                                                                        What do the classifications of ‘‘exempt
                                                finding for a fishery. The rule also                                                                          may determine whether a fishery is an
                                                                                                        fishery’’ and ‘‘export fishery’’ mean?
                                                established provisions for intermediary                                                                       exempt or export fishery by evaluating
                                                nations to ensure that such nations do                     The classifications of ‘‘exempt                    the fishery using information such as
                                                not import and re-export to the United                  fishery’’ or ‘‘export fishery’’ determine             fishing techniques, gear used, methods
                                                States fish or fish products that are                   the criteria that a particular nation’s               used to deter marine mammals, target
                                                subject to an import prohibition.                       fishery must meet to receive a                        species, seasons and areas fished,
                                                                                                        comparability finding for that fishery. A             qualitative data from logbooks or fisher
                                                What is the List of Foreign Fisheries?                  comparability finding is required for                 reports, stranding data, the species and
                                                   Based on information provided by                     both exempt and export fisheries, but                 distribution of marine mammals in the
                                                nations, industry, the public, and other                the criteria differ.                                  area, or other factors.
                                                readily available sources, NMFS has                        The criteria for an exempt fishery to
                                                identified nations with commercial                      receive a comparability finding are                      As anticipated, information on the
                                                fishing operations that export fish and                 limited only to those conditions related              frequency or likelihood of interactions
                                                fish products to the United States and                  to the prohibition of intentional killing             or bycatch in most foreign fisheries was
                                                has classified each of those fisheries                  or injury of marine mammals (see 50                   lacking or incomplete. In the absence of
                                                based on their frequency of marine                      CFR 216.24(h)(6)(iii)(A)). To receive a               such information, NMFS used the
                                                mammal interactions as either ‘‘exempt’’                comparability finding, export fisheries,              information noted above to classify
                                                or ‘‘export’’ fisheries (see definitions                must comply with those criteria and                   fisheries, which may include drawing
                                                below). The entire list of these export                 also maintain regulatory programs                     analogies to similar U.S. fisheries and
                                                and exempt fisheries, organized by                      comparable in effectiveness to the U.S.               gear types interacting with similar
                                                nation (or subsidiary jurisdiction),                    regulatory program for reducing                       marine mammal stocks. Where no
                                                constitutes the LOFF.                                   incidental marine mammal bycatch (see                 analogous fishery or fishery information
                                                                                                        50 CFR 216.24(h)(6)).                                 exists, NMFS classified the commercial
                                                Why is the LOFF important?                                                                                    fishing operation as an export fishery
                                                   Under the MMPA, the United States                    What is the five-year exemption period?               until such time as information comes
                                                prohibits imports of commercial fish or                    NMFS included a five-year exemption                available to properly classify the fishery.
                                                fish products caught in commercial                      period (which began 1 January, 2017) in               NMFS may reclassify a fishery if a
                                                fishing operations resulting in the                     this process to allow foreign harvesting              harvesting nation provides, during the
                                                incidental killing or serious injury                    nations time to develop, as appropriate,              comment period, reliable information to
                                                (bycatch) of marine mammals in excess                   regulatory programs comparable in                     reclassify the fishery or such
                                                of United States standards (16 U.S.C.                   effectiveness to U.S. programs at                     information is readily available to
                                                1371(a)(2)). NMFS published                             reducing marine mammal bycatch.                       NMFS in the course of preparing a
                                                regulations implementing these MMPA                     During this exemption period, NMFS,                   revised LOFF.
                                                import provisions in August 2016 (81                    based on the final LOFF, and in                       Instructions to Nations Reviewing the
                                                FR 54390, August 15, 2016). The                         consultation with the Secretary of State,             Draft LOFF
                                                regulations apply to any foreign nation                 will consult with harvesting nations
                                                with fisheries exporting fish and fish                  with commercial fishing operations                       In the LOFF, the vast majority, 3272
                                                products to the United States, either                   identified as export or exempt fisheries              fisheries, are classified as export
                                                directly or through an intermediary                     for purposes of notifying the harvesting              fisheries in accordance with 50 CFR
                                                nation.                                                 nation of the requirements of the                     216.24(h)(3) and 216.3. To ensure the
                                                   The LOFF is an integral part of the                  MMPA. NMFS will continue to urge                      appropriate classification of their
                                                process for implementing the import                     harvesting nations to gather information              fisheries, nations should review the
                                                provisions of the MMPA. As described                    about marine mammal bycatch in their                  LOFF at www.nmfs.noaa.gov/ia/species/
                                                below, the LOFF lists foreign                           commercial fisheries to inform the next               marine_mammals/mmpaloff.html
                                                commercial fisheries that export fish                   draft and final LOFF. NMFS will re-                   together with this Federal Register
                                                and fish products to the United States                  evaluate foreign commercial fishing                   notice carefully and submit detailed
                                                and that have been classified as either                 operations and publish a notice of                    comments on their commercial fishing
                                                ‘‘export’’ or ‘‘exempt’’ based on the                   availability of the draft for public                  and processing operations. In this
                                                frequency and likelihood of interactions                                                                      Federal Register notice, NMFS provides
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                                                                                                        comment, and a notice of availability of
                                                or incidental mortality and serious                     the final revised LOFF in the Federal                 detailed information on the information
                                                injury of marine mammal. A harvesting                   Register the year prior to the expiration             reviewed to create the LOFF, the criteria
                                                nation must apply for and receive a                     of the exemption period (2020).                       used to classify a fishery as exempt or
                                                comparability finding for each of its                      If, during the five-year exemption                 export, and the assumptions made to
                                                export and exempt fisheries to continue                 period, the United States determines                  determine such classifications based on
                                                to export fish and fish products from                   that a marine mammal stock is                         the information submitted or found
                                                those fisheries to the United States. For               immediately and significantly adversely               readily available.


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                                                39764                        Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 161 / Tuesday, August 22, 2017 / Notices

                                                  If a nation or entity wishes to                       Instructions for Reviewing Gear Type                  fisheries that do not pose the same level
                                                advocate for a change in the                            and Operational Areas                                 of risk.
                                                classification of a fishery, the nation or
                                                                                                           In developing the LOFF, NMFS                       Instructions for High Seas Fisheries
                                                entity should provide detailed                                                                                Operating Within a Regional Fishery
                                                information about the fishery,                          divided the fisheries by gear type
                                                                                                        because certain gears are documented as               Management Organization,
                                                summaries of observer or logbook data,                                                                        Intergovernmental Agreement, or Access
                                                information on analogous fisheries                      posing a greater risk of having marine
                                                                                                        mammal bycatch than others.                           Agreement
                                                where marine mammal bycatch may or
                                                may not occur, and detailed                             Subdividing fishery information in this                  NMFS attempted to identify fisheries
                                                documentary evidence to support its                     manner may not account for the actual                 that are operating within a convention
                                                claims, including, whenever possible,                   or estimated number of vessels. Nations               area of a regional fishery management
                                                peer-reviewed data on marine mammal                     should review the number of vessels                   organization (RFMO) or are associated
                                                bycatch and impacts of bycatch to                       licensed to fish with a particular gear               with an intergovernmental agreement.
                                                marine mammal population abundance.                     type and provide comments or revised                  NMFS requests that nations identify
                                                NMFS recommends that nations make                       estimates of vessels licensed to fish with            which fisheries are operating or
                                                specific edits in the appropriate column                that gear type.                                       authorized under an RFMO or
                                                to the draft LOFF and provide                              Some fisheries in the LOFF are likely              intergovernmental agreement and
                                                references and supporting information.                  multi-species fisheries but are currently             provide information on conservation
                                                                                                        classified separately by fish species. If a           and management measures that
                                                Instructions for Freshwater and Inland                  fishery listed has multiple target species            specifically govern the bycatch of
                                                Fisheries                                               (e.g., demersal fish or large pelagics) and           marine mammals in that organization.
                                                  Fisheries that occur solely in fresh                  is represented more than once on the                  This information will further assist in
                                                water outside any marine mammal                         LOFF, nations should consider                         the classification of fisheries and
                                                habitat, and inland aquaculture                         consolidating those fisheries to                      determinations related to future
                                                operations, are exempt from this rule. If               accurately reflect the multi-species                  comparability findings.
                                                any such fisheries have been included                   nature of that fishery. For example, cod                 Many nations have access agreements
                                                in the LOFF, nations should indicate                    and haddock fisheries that are classified             with other nations that permit them to
                                                such fisheries and provide the necessary                separately can be designated as                       fish within the EEZ or territorial waters
                                                documentary evidence so NMFS can                        multispecies groundfish fishery                       of another nation (see annex on global
                                                remove them from the LOFF as                            (including cod, haddock, etc.). NMFS                  tuna catch and access agreements in
                                                appropriate.                                            encourages nations to aggregate those                 supporting documents at
                                                                                                        fisheries that are listed separately into a           www.nmfs.noaa.gov/ia/species/marine_
                                                Instructions for Data Sets Listed as                    broader fishery designation, as                       mammals/mmpaloff.html).
                                                ‘‘None Provided’’                                       appropriate, and provide NMFS with a                     In most cases, nations did not provide
                                                                                                        list of fish species that are captured in             information distinguishing between
                                                   Many nations either did not provide
                                                                                                        that fishery and its operational details              vessels permitted to fish in their own
                                                information or provided incomplete
                                                                                                        (e.g., coastal pelagic gillnet fishery).              territorial waters from their national
                                                information. Where no information was
                                                                                                           NMFS also urges nations to group or                vessels fishing in distant waters under
                                                provided, NMFS labelled that data set as
                                                                                                        list fisheries, not based on the product              some type of access agreement. NMFS
                                                ‘‘none provided.’’ Nations are strongly
                                                                                                        exported but on the actual target species             strongly encourages nation to identify
                                                encouraged to provide that information
                                                                                                        of the fishery. If an exported fish or fish           which fisheries are operating under
                                                during the public comment period. In
                                                                                                        product is not a target of a fishery but              access agreements in distant waters or
                                                particular, NMFS is lacking information
                                                                                                        rather is a bycatch of that fishery,                  within the EEZ of another nation and
                                                for many fisheries on gear type, area of
                                                                                                        nations should note that information.                 the reporting requirements for such
                                                operation, marine mammal species that
                                                                                                        NMFS prefers avoiding consolidating                   fisheries.
                                                a fishery may encounter or entangle as
                                                bycatch, and bycatch estimates for many                 gear types together due to the different              Instruction for Nations That Are
                                                species. This information is critical for               risk gear types pose to marine mammals,               Processing Fish and Fish Products
                                                properly classifying the fishery. When                  but would consider aggregating fisheries                 For the purposes of identifying
                                                no information was provided, NMFS                       by target species or area, based on a                 intermediary nations (discussed below),
                                                used other readily available information                nation’s recommendations.                             if a nation exports a fish or fish product
                                                to define a fishery. Nations are urged to                  NMFS separated fisheries into                      to the United States for which it is only
                                                review both information supplied by the                 specific areas of operation. Our                      the processor, and the fish in that
                                                nation or discovered by NMFS,                           experience indicates that marine                      product is harvested elsewhere, NMFS
                                                especially those nations that did not                   mammal bycatch can differ depending                   strongly encourages nations or other
                                                provide information or provided                         on a fishery’s area of operation and its              entities to identify those products and
                                                incomplete information.                                 overlap with marine mammal                            the source fisheries and nations for
                                                   NMFS also urges nations to provide                   populations. NMFS urges nations to                    those products. Providing this
                                                the area of operation for both wild-                    review the area of operation listed for               information will result in NMFS re-
                                                caught fisheries and aquaculture                        each fishery and aggregate fisheries of               classifying a nation as an intermediary
                                                operations for all the fisheries listed. It             the same gear type into larger areas of               nation for that specific fish or fish
                                                is particularly important for nations to                operation (e.g., encompassing more bays
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES




                                                                                                                                                              product.
                                                provide information on the location of                  or management zones) where
                                                aquaculture operations (e.g., open                      appropriate. NMFS recommends                          Instructions for Fisheries With No
                                                ocean, lagoon, or pond) and the type of                 avoiding collapsing areas into larger                 Specific Target Species
                                                aquaculture operation (e.g., pens, cages,               management areas unless it is                           Nations will note that there are
                                                or lines); without this information,                    appropriate to do so and would not                    products for which NMFS has been
                                                NMFS cannot properly classify an                        result in a fishery with marine mammal                unable to find information (e.g., gear
                                                aquaculture operation.                                  bycatch disadvantaging one or more                    type and area of operation), and there


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                                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 161 / Tuesday, August 22, 2017 / Notices                                          39765

                                                are fisheries that have been documented                 Definitions                                           LOFF as either exempt or export
                                                in the literature as having marine                                                                            fisheries are deemed to be export
                                                                                                        What is a ‘‘comparability finding?’’
                                                mammal bycatch associated with a                                                                              fisheries until a revised LOFF is posted,
                                                nation and gear type but for which no                      A comparability finding is a finding               unless the harvesting nation provides
                                                target species of fish or fish products                 by NMFS that the harvesting nation for                the Assistant Administrator with
                                                was identified. NMFS urges nations to                   an export or exempt fishery has met the               information to properly classify the
                                                provide the information that is lacking                 applicable conditions specified in the                foreign commercial fishing operation.
                                                and as much detail as possible about the                regulations (see 50 CFR 216.24(h))                    The Assistant Administrator may also
                                                fishery, its operational characteristics,               subject to the additional considerations              request additional information from the
                                                and its interactions with marine                        for comparability findings set out in the             harvesting nation, as well as consider
                                                mammals, including applicable                           regulations. A comparability finding is               other relevant information about such
                                                references.                                             required for a nation to export fish and              commercial fishing operations and the
                                                                                                        fish products to the United States. In                frequency of incidental mortality and
                                                Instructions for Which Fisheries Should                 order to receive a comparability finding              serious injury of marine mammals, to
                                                be Included in the LOFF                                 for an export fishery, the harvesting                 properly classify the foreign commercial
                                                   NMFS urges nations to examine their                  nation must maintain a regulatory                     fishing operation.
                                                exports to the United States over the last              program with respect to that fishery that
                                                decade and include all fisheries which                  is comparable in effectiveness to the                 What is the definition of an ‘‘exempt
                                                have, are, or may in the future be the                  U.S. regulatory program for reducing                  fishery?’’
                                                source of fish and fish products                        incidental marine mammal bycatch.                        The definition of exempt fishery can
                                                exported to the United States. To ensure                This may be met by maintaining a                      be found in the implementing
                                                that no fisheries are overlooked in this                regulatory program that includes                      regulations for section 101(a)(2) of the
                                                process, nations should be as inclusive                 measures that are comparable, or that                 MMPA (see 50 CFR 216.3). NMFS
                                                as possible. Nations or other entities                  effectively achieve comparable results,               considers ‘‘exempt’’ fisheries to be
                                                should provide all the documentation                    to the regulatory program under which                 functionally equivalent to Category III
                                                and applicable references necessary to                  the analogous U.S. fishery operates.                  fisheries under the U.S. regulatory
                                                support any proposed modifications to                                                                         program (see definitions at 50 CFR
                                                                                                        What is the definition of an ‘‘export                 229.2). The definition of an exempt
                                                the fisheries in the LOFF. Providing
                                                                                                        fishery?’’                                            fishery is summarized below.
                                                such information will ensure an
                                                accurate classification of each fishery in                 The definition of export fishery can be               NMFS defines an exempt fishery as a
                                                the final LOFF and avoid requiring a                    found in the implementing regulations                 foreign commercial fishing operation
                                                nation to develop a regulatory program                  for section 101(a)(2) of the MMPA (see                determined by the Assistant
                                                for a fishery classified as an export                   50 CFR 216.3). NMFS considers                         Administrator to be the source of
                                                fishery because the nation failed to                    ‘‘export’’ fisheries to be functionally               exports of commercial fish and fish
                                                provide information.                                    equivalent to Category I and II fisheries             products to the United States that have
                                                                                                        under the U.S. regulatory program (see                a remote likelihood of, or no known,
                                                Instructions for Non-Nation Entities                    definitions at 50 CFR 229.2). The                     incidental mortality and serious injury
                                                   NMFS welcomes the input of the                       definition of an export fishery is                    of marine mammals in the course of
                                                public, non-governmental organizations,                 summarized below.                                     commercial fishing operations. A
                                                and scientists. These entities can                         NMFS defines ‘‘export fishery’’ as a               commercial fishing operation that has a
                                                provide critical information about                      foreign commercial fishing operation                  remote likelihood of causing incidental
                                                marine mammal bycatch in global                         determined by the Assistant                           mortality and serious injury of marine
                                                fisheries and efforts to mitigate such                  Administrator to be the source of                     mammals is one that, collectively with
                                                bycatch. NMFS requests that when such                   exports of commercial fish and fish                   other foreign fisheries exporting fish
                                                entities comment on the LOFF, they                      products to the United States that have               and fish products to the United States,
                                                provide as much detail and supporting                   more than a remote likelihood of                      causes the annual removal of:
                                                documentary evidence as possible.                       incidental mortality and serious injury                  (1) Ten percent or less of any marine
                                                While there are references in the                       of marine mammals in the course of its                mammal stock’s bycatch limit, or
                                                literature to marine mammal bycatch in                  commercial fishing operations.                           (2) More than ten percent of any
                                                certain foreign fisheries, it may be that                  Where reliable information on the                  marine mammal stock’s bycatch limit,
                                                fish and fish products originating from                 frequency of incidental mortality and                 yet that fishery by itself removes one
                                                those fisheries are not exported to the                 serious injury of marine mammals                      percent or less of that stock’s bycatch
                                                United States (e.g., artisanal or coastal               caused by the commercial fishing                      limit annually, or
                                                fisheries for domestic consumption).                    operation is not provided by the                         (3) Where reliable information has not
                                                NMFS would like to receive information                  harvesting nation, the Assistant                      been provided by the harvesting nation
                                                on which fish and fish products are                     Administrator may determine the                       on the frequency of incidental mortality
                                                exported to the United States and the                   likelihood of incidental mortality and                and serious injury of marine mammals
                                                frequency of marine mammal                              serious injury as more than remote by                 caused by the commercial fishing
                                                interactions or bycatch in those                        evaluating information concerning                     operation, the Assistant Administrator
                                                fisheries.                                              factors such as fishing techniques, gear              may determine whether the likelihood
                                                                                                        used, methods used to deter marine                    of incidental mortality and serious
                                                Further Direction and Instructions                                                                            injury is ‘‘remote’’ by evaluating
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                                                                                                        mammals, target fish species, seasons
                                                  NMFS urges all nations and all                        and areas fished, qualitative data from               information such as fishing techniques,
                                                stakeholders to review the criteria,                    logbooks or fisher reports, stranding                 gear used, methods to deter marine
                                                assumptions, and global classifications                 data, the species and distribution of                 mammals, target fish species, seasons
                                                that follow in this Federal Register                    marine mammals in the area, or other                  and areas fished, qualitative data from
                                                notice, to more completely understand                   factors.                                              logbooks or fisher reports, stranding
                                                the classifications and rationale in the                   Commercial fishing operations not                  data, the species and distribution of
                                                LOFF.                                                   specifically identified in the current                marine mammals in the area, or other


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                                                39766                        Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 161 / Tuesday, August 22, 2017 / Notices

