82_FR_58821 82 FR 58583 - Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Atlantic Mackerel, Squid, and Butterfish Fisheries; Specifications

82 FR 58583 - Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Atlantic Mackerel, Squid, and Butterfish Fisheries; Specifications

DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Federal Register Volume 82, Issue 238 (December 13, 2017)

Page Range58583-58587
FR Document2017-26840

NMFS proposes revised longfin squid, Illex squid, and butterfish specifications for the 2018 fishing year and projected specifications for fishing years 2019 and 2020. NMFS previously set specifications for Atlantic mackerel for three years in 2016 (2016- 2018) and, therefore, new Atlantic mackerel specifications will not be included in this year's specification rulemaking. This action is necessary to specify catch levels for the squid and butterfish fisheries based upon updated information on stock status. These proposed and projected specifications are intended to promote the sustainable utilization and conservation of the squid and butterfish resources.

Federal Register, Volume 82 Issue 238 (Wednesday, December 13, 2017)
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 238 (Wednesday, December 13, 2017)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 58583-58587]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2017-26840]


=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

50 CFR Part 648

[Docket No. 170713663-7663-01]
RIN 0648-BH04


Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Atlantic Mackerel, 
Squid, and Butterfish Fisheries; Specifications

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

[[Page 58584]]


ACTION: Proposed rule, request for comments.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

SUMMARY: NMFS proposes revised longfin squid, Illex squid, and 
butterfish specifications for the 2018 fishing year and projected 
specifications for fishing years 2019 and 2020. NMFS previously set 
specifications for Atlantic mackerel for three years in 2016 (2016-
2018) and, therefore, new Atlantic mackerel specifications will not be 
included in this year's specification rulemaking. This action is 
necessary to specify catch levels for the squid and butterfish 
fisheries based upon updated information on stock status. These 
proposed and projected specifications are intended to promote the 
sustainable utilization and conservation of the squid and butterfish 
resources.

DATES: Public comments must be received by January 12, 2018.

ADDRESSES: Copies of supporting documents used by the Mid-Atlantic 
Fishery Management Council, including the Environmental Assessment 
(EA), the Regulatory Impact Review (RIR), and the Regulatory 
Flexibility Act (RFA) analysis are available from: Dr. Christopher M. 
Moore, Executive Director, Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council, 800 
North State Street, Suite 201, Dover, DE 19901, telephone (302) 674-
2331. The EA/RIR/RFA analysis is also accessible via the internet at 
www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-2017-0089.
    You may submit comments, identified by NOAA-NMFS-2017-0089, by any 
of the following methods:
     Electronic Submission: Submit all electronic public 
comments via the Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to 
www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-2017-0089, click the 
``Comment Now!'' icon, complete the required fields, and enter or 
attach your comments.
     Mail: Submit written comments to NMFS, Greater Atlantic 
Regional Fisheries Office, 55 Great Republic Drive, Gloucester, MA 
01930. Mark the outside of the envelope ``Comments on 2018 MSB 
Specifications.''
     Fax: 978-281-9135; Attn: Douglas Christel.
    Instructions: Comments sent by any other method, to any other 
address or individual, or received after the end of the comment period, 
may not be considered by NMFS. All comments received are a part of the 
public record and will generally be posted for public viewing on 
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 PDF file formats only.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Douglas Christel, Fishery Policy 
Analyst, (978) 281-9141, fax (978) 281-9135.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

Background

    This rule proposes specifications, which are the combined suite of 
commercial and recreational catch levels established for one or more 
fishing years. Section 302(g)(1)(B) of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery 
Conservation and Management Act states that the Scientific and 
Statistical Committee (SSC) for each regional fishery management 
council shall provide its Council ongoing scientific advice for fishery 
management decisions, including recommendations for acceptable 
biological catch (ABC), preventing overfishing, ensuring maximum 
sustainable yield, and achieving rebuilding targets. The ABC is a level 
of catch that accounts for the scientific uncertainty in the estimate 
of the stock's defined overfishing level (OFL).
    The regulations implementing the Atlantic Mackerel, Squid, and 
Butterfish Fishery Management Plan (FMP) require the Council's Atlantic 
Mackerel, Squid, and Butterfish Monitoring Committee to develop 
specification recommendations for each species based upon the ABC 
advice of the Council's SSC. The FMP regulations also require the 
specification of annual catch limits (ACLs) and accountability measure 
(AM) provisions for butterfish. Both squid species are exempt from the 
ACL/AM requirements because they have a life cycle of less than one 
year. In addition, the regulations require the specification of 
domestic annual harvest (DAH), domestic annual processing (DAP), total 
allowable level of foreign fishing (TALFF), joint venture processing 
(JVP), commercial and recreational annual catch targets (ACT), the 
butterfish mortality cap in the longfin squid fishery, and initial 
optimum yield (IOY) for both squid species.
    The Council's SSC met on May 17 and 18, 2017, and the Monitoring 
Committee met on June 7, 2017, to recommend revised longfin squid, 
Illex squid, and butterfish specifications for the 2018 and projected 
specifications for the 2019 and 2020 fishing years. The Council 
considered the recommendations of the SSC, the Monitoring Committee, 
and public comments at its June 6-8, 2017, meeting. The Council 
submitted its recommendations, as summarized below, along with the 
required analyses, for agency review on August 24, 2017. NMFS must 
review the Council's recommendations for compliance with the FMP and 
applicable law, and conduct notice-and-comment rulemaking to propose 
and implement the final specifications.
    This action does not consider revisions to existing specifications 
for Atlantic mackerel. On April 26, 2016, we implemented Atlantic 
mackerel specifications for fishing years 2016-2018 (81 FR 24504). That 
action implemented a 2018 mackerel ABC of 19,898 mt, an ACL of 11,009 
mt, a commercial ACT of 9,294 mt, a commercial DAH of 9,177 mt, and a 
recreational ACT of 614 mt. A new stock assessment for Atlantic 
mackerel is expected to be completed as part of Stock Assessment 
Workshop 64 in November 2017. This will inform updated mackerel 
specifications starting in fishing year 2019.

Proposed 2018 and Projected 2019-2020 Illex Squid Specifications

     Table 1--Proposed 2018 and Projected 2019 and 2020 Illex Squid
                    Specifications in Metric Ton (mt)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
------------------------------------------------------------------------
OFL.....................................................         Unknown
ABC.....................................................          24,000
IOY.....................................................          22,915
DAH/DAP.................................................          22,915
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Illex squid stock was most recently assessed at the 42nd 
Northeast Regional Stock Assessment Workshop in late 2005. The 
assessment did not generate reliable estimates of stock biomass or 
fishing mortality. The Northeast Fisheries Science Center conducted a 
data update for Illex squid in April 2017. The update indicated that 
abundance continues to be highly variable, but that relative abundance 
was near the long-term median during 2014-2016. The SSC considered the 
results of this data update in recommending revised 2018 and projected 
2019 and 2020 ABCs. In the absence of an updated stock assessment and 
the inadequacy of information to determine an OFL and assess the 
probability of overfishing, the SSC recommended maintaining the status 
quo ABC of 24,000 mt for 2018 and continuing that for 2019 and 2020. 
The SSC concluded that landings of 24,000-

[[Page 58585]]

26,000 mt do not appear to have caused harm to the Illex stock based on 
trawl survey indices and landings following years in which the fishery 
landed 24,000-26,000 mt of Illex squid.
    The Council recommended that the ABC be reduced by the status quo 
discard rate of 4.52 percent, which results in an IOY, DAH, and DAP of 
22,915 mt for 2018 that would be maintained for the 2019 and 2020 
fishing years. These are the same specifications for the Illex fishery 
since 2012. The Council will review this decision during its annual 
specifications process following annual data updates each spring, and 
may change its recommendations for 2019 or 2020 if new information is 
available. Consistent with the Council's recommendation, NMFS proposes 
to specify the Illex ABC as 24,000 mt, and to specify IOY, DAH, and DAP 
as 22,915 mt for the 2015-2017 fishing years.

