99-21196. International Fisheries Regulations; Pacific Tuna Fisheries  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 157 (Monday, August 16, 1999)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 44428-44431]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-21196]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
    
    National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
    
    50 CFR Part 300
    
    [Docket No. 990212047-9208-02; I.D. 111998C]
    RIN 0648-AL28
    
    
    International Fisheries Regulations; Pacific Tuna Fisheries
    
    AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and 
    Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
    
    ACTION: Final rule; implementation of Inter-American Tropical Tuna 
    Commission (IATTC) recommendations.
    
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    SUMMARY: NMFS issues final regulations to implement recommendations of 
    the
    
    [[Page 44429]]
    
    IATTC to conserve and manage the tuna fisheries of the Eastern Tropical 
    Pacific Ocean (ETP). This rule provides for an annual announcement of 
    tuna harvest quotas, closure of the U.S. fishery in the IATTC's 
    Convention Area or in the Yellowfin Regulatory Area (CYRA) when quotas 
    have been reached, and implementation of other measures recommended by 
    the IATTC to ensure conservation and management of fishery resources. 
    The rule also prohibits U.S. citizens from utilizing vessels that 
    service fish-aggregating devices (FADs) and prohibits the transshipment 
    at sea by U.S. purse seine vessels of purse seine-caught tuna. This 
    final rule is intended to ensure that U.S. fisheries are conducted 
    according to the IATTC's recommendations, as approved by the Department 
    of State.
    
    DATES: Effective September 13, 1999.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Svein Fougner or James Morgan, 
    Sustainable Fisheries Division, Southwest Region, NMFS, 562-980-4030.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The United States is a member of the IATTC, 
    which was established under the Convention for the Establishment of an 
    Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission signed in 1949. The IATTC was 
    established to provide an international arrangement to ensure 
    conservation and management of yellowfin and skipjack tuna and other 
    species taken by tuna fishing vessels in the ETP. The IATTC has 
    maintained a scientific research and fishery monitoring program for 
    many years and annually assesses the status of tuna stocks and 
    conditions in the fisheries. Each year, the IATTC recommends 
    appropriate harvest levels (quotas) and/or other measures to prevent 
    overexploitation and promote maximum sustainable yield (MSY). Each 
    member country of the IATTC is responsible for enforcing quotas and 
    other measures with respect to its own fisheries. As required by the 
    Tuna Conventions Act of 1950, the recommendations of the IATTC must be 
    approved by the Secretary of State before implementation for U.S. 
    fisheries.
        NMFS published a proposed rule on February 25, 1999 (64 FR 9296), 
    that provided background on the 1998 recommendations that were not 
    implemented and other permanent measures that are implemented by this 
    rule. That background is not repeated here.
    
    Comments and Responses
    
        Three organizations commented on the proposed rule. Although most 
    of the comments cannot be addressed by Federal regulations, the 
    comments are summarized below with NMFS responses.
        Comment 1: The U.S. Government should insist on the formation of a 
    compliance committee in the IATTC to ensure that all member countries 
    abide by IATTC recommendations.
        Response: The United States has supported establishing such a 
    committee under the auspices of the IATTC and has proposed terms of 
    reference for a compliance committee. At its annual meeting in June 
    1999, the IATTC agreed to establish a Compliance Committee based on the 
    U.S. terms of reference.
        Comment 2: Fishermen should be prohibited from fishing all gear 
    types, not only purse seines, when such a prohibition is necessary to 
    reduce the harvest of small fish.
        Response: This rule does not impose an immediate prohibition of 
    sets on floating objects. Although the IATTC resolution of October 1998 
    specifically recommended prohibiting purse seines from being set on 
    floating objects after the bigeye quota is reached, the prohibitions in 
    Sec. 300.28(b) have been revised to authorize the Southwest Regional 
    Administrator, NMFS (Regional Administrator) to prohibit any fishing 
    gear, as specified in the notification to fishermen, if such a 
    prohibition is necessary for the conservation of fishery resources or 
    other species.
        Comment 3: One commenter expressed concern about the need for a 
    quota on bigeye tuna and the quality of the data used to establish it. 
    Questions were raised about using data obtained from foreign longline 
    vessels, which may not have observers; the ability of observers on any 
    vessel to distinguish between small yellowfin and bigeye tuna, and the 
    effects of El Nino on the resource.
        Response: A 45,000-metric ton (mt) quota on bigeye tuna was 
    recommended by the IATTC and adopted by the member countries in 1998. 
    The questions raised by the commenter, however, are legitimate and have 
    a bearing on future decisions that the IATTC may make. Other nations 
    also have questioned the quality of the data used to assess bigeye 
    stocks and the effects of harvesting small bigeye on floating object 
    sets. The IATTC staff are aware of these questions and have research 
    underway to answer some of them. U.S. scientists are also obtaining 
    U.S. vessels' catch and effort data to determine the extent to which 
    those data confirm the IATTC staff analyses.
        Comment 4: The prohibition on fishing on floating objects as a way 
    of reducing the harvest of small fish is too simplistic. It implies 
    that the only goal is the maximum productivity of tuna without 
    recognizing the impact on other species. It also discriminates against 
    nations that depend on this fishing strategy as a way to reduce the 
    take of dolphins.
        Response: This rule does not prohibit fishing on floating objects 
    (natural or man-made); rather, it authorizes the Regional Administrator 
    to prohibit fishing on floating objects in the future. The 1998 quota 
    on bigeye would have been implemented by prohibiting sets on floating 
    objects if and when the quota was reached. The bigeye quota is enforced 
    this way because floating objects sets are responsible for virtually 
    all the catch of small bigeye tuna. In fact, some nations may have been 
    reluctant to set the 1999 quota in part because they did not want their 
    vessels to be restricted from using a strategy on which they had become 
    dependent. The U.S. supported the 1998 quota reluctantly because U.S. 
    vessels are largely dependent on floating object fishing. However, in a 
    meeting in January 1999, NMFS insisted that any consideration of 
    management measures directed at any single fishing strategy be based on 
    a full analysis of impacts on the stocks, on other ecosystem components 
    (e.g., dolphin and other non-fish species), and on the vessels engaged 
    in the fishery. The U.S. Department of State also actively seeks input 
    from U.S. vessel owners to ensure that U.S. positions consider fully 
    the impacts of alternative measures on U.S. firms.
        Comment 5: The 15-percent incidental catch for yellowfin tuna that 
    the IATTC recommended for the closed season in 1998 would allow 
    uncontrolled mortality in excess of the estimated MSY.
        Response: The IATTC resolutions in 1998 regarding yellowfin tuna 
    included recommendations that apply to fishing vessels after the quota 
    is reached, such as allowing a vessel to retain a 15-percent incidental 
    harvest by weight of yellowfin tuna while fishing for other species of 
    tuna. The 15-percent incidental catch allocation for yellowfin tuna 
    will not allow uncontrolled mortality in excess of MSY. The IATTC 
    estimates the amount of yellowfin tuna that will be caught during a 
    closure and includes those data in its decision about when to close the 
    fishery. The closure date is chosen so that the total yellowfin harvest 
    (including incidental catch) will not exceed MSY. This final rule 
    authorizes the Regional Administrator
    