                                                factors at the discretion of the Assistant              Second, in December 2016 NMFS                         network data, fisher self-reports, and the
                                                Administrator.                                          notified in writing each nation with                  information referenced in the definition
                                                   A foreign fishery will not be classified             commercial fishing or processing                      of exempt and export fishery (see above
                                                as an exempt fishery unless the                         operations that export fish or fish                   or 50 CFR 216.3).
                                                Assistant Administrator has reliable                    products to the United States to request
                                                                                                                                                              How often will NMFS revise the List of
                                                information from the harvesting nation,                 that within 90 days of notification, by
                                                                                                                                                              Foreign Fisheries?
                                                or other information to support such a                  April 1, 2017, the nation submit
                                                finding.                                                information about commercial fishing or                  NMFS has developed this draft LOFF
                                                                                                        processing operations. NMFS included                  and intends to publish a notice of the
                                                Developing the 2017 Draft List of                       in that notification a list of fish and fish          availability of the final LOFF in the
                                                Foreign Fisheries                                       products imported into the United                     Federal Register by January 1, 2018.
                                                How is the List of Foreign Fisheries                    States from that nation during the past               NMFS will re-evaluate foreign
                                                organized?                                              several years.                                        commercial fishing operations and
                                                                                                           For commercial fishing operations,                 publish a notice of availability of the
                                                  NMFS organized the LOFF by                            NMFS requested information on the                     draft for public comment, and a notice
                                                harvesting nation (or subsidiary                        number of participants, number of                     of availability of the final revised LOFF
                                                jurisdiction), then exempt fisheries,                   vessels, gear type, target species, area of           in the Federal Register the year prior to
                                                export fisheries, and export fisheries                  operation, fishing season, and any                    the expiration of the exemption period
                                                with no information. The fisheries listed               information regarding the frequency of                (2020). NMFS will revise the final
                                                contain defining factors including                      marine mammal incidental mortality                    LOFF, as appropriate, and publish a
                                                geographic location of harvest, gear-                   and serious injury, including programs                notice of availability in the Federal
                                                type, target species or a combination                   to assess marine mammal populations                   Register every four years thereafter. In
                                                thereof. The LOFF also includes a list of               or bycatch. NMFS also requested that                  revising the list, NMFS may reclassify a
                                                the marine mammals that interact with                   nations submit copies of any laws,                    fishery if new, substantive information
                                                each commercial fishing operation,                      decrees, regulations, or measures to                  indicates the need to re-examine and
                                                where known, and, when available,                       reduce incidental mortality and serious               possibly reclassify a fishery. After
                                                indicates the level of incidental                       injury of marine mammals in their                     publication of the LOFF, if a nation
                                                mortality and serious injury of marine                  commercial fishing operations or                      wishes to commence exporting fish and
                                                mammals in each commercial fishing                      prohibit the intentional killing or injury            fish products to the United States from
                                                operation.                                              of marine mammals.                                    a fishery not on the LOFF, that fishery
                                                What sources of information did NMFS                       NMFS also evaluated information                    will be classified as an export fishery
                                                use to classify the commercial fisheries                submitted by the nations and the public               until the next LOFF is published and
                                                included in the draft LOFF?                             in response to Federal Register Notice                will be provided a provisional
                                                                                                        (82 FR 2961, January 10, 2017) seeking                comparability finding for a period not to
                                                   NMFS reviewed and considered                         information on foreign commercial                     exceed twelve months. If a harvesting
                                                documentation provided by nations; the                  fishing operations that export fish and               nation can provide the reliable
                                                public; and other sources of                            fish products to the United States and                information necessary to classify the
                                                information, where available, including                 the frequency of incidental and                       commercial fishing operation at the time
                                                fishing vessel records; reports of on-                  intentional mortality and serious injury              of the request for a provisional
                                                board fishery observers; information                    of marine mammals in those fisheries.                 comparability finding or prior to the
                                                from off-loading facilities, port-side                                                                        expiration of the provisional
                                                government officials, enforcement,                      How did NMFS determine which species
                                                                                                                                                              comparability finding, NMFS will
                                                transshipment vessel workers and fish                   or stocks are included as incidentally or             classify the fishery in accordance with
                                                importers; government vessel registries;                intentionally killed or seriously injured             the definitions. The provisions for new
                                                RFMOs or intergovernmental agreement                    in a fishery?                                         entrants are discussed in the regulations
                                                documents, reports, national reports,                      The LOFF includes a list of marine                 implementing section 101(a)(2) of the
                                                and statistical document programs;                      mammal species and/or stocks                          MMPA (see 50 CFR 216.24(h)(8)(vi)).
                                                appropriate catch certification                         incidentally or intentionally killed or
                                                programs; Food and Agricultural                         injured in a commercial fishing                       How can a classification be changed?
                                                Organization (FAO)documents and                         operation. The list of species and/or                    To change a fishery’s classification,
                                                profiles; and published literature and                  stocks incidentally or intentionally                  nations or other interested stakeholders
                                                reports on commercial fishing                           killed or injured includes ‘‘serious’’ and            must provide observer data, logbook
                                                operations with intentional or                          ‘‘non-serious’’ documented injuries and               summaries, or reports that specifically
                                                incidental mortality and serious injury                 interactions with fishing gear, including             indicate the presence or absence of
                                                of marine mammals. NMFS has used                        interactions such as depredation.                     marine mammal interactions, quantify
                                                these sources of information and any                       NMFS reviewed information                          such interactions wherever possible,
                                                other readily available information to                  submitted by nations and readily                      provide additional information on the
                                                classify the fisheries as ‘‘export’’ or                 available scientific information                      location and operation of the fishery
                                                ‘‘exempt’’ fisheries to develop the LOFF.               including co-occurrence models                        (e.g., nearshore in less than three meters
                                                                                                        demonstrating distributional overlap of               of water), details about the gear type and
                                                How did NMFS obtain the information                     the commercial fishing operations and                 how it is used, maps showing the
                                                used to classify fisheries included in the              marine mammals to determine which                     distribution of marine mammals and the
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                                                draft LOFF?                                             species or stocks to include as                       operational area of the fishery;
                                                  First, NMFS identified imports of fish                incidentally or intentionally killed or               information regarding marine mammal
                                                and fish products by nation using the                   seriously injured in or interacting with              populations and the biological impact of
                                                U.S. foreign trade database for                         a fishery. NMFS also reviewed, when                   that fishery on those populations, and/
                                                commercial fisheries imports found at:                  available, injury determination reports,              or any other documentation that clearly
                                                http://www.st.nmfs.noaa.gov/                            bycatch estimation reports, observer                  demonstrates that a fishery is either an
                                                commercial-fisheries/foreign-trade/.                    data, logbook data, disentanglement                   export or exempt fishery.


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                                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 161 / Tuesday, August 22, 2017 / Notices                                            39767

                                                The Intersection of the LOFF and Other                  shrimp and shrimp products to the                     U.S. and international fisheries or gear
                                                Statutes Certifying Bycatch                             United States, regardless of whether                  types; and (3) overarching
                                                                                                        they are certified under this provision,              classifications, evaluation of gears and
                                                What is the relationship between the
                                                                                                        must also comply with the MMPA                        fishing operations and their risk of
                                                MMPA import rule, the LOFF, and the
                                                                                                        import rule, be included on the LOFF,                 marine mammal bycatch (see section
                                                affirmative finding process and
                                                                                                        and have a comparability finding.                     below for further discussion). Published
                                                yellowfin tuna purse seine fisheries in
                                                                                                        Nations in compliance with the MMPA                   scientific literature provides numerous
                                                the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean?
                                                                                                        import rule, but not certified under                  risk assessments of marine mammal
                                                   Dolphin (family Delphinidae)                         Public Law 101–162, cannot export                     bycatch in fisheries, routinely using
                                                incidental mortality and serious injury                 wild-caught shrimp to the United States.              these approaches to estimate marine
                                                in eastern tropical Pacific yellowfin                                                                         mammal mortality rates, identify
                                                tuna purse seine fisheries are covered by               Classification Criteria, Rationale, and               information gaps, set priorities for
                                                section 101(a)(2)(B) and Title III of the               Process Used To Classify Fisheries                    conservation, and transfer technology
                                                MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1371(a)(2)(B) and 16                    Process When Incidental Mortality and                 for deterring marine mammals from gear
                                                U.S.C. 1411–1417), implemented at 50                    Serious Injury Estimates and Bycatch                  and catch. Findings from the most
                                                CFR 216.24(a)–(g). Nations must still                   Limits Are Available                                  recent publications cited in this Federal
                                                comply with those provisions and                                                                              Register notice, often demonstrate level
                                                receive an affirmative finding in order to                If estimates of the total incidental                of risk by location, season, fishery, and
                                                export tuna to the United States. Tuna                  mortality and serious injury were                     gear. A summary of the information
                                                purse seine fishing vessels fishing for                 available and a bycatch limit calculated              used to support the designations
                                                tuna with a carrying capacity of 400                    for a marine mammal stock, NMFS used                  described below is available in the
                                                short tons or greater that are governed                 the quantitative and tiered analysis to               annotated bibliography and the
                                                by the Agreement for the International                  classify foreign commercial fishing                   expanded LOFF with references and
                                                Dolphin Conservation Program (AIDCP)                    operations as export or exempt fisheries              comments, at www.nmfs.noaa.gov/ia/
                                                are not included in the LOFF, and are                   under the category definition within 50               species/marine_mammals/
                                                not required to apply for and receive a                 CFR 229.2 and the procedures used to                  mmpaloff.html.
                                                comparability finding. Purse seine                      categorize U.S. fisheries as Category I, II,
                                                vessels under 400 short tons and vessels                or III, at http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/               Co-Occurrence Evaluation
                                                using all other gear types operating in                 interactions/lof/.                                      The co-occurrence of marine mammal
                                                the eastern tropical Pacific must comply                Process When Only Incidental Mortality                populations with a commercial fishing
                                                with the MMPA import rule. These                        and Serious Injury Estimates Were                     operation can be a measure of risk.
                                                fisheries are included in the LOFF and                  Available                                             NMFS evaluated, when available, the
                                                must apply for and receive a                                                                                  distribution and spatial overlap of
                                                comparability finding.                                     In the majority of cases, however,                 marine mammal populations and
                                                                                                        NMFS either did not receive any                       commercial fishing operations to
                                                What is the intersection of the U.S.                    information or found that the                         determine whether the probability for
                                                shrimp certification program (Section                   information provided was incomplete,                  marine mammal interactions or bycatch
                                                609 of Pub. L. 101–162) with the MMPA                   lacking detail regarding marine mammal                in that fishery is more than remote.
                                                import rule?                                            interactions, and lacking quantitative                Resources that NMFS used to consider
                                                   Section 609 of Public Law 101–162                    information on the frequency of                       co-occurrence include OBIS–SEAMAP
                                                (‘‘Sec. 609’’) prohibits imports of certain             interactions. Where nations provided                  http://seamap.env.duke.edu/, http://
                                                categories of shrimp unless the                         estimates of bycatch (incidental or                   www.hsi.org/assets/pdfs/mapping_
                                                President annually certifies to the                     intentional mortality or serious injury)              marine_mammals.pdf and http://www.
                                                Congress by May 1, 1991, and annually                   or NMFS found estimates of bycatch in                 conservationecologylab.com/uploads/1/
                                                thereafter, that either: (1) The harvesting             published literature, national reports, or            9/7/6/19763887/lewison_et_al_
                                                nation has adopted a program governing                  through other readily available sources,              2014.pdf. Additional sources in peer
                                                the incidental taking of sea turtles in its             NMFS classified the fishery as an export              reviewed literature that provide
                                                commercial shrimp fishery comparable                    fishery if the information indicated that             documentation of co-occurrence are
                                                to the program in effect in the United                  there was a likelihood that the mortality             Komoroske & Lewison 2015; FAO 2010;
                                                States and has an incidental take rate                  and serious injury was more than                      Watson et al. 2006; Read et al., 2006;
                                                comparable to that of the United States;                remote. The code or designation in the                Reeves et al., 2004. The code or
                                                or (2) the particular fishing environment               LOFF for the determination ‘‘presence                 designation for ‘‘co-occurrence’’ is
                                                of the harvesting nation does not pose                  of bycatch’’ is recorded as ‘‘P’’ in the              recorded as ‘‘C/O’’ in the LOFF.
                                                a threat of the incidental taking of sea                LOFF.
                                                turtles. On May 1, 2017, the Department                                                                       Analogous Gear Evaluation
                                                of State certified that 13 shrimp-                      Alternative Approaches When Estimates                    Where a nation did not provide
                                                harvesting nations and four fisheries                   of Marine Mammal Bycatch Are                          documentation or information was not
                                                have a regulatory program comparable                    Unavailable                                           readily available on the amount of
                                                to that of the United States governing                     Because bycatch estimates were                     marine mammal bycatch in a fishery or
                                                the incidental taking of the relevant                   lacking for most fisheries, NMFS relied               the co-occurrence, NMFS classified a
                                                species of sea turtles in the course of                 on three considerations to assess the                 fishery as exempt or export by analogy
                                                commercial shrimp harvesting and that                   likelihood of bycatch or interaction with             to similar U.S. or international fisheries
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                                                the particular fishing environments of                  marine mammals, including: (1) Co-                    and gear types interacting with similar
                                                26 shrimp-harvesting nations, one                       occurrence, the spatial and seasonal                  marine mammal stocks. NMFS
                                                economy, and three fisheries do not                     distribution and overlap of marine                    consulted the United States’ domestic
                                                pose a threat of the incidental taking of               mammals and fishing operations; (2)                   MMPA List of Fisheries when
                                                covered sea turtles in the course of such               analogous gear, evaluation of records of              classifying by analogy international
                                                harvesting (83 FR 21295 May 5, 2017).                   bycatch and assessment of risk, where                 fisheries http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/
                                                All nations exporting wild-caught                       such information exists, in analogous                 interactions/fisheries/2017_list_of_


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                                                39768                        Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 161 / Tuesday, August 22, 2017 / Notices