Proposed 2018 and Projected 2019-2020 Longfin Squid Specifications

    Table 2--Proposed 2018 and Projected 2019 and 2020 Longfin Squid
                   Specifications in Metric Tons (mt)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
------------------------------------------------------------------------
OFL.....................................................         Unknown
ABC.....................................................          23,400
IOY.....................................................          22,932
DAH/DAP.................................................          22,932
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The most recent longfin squid assessment, the 51st Northeast 
Regional Stock Assessment Workshop published in January 2011, found 
that the longfin squid stock was not overfished in 2009 based on recent 
biomass estimates from NMFS surveys. The Workshop concluded that the 
overfishing status was unknown in 2009 because the short lifespan of 
longfin squid and the lack of evidence correlating fishing effort with 
changes in biomass prevented the estimation of a fishing mortality 
reference point. The SSC considered the results of an April 2017 
assessment update for longfin squid, which included more recent fishery 
dependent and independent information on longfin catch and abundance. 
Based on that update, the longfin squid stock was not overfished in 
2016 because the average swept-area biomass estimates derived from 
recent surveys were much higher (73,762 mt) than the threshold biomass 
proxy (21,203 mt) for determining overfished status and the target 
biomass proxy at maximum sustainable yield (42,205 mt). Thus, the 
current stock biomass is estimated to be approximately 174 percent of 
the biomass target. The assessment concluded that the stock is likely 
lightly exploited because annual catches since 1987 were less than 
annual biomass and did not result in a multi-year decrease in biomass. 
Based on the above, the SSC recommended maintaining current levels for 
another three years, subject to annual review, resulting in a proposed 
ABC of 23,400 mt for 2018 and projected ABCs for 2019 and 2020. This 
recommendation corresponds to catch in the year with the highest 
observed exploitation fraction (catch divided by estimated biomass) 
during a period of light exploitation (1976-2009), interpreting this 
level of exploitation to be sustainable over the long term.
    The Council recommended reducing the ABC by an updated discard rate 
of 2.0 percent derived from the April 2017 assessment update. This 
discard rate is lower than previous discard rates estimated at 4.08 
percent, and reflects the discards observed since 2007, the year in 
which the current trimester management approach was implemented. Using 
this updated discard estimate results in a recommended IOY, DAH, and 
DAP of 22,932 mt for 2018 and the same projected catch levels for 2019 
and 2020. Consistent with the Council's recommendation, NMFS proposes 
an ABC of 23,400 mt, and an IOY, DAH, and DAP of 22,932 mt for 2018 and 
projects the same catch levels for 2019 and 2020.

Distribution of the Longfin DAH

    The Council did not recommend any changes to the trimester 
allocation of the 2018-2020 longfin DAH. Therefore, allocations would 
remain consistent with the distribution implemented since 2007 
according to percentages specified in the FMP, as follows:

 Table 3--Proposed 2018 and Projected 2019-2020 Longfin Quota Trimester
                               Allocations
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Trimester                     Percent      Metric tons
------------------------------------------------------------------------
I (Jan-Apr)................................           43           9,861
II (May-Aug)...............................           17           3,898
III (Sep-Dec)..............................           40           9,173
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Proposed 2018 and Projected 2019-2020 Butterfish Specifications

          Table 4--Proposed 2018 and Projected 2019-2020 Butterfish Specifications in Metric Tons (mt)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                       2018            2019            2020
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OFL.............................................................          28,628          37,637          39,592
ABC.............................................................          17,801          27,108          32,063
Commercial ACT (ABC--management uncertainty buffers for each              16,911          25,075          28,857
 year)..........................................................
DAH (ACT minus butterfish cap and discards).....................          12,093          20,061          23,752
Directed Fishery closure limit (DAH--1,000 mt incidental                  11,093          19,061          22,752
 landings buffer)...............................................
Butterfish Cap (in the longfin squid fishery)...................           3,884           3,884           3,884
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The status of the butterfish stock was last assessed in the 58th 
Northeast Regional Stock Assessment Workshop (March 2014), and updated 
through a March 2017 assessment update. The 2017 assessment update 
concluded that the stock was neither overfished, nor subject to 
overfishing. The butterfish stock biomass is estimated to be 64,376 mt, 
well above the target stock biomass at maximum sustainable yield 
(45,616 mt). In addition, the fishing mortality rate was estimated to 
be very low (0.05), well below the overfishing reference point of 0.81. 
However, trawl survey

[[Page 58586]]