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    to close the U.S. fishery for yellowfin tuna or other species of tuna 
    at such time as the IATTC Director of Investigations advises that the 
    quota will be reached.
    
    Bigeye and FAD issues in 1999
    
        In 1999, the IATTC recommended that action be taken to limit the 
    catch of bigeye tuna to 40,000 mt by prohibiting purse seine sets on 
    all types of floating objects in the Convention Area when this harvest 
    level is reached. This would tend to reduce the harvest of small fish 
    and increase the catch-per-recruit.
        This final rule establishes a procedure for implementing future 
    recommendations of the IATTC. In addition, this final rule implements 
    the following two measures, which were recommended by the IATTC in 1998 
    and approved by the Department of State:
        1. The use of tender vessels, which are vessels that do not engage 
    in purse seining but tend FADS in support of tuna fishing operations, 
    in the Convention Area is prohibited; and
        2. The transshipment of tuna by purse seine vessels at sea in the 
    Convention Area is prohibited.
        NMFS will notify fishermen of any future resolutions adopted by the 
    IATTC and approved by the Department of State.
    
    Changes to the Proposed Rule
    
        Changes to the proposed rule were made to the definition of 
    Regional Administrator to allow a designee to act in his or her stead, 
    and to the prohibitions section at Sec. 300.28(b) to authorize the 
    Regional Administrator to prohibit the use of any fishing gear around 
    floating objects, if such a prohibition is necessary for the 
    conservation of fishery resources or other species.
    
    Classification
    
        This final rule has been determined to be not significant for 
    purposes of E.O. 12866.
        The Assistant General Counsel for Legislation and Regulation of the 
    Department of Commerce certified to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of 
    the Small Business Administration when this rule was proposed, that 
    this rule, if adopted as proposed, would not have a significant 
    economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. No comments 
    were received regarding this certification. As a result, a regulatory 
    flexibility analysis was not prepared.
    
    List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 300
    
        Fish, Fisheries, Fishing, High seas fishing, International 
    agreements, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
        Dated: August 10, 1999.
    Gary C. Matlock,
    Acting Assistant Administrator for Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries 
    Service.
        For the reasons set out in the preamble, 50 CFR part 300 is amended 
    as follows:
    
    PART 300--INTERNATIONAL FISHERIES REGULATIONS
    
    Subpart C--Pacific Tuna Fisheries
    
        1. The authority citation for subpart C continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 16 U.S.C. 951-961 and 971 et seq.
    