                                                fisheries_lof.html. NMFS also evaluated                 mammal species interacting with a                     Longlines
                                                other relevant information including,                   fishery or estimates of marine mammal                    Because the available information
                                                but not limited to: Fishing techniques,                 bycatch.                                              indicates that there is a likelihood that
                                                gear used, methods used to deter marine                                                                       the mortality and serious injury caused
                                                mammals, target fish species, seasons                   Overarching Classifications
                                                                                                                                                              by longlines is more than remote, NMFS
                                                and areas fished, qualitative data from                    Below is a discussion of the                       classified all longline fisheries as export
                                                logbooks or fisher reports, stranding                   overarching fishery classifications of                fisheries. U.S. longline fisheries, which
                                                data, the species and distribution of                   gillnets, longlines, purse seines, trawls,            are analogous to some fisheries
                                                marine mammals in the area, or other                                                                          considered in the LOFF, have been
                                                                                                        and aquaculture, and their interactions
                                                factors. The code or designation for the                                                                      categorized as Category I fisheries under
                                                                                                        with marine mammals.
                                                determination ‘‘analogous gear’’ is                                                                           the MMPA.
                                                recorded as ‘‘A/G’’ in the LOFF. Gear                   Gillnets                                                 In longline fisheries, hooking,
                                                types commonly used in U.S. fisheries,                                                                        entanglement, and boat strikes account
                                                such as longline, gillnet, purse seine,                    Because the available information
                                                                                                                                                              for some mortality and serious injury,
                                                trawl, and pot/trap, were identified as                 indicates that there is a likelihood that
                                                                                                                                                              but not all interactions or depredation
                                                ‘‘analogous gear’’ in the justification                 the mortality and serious injury caused
                                                                                                                                                              may have this result. Interactions of
                                                section of the LOFF. Gear types not                     by gillnets is more than remote, NMFS
                                                                                                                                                              marine mammals with longline fisheries
                                                commonly used in U.S. waters, such as                   has classified all gillnet fisheries as
                                                                                                                                                              are likely to be under-reported (Clarke
                                                Danish seine, ring nets, lift nets or large             export fisheries in the draft LOFF.
                                                                                                                                                              2014). Though not as great a threat for
                                                pound nets off Southeast Asia, however,                 Several U.S. gillnet fisheries, which are             cetaceans globally as compared with
                                                could not be compared to an analogous                   analogous to some fisheries considered                other gear types, longline bycatch is a
                                                gear or fishery in the United States.                   in the LOFF, have been categorized as                 threat to several species and
                                                Classification in the Absence of                        Category I fisheries under the MMPA.                  populations, including false killer
                                                Information                                             Records show that between 1990 and                    whales (Pseudorca crassidens), Risso’s
                                                                                                        2011, bycatch in gillnets continues to                dolphin (Grampus griseus), and pilot
                                                   When no analogous gear, fishery, or                  affect many dolphins (odontocetes);
                                                fishery information existed, or                                                                               whales (Globicephala spp.) in the
                                                                                                        namely 56 of the 74 recognized species                Northwest Atlantic (Werner 2015).
                                                insufficient information was provided                   (75%) have been bycaught in gillnets
                                                by the nation, and information was not                                                                        Killer whales (Orcinus orca) and sperm
                                                                                                        (Reeves et al. 2013). Additionally,                   whales (Physeter macrocephalus)
                                                readily available, NMFS classified the
                                                                                                        records indicate that nine species of the             appear to be the main species involved
                                                commercial fishing operation as an
                                                                                                        14 recognized species of whales have                  with demersal longline fisheries at
                                                export fishery per the definition of
                                                ‘‘export fishery’’ at 50 CFR 216.3. These               been bycaught in gillnets. For seals and              higher latitudes, while false killer
                                                fishing operations will remain classified               sea lions, 14 of the 18 extant species of             whales (Pseudorca crassidens) and pilot
                                                as export fisheries until the harvesting                phocid seals were captured in gillnets;               whales (Globicephala spp.) appear to be
                                                nation provides the reliable information                and of the 14 species of otariid seals and            the primary species involved with
                                                necessary to classify properly the                      sea lions (including one extinct species),            pelagic longline fisheries at lower
                                                fishery or, in the course of revising the               seven have been bycaught in gillnets                  latitudes (Hamer 2012).
                                                LOFF, such information becomes                          (Reeves et al. 2013). Since 1990, marine                 In a 2010 bycatch workshop with tuna
                                                readily available to NMFS. The code or                  mammal bycatch in gillnets has                        RFMOs, the FAO found that progress on
                                                designation for the determination ‘‘no                  increased and consistently poses a                    quantifying tuna RFMO fishery impacts
                                                information’’ is recorded as ‘‘N/I’’ in the             significant risk to marine mammals                    on marine mammal populations and
                                                LOFF.                                                   (Reeves et al. 2013). In particular,                  related progress in mitigating or
                                                                                                        Lewison et al. (2014) found that gillnets             reducing the mortality has been slow,
                                                Multiple Codes and Additional Terms in                  for finfish have high bycatch intensity               because the priority for fishers is the
                                                the LOFF                                                in various fishing regions of the world.              adoption of measures to reduce or
                                                   In some cases, NMFS recorded                            International and regional marine                  eliminate depredation and gear damage
                                                multiple codes as the rationale for a                   mammal and fishery management                         (FAO 2010). In tuna longline fisheries,
                                                fishery classification. For example,                                                                          which represent a significant portion of
                                                                                                        organizations such as ACCOBAMS
                                                NMFS may have received insufficient                                                                           fisheries that export seafood to the
                                                                                                        (2008), ASCOBANS (2009), CMS (2011),
                                                information from a nation, still lacks                                                                        United States, cetaceans are
                                                                                                        FAO (2000), ICES (2013), IOTC (2014),
                                                information in some columns, yet                                                                              occasionally entangled and hooked. Any
                                                                                                        and IWC (2004) have conducted
                                                classified the fishery by analogy. In that                                                                    entanglement could be mitigated by the
                                                                                                        workshops, collected information, and
                                                instance, the codes used to classify the                                                                      use of voluntary or mandated best
                                                                                                        published findings documenting the
                                                fishery would be: ‘‘N/I, A/G.’’                                                                               practices to avoid bycatch by the tuna
                                                                                                        high risk gillnets pose to marine
                                                   Additional terms in the LOFF include                                                                       fishing industry; however, to date, the
                                                ‘‘none provided,’’ ‘‘no information,’’ and              mammals.
                                                                                                                                                              application of such techniques has been
                                                ‘‘none documented’’. ‘‘None provided’’                     Based on the available information,                limited (Gilman 2011).
                                                indicates the nation did not provide                    NMFS has designated all gillnet                          Only through an evaluation of the
                                                information and no information could                    fisheries as export fisheries. Nations                bycatch rate and a determination of
                                                be found through research and literature                wishing to challenge this designation                 overall risk of bycatch associated with
                                                searches. ‘‘None documented’’ indicates                 must provide observer or logbook data                 longline fishing can definitive case-by-
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                                                that neither the nation nor reference                   sufficient to refute this determination.              case classifications be made for longline
                                                material have documented interactions                   When possible, NMFS requests nations                  fisheries. NMFS invites nations who are
                                                with marine mammals either through                      provide documentation that                            parties and cooperating non-parties to
                                                observers or logbooks. ‘‘No information’’               demonstrates that a gillnet fishery poses             RFMOs to join us in urging their
                                                indicates that the nation provided                      a remote likelihood of incidental                     respective RFMOs to undertake, as a
                                                information but did not specifically                    mortality and serious injury to marine                research priority, such a risk assessment
                                                provide information on the marine                       mammals.                                              and analyze logbook and observer data


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                                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 161 / Tuesday, August 22, 2017 / Notices                                           39769

                                                to analyze the marine mammal bycatch                    areas of jurisdiction are designated as               operations for which nations submitted
                                                risk posed by longline fisheries.                       export fisheries. Tuna fisheries within               information as exempt fisheries unless
                                                   NMFS designated all longline                         the jurisdiction of RFMOs lacking                     there is a record of entanglement or
                                                fisheries as export fisheries. Nations                  measures that prohibit intentional                    intentional killing in such aquaculture
                                                wishing to challenge this designation                   encirclement are export fisheries. Tuna               operations. Because the MMPA import
                                                must provide observer or logbook data                   fisheries within the jurisdiction of                  rule applies to aquaculture facilities
                                                sufficient to refute this determination.                RFMOs with measures that prohibit                     sited in marine mammal habitat, where
                                                When possible, NMFS requests that                       intentional encirclement are exempt                   deterrence measures (e.g., anti-predator
                                                nations provide documentation that                      fisheries, unless information submitted               nets) may incidentally or intentionally
                                                demonstrates that a longline fishery                    by nations or readily available scientific            kill and seriously injury marine
                                                poses a remote likelihood of incidental                 information shows that the fishery has                mammals, NMFS evaluated an array of
                                                mortality and serious injury to marine                  more than a remote likelihood of                      aquaculture operations, some of which
                                                mammals.                                                incidental mortality and serious injury               have no analogous operations or
                                                Purse Seines                                            of marine mammals in the course of its                characteristics to operations in the
                                                                                                        commercial fishing operations. Nations                United States. Aquaculture operations
                                                   Because the available information                    wishing to challenge these designations               for finfish (especially salmon),
                                                indicates that there is a likelihood that               must provide observer or logbook data                 mollusks, seaweed, and other species
                                                the mortality and serious injury caused                 sufficient to refute this determination.              are proliferating globally. Since 1990,
                                                by purse seines is more than remote,                    When possible, NMFS requests nations                  annual production of salmonid farms
                                                NMFS classified several types of purse                  provide documentation that                            has increased from 299,000 to 1,900,000
                                                seine fisheries as export fisheries. Purse              demonstrates that purse seine gear in a               tons (FAO 2012), and accompanying
                                                seine gear is documented to have                        particular fishery poses a remote                     this expansion has been an increase in
                                                marine mammal bycatch globally                          likelihood of incidental mortality and                conflicts with marine mammals,
                                                (Anderson 2014, Hall 2013, NOAA Tech                    serious injury to marine mammals.                     especially pinnipeds. Pinniped
                                                Memo 2011). A portion of tuna exported                                                                        depredation is a major problem at many
                                                to the United States is captured with                   Trawl
                                                                                                                                                              aquaculture facilities in Europe, Chile,
                                                purse seines, documented to have                           Because the available information                  Australia, and South Africa (Kemper et
                                                marine mammal bycatch (Anderson                         indicates that there is a likelihood that             al. 2003). Some nations use anti-
                                                2014, Gilman 2011, IOTC 2010). Marine                   the mortality and serious injury caused               predator nets as a deterrent.
                                                mammal interactions have been                           by trawl fisheries is more than remote,                  In some aquaculture operations,
                                                documented in purse seine fisheries                     NMFS classified several types of trawl                bycatch of marine mammals in anti-
                                                other than those for tuna, including                    fisheries as export fisheries. U.S. trawl             predator nets occurs occasionally,
                                                anchovy (Gonzales 2015), sardine                        fisheries with marine mammal bycatch,                 although direct killing, harassment, and
                                                (Prajith 2014), and small scale coastal                 which are analogous to some fisheries                 exclusion from preferred habitat may
                                                fisheries for various species (Mustika,                 considered in the LOFF have been                      pose more serious problems for marine
                                                2014, Kiszka 2008).                                     categorized as Category II fisheries                  mammal populations (Kemper et al.
                                                   Purse seine fisheries for tuna are, with             under the MMPA.                                       2003). Fatal entanglements of
                                                some exceptions, managed through                           Trawl fisheries, including bottom,                 odontocetes in aquaculture anti-
                                                RFMOs according to agreements entered                   mid-water, and pelagic trawls, have                   predator nets appear to be infrequent;
                                                into by member nations. Five tuna                       been documented to globally interact                  however, dolphin deaths in such nets
                                                RFMOs manage fisheries in the                           with marine mammals (Peltier et al.                   have been reported from salmon and
                                                Southern Ocean, Indian Ocean, Eastern                   2016, Komoroske & Lewison 2015, Read                  tuna facilities in Australia and Chile
                                                Tropical Pacific, Western and Central                   2014, Brown 2014). Pinnipeds are more                 (Kemper et al. 2003).
                                                Pacific, and Atlantic. Only three RFMOs                 likely to be entangled in industrial pair                Literature documenting marine
                                                have adopted measures to mitigate                       and pelagic trawl fisheries (Machado                  mammal interactions and the risk of
                                                marine mammal bycatch in purse seine                    2015, Lobao-Tello et al. 2013). ICES                  marine mammal interactions with
                                                fisheries or prohibit entirely the                      (2010) has identified pelagic trawl nets              aquaculture equipment, or fish cages is
                                                intentional encirclement of marine                      as posing a risk of cetacean bycatch.                 lacking. For net pens and fish cages, the
                                                mammals with purse seines.                              Northridge et al. (2011) documented                   most damaging marine mammal
                                                Specifically, the Inter-American                        bycatch of harbor porpoises, bottlenose               interactions are with pinnipeds, while
                                                Tropical Tuna Commission serves as the                  dolphins, common dolphins, pilot                      dolphins, porpoises and whales are
                                                secretariat for the International Dolphin               whales, minke whales, grey and harbor                 viewed as a minor threat. Dolphins have
                                                Conservation Program; the Indian Ocean                  seals in mid-water and pair trawl                     been documented feeding on wild fish
                                                Tuna Commission prohibits members                       fisheries in the North Atlantic. Trawl                attracted to marine fish farms off Italy
                                                from intentionally setting on cetaceans;                bycatch intensity was found to be higher              but were not reported to predate the
                                                and the Western and Central Pacific                     in certain regions (Lewison et al. 2014).             caged fish (Dı́az López et al. 2005). In
                                                Fisheries Commission also prohibits                        Nations wishing to challenge that                  a five-year study of Italian sea bass, sea
                                                intentionally setting on schools                        designation must provide observer or                  bream, and meagre cages, Dı́az López
                                                associated with cetaceans, and requires                 logbook data sufficient to refute this                (2012) observed individually identified
                                                reasonable steps to ensure safe release of              determination. When possible, NMFS                    dolphins to assess patterns of habitat
                                                marine mammals. The International                       requests nations provide documentation                use and farm fidelity. Dolphins near
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                                                Commission for the Conservation of                      that demonstrates that a trawl fishery                farms typically foraged on wild fish
                                                Atlantic Tunas and the Commission for                   poses a remote likelihood of incidental               concentrated in the farm but also fed on
                                                the Conservation of Southern Bluefin                    mortality and serious injury to marine                discarded or escaping fish during
                                                Tuna do not prescribe marine mammal                     mammals.                                              harvesting operations. Annual dolphin
                                                conservation measures.                                                                                        mortality was 1.5 per year, and five
                                                   NMFS designated most non-tuna                        Aquaculture                                           animals were found entangled in nets
                                                purse seine fisheries as export fisheries.               Based on the available information,                  during the study period. The potential
                                                Purse seine fisheries outside tuna RFMO                 NMFS has designated most aquaculture                  for marine mammals to become