information suggests that recruitment has been declining in recent 
years. Due to reduced recruitment, biomass is expected to decline below 
target levels (45,616 mt) in 2017, but remain above the overfishing 
threshold (22,808 mt). If recruitment returns to average levels, then 
the stock is predicted to rebound above the biomass target by 2020.
    The SSC derived OFLs for 2018 and projected OFLs for 2019-2020 by 
applying estimated natural and fishing mortality to the size of the 
existing stock, assuming the ABCs are fully harvested each year (see 
Table 4). However, the SSC noted that the estimated uncertainties from 
the OFLs derived from the assessment make them unrealistic for setting 
ABCs. In addition, the SSC was concerned about the declining trend in 
recruitment from recent trawl surveys, suggesting that catch 
projections may be overly optimistic. As a result, the SSC recommended 
an ABC of 17,801 mt in 2018, 27,108 mt in 2019, and 32,063 mt in 2020. 
The low 2018 ABC is 42 percent below the 2017 ABC and reflects 
projections using low recruitment estimates from 2016. In contrast, the 
2019 and 2020 ABC recommendations are based upon long-term average 
recruitment. The SSC admitted that these catch levels are very 
conservative, estimating that the probability of overfishing is very 
low (8 percent).
    At its June 2017 meeting, the Council adopted the SSC's butterfish 
ABC recommendations subject to annual review, as required by existing 
regulations. The Monitoring Committee indicated that discards and 
landings are adequately controlled under existing measures. 
Accordingly, the Monitoring Committee and the Council recommended using 
a lower estimate of management uncertainty when setting ACTs, adopting 
a 5-percent management uncertainty buffer in 2018, a 7.5-percent buffer 
in 2019, and maintaining the current 10-percent buffer for 2020. The 
Council reasoned that there is a lower likelihood of an unexpected 
change in butterfish discarding in the directed fishery with lower 
catch levels, allowing for a smaller ACT buffer in 2018 and 2019. This 
results in a proposed commercial ACT of 12,093 mt in 2018, and proposed 
ACTs of 25,075 mt in 2019 and 28,857 in 2020.
    To prevent butterfish catch from exceeding the ACT, the Council 
subtracts butterfish catch in the longfin squid fishery, catch in other 
fisheries, and discards in the directed fishery. The Council 
recommended maintaining the butterfish cap for the longfin squid 
fishery at the 2014 level of 3,884 mt for 2018 and projected 
maintaining that level for 2019 and 2020. This cap is not constraining 
on the longfin fishery and reserves most of the available butterfish 
quota for the directed butterfish fishery. The maximum amount of 
butterfish discards in non-longfin fisheries from 2011-2013 was 637 mt. 
The Council did not indicate that there is a need to revise this 
estimate. Therefore, 4,521 mt (the 3,884-mt butterfish cap plus 637 mt 
of discards) would be subtracted from the ACT, as recommended. Next, 
the Council deducts an estimate of butterfish discards in the directed 
fishery to calculate the DAH (i.e., commercial landings). Previous 
analysis used an assumed discard rate of 11.4 percent. However, updated 
analysis using more recent observed trips targeting butterfish (trips 
that landed over 25,000 lb (9.33 mt) of butterfish) suggests that a 
discard rate of 2.4 percent is more accurate. Using this updated 
discard estimate results in a Council-recommended DAH of 12,093 mt in 
2018, 20,061 mt in 2019, and 23,752 mt in 2020.
    Current regulations require butterfish specifications to establish 
a buffer to account for butterfish landings once the directed fishery 
is closed and a 5,000-lb (2,268-kg) incidental limit is imposed. Based 
on previous analysis, if such an incidental limit is implemented, less 
than 700 mt of butterfish would be landed after the directed fishery is 
closed. Therefore, the Council recommended closing the directed 
butterfish fishery once 11,093 mt is caught in 2018, 19,061 mt is 
caught in 2019, and 22,752 is caught in 2020. This would provide a 
1,000-mt set aside in each year to account for incidental landings of 
butterfish after a closure of the directed fishery.
    NMFS proposes specifications, consistent with the Council's 
recommendations, as outlined in Table 4. Because the Council did not 
recommend any changes to the allocation of the butterfish mortality cap 
on the longfin squid fishery, we also propose that the 2018-2020 
butterfish mortality cap be allocated to Trimesters as follows:

  Table 5--Proposed Trimester Allocation of Butterfish Mortality Cap on
  the Longfin Squid Fishery for 2018 and Projected Allocations for 2019
                                and 2020
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Trimester                     Percent      Metric tons
------------------------------------------------------------------------
I (Jan-Apr)................................           43           1,670
II (May-Aug)...............................           17             660
III (Sep-Dec)..............................           40           1,554
rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr
    Total..................................          100           3,844
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Classification

    Pursuant to section 304(b)(1)(A) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, the 
NMFS Assistant Administrator has determined that this proposed rule is 
consistent with the Atlantic Mackerel, Squid, and Butterfish FMP, other 
provisions of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other applicable law, 
subject to further consideration after public comment.
    This proposed rule has been determined to be not significant for 
purposes of Executive Order 12866. This proposed rule is not expected 
to be an Executiver Order 13771 regulatory action because this proposed 
rule is not significant under Executive Order 12866.
    The Chief Counsel for Regulation of the Department of Commerce 
certified to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business 
Administration that this proposed rule, if adopted, would not have a 
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. 
The purpose, context, and statutory basis for this action is described 
above and not repeated here. Business entities affected by this action 
include vessels that are issued limited access longfin squid/butterfish 
and Illex squid permits. Although vessels issued open access incidental 
catch permits for these species are also potentially affected by this 
action, because these vessels land only small amounts of squid and 
butterfish and this action would not revise the amount of squid and 
butterfish that these vessels can land, these entities would not be 
affected by this proposed rule.

[[Page 58587]]

    Any entity with combined annual fishery landing receipts less than 
$11 million is considered a small entity based on standards published 
in the Federal Register (80 FR 81194, December 29, 2015). In 2016, 298 
separate vessels were issued longfin squid/butterfish and Illex squid 
limited access permits. These vessels were owned by 222 entities, of 
which 214 earned less and 8 earned more than $11 million in revenue. 
Average revenue among all entities was $2.1 million in 2016. Therefore, 
214 entities affected by this action are classified as small businesses 
based on current definitions.
    The existing Illex squid commercial landing limit would not be 
changed by this proposed action, while the commercial longfin squid 
landing limit would be slightly increased by 2 percent (487 mt). 
Fishing revenue and, therefore, economic impacts of yearly squid 
specifications depend upon species availability. In 2016, the longfin 
squid fishery landed 81 percent of the 2016 commercial landing limit, 
resulting in nearly $50 million in fishing revenue. The Illex squid 
fishery landed just 29 percent of the 2016 commercial landing limit, 
resulting in a value of $7.2 million, but landed 100 percent of the 
2017 commercial limit as of September 15, 2017. If both fisheries fully 
harvested proposed 2018 commercial landing limits, the longfin and 
Illex squid fisheries could generate approximately $63 and $25 million 
in fishing revenue, respectively, based on 2016 prices. Because this 
action would essentially maintain existing landing limits, it imposes 
no costs and is not expected to alter fishing behavior or resulting 
revenues.
    This action would reduce current commercial butterfish landing 
limits in 2018 and 2019. Compared to the 2017 commercial butterfish 
landing limit (20,652 mt), the proposed 2018 and projected 2019 
commercial landing limits are 41 and 3 percent lower (12,093 mt and 
20,061 mt, respectively), while the projected 2020 landing limit 
(23,752 mt) is 15 percent higher. Since 2014, the butterfish fishery 
has not landed more than 3,135 mt in any year. Recent landings peaked 
at 4,435 mt in 2001, representing only 37 percent of the proposed quota 
for 2018. Even at its peak, domestic landings reached 11,715 mt in 
1984, which is still 3 percent shy of the proposed 2018 commercial 
quota. It is possible for the fishery to substantially increase 
butterfish landings compared to recent years without approaching the 
reduced limits proposed in this action. Therefore, although the 
proposed action would substantially reduce commercial butterfish 
landing limits in 2018, such a reduction is unlikely to impede 
commercial operations or reduce domestic butterfish landings from 
recent levels. Based on 2016 prices, if the fishery fully harvested the 
proposed 2018 commercial limit, it may generate nearly $17 million in 
fishery revenue, which would be a 41-percent reduction from potential 
revenue under landing limits consistent with 2017 landing limits. 
However, because we expect the fishery to land much less than the 
landing limit, these potential revenues are not realistic. Instead, we 
expect that the fishery would maintain recent catch levels, which would 
produce $2.3 million in fishing revenue based on average landings since 
2012 and 2016 price estimates.
    In determining the significance of the economic impacts of the 
proposed action, we considered the following two criteria outlined in 
applicable National Marine Fisheries Service guidance: 
Disproportionality and profitability. The proposed measures would not 
place a substantial number of small entities at a significant 
competitive disadvantage to large entities; all entities affected by 
this action would be equally affected. Accordingly, there are no 
distributional economic effects from this action between small and 
large entities. Proposed measures would not reduce fishing 
opportunities based on recent squid and butterfish landings, change any 
entity's access to these resources, or impose any costs to affected 
entities. Therefore, it is unlikely that this action would reduce 
revenues or profit for affected entities. Based on the above 
justification, the proposed action is not expected to have a 
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.

    Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.

    Dated: December 7, 2017.
Alan D. Risenhoover,
Acting Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National 
Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2017-26840 Filed 12-12-17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P



                                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 238 / Wednesday, December 13, 2017 / Proposed Rules                                                          58583

                                                  7311 required the Secretary of                                     provided for U.S. General                                including the updated RIA, are still
                                                  Transportation to review the final                                 Accountability Office (GAO) review of                    available for review at http://
                                                  updated RIA and determine if the final                             the potential costs and benefits of ECP                  www.regulations.gov in Docket Number
                                                  rule’s ECP brake requirements are                                  brakes. In response, GAO completed an                    PHMSA–2017–0102.
                                                  justified, based on whether the final                              evaluation of the business benefits,
                                                                                                                                                                              Final Determination
                                                  updated RIA demonstrated that the                                  safety benefits, and costs that DOT
                                                  benefits exceed the costs. The FAST Act                            estimated in the RIA for the final rule.6                   The final updated RIA shows that the
                                                  required this process to be completed no                           Additionally, GAO recently completed a                   ECP brake requirements are not
                                                  later than December 4, 2017.                                       second evaluation comparing the                          expected to be cost beneficial under any
                                                     Section 7311 required DOT to enter                              forecasted values of certain data points                 scenario assessed. These include a range
                                                  into an agreement with National                                    that were used to support DOT’s ECP                      of crude oil volume by rail forecasts—
                                                  Academy of Sciences (NAS) to test ECP                              brake analysis.7 Both audits are                         one that shows volumes shipped by rail
                                                  brakes and reevaluate the economic                                 discussed in the final updated RIA.                      rebounding over a period of time to
                                                  analysis supporting the ECP brake                                                                                           close to the levels predicted at the
                                                                                                                     October 16, 2017—Federal Register
                                                  requirement of the Final Rule.5 Section                                                                                     rulemaking stage, one that shows levels
                                                                                                                     Document and Request for Comments
                                                  7311 required the testing to                                                                                                flattening at those seen over the past few
                                                  ‘‘objectively, accurately, and reliably                              On October 16, 2017, PHMSA                             years, and a third showing declining
                                                  measure[s] the performance of ECP                                  published a Federal Register document                    volumes of crude oil shipped by rail.
                                                  brake systems relative to other braking                            that provided the public with an                         The estimated costs and benefits for the
                                                  technologies or systems, such as                                   opportunity to comment on the updated                    20-year analysis are presented in the
                                                  distributed power and 2-way end-of-                                RIA. See 82 FR 48006.8 All documents                     following (figures are in millions of
                                                  train devices.’’ The FAST Act also                                 and comments related to this matter,                     dollars):
                                                                                                                                           TABLE #1
                                                                                                                                       [Millions of dollars]

                                                                                                                  Total                                         7 Percent                                   3 Percent

                                                                                                   Low            High        Sensitivity          Low            High      Sensitivity        Low            High       Sensitivity

                                                  Tank Cars ..................................      $274.48        $364.48       $191.69           $237.76        $318.49      $165.00         $256.18         $341.52      $178.39
                                                  Locomotives ..............................         115.67         153.25         85.86            105.03         140.42        77.13          110.79          147.39        81.84
                                                  Asset Management ...................                 0.52           0.52          0.52              0.52           0.52         0.52            0.52            0.52         0.52
                                                  Training .....................................      36.58          36.58         36.58             32.29          32.29        32.29           34.62           34.62        34.62

                                                      Total Costs .........................          427.25         554.83        314.65            375.60         491.72       274.95             402.11       524.05       295.37
                                                  Damage Mitigation ....................              89.52         146.16         70.07             48.16          78.19        37.36              67.19       109.44        52.41
                                                  Set Out Reliefs ..........................          11.04          14.18          6.62              5.87           7.46         3.56               8.24        10.55         4.97
                                                  Class IA Brake Test ..................              67.90          87.58         40.29             27.54          46.04        21.68              45.07        65.12        30.24
                                                  Wheel Savings ..........................            46.39          71.15         33.22             26.77          37.40        17.87              36.08        52.90        24.93
                                                  Fuel Savings .............................          42.70          54.88         25.63             22.70          28.85        13.79              31.90        40.81        19.23

                                                        Total Benefits .....................         257.54         373.95        175.82            131.03         197.95         94.27            188.49       278.81       131.78

                                                              Net Benefits ................        ¥169.71        ¥180.88       ¥138.83            ¥244.57       ¥293.78      ¥180.68         ¥213.63         ¥245.24      ¥163.59



                                                    As mandated by Section 7311, the                                   Issued in Washington, DC on December 5,                DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
                                                  Department of Transportation has                                   2017, under authority delegated in 49 CFR
                                                  reviewed the final updated RIA and                                 1.97.                                                    National Oceanic and Atmospheric
                                                  determined that the HM–251 final rule’s                            Drue Pearce,                                             Administration
                                                  ECP brake requirements are not                                     Deputy Administrator, Pipeline and
                                                  economically justified as the final                                Hazardous Materials Safety Administration.               50 CFR Part 648
                                                  updated RIA demonstrates that the                                  [FR Doc. 2017–26546 Filed 12–12–17; 8:45 am]
                                                  expected benefits do not exceed the                                BILLING CODE 4910–60–P                                   [Docket No. 170713663–7663–01]
                                                  expected costs. As such, PHMSA and
                                                  FRA will initiate a rulemaking to                                                                                           RIN 0648–BH04
                                                  rescind the necessary regulatory
                                                  provisions.                                                                                                                 Fisheries of the Northeastern United
                                                                                                                                                                              States; Atlantic Mackerel, Squid, and
                                                                                                                                                                              Butterfish Fisheries; Specifications

                                                                                                                                                                              AGENCY:  National Marine Fisheries
                                                                                                                                                                              Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                                                                                                                                              Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
                                                                                                                                                                              Commerce.
                                                    5 In a March 17, 2016, letter, NAS declined to                   itself and contracted with NAS to review and               7 2015 Electronically Controlled Pneumatic Brake

                                                  perform the testing, citing preliminary cost                       monitor the test plan.                                   Rule: Comparison of DOT Forecasts for Selected
                                                  estimates to perform the testing in excess of $100                    6 DOT’s Rulemaking on Electronically Controlled       Data Points for 2015 and 2016 to Preliminary Data
                                                  million and expressing concern about meeting the                   Pneumatic Brakes Could Benefit from Additional           for Those Years, GAO–17–567R, May 31, 2017.
                                                  statutory deadline. As an alternative, to meet the                 Data and Transparency, GAO–17–122, Oct 12, 2016.
                                                                                                                                                                                8 https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2017-10-16/

                                                  intent of the FAST Act, DOT conducted the testing                                                                           pdf/2017-22281.pdf.