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                                                39770                        Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 161 / Tuesday, August 22, 2017 / Notices

                                                entangled and drown in farm structures                  habitat or interacting with marine                    • handline
                                                or lines is a concern (Würsig and Gailey               mammals, are prohibited from the                      • harpoon
                                                2002). From surveys at marine fish                      intentional killing or serious injury of              • hook and line
                                                farms off Italy, Dı́az López and Shirai                marine mammals in the course of                       • pole and line
                                                (2007) estimated one bottlenose dolphin                 aquaculture operations or have                        • spearfishing
                                                mortality per month due to                              established procedures to reliably                    • aquarium collecting
                                                entanglement with farm nets.                            certify that exports of fish and fish                 • cast net
                                                   Mussel aquaculture is a growing                      products to the United States are not the             • hand collection
                                                industry, with coastal and offshore                     product of an intentional killing or                  • loop net
                                                waters being utilized for mussel                        serious injury of a marine mammal.                    • rake/tongs
                                                aquaculture farms. This form of                            While NMFS desires more                            • diving
                                                aquaculture uses ropes in the water                     information about the environmental                     By analogy, NMFS classified these
                                                column that pose an entanglement risk                   risk of these operations, particularly                gear types as exempt in the LOFF.
                                                to marine mammals, particularly                         mussel rope and cage aquaculture, to
                                                whales, although the extent of the risk                 marine mammals and urges the industry                 What was the process for notification
                                                is undetermined. In 2015, a Pacific right               to develop mitigation techniques to                   and the classification for fisheries where
                                                whale was documented entangled in,                      avoid potential entanglements or reduce               nations failed to provide information?
                                                but successfully disentangled and                       their severity, the documented                           NMFS first informed nations of the
                                                released from, the grow-out ropes of                    interactions have been mostly non-life                requirements of the MMPA import rule
                                                mussel farm gear in Korea (Young,                       threatening. Nevertheless, in developing              and the process to develop the LOFF via
                                                2015). A Bryde’s whale was entangled                    the LOFF, NMFS has evaluated, and                     a cable sent to all trading partners in
                                                in mussel spat lines off the coast of New               will continue to evaluate, aquaculture                September 2016. On December 21, 2016,
                                                Zealand (Lloyd 2003). A humpback calf                   operations on a case-by-case basis,                   NMFS sent a letter to the Washington,
                                                was found entangled in mussel spat-                     considering the operation’s measures to               DC embassy of each trading partner
                                                collecting rope off Western Australia but               reduce interactions, prohibit intentional             officially requesting the information
                                                was disentangled and released (Groom &                  mortality, and reduce incidental                      needed to create the LOFF. The letter
                                                Coughran, 2012). Finally, a humpback                    mortality and serious injury of marine                included explicit details about the type
                                                whale died from entanglement in single                  mammals (e.g., use of anti-predator nets              of information needed. From March
                                                dropper spat- collectors at an                          and the prohibition on intentional                    through June 2017, NMFS followed up
                                                experimental mussel farm in northwest                   killing).
                                                                                                                                                              on these requests by phone, emails, and
                                                Iceland (Young, 2015). Given this
                                                                                                        Fisheries or Gear Types Excluded From                 in some cases, visits to embassies in the
                                                information, the placement of
                                                                                                        This Rule or That are Generally Listed                United States, requesting information on
                                                aquaculture farms in waters that are
                                                                                                        as Exempt                                             nation’s fisheries that export to the
                                                critical habitats and migratory routes for
                                                                                                           In the implementing regulations and                United States. Additionally, NMFS
                                                endangered species, can increase the
                                                                                                        the LOFF, NMFS has defined                            searched readily available information,
                                                risk of entanglements, and in so doing
                                                                                                        ‘‘commercial fishing operation’’ as:                  including FAO documents, in an
                                                can change the classification of the
                                                                                                        Vessels or entities that catch, take, or              attempt to classify fisheries for which
                                                aquaculture operation.
                                                   Review of the NMFS U. S. Atlantic                    harvest fish (as defined in section 3 of              nations failed to provide sufficient
                                                and Gulf of Mexico Marine Mammal                        the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery                          information or provided no information
                                                Stock Assessments (Waring et al. 2012,                  Conservation and Management Act (16                   at all. If nations submit information
                                                2015) finds very few verified instances                 U.S.C. 1802)) from the marine                         during this comment period on the draft
                                                of marine mammals being injured by or                   environment (or other areas where                     LOFF, NMFS will consider this
                                                entangled in aquaculture gear. U.S                      marine mammals occur) that results in                 information when developing the final
                                                aquaculture facilities are Category III                 the sale or barter of all or part of the fish         LOFF.
                                                fisheries, because there are no known                   caught, taken or harvested. The term                     As discussed above, NMFS classified
                                                incidental mortalities or serious injuries              includes aquaculture activities that                  as export fisheries all fisheries from
                                                of marine mammals in these operations,                  interact with or occur in marine                      nations that failed to respond to
                                                and they are considered to have a                       mammal habitat. Consequently, this rule               requests for information or provided
                                                remote likelihood of marine mammal                      does not apply to any land-based or                   insufficient information about a fishery
                                                interactions. Therefore, by analogy,                    freshwater aquaculture operations; these              and for which information was not
                                                NMFS is proposing to classify all                       commercial fishing operations do not                  readily available as stipulated in the
                                                aquaculture operations for which                        occur in marine mammal habitat.                       implementing regulations defining
                                                nations provided information (or for                       Additionally, there are several gear               export and exempt fishery (see 50 CFR
                                                which scientific information is readily                 types in the U.S. List of Fisheries that              216.3 Definitions of Export and Exempt
                                                available) as exempt in the LOFF, absent                are consistently and broadly classified               Fishery).
                                                information and evidence that a                         as category III fisheries with no                     Nations that Failed to Provide
                                                particular aquaculture operation has                    documented marine mammal catch (see                   Information
                                                more than a remote likelihood of                        http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/
                                                incidental mortality and serious injury                 interactions/fisheries/2016_list_of_                    The following nations failed to
                                                of marine mammals, NMFS is seeking                      fisheries_lof.html#table3_cat3). NMFS                 provide information on their fisheries,
                                                                                                        has classified those fisheries as Category            and NMFS did not find available
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                                                comment on this classification.
                                                However, NMFS has classified as export                  III because there are often no known                  information to classify their fisheries;
                                                fisheries aquaculture facilities with a                 incidental mortalities or serious injuries            consequently, NMFS classified all these
                                                record of entanglement or a history of                  of marine mammals in these fisheries,                 nations’ fisheries as export fisheries (see
                                                intentional killing. A harvesting nation                and there is a remote likelihood of                   50 CFR 216.3 Definitions of Export and
                                                must demonstrate that all aquaculture                   marine mammal mortalities and serious                 Exempt Fishery).
                                                operations, regardless of their                         injuries given that the fishing method or               • British Virgin Islands (BVI) failed to
                                                classification, sited in marine mammal                  gear is highly selective. These include:              provide data for exports of marine fish,



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                                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 161 / Tuesday, August 22, 2017 / Notices                                          39771

                                                toothfish, snapper and squid. BVI maintains             products from a fishery on the LOFF                   which they are acting as intermediary
                                                that it does not export fish and fish products          and re-exports such fish or fish products             nations.
                                                to the United States.                                   to the United States. To prevent any fish
                                                   • Cameroon failed to provide data for                                                                      Nations That Do Not Have a Consistent
                                                exports of groundfish (cod, cusk, haddock,              or fish products subject to import
                                                                                                                                                              History of Exporting Fish and Fish
                                                hake, pollock, sole), mackerel, herring, snail,         prohibitions authorized by the MMPA
                                                                                                        import rule from being imported into                  Products to the United States and Are
                                                mussels, oysters, crawfish, crustaceans,
                                                tilapia, and shrimp. These species may be               the United States from any intermediary               Not Included in the List of Foreign
                                                harvested with longlines and gillnets.                  nation, including a processing nation,                Fisheries
                                                Indications of marine mammal bycatch in                 NMFS includes provisions for
                                                longlines (Werner 2014) and gillnets (Ayissi                                                                     In reviewing the import data,
                                                et al. 2014) are documented; however, the               intermediary nations (see 50 CFR 216.24               information submitted by nations, and
                                                target species for these gear types are not             (h)(9)(iv)). NMFS requested that                      readily available information, NMFS
                                                identified in the literature for Cameroon.              intermediary nations provide                          identified twenty-five trading partners
                                                   • China also did not provide information,            information on the fisheries and nations              that either exported solely freshwater
                                                and the data readily available and used to              that are the source of any imported
                                                classify China’s fisheries that export to the                                                                 species or had a sporadic or inconsistent
                                                                                                        product that they process and export to               export history with the United States.
                                                United States may not accurately characterize
                                                existing aquaculture operations, processing
                                                                                                        the United States. Many nations failed                Table 1 summarizes the nations that
                                                operations, and wild-capture fisheries.                 to provide this information; NMFS
                                                                                                                                                              NMFS has determined will not be
                                                   • Haiti failed to provide data for exports of        continues to urge them to do so.
                                                                                                                                                              included in the LOFF and are not
                                                conch, coral, crab, lobster, molluscs, sea                Based on the information received or
                                                cucumbers, and shrimp. Haiti has not                                                                          subject to any of the requirements of the
                                                exported fish or fish products to the United
                                                                                                        obtained, the following nations are                   MMPA import rule. However, if any of
                                                States since 2012.                                      solely intermediary nations: Belarus,                 these nations wish to export fish and
                                                                                                        Monaco, and Switzerland. Israel is                    fish products to the United States, they
                                                Classification for Fisheries of Nations                 predominantly an intermediary nation                  must contact NMFS and satisfy the
                                                Identified as Solely Intermediary                       except for the export of seaweed, tuna,               requirements of the MMPA import rule.
                                                Nations                                                 and freshwater species-derived caviar.
                                                  NMFS defines an intermediary nation                   Nations are encouraged to identify and
                                                as a nation that imports fish or fish                   indicate the fish and fish products for

                                                      TABLE 1—NATIONS SUGGESTED FOR REMOVAL FROM THE MMPA LOFF AND THE JUSTIFICATION FOR REMOVAL

                                                Bolivia
                                                     Justification—Landlocked nation, low level of U.S. fish imports from Bolivia.
                                                     Detail—Landlocked nation. In 2006 & 2015, the U.S. imported fish and shellfish meal not for human consumption, and fish eggs only in
                                                        2006. In 2013, Bolivia exported seaweed to the U.S.
                                                     http://www.st.nmfs.noaa.gov/commercial-fisheries/foreign-trade/.
                                                     http://www.fao.org/fi/oldsite/FCP/en/bol/profile.htm.
                                                     http://www.fao.org/fishery/facp/BOL/en.
                                                Bosnia Hercegovina
                                                     Justification—Export conch (2015), grouper, snapper, and swordfish (2003).
                                                     Detail—Very small amount of coastline on the Adriatic Sea. ‘‘The role of maritime areas in the total national economy is very small. There
                                                        are no exact figures on the performance of the economy but it is estimated (Strategy for development of tourism of Bosnia and
                                                        Herzegovina) that the GDP from the maritime area of Bosnia and Herzegovina is less than 1 percent of the total GDP of the country (Eu-
                                                        ropean Commission, 2014 H).’’
                                                     Fisheries are artisanal and sold domestically or captured for domestic aquaculture.
                                                     http://www.fao.org/3/a-au016e.pdf.
                                                     http://www.fao.org/fishery/facp/BIH/en.
                                                Burkina Faso
                                                     Justification—Landlocked; only export waxes.
                                                     Detail—Have exported ‘‘waxes, may include spermaceti’’ to the U.S. in 2010, 2013, 2014, and 2016. Further consultation with NMFS Office
                                                        of Science and Technology (S&T) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) revealed that since cessation of commercial whaling and
                                                        whale product imports, ‘‘waxes’’ encompasses waxes not derived from spermaceti whale oil, such as beeswax.
                                                Cayman Islands
                                                     Justification—Only toothfish exports which may be an error.
                                                     Detail—Consultations with S&T, CBP, and NOAA experts on the Dissostichus catch documentation scheme indicate that attribution of
                                                        toothfish catch to Cayman Islands is likely a recording error of ‘‘last port’’ vs. ‘‘origin of product.’’ NMFS contacted the Caymans, and they
                                                        have no records of toothfish exports. Further, the catch documentation scheme ensures that toothfish cannot enter the United States
                                                        without valid catch documentation.
                                                Central African Republic (CAR)
                                                     Justification—Landlocked, possible processor only.
                                                     Detail—Exported processed squid in 2016, lobster, yellowfin and swordfish 2000–2001. Aquaculture for domestic use only. http://www.fao.
                                                        org/3/a-au069e.pdf FAO indicates that CAR does not have an export market for fish products: Table 2.
                                                     http://www.fao.org/fishery/facp/CAF/fr.
                                                Chad
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                                                     Justification—Landlocked; Last 17 years only product exported was thickeners derived from seaweed (2015).
                                                     Detail—Landlocked, local economy produces no exports of fish for human consumption to U.S. from Chad.
                                                     http://www.fao.org/fishery/facp/TCD/fr.
                                                Christmas Island, territory of Australia
                                                     Justification—During the last 17 years exports have been sporadic, clam or crab in 2002, 2003, 2004, 2007, fish liver, roe 2016.
                                                     Detail—Australia indicated that no export fisheries originate from Christmas Island.
                                                Cocos Island
                                                     Justification—Freshwater fish exports.



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                                                39772                        Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 161 / Tuesday, August 22, 2017 / Notices

                                                     TABLE 1—NATIONS SUGGESTED FOR REMOVAL FROM THE MMPA LOFF AND THE JUSTIFICATION FOR REMOVAL—
                                                                                              Continued
                                                     Detail—Between 2000 and 2017, Cocos Island has exported tilapia once to the U.S. Australia noted hand collection of giant clam for aqua-
                                                        culture and re-seeding in the waters around Cocos Island, but these products are not entering the U.S. via Cocos Island.
                                                Ethiopia
                                                     Justification—Landlocked, only product exported is waxes.
                                                     Detail—Consultation with NMFS S&T and CBP revealed that since cessation of commercial whaling and whale product imports, ‘‘waxes’’
                                                        encompasses wax that is not made from spermaceti whale oil, likely beeswax. Ethiopia confirmed the wax was beeswax.
                                                     Ethiopian fisheries are entirely from aquaculture with limited exports.
                                                     http://www.fao.org/fishery/facp/ETH/en.
                                                French Guiana
                                                     Justification—Freshwater fish in 2016, no exports to the U.S. 2001–2015.
                                                     Details—Rule does not apply to freshwater fisheries.
                                                Hungary
                                                     Justification—Landlocked; Seaweed and other algae, historically caviar (2014).
                                                     Details—Hungary has extensive inland capture fisheries, pond aquaculture, and fish farming. Carps are the most popular fish species in
                                                        capture fisheries (54%) and pond aquaculture (82%) while African catfish is the dominant fish in intensive fish farming. Inland waters
                                                        have high value predator species such as pikes, catfish and pike perch, which were not exported to the U.S. Given the inland nature of
                                                        Hungarian fisheries, the export of seaweed is likely from inland freshwater aquaculture and fish farming and is therefore not included
                                                        under this rule.
                                                Kazakhstan
                                                     Justification—Landlocked; Solely freshwater fisheries, some caviar.
                                                     Details—The MMPA import rule does not apply to freshwater fisheries. The last U.S. import of caviar (aquaculture) was in 2010. Aqua-
                                                        culture is on the rise, but fish farming is expensive to maintain and consequently results in very few exports.
                                                     ftp://ftp.fao.org/FI/DOCUMENT/fcp/en/FI_CP_KZ.pdf.
                                                Kyrgyzstan
                                                     Justification—Landlocked; Oysters, canned (2004), dolphinfish and tilapia (2013), marine fish (2015).
                                                     Details—In the last 17 years, U.S. importation records show imports for only the three years listed above. Import reports/records may be an
                                                        error, generally there are no consistent seafood imports to the U.S. from this nation.
                                                Macedonia
                                                     Justification—Landlocked; Exported fish paste in 2016.
                                                     Details—Exported fish paste (2016 and 2010), and processed tuna in 2010. Their fisheries are entirely freshwater, for which the rule does
                                                        not apply.
                                                     ftp://ftp.fao.org/FI/DOCUMENT/fcp/en/FI_CP_MK.pdf.
                                                Mali
                                                     Justification—Landlocked, main export is waxes 2003 to 2015.
                                                     Details—Mali exported to the U.S. grouper and processed fish in 2009, and solely waxes were exported to the U.S. other years, with no ex-
                                                        ports to the U.S. between 2015–present.
                                                     ftp://ftp.fao.org/FI/DOCUMENT/fcp/fr/FI_CP_ML.pdf (in French).
                                                Moldova
                                                     Justification—Landlocked; Export is aquaculture derived caviar.
                                                     Details—Moldova exported tuna and caviar in 2012 and 2016, caviar only in 2015. FAO has no record of tuna or caviar harvest in Moldova:
                                                     ftp://ftp.fao.org/FI/DOCUMENT/fcp/en/FI_CP_MD.pdf.
                                                     It appears that most of the sturgeon caviar harvest is derived from aquaculture:
                                                     http://www.aquatir.md/?lang=en (and other google searches).
                                                Mongolia
                                                     Justification—Landlocked, freshwater fisheries only.
                                                     Details— Mongolia exported to U.S. seaweed unfit for human consumption in 2016 (processed product). No FAO fishery profile. The
                                                        MMPA import rule does not apply to freshwater inland fisheries.
                                                Monserrat
                                                     Justification—freshwater aquaculture; No exports to U.S. from 2000–2017 with exception of tuna in 2012.
                                                     Details—It appears that Monserrat has no active commercial tuna fishery (http://waittinstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/5_Montserrat-
                                                        Fisheries-Assessment-final.pdf, and targeted searches), no FAO fishery profile.
                                                Serbia
                                                     Justification—No exports 2000–17 with the exception of tuna in 2012.
                                                     Details—Landlocked, Rule does not apply to freshwater aquaculture. No FAO fishery profile. (http://www.fao.org/fishery/countrysector/naso_
                                                        serbia/en). Do not and have not fished for tuna as members of International Convention for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas.
                                                Slovakia
                                                     Justification— Landlocked; Freshwater pond aquaculture.
                                                     Details— U.S. does not import aquaculture product from Slovakia. The U.S. imported bigeye and yellowfin tuna in 2013 and pickled herring
                                                        in 2014. Neither are products that Slovakia is likely harvesting or processing.
                                                     ftp://ftp.fao.org/FI/DOCUMENT/fcp/en/FI_CP_SK.pdf.
                                                Somalia
                                                     Justification—U.S. imported shrimp in 2002, lobster (Homarus spp.) in 2004, and coral/shells in 2015.
                                                     Details—The Homarus lobster is not native to the Indian Ocean; therefore, this product is likely a re-export or reporting error. Coral and
                                                        shell fisheries are predominantly hand collection fisheries and have a remote likelihood of marine mammal interaction. NMFS was unable
                                                        to find evidence of an existing shrimp fishery. Possible import recording issue as the U.S. is not actively importing any product from So-
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                                                        malia. (http://www.fao.org/fi/oldsite/FCP/en/SOM/profile.htm).
                                                Tokelau Islands, Territory of New Zealand
                                                     Justification—No commercial fisheries.
                                                     Details—2000–2017 U.S. Trade Data shows records of exports of marine fish (2001, 2007, 2008, 2009) seabass (2010, 2011, 2012) and
                                                        Bluefin tuna (2016). However, several reports indicate the absence of commercial fisheries operating in Tokelau (Dalzell et al., 1996;
                                                        Passfield, 1998). All fishing activities are subsistence. In addition, seabass is not a species found in Tokelau. Tokelau does not have the
                                                        food safety regulations to export fish to another nation and is not a flag state or port state.
                                                Togo