                                             VerDate Sep<11>2014          16:09 Dec 12, 2017       Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00018    Fmt 4702    Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\13DEP1.SGM       13DEP1


                                                  58584             Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 238 / Wednesday, December 13, 2017 / Proposed Rules

                                                        Proposed rule, request for
                                                  ACTION:                                                 otherwise sensitive information                       and 2020 fishing years. The Council
                                                  comments.                                               submitted voluntarily by the sender will              considered the recommendations of the
                                                                                                          be publicly accessible. NMFS will                     SSC, the Monitoring Committee, and
                                                  SUMMARY:    NMFS proposes revised                       accept anonymous comments (enter                      public comments at its June 6–8, 2017,
                                                  longfin squid, Illex squid, and butterfish              ‘‘N/A’’ in the required fields if you wish            meeting. The Council submitted its
                                                  specifications for the 2018 fishing year                to remain anonymous). Attachments to                  recommendations, as summarized
                                                  and projected specifications for fishing                electronic comments will be accepted in               below, along with the required analyses,
                                                  years 2019 and 2020. NMFS previously                    Microsoft Word, Excel, or Adobe PDF                   for agency review on August 24, 2017.
                                                  set specifications for Atlantic mackerel                file formats only.                                    NMFS must review the Council’s
                                                  for three years in 2016 (2016–2018) and,                                                                      recommendations for compliance with
                                                  therefore, new Atlantic mackerel                        FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                                                                          Douglas Christel, Fishery Policy                      the FMP and applicable law, and
                                                  specifications will not be included in
                                                                                                          Analyst, (978) 281–9141, fax (978) 281–               conduct notice-and-comment
                                                  this year’s specification rulemaking.
                                                                                                          9135.                                                 rulemaking to propose and implement
                                                  This action is necessary to specify catch
                                                                                                          SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:                            the final specifications.
                                                  levels for the squid and butterfish                                                                             This action does not consider
                                                  fisheries based upon updated                            Background                                            revisions to existing specifications for
                                                  information on stock status. These                                                                            Atlantic mackerel. On April 26, 2016,
                                                  proposed and projected specifications                      This rule proposes specifications,
                                                                                                          which are the combined suite of                       we implemented Atlantic mackerel
                                                  are intended to promote the sustainable                                                                       specifications for fishing years 2016–
                                                  utilization and conservation of the squid               commercial and recreational catch
                                                                                                          levels established for one or more                    2018 (81 FR 24504). That action
                                                  and butterfish resources.
                                                                                                          fishing years. Section 302(g)(1)(B) of the            implemented a 2018 mackerel ABC of
                                                  DATES: Public comments must be                                                                                19,898 mt, an ACL of 11,009 mt, a
                                                  received by January 12, 2018.                           Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
                                                                                                          Conservation and Management Act                       commercial ACT of 9,294 mt, a
                                                  ADDRESSES: Copies of supporting                                                                               commercial DAH of 9,177 mt, and a
                                                  documents used by the Mid-Atlantic                      states that the Scientific and Statistical
                                                                                                          Committee (SSC) for each regional                     recreational ACT of 614 mt. A new stock
                                                  Fishery Management Council, including                                                                         assessment for Atlantic mackerel is
                                                  the Environmental Assessment (EA), the                  fishery management council shall
                                                                                                          provide its Council ongoing scientific                expected to be completed as part of
                                                  Regulatory Impact Review (RIR), and the                                                                       Stock Assessment Workshop 64 in
                                                  Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)                        advice for fishery management
                                                                                                          decisions, including recommendations                  November 2017. This will inform
                                                  analysis are available from: Dr.                                                                              updated mackerel specifications starting
                                                  Christopher M. Moore, Executive                         for acceptable biological catch (ABC),
                                                                                                          preventing overfishing, ensuring                      in fishing year 2019.
                                                  Director, Mid-Atlantic Fishery
                                                  Management Council, 800 North State                     maximum sustainable yield, and                        Proposed 2018 and Projected 2019–2020
                                                  Street, Suite 201, Dover, DE 19901,                     achieving rebuilding targets. The ABC is              Illex Squid Specifications
                                                  telephone (302) 674–2331. The EA/RIR/                   a level of catch that accounts for the
                                                  RFA analysis is also accessible via the                 scientific uncertainty in the estimate of              TABLE 1—PROPOSED 2018 AND PRO-
                                                  internet at www.regulations.gov/                        the stock’s defined overfishing level                   JECTED 2019 AND 2020 ILLEX
                                                  #!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-2017-                        (OFL).                                                  SQUID SPECIFICATIONS IN METRIC
                                                  0089.                                                      The regulations implementing the
                                                                                                                                                                  TON (mt)
                                                     You may submit comments, identified                  Atlantic Mackerel, Squid, and Butterfish
                                                  by NOAA–NMFS–2017–0089, by any of                       Fishery Management Plan (FMP) require                 OFL .......................................    Unknown
                                                  the following methods:                                  the Council’s Atlantic Mackerel, Squid,               ABC ......................................       24,000
                                                     • Electronic Submission: Submit all                  and Butterfish Monitoring Committee to                IOY ........................................     22,915
                                                  electronic public comments via the                      develop specification recommendations                 DAH/DAP ..............................           22,915
                                                  Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to                      for each species based upon the ABC
                                                  www.regulations.gov/                                    advice of the Council’s SSC. The FMP                    The Illex squid stock was most
                                                  #!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-2017-                        regulations also require the specification            recently assessed at the 42nd Northeast
                                                  0089, click the ‘‘Comment Now!’’ icon,                  of annual catch limits (ACLs) and                     Regional Stock Assessment Workshop
                                                  complete the required fields, and enter                 accountability measure (AM) provisions                in late 2005. The assessment did not
                                                  or attach your comments.                                for butterfish. Both squid species are                generate reliable estimates of stock
                                                     • Mail: Submit written comments to                   exempt from the ACL/AM requirements                   biomass or fishing mortality. The
                                                  NMFS, Greater Atlantic Regional                         because they have a life cycle of less                Northeast Fisheries Science Center
                                                  Fisheries Office, 55 Great Republic                     than one year. In addition, the                       conducted a data update for Illex squid
                                                  Drive, Gloucester, MA 01930. Mark the                   regulations require the specification of              in April 2017. The update indicated that
                                                  outside of the envelope ‘‘Comments on                   domestic annual harvest (DAH),                        abundance continues to be highly
                                                  2018 MSB Specifications.’’                              domestic annual processing (DAP), total               variable, but that relative abundance
                                                     • Fax: 978–281–9135; Attn: Douglas                   allowable level of foreign fishing                    was near the long-term median during
                                                  Christel.                                               (TALFF), joint venture processing (JVP),              2014–2016. The SSC considered the
                                                     Instructions: Comments sent by any                   commercial and recreational annual                    results of this data update in
                                                  other method, to any other address or                   catch targets (ACT), the butterfish                   recommending revised 2018 and
                                                  individual, or received after the end of                mortality cap in the longfin squid                    projected 2019 and 2020 ABCs. In the
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                  the comment period, may not be                          fishery, and initial optimum yield (IOY)              absence of an updated stock assessment
                                                  considered by NMFS. All comments                        for both squid species.                               and the inadequacy of information to
                                                  received are a part of the public record                   The Council’s SSC met on May 17 and                determine an OFL and assess the
                                                  and will generally be posted for public                 18, 2017, and the Monitoring Committee                probability of overfishing, the SSC
                                                  viewing on www.regulations.gov                          met on June 7, 2017, to recommend                     recommended maintaining the status
                                                  without change. All personal identifying                revised longfin squid, Illex squid, and               quo ABC of 24,000 mt for 2018 and
                                                  information (e.g., name, address, etc.),                butterfish specifications for the 2018                continuing that for 2019 and 2020. The
                                                  confidential business information, or                   and projected specifications for the 2019             SSC concluded that landings of 24,000–


                                             VerDate Sep<11>2014   16:09 Dec 12, 2017   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00019   Fmt 4702   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\13DEP1.SGM     13DEP1


                                                                            Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 238 / Wednesday, December 13, 2017 / Proposed Rules                                                                                     58585

                                                  26,000 mt do not appear to have caused                                         The most recent longfin squid                                            ABC of 23,400 mt for 2018 and
                                                  harm to the Illex stock based on trawl                                      assessment, the 51st Northeast Regional                                     projected ABCs for 2019 and 2020. This
                                                  survey indices and landings following                                       Stock Assessment Workshop published                                         recommendation corresponds to catch
                                                  years in which the fishery landed                                           in January 2011, found that the longfin                                     in the year with the highest observed
                                                  24,000–26,000 mt of Illex squid.                                            squid stock was not overfished in 2009                                      exploitation fraction (catch divided by
                                                                                                                              based on recent biomass estimates from                                      estimated biomass) during a period of
                                                     The Council recommended that the
                                                                                                                              NMFS surveys. The Workshop                                                  light exploitation (1976–2009),
                                                  ABC be reduced by the status quo                                            concluded that the overfishing status                                       interpreting this level of exploitation to
                                                  discard rate of 4.52 percent, which                                         was unknown in 2009 because the short                                       be sustainable over the long term.
                                                  results in an IOY, DAH, and DAP of                                          lifespan of longfin squid and the lack of
                                                  22,915 mt for 2018 that would be                                                                                                                           The Council recommended reducing
                                                                                                                              evidence correlating fishing effort with
                                                  maintained for the 2019 and 2020                                                                                                                        the ABC by an updated discard rate of
                                                                                                                              changes in biomass prevented the
                                                  fishing years. These are the same                                                                                                                       2.0 percent derived from the April 2017
                                                                                                                              estimation of a fishing mortality
                                                  specifications for the Illex fishery since                                                                                                              assessment update. This discard rate is
                                                                                                                              reference point. The SSC considered the
                                                  2012. The Council will review this                                                                                                                      lower than previous discard rates
                                                                                                                              results of an April 2017 assessment
                                                  decision during its annual specifications                                                                                                               estimated at 4.08 percent, and reflects
                                                                                                                              update for longfin squid, which
                                                                                                                                                                                                          the discards observed since 2007, the
                                                  process following annual data updates                                       included more recent fishery dependent
                                                                                                                                                                                                          year in which the current trimester
                                                  each spring, and may change its                                             and independent information on longfin
                                                                                                                                                                                                          management approach was
                                                  recommendations for 2019 or 2020 if                                         catch and abundance. Based on that
                                                                                                                              update, the longfin squid stock was not                                     implemented. Using this updated
                                                  new information is available. Consistent                                                                                                                discard estimate results in a
                                                  with the Council’s recommendation,                                          overfished in 2016 because the average
                                                                                                                              swept-area biomass estimates derived                                        recommended IOY, DAH, and DAP of
                                                  NMFS proposes to specify the Illex ABC                                                                                                                  22,932 mt for 2018 and the same
                                                  as 24,000 mt, and to specify IOY, DAH,                                      from recent surveys were much higher
                                                                                                                              (73,762 mt) than the threshold biomass                                      projected catch levels for 2019 and
                                                  and DAP as 22,915 mt for the 2015–                                                                                                                      2020. Consistent with the Council’s
                                                  2017 fishing years.                                                         proxy (21,203 mt) for determining
                                                                                                                              overfished status and the target biomass                                    recommendation, NMFS proposes an
                                                  Proposed 2018 and Projected 2019–2020                                       proxy at maximum sustainable yield                                          ABC of 23,400 mt, and an IOY, DAH,
                                                  Longfin Squid Specifications                                                (42,205 mt). Thus, the current stock                                        and DAP of 22,932 mt for 2018 and
                                                                                                                              biomass is estimated to be                                                  projects the same catch levels for 2019
                                                    TABLE 2—PROPOSED 2018 AND PRO-                                            approximately 174 percent of the                                            and 2020.
                                                     JECTED 2019 AND 2020 LONGFIN                                             biomass target. The assessment                                              Distribution of the Longfin DAH
                                                     SQUID SPECIFICATIONS IN METRIC                                           concluded that the stock is likely lightly
                                                     TONS (mt)                                                                exploited because annual catches since                                         The Council did not recommend any
                                                                                                                              1987 were less than annual biomass and                                      changes to the trimester allocation of the
                                                                                                                              did not result in a multi-year decrease                                     2018–2020 longfin DAH. Therefore,
                                                  OFL .......................................               Unknown
                                                  ABC ......................................                  23,400
                                                                                                                              in biomass. Based on the above, the SSC                                     allocations would remain consistent
                                                  IOY ........................................                22,932
                                                                                                                              recommended maintaining current                                             with the distribution implemented since
                                                  DAH/DAP ..............................                      22,932
                                                                                                                              levels for another three years, subject to                                  2007 according to percentages specified
                                                                                                                              annual review, resulting in a proposed                                      in the FMP, as follows:

                                                                      TABLE 3—PROPOSED 2018 AND PROJECTED 2019–2020 LONGFIN QUOTA TRIMESTER ALLOCATIONS
                                                                                                                                   Trimester                                                                                        Percent     Metric tons

                                                  I (Jan–Apr) ...................................................................................................................................................................          43          9,861
                                                  II (May–Aug) ................................................................................................................................................................            17          3,898
                                                  III (Sep–Dec) ................................................................................................................................................................           40          9,173



                                                  Proposed 2018 and Projected 2019–2020
                                                  Butterfish Specifications

                                                              TABLE 4—PROPOSED 2018 AND PROJECTED 2019–2020 BUTTERFISH SPECIFICATIONS IN METRIC TONS (mt)
                                                                                                                                                                                                             2018                   2019           2020