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                                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 161 / Tuesday, August 22, 2017 / Notices                                             39773

                                                     TABLE 1—NATIONS SUGGESTED FOR REMOVAL FROM THE MMPA LOFF AND THE JUSTIFICATION FOR REMOVAL—
                                                                                              Continued
                                                   Justification—Few and inconsistent exports.
                                                   Details—We found evidence that Togo’s fisheries for shrimp are subsistence, artisanal fisheries; likewise, Togo’s tuna fisheries are solely
                                                      artisanal fisheries with no current active industrial fishery although foreign-flagged and IUU vessels target tuna in Togo’s waters. Togo’s
                                                      sardine fishery consists of industrial trawl and artisanal beach seine operations, with no evidence that these are commercial and export-
                                                      ing fisheries (https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/legacy.seaaroundus/doc/Researcher+Publications/dpauly/PDF/2015/Working+Papers/
                                                      MarineFisheriesTogo.pdf). Togo’s snail (other than sea snail) are freshwater species for which the rule does not apply. Finally, the crusta-
                                                      cean fishery is lagoon-based (artisanal and subsistence) with limited exports to international markets.
                                                Uganda
                                                   Justification—Landlocked, only export freshwater species.
                                                   Details—From 2000–2009, U.S. Trade Data records show some processed marine fishery products imported to the U.S via Uganda; how-
                                                      ever from 2012 to 2017, exports have been exclusively Nile perch, a freshwater species for which the MMPA import rule does not apply.
                                                Uzbekistan
                                                   Justification—Landlocked; Freshwater species only.
                                                   Details—No imports 2014–2017, in 2013 Uzbekistan exported freshwater species only; and, from 2009–2012, the predominant exports
                                                      were freshwater fish species with some exports of processed ‘‘marine fish.’’ For freshwater species the MMPA import rule does not
                                                      apply.
                                                   http://www.fao.org/fishery/facp/UZB/en.



                                                Assumptions Made in the Development                     subsequently labelled an exempt                       is the sole Non-Contracting Party (NCP),
                                                of the LOFF                                             fishery. There is limited aquaculture of              permitted to participate in the CDS. As
                                                                                                        corals for export, though aquaculture-                in the case of the Cayman Islands
                                                Fishery Products
                                                                                                        raised coral would also be hand                       discussed above, instances where the
                                                   NMFS assumed that seafood products                   collected and labelled an exempt                      NOAA S&T and CBP import data
                                                imported by the U.S. between the years                  fishery.                                              indicated the U.S. received toothfish
                                                2000 and 2017 would be a reasonable                                                                           from an NCP were crosschecked against
                                                basis for the list of target species                    Duplication of Marine Mammal
                                                                                                                                                              the CDS and were determined to likely
                                                included in the draft LOFF for each                     Interactions Based on Gear Type With
                                                                                                                                                              be the result misreporting a vessel’s
                                                harvesting nation, unless the nation                    No Associated Target Fishery Species
                                                                                                                                                              ‘‘last port’’ as its ‘‘point of origin.’’ As
                                                indicated that the fishery no longer                       Where nations did not indicate target              the U.S. already prohibits the
                                                occurs, the species is a re-export, (e.g.,              species and failed to provide fishery                 importation of toothfish without a valid
                                                because the nation is only the processor                information in the form of: (1) A gear                Dissostichus Catch Document, NMFS
                                                for that fish or fish product), or the                  type and associated marine mammal                     discarded these cases from the LOFF.
                                                reported export of that seafood species/                interaction, or (2) a gear type and                   For more information, see https://
                                                product to the United States was a data                 specific area of operation with                       www.ccamlr.org/en/compliance/catch-
                                                reporting error. For those fish and fish                associated marine mammal interaction,                 documentation-scheme-cds.
                                                products listed on the U.S. Trade                       NMFS assumed that any instance of that
                                                database, NMFS initially assumed that a                 gear type for any target species, or that             Summary
                                                fishery was associated with those                       gear type operating in a specific area of                NMFS reviewed information from or
                                                products and looked to exporting                        operation for any corresponding target                related to more than 160 trading
                                                nations to confirm their status as either               species also reported, had the same                   partners. NMFS eliminated 25 nations
                                                the harvesting nation, intermediary                     likelihood or prevalence of marine                    from the LOFF (see Table 1 for a list of
                                                nation, or both.                                        mammal interaction. Any species or                    these nations and the rationale used for
                                                   NMFS assumed that species or                         bycatch numbers provided in these                     eliminating them from the LOFF). The
                                                products that were associated with a                    instances were copied across target                   draft LOFF is comprised of 138 nations
                                                gear type were wild caught and not                      fisheries. Nations are encouraged to                  for a total of 720 exempt and 3,270
                                                aquacultured, with one exception.                       notice where duplication may have                     export fisheries. The LOFF, an
                                                Unless occurring in the wild in a given                 occurred and provide documentation to                 expanded LOFF containing references, a
                                                country, NMFS assumed tilapia was                       support changes to the bycatch species                list of Intermediary nations and their
                                                produced by aquaculture operation.                      or bycatch estimates.                                 associated products, and list of fisheries
                                                                                                                                                              and nations where the rule does not
                                                Area of Operation                                       Toothfish (Dissostichus spp.) Catch
                                                                                                                                                              apply can found at www.nmfs.noaa.gov/
                                                                                                        Documentation Scheme (CDS)
                                                  To the extent possible, NMFS listed a                                                                       ia/species/marine_mammals/
                                                harvesting nation’s fisheries that take                    Antarctic and Patagonian toothfish                 mmpaloff.html. An annotated
                                                place in a foreign Exclusive Economic                   (Dissostichus spp.) are fished under a                bibliography with supporting references
                                                Zone (EEZ) or on the high seas under                    strict catch documentation scheme                     can be found at www.nmfs.noaa.gov/ia/
                                                that harvesting nation’s LOFF, rather                   (CDS) in order to prevent trade in                    species/marine_mammals/
                                                than under the LOFF of the nation in                    toothfish harvested in contravention of               mmpaloff.html.
                                                whose EEZ the fishing took place.                       Convention on the Conservation of
                                                                                                        Antarctic Marine Living Resources                     Impact of the LOFF on Largest Trading
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES




                                                Hand Collection Fisheries for Corals,                   (CCAMLR) Conservation measures. The                   Partners by Volume and Value
                                                Sponges, Shells                                         CDS allows for supply chain tracking of                 Below is a table containing the twenty
                                                  Where no information was provided                     toothfish from point of harvest. Only                 largest imports by volume and value, an
                                                by a nation and the U.S. has imported                   Members and nations that are Party to                 assessment of the data they provided,
                                                corals, sponges, and/or shells from that                the Convention are permitted to                       and their risk of marine mammal
                                                nation, these fisheries were designated                 participate in the CDS for toothfish with             bycatch. NMFS based its assessment of
                                                as a gear type of ‘‘hand collection’’ and               the exception of the Seychelles, which                the quality of the data supplied by


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                                                39774                                   Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 161 / Tuesday, August 22, 2017 / Notices

                                                nations based on the completeness and                                      their vulnerability lies in their apparent                                  Taiwan has bycatch in their longline
                                                amount of detail in the information                                        inability to assess and mitigate marine                                     fisheries and their drift gillnet fisheries.
                                                provided. The number of export and                                         mammal bycatch. If these nations                                            The United Kingdom has bycatch of
                                                exempt fisheries is a tally of those                                       estimate their marine mammal bycatch                                        harbor porpoise and common dolphins
                                                fisheries after NMFS analysis of the                                       or provide more detailed information                                        in gillnet and trawl fisheries.
                                                LOFF. The overall risk of marine                                           about their fishery operations, NMFS
                                                                                                                                                                                                          Nations, some not on this list, with a
                                                mammal bycatch is based on the type of                                     may be able to reclassify as exempt
                                                gear most prevalent in the nation’s                                        additional fisheries.                                                       high level of documented marine
                                                fisheries and the information provided                                        The Russian Federation, Japan,                                           mammal bycatch include South Korea
                                                by those nations related to marine                                         Mexico, and China provided little to no                                     (pound nets and gillnets); New Zealand
                                                mammal fisheries interactions.                                             information to enable a full assessment                                     (all gear types, especially trawl); and
                                                   Chile, Peru, Argentina, and Ecuador                                     of their fisheries and level of marine                                      Australia (trawl and longline). However,
                                                have large numbers of small gillnet,                                       mammal risk. Japan’s marine mammal                                          NMFS recognizes that this evaluation
                                                purse seine, and trawl vessels with                                        bycatch is particularly large in its pound                                  may be highly influenced by the
                                                marine mammal bycatch. Canada’s pot                                        net fisheries, whereas the Russian                                          advanced assessment capabilities of
                                                fisheries for lobster and snow crab have                                   Federation’s bycatch is predominantly                                       these nations. New Zealand and Norway
                                                high levels of large whale bycatch.                                        in its pot and trawl fisheries. Mexico’s                                    may be the only nations to have
                                                Canada also has bycatch in its gillnet                                     marine mammal bycatch includes its                                          currently calculated a bycatch limit.
                                                fisheries and permits the intentional                                      gillnet and trawl fisheries in the Gulf of                                  Norway’s information demonstrates
                                                killing of marine mammals in                                               Mexico and the Gulf of California.                                          bycatch of harbor porpoise, gray seal,
                                                aquaculture operations. Indonesia,                                         India’s fishery bycatch is predominantly                                    and harbor seal in excess of the bycatch
                                                Thailand, and Vietnam have large                                           in its coastal gillnet fisheries which                                      limit in its gillnet fisheries.
                                                processing and aquaculture sectors;                                        includes tens of thousands of vessels.