                                                  OFL ..............................................................................................................................................              28,628              37,637          39,592
                                                  ABC ..............................................................................................................................................              17,801              27,108          32,063
                                                  Commercial ACT (ABC—management uncertainty buffers for each year) ................................                                                              16,911              25,075          28,857
                                                  DAH (ACT minus butterfish cap and discards) ...........................................................................                                         12,093              20,061          23,752
                                                  Directed Fishery closure limit (DAH—1,000 mt incidental landings buffer) ................................                                                       11,093              19,061          22,752
                                                  Butterfish Cap (in the longfin squid fishery) ................................................................................                                   3,884               3,884           3,884
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    The status of the butterfish stock was                                    2017 assessment update concluded that                                       at maximum sustainable yield (45,616
                                                  last assessed in the 58th Northeast                                         the stock was neither overfished, nor                                       mt). In addition, the fishing mortality
                                                  Regional Stock Assessment Workshop                                          subject to overfishing. The butterfish                                      rate was estimated to be very low (0.05),
                                                  (March 2014), and updated through a                                         stock biomass is estimated to be 64,376                                     well below the overfishing reference
                                                  March 2017 assessment update. The                                           mt, well above the target stock biomass                                     point of 0.81. However, trawl survey



                                             VerDate Sep<11>2014         16:09 Dec 12, 2017          Jkt 244001       PO 00000        Frm 00020        Fmt 4702       Sfmt 4702       E:\FR\FM\13DEP1.SGM             13DEP1


                                                  58586                     Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 238 / Wednesday, December 13, 2017 / Proposed Rules

                                                  information suggests that recruitment                                       indicated that discards and landings are                                      fishery to calculate the DAH (i.e.,
                                                  has been declining in recent years. Due                                     adequately controlled under existing                                          commercial landings). Previous analysis
                                                  to reduced recruitment, biomass is                                          measures. Accordingly, the Monitoring                                         used an assumed discard rate of 11.4
                                                  expected to decline below target levels                                     Committee and the Council                                                     percent. However, updated analysis
                                                  (45,616 mt) in 2017, but remain above                                       recommended using a lower estimate of                                         using more recent observed trips
                                                  the overfishing threshold (22,808 mt). If                                   management uncertainty when setting                                           targeting butterfish (trips that landed
                                                  recruitment returns to average levels,                                      ACTs, adopting a 5-percent management                                         over 25,000 lb (9.33 mt) of butterfish)
                                                  then the stock is predicted to rebound                                      uncertainty buffer in 2018, a 7.5-percent                                     suggests that a discard rate of 2.4
                                                  above the biomass target by 2020.                                           buffer in 2019, and maintaining the                                           percent is more accurate. Using this
                                                    The SSC derived OFLs for 2018 and                                         current 10-percent buffer for 2020. The                                       updated discard estimate results in a
                                                  projected OFLs for 2019–2020 by                                             Council reasoned that there is a lower                                        Council-recommended DAH of 12,093
                                                  applying estimated natural and fishing                                      likelihood of an unexpected change in                                         mt in 2018, 20,061 mt in 2019, and
                                                  mortality to the size of the existing                                       butterfish discarding in the directed                                         23,752 mt in 2020.
                                                  stock, assuming the ABCs are fully                                          fishery with lower catch levels, allowing
                                                  harvested each year (see Table 4).                                                                                                                           Current regulations require butterfish
                                                                                                                              for a smaller ACT buffer in 2018 and
                                                  However, the SSC noted that the                                                                                                                           specifications to establish a buffer to
                                                                                                                              2019. This results in a proposed
                                                  estimated uncertainties from the OFLs                                                                                                                     account for butterfish landings once the
                                                                                                                              commercial ACT of 12,093 mt in 2018,
                                                  derived from the assessment make them                                                                                                                     directed fishery is closed and a 5,000-
                                                                                                                              and proposed ACTs of 25,075 mt in
                                                  unrealistic for setting ABCs. In addition,                                  2019 and 28,857 in 2020.                                                      lb (2,268-kg) incidental limit is
                                                  the SSC was concerned about the                                                To prevent butterfish catch from                                           imposed. Based on previous analysis, if
                                                  declining trend in recruitment from                                         exceeding the ACT, the Council                                                such an incidental limit is
                                                  recent trawl surveys, suggesting that                                       subtracts butterfish catch in the longfin                                     implemented, less than 700 mt of
                                                  catch projections may be overly                                             squid fishery, catch in other fisheries,                                      butterfish would be landed after the
                                                  optimistic. As a result, the SSC                                            and discards in the directed fishery. The                                     directed fishery is closed. Therefore, the
                                                  recommended an ABC of 17,801 mt in                                          Council recommended maintaining the                                           Council recommended closing the
                                                  2018, 27,108 mt in 2019, and 32,063 mt                                      butterfish cap for the longfin squid                                          directed butterfish fishery once 11,093
                                                  in 2020. The low 2018 ABC is 42                                             fishery at the 2014 level of 3,884 mt for                                     mt is caught in 2018, 19,061 mt is
                                                  percent below the 2017 ABC and                                              2018 and projected maintaining that                                           caught in 2019, and 22,752 is caught in
                                                  reflects projections using low                                              level for 2019 and 2020. This cap is not                                      2020. This would provide a 1,000-mt set
                                                  recruitment estimates from 2016. In                                         constraining on the longfin fishery and                                       aside in each year to account for
                                                  contrast, the 2019 and 2020 ABC                                             reserves most of the available butterfish                                     incidental landings of butterfish after a
                                                  recommendations are based upon long-                                        quota for the directed butterfish fishery.                                    closure of the directed fishery.
                                                  term average recruitment. The SSC                                           The maximum amount of butterfish                                                 NMFS proposes specifications,
                                                  admitted that these catch levels are very                                   discards in non-longfin fisheries from                                        consistent with the Council’s
                                                  conservative, estimating that the                                           2011–2013 was 637 mt. The Council did                                         recommendations, as outlined in Table
                                                  probability of overfishing is very low (8                                   not indicate that there is a need to revise                                   4. Because the Council did not
                                                  percent).                                                                   this estimate. Therefore, 4,521 mt (the                                       recommend any changes to the
                                                    At its June 2017 meeting, the Council                                     3,884-mt butterfish cap plus 637 mt of                                        allocation of the butterfish mortality cap
                                                  adopted the SSC’s butterfish ABC                                            discards) would be subtracted from the                                        on the longfin squid fishery, we also
                                                  recommendations subject to annual                                           ACT, as recommended. Next, the                                                propose that the 2018–2020 butterfish
                                                  review, as required by existing                                             Council deducts an estimate of                                                mortality cap be allocated to Trimesters
                                                  regulations. The Monitoring Committee                                       butterfish discards in the directed                                           as follows:

                                                     TABLE 5—PROPOSED TRIMESTER ALLOCATION OF BUTTERFISH MORTALITY CAP ON THE LONGFIN SQUID FISHERY FOR
                                                                            2018 AND PROJECTED ALLOCATIONS FOR 2019 AND 2020
                                                                                                                                  Trimester                                                                                            Percent    Metric tons

                                                  I (Jan–Apr) ...................................................................................................................................................................            43          1,670
                                                  II (May–Aug) ................................................................................................................................................................              17            660
                                                  III (Sep–Dec) ................................................................................................................................................................             40          1,554

                                                        Total ......................................................................................................................................................................        100          3,844



                                                  Classification                                                              an Executiver Order 13771 regulatory                                          affected by this action include vessels
                                                    Pursuant to section 304(b)(1)(A) of the                                   action because this proposed rule is not                                      that are issued limited access longfin
                                                  Magnuson-Stevens Act, the NMFS                                              significant under Executive Order                                             squid/butterfish and Illex squid permits.
                                                  Assistant Administrator has determined                                      12866.                                                                        Although vessels issued open access
                                                  that this proposed rule is consistent                                          The Chief Counsel for Regulation of                                        incidental catch permits for these
                                                  with the Atlantic Mackerel, Squid, and                                      the Department of Commerce certified                                          species are also potentially affected by
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                  Butterfish FMP, other provisions of the                                     to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the                                      this action, because these vessels land
                                                  Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other                                             Small Business Administration that this                                       only small amounts of squid and
                                                  applicable law, subject to further                                          proposed rule, if adopted, would not                                          butterfish and this action would not
                                                  consideration after public comment.                                         have a significant economic impact on                                         revise the amount of squid and
                                                    This proposed rule has been                                               a substantial number of small entities.                                       butterfish that these vessels can land,
                                                  determined to be not significant for                                        The purpose, context, and statutory                                           these entities would not be affected by
                                                  purposes of Executive Order 12866.                                          basis for this action is described above                                      this proposed rule.
                                                  This proposed rule is not expected to be                                    and not repeated here. Business entities


                                             VerDate Sep<11>2014         16:09 Dec 12, 2017          Jkt 244001       PO 00000        Frm 00021        Fmt 4702       Sfmt 4702       E:\FR\FM\13DEP1.SGM               13DEP1


                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 238 / Wednesday, December 13, 2017 / Proposed Rules                                                58587

                                                     Any entity with combined annual                      expected to alter fishing behavior or                 the fishery would maintain recent catch
                                                  fishery landing receipts less than $11                  resulting revenues.                                   levels, which would produce $2.3
                                                  million is considered a small entity                       This action would reduce current                   million in fishing revenue based on
                                                  based on standards published in the                     commercial butterfish landing limits in               average landings since 2012 and 2016
                                                  Federal Register (80 FR 81194,                          2018 and 2019. Compared to the 2017                   price estimates.
                                                  December 29, 2015). In 2016, 298                        commercial butterfish landing limit
                                                                                                          (20,652 mt), the proposed 2018 and                       In determining the significance of the
                                                  separate vessels were issued longfin
                                                  squid/butterfish and Illex squid limited                projected 2019 commercial landing                     economic impacts of the proposed
                                                  access permits. These vessels were                      limits are 41 and 3 percent lower                     action, we considered the following two
                                                  owned by 222 entities, of which 214                     (12,093 mt and 20,061 mt, respectively),              criteria outlined in applicable National
                                                  earned less and 8 earned more than $11                  while the projected 2020 landing limit                Marine Fisheries Service guidance:
                                                  million in revenue. Average revenue                     (23,752 mt) is 15 percent higher. Since               Disproportionality and profitability. The
                                                  among all entities was $2.1 million in                  2014, the butterfish fishery has not                  proposed measures would not place a
                                                  2016. Therefore, 214 entities affected by               landed more than 3,135 mt in any year.                substantial number of small entities at a
                                                  this action are classified as small                     Recent landings peaked at 4,435 mt in                 significant competitive disadvantage to
                                                  businesses based on current definitions.                2001, representing only 37 percent of                 large entities; all entities affected by this
                                                     The existing Illex squid commercial                  the proposed quota for 2018. Even at its              action would be equally affected.
                                                  landing limit would not be changed by                   peak, domestic landings reached 11,715                Accordingly, there are no distributional
                                                  this proposed action, while the                         mt in 1984, which is still 3 percent shy              economic effects from this action
                                                  commercial longfin squid landing limit                  of the proposed 2018 commercial quota.                between small and large entities.
                                                  would be slightly increased by 2 percent                It is possible for the fishery to                     Proposed measures would not reduce
                                                  (487 mt). Fishing revenue and,                          substantially increase butterfish                     fishing opportunities based on recent
                                                  therefore, economic impacts of yearly                   landings compared to recent years                     squid and butterfish landings, change
                                                  squid specifications depend upon                        without approaching the reduced limits                any entity’s access to these resources, or
                                                  species availability. In 2016, the longfin              proposed in this action. Therefore,                   impose any costs to affected entities.
                                                  squid fishery landed 81 percent of the                  although the proposed action would
                                                                                                                                                                Therefore, it is unlikely that this action
                                                  2016 commercial landing limit,                          substantially reduce commercial
                                                                                                                                                                would reduce revenues or profit for
                                                  resulting in nearly $50 million in                      butterfish landing limits in 2018, such
                                                  fishing revenue. The Illex squid fishery                a reduction is unlikely to impede                     affected entities. Based on the above
                                                  landed just 29 percent of the 2016                      commercial operations or reduce                       justification, the proposed action is not
                                                  commercial landing limit, resulting in a                domestic butterfish landings from recent              expected to have a significant economic
                                                  value of $7.2 million, but landed 100                   levels. Based on 2016 prices, if the                  impact on a substantial number of small
                                                  percent of the 2017 commercial limit as                 fishery fully harvested the proposed                  entities.
                                                  of September 15, 2017. If both fisheries                2018 commercial limit, it may generate                  Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
                                                  fully harvested proposed 2018                           nearly $17 million in fishery revenue,
                                                                                                                                                                  Dated: December 7, 2017.
                                                  commercial landing limits, the longfin                  which would be a 41-percent reduction
                                                  and Illex squid fisheries could generate                from potential revenue under landing                  Alan D. Risenhoover,
                                                  approximately $63 and $25 million in                    limits consistent with 2017 landing                   Acting Deputy Assistant Administrator for
                                                  fishing revenue, respectively, based on                 limits. However, because we expect the                Regulatory Programs, National Marine
                                                  2016 prices. Because this action would                  fishery to land much less than the                    Fisheries Service.
                                                  essentially maintain existing landing                   landing limit, these potential revenues               [FR Doc. 2017–26840 Filed 12–12–17; 8:45 am]
                                                  limits, it imposes no costs and is not                  are not realistic. Instead, we expect that            BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS




                                             VerDate Sep<11>2014   16:09 Dec 12, 2017   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00022   Fmt 4702   Sfmt 9990   E:\FR\FM\13DEP1.SGM   13DEP1



Document Created: 2017-12-13 01:23:45
Document Modified: 2017-12-13 01:23:45
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionProposed Rules
ActionProposed rule, request for comments.
DatesPublic comments must be received by January 12, 2018.
ContactDouglas Christel, Fishery Policy Analyst, (978) 281-9141, fax (978) 281-9135.
FR Citation82 FR 58583 
RIN Number0648-BH04

2025 Federal Register | Disclaimer | Privacy Policy
USC | CFR | eCFR