                                                    TABLE 2—LIST OF THE TWENTY LARGEST IMPORTS BY VOLUME AND VALUE AND AN ASSESSMENT OF THE DATA THEY
                                                                            PROVIDED AND THEIR RISK OF MARINE MAMMAL BYCATCH
                                                                                                                                                                                                                 Number of      Overall risk of marine
                                                                                 Nation                                                             Quality of data supplied                                    export/exempt    mammal bycatch
                                                                                                                                                                                                                  fisheries

                                                Canada ...................................................................      Excellent ................................................................             163/82   Average/High.
                                                China ......................................................................    Poor .......................................................................            110/3   Unknown.
                                                Indonesia ................................................................      Fair ........................................................................           13/25   Low.
                                                Thailand .................................................................      Fair ........................................................................           76/12   Average.
                                                Chile .......................................................................   Good ......................................................................             46/39   Average/High.
                                                India .......................................................................   Poor .......................................................................             24/2   Unknown.
                                                Vietnam ..................................................................      Fair ........................................................................           26/14   Low.
                                                Ecuador ..................................................................      Good ......................................................................              21/6   High.
                                                Mexico ....................................................................     Fair ........................................................................           40/24   Average.
                                                Russian Federation ................................................             Poor .......................................................................            114/0   Average/High.
                                                Japan .....................................................................     Poor .......................................................................           197/18   High.
                                                Philippines ..............................................................      Good ......................................................................              16/4   Low.
                                                Peru ........................................................................   Good ......................................................................             70/34   Average/High.
                                                Argentina ................................................................      Good ......................................................................              65/9   Average.
                                                Iceland ....................................................................    Excellent ................................................................               27/2   Average.
                                                Honduras ................................................................       Poor .......................................................................              4/6   Unknown.
                                                Taiwan ....................................................................     Good ......................................................................              19/3   Average/High.
                                                South Korea ...........................................................         Excellent ................................................................             604/44   High.
                                                New Zealand ..........................................................          Excellent ................................................................              81/25   Average/High.
                                                United Kingdom .....................................................            Good ......................................................................              56/8   Average/High.



                                                Request for Input                                                             4. Should lift net or other such nets be                                  International Pole and Line Foundation,
                                                                                                                           considered an exempt fishery? Why or why                                     London. 133 pages.
                                                  In addition to the requested                                             not?                                                                        Agreement on the Conservation of Small
                                                information in this Federal Register                                          5. Would nations prefer to submit their                                   Cetaceans in the Baltic, North East
                                                notice, NMFS is interested in receiving                                    information in the form of a database?                                       Atlantic, Irish and North Seas
                                                                                                                              6. Should nations with only exempt                                        (ASCOBANS) 2009. Cetacean Incidental
                                                public comment and supporting
                                                                                                                           fisheries be allowed to apply for a                                          Catches in Fisheries: Report on the
                                                documentation in response to the                                           comparability finding every eight years rather                               Implementation of Certain Provisions of
                                                following:                                                                 than every four years?                                                       the Council Regulations (EC) No. 812/2004
                                                   1. Should all marine aquaculture involving                                                                                                           and on a Scientific Assessment of the
                                                                                                                           References                                                                   Effects of Using in Particular Gillnets,
                                                lines, such as seaweed, mussels, oysters, and
                                                                                                                           Agreement on the Conservation of Cetaceans                                   Trammel Nets, and Entangled Nets on
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES




                                                other shellfish be considered an exempt
                                                                                                                            of the Black Sea, Mediterranean Sea and                                     Cetaceans in the Baltic Sea as Requested
                                                fishery? Why or why not?
                                                                                                                            contiguous Atlantic area (ACCOBAMS)                                         through Council Regulation (EC) No. 2187/
                                                   2. Should net pen aquaculture for tuna be                                                                                                            2005. 6th Meeting of the Parties to
                                                                                                                            2008. International Workshop on Cetacean
                                                considered an exempt fishery? Why or why                                    Bycatch within ACCOBAMS Area. Rome                                          ASCOBANS MOP6/Doc.5–09 (AC) UN
                                                not?                                                                        (FAO HQs), Italy, 17–18 September 2008                                      Campus, Bonn, Germany, 16–18 September
                                                   3. Should net cage aquaculture for finfish                              Anderson, R.C. (2014) Cetaceans and Tuna                                     2009 Dist.
                                                be considered an exempt fishery? Why or                                     Fisheries in the Western and Central                                       Ayissi, I.K. Van Waerebeek, and G.
                                                why not?                                                                    Indian Ocean. IPNLF Technical Report 2,                                     Segniagbeto, ‘‘Report on the exploratory



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                                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 161 / Tuesday, August 22, 2017 / Notices                                              39775

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                                                39776                             Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 161 / Tuesday, August 22, 2017 / Notices

                                                  SC, Litz J, Mullin KD, Orphanides C, Pace                   aquaculture gear, documented cases from              Act (MMPA) and the Endangered
                                                  RM, Palka DL, Lyssikatos M. Wenzel FW                       mussel farming regions of the world                  Species Act (ESA), as applicable.
                                                  (2015) Trends in Selected U.S. Atlantic and                 including first-hand accounts from Iceland.
                                                  Gulf of Mexico Marine Mammal Stock                          Master’s thesis. University of Akureyri,             ADDRESSES:  The permits and related
                                                  Assessments—2014. NOAA Technical                            Iceland.                                             documents are available for review
                                                  Memorandum NMFS–NE–23. Available at:                                                                             upon written request or by appointment
                                                  www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/sars/pdf/ao2013_                       Dated: August 16, 2017.
                                                                                                            John Henderschedt,                                     in the Permits and Conservation
                                                  tm228.pdf. Accessed: 23 December 2015
                                                Waring GT, Josephson E, Maze-Foley K,                       Director, Office for International Affairs and
                                                                                                                                                                   Division, Office of Protected Resources,
                                                  Rosel PE, Barry K, Byrd B, Cole TVN,                      Seafood Inspection, National Marine                    NMFS, 1315 East-West Highway, Room
                                                  Engleby L, Fairfield C, Garrison LP, Henry                Fisheries Service.                                     13705, Silver Spring, MD 20910; phone
                                                  A, Hansen L, Litz J, Orphanides C, Pace                   [FR Doc. 2017–17671 Filed 8–21–17; 8:45 am]            (301) 427–8401; fax (301) 713–0376.
                                                  RM, Palka DL, Rossman MC, Sinclair C,
                                                  Wenzel FW (2012) U.S. Atlantic and Gulf                   BILLING CODE 3510–22–P                                 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                  of Mexico Marine Mammal Stock                                                                                    Shasta McClenahan (File Nos. 17350,
                                                  Assessments—2011. NOAA Technical                                                                                 20523, 20605, 21045, and 21114), Carrie
                                                  Memorandum NMFS–NE–22. Available at:                      DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE                                 Hubard (File No. 16111 and 20311),
                                                  www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/pdfs/sars/                                                                                  Sara Young (File No. 20043), Courtney
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                                                                                                                                                                   Smith (File No. 21170), and Jennifer
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                                                  102. Vancouver, BC. Doi:10.1016/                          Species
                                                  j.fishres.2006.01.010
                                                                                                                                                                   SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:     Notices
                                                Werner (2014) Mitigating bycatch and                        AGENCY:  National Marine Fisheries                     were published in the Federal Register
                                                  depredation of marine mammals in                          Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and                   on the dates listed below that requests
                                                  longline fisheries. ICES Journal of Marine                Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),                     for a permit or permit amendment had
                                                  Science, 72:1576–1586.                                    Commerce.                                              been submitted by the below-named
                                                Würsig, B., and G.A. Gailey. 2002. Marine                                                                         applicants. To locate the Federal
                                                  mammals and aquaculture: Conflicts and                    ACTION: Notice; issuance of permits and
                                                                                                            permit amendments.                                     Register notice that announced our
                                                  potential resolutions. Pages 45–59 in R.R.
                                                  Stickney and J.P. McVey, editors.
                                                                                                                                                                   receipt of the application and a
                                                  Responsible Marine Aquaculture. CAB                       SUMMARY:  Notice is hereby given that                  complete description of the research, go
                                                  International, New York.                                  permits or permit amendments have                      to www.federalregister.gov and search
                                                Young, Madeline Olivia. 2015. Marine                        been issued to the following entities                  on the permit number provided in the
                                                  animal entanglements in mussel                            under the Marine Mammal Protection                     table below.

                                                                                                                                                             Receipt of application Federal    Permit or amend-
                                                         File No.                        RIN                                  Applicant                             Register notice           ment issuance date

                                                16111–02 ..................      0648–XA626 ...........   John Calambokidis, Cascadia Research              77 FR 19645; April 2, 2012 ....   July 13, 2017.
                                                                                                            Collective, Waterstreet Building, Suite
                                                                                                            201, 218 1⁄2 West Fourth Ave., Olym-
                                                                                                            pia, WA 98501.
                                                16580–01 ..................      0648–XB158 ...........   Shannon Atkinson, Ph.D., University of            77 FR 31835; May 30, 2012 ...     July 17, 2017.
                                                                                                            Alaska Fairbanks, 17101 Pt. Lena
                                                                                                            Loop Road, Juneau, AK 99801.
                                                17350–02 ..................      0648–XC067 ...........   North Slope Borough Department of                 77 FR 36488; June 19, 2012 ..     July 20, 2017.
                                                                                                            Wildlife Management, (Taqulik Hepa,
                                                                                                            Responsible Party), P.O. Box 69, Bar-
                                                                                                            row, AK 99723.
                                                20043 ........................   0648–XF153 ...........   Whitlow Au, Ph.D., University of Hawaii,          82 FR 4858; January 17, 2017      July 28, 2017.
                                                                                                            P.O. Box 1346, Kaneohe, HI 96744.
                                                20311 ........................   0648–XF412 ...........   NMFS Pacific Islands Fisheries Science            82 FR 22498; May 16, 2017 ...     June 30, 2017.
                                                                                                            Center, (Evan Howell, Ph.D., Respon-
                                                                                                            sible Party), 1845 Wasp Boulevard,
                                                                                                            Building 176, Honolulu, HI 96818.
                                                20523 ........................   0648–XF455 ...........   National Museum of Natural History (Kirk          82 FR 26455; June 7, 2017 ....    July 10, 2017.
                                                                                                            Johnson, Ph.D., Responsible Party),
                                                                                                            P.O. Box 37012, Washington, DC
                                                                                                            20013.
                                                20605 ........................   0648–XF381 ...........   Robin Baird, Ph.D., Cascadia Research             82 FR 22503; May 16, 2017 ...     July 28, 2017.
                                                                                                            Collective, 218 1⁄2 West Fourth Ave-
                                                                                                            nue, Olympia, WA 98501.
                                                21045 ........................   0648–XF350 ...........   Matson Laboratory (Carolyn Nistler, Re-           82 FR 22516; May 16, 2017 ...     June 29, 2017.
                                                                                                            sponsible Party), 135 Wooden Shoe
                                                                                                            Lane, Manhattan, MT 59741.
                                                21114 ........................   0648–XF453 ...........   The Whale Museum (Jenny Atkinson,                 82 FR 26455; June 7, 2017 ....    July 25, 2017.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES




                                                                                                            Responsible Party), P.O. Box 945, Fri-
                                                                                                            day Harbor, WA 98250.
                                                21170 ........................   0648–XF399 ...........   Keith Ellenbogen, Keith Ellenbogen Pho-           82 FR 21370; May 8, 2017 .....    July 3, 2017.
                                                                                                            tography, 795 Carroll Street, Brooklyn,
                                                                                                            NY 11215.




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Document Created: 2018-10-24 11:56:41
Document Modified: 2018-10-24 11:56:41
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionNotices
ActionNotice of availability; request for comments.
DatesWritten comments must be received by 5 p.m. Eastern Time on October 23, 2017.
ContactNina Young, NMFS F/IASI at [email protected] or 301-427-8383.
FR Citation82 FR 39762 
RIN Number0648-XF53

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