        2. Section 300.20 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 300.20  Purpose and scope.
    
        The regulations in this subpart implement the Tuna Conventions Act 
    of 1950 (Act) and the Atlantic Tunas Convention Act of 1975. The 
    regulations provide a mechanism to carry out the recommendations of the 
    Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission (IATTC) for the conservation 
    and management of highly migratory fish resources in the Eastern 
    Tropical Pacific Ocean so far as they affect vessels and persons 
    subject to the jurisdiction of the United States. They also carry out 
    the recommendations of the International Commission for the 
    Conservation of Atlantic Tunas for the conservation of bluefin tuna, so 
    far as they affect vessels and persons subject to the jurisdiction of 
    the United States.
        3. Section 300.21 is amended by removing the definition of 
    ``Regional Director'' and adding definitions for ``Bigeye tuna'', 
    ``Commission's Yellowfin Regulatory Area (CYRA)'', ``Convention Area'', 
    ``Fish aggregating device (FAD)'', ``Fishing trip'', ``Floating 
    object'', ``Incidental catch or incidental species'', ``Land or 
    Landing'', ``Observer'', ``Regional Administrator'', ``Tender vessel'', 
    ``Transship'', and ``Transshipment receiving vessel'' in alphabetical 
    order to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 300.21  Definitions.
    
    * * * * *
        Bigeye tuna means the species Thunnus obesus.
    * * * * *
        Commission's Yellowfin Regulatory Area (CYRA) means the waters 
    bounded by a line extending westward from the mainland of North America 
    along the 40 deg. N. latitude parallel, and connecting the following 
    coordinates:
        40 deg. N. lat., 125 deg. W. long.;
        20 deg. N. lat., 125 deg. W. long.;
        20 deg. N. lat., 120 deg. W. long.;
        5 deg. N. lat., 120 deg. W. long.;
        5 deg. N. lat., 110 deg. W. long.;
        10 deg. S. lat., 110 deg. W. long.;
        10 deg. S. lat., 90 deg. W. long.;
        30 deg. S. lat., 90 deg. W. long.; and then eastward along the 
    30 deg. S. latitude parallel to the coast of South America.
        Convention Area means the waters within the area bounded by the 
    mainland of the Americas, lines extending westward from the mainland of 
    the Americas along the 40 deg. N. lat. and 40 deg. S. lat., and 
    150 deg. W. long.
        Fish aggregating device (FAD) means a manmade raft or other 
    floating object used to attract tuna and make them available to fishing 
    vessels.
        Fishing trip means a period of time between landings when fishing 
    is conducted.
    * * * * *
        Floating object means any natural object or FAD around which 
    fishing vessels may catch tuna.
         Incidental catch or incidental species means species caught while 
    fishing with the primary purpose of catching a different species. An 
    incidental catch is expressed as a percentage of the weight of the 
    total fish on board.
        Land or Landing means to begin transfer of fish from a fishing 
    vessel. Once transfer begins, all fish on board the vessel are counted 
    as part of the landing.
        Observer means an individual placed aboard a fishing vessel under 
    the IATTC observer program or any other international observer program 
    in which the United States may participate.
    * * * * *
         Regional Administrator means the Administrator, Southwest Region, 
    NMFS, or his designee.
    * * * * *
        Tender vessel means a vessel that does not engage in purse seine 
    fishing but tends to FADs in support of tuna fishing operations.
         Transship means to unload fish from a vessel that caught fish to 
    another vessel.
        Transshipment receiving vessel means any vessel, boat, ship, or 
    other craft that is used to receive fish from a fishing vessel.
        4. In Sec. 300.28, the section heading is revised, paragraphs (a) 
    through (c) are redesignated as (e) through (g), respectively, and new 
    paragraphs (a) through (d) are added to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 300.28  Prohibitions.
    
    * * * * *
        (a) Land any species of tuna during the closed season for that 
    species in excess of the amount allowed by the Regional Administrator.
    
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        (b) Fish on floating objects in the Convention Area using any gear 
    type specified by the Regional Administrator's notification of closure 
    issued under Sec. 300.29.
        (c) Use tender vessels in the Convention Area.
        (d) Transship purse seine-caught tuna at sea within the Convention 
    Area.
    * * * * *
        5. Section 300.29 is added to Subpart C to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 300.29  Eastern Pacific fisheries management.
    
        (a) Notification of IATTC recommendations. The Regional 
    Administrator will directly notify owners or agents of U.S. tuna 
    vessels of any fishery management recommendations made by the IATTC and 
    approved by the Department of State that will affect fishing or other 
    activities by U.S. parties with fishery interests in the Convention 
    Area. As soon as practicable after such notification, the Regional 
    Administrator will announce approved IATTC recommendations in the 
    Federal Register.
        (b) Tuna quotas. (1) Fishing seasons for all tuna species begin on 
    January 1 and end either on December 31 or when NMFS closes the fishery 
    for a specific species.
        (2) The Regional Administrator may close the U.S. fishery for 
    yellowfin, bigeye, or skipjack tuna or any other tuna species in the 
    Convention Area or portion of the Convention Area when advised by the 
    Director of Investigations of the IATTC that the associated quota has 
    been or is projected to be reached. Any such closure may include:
        (i) An allowance for an incidental catch that may be landed while 
    fishing for other tuna species;
        (ii) A prohibition on the further setting of specified gear types 
    on floating objects by U.S. vessels in the Convention Area;
        (iii) Provisions for vessels that are at sea during an announced 
    closure to fish unrestricted until the fishing trip is completed;
        (iv) Provisions for vessels at sea with an observer on board during 
    any closure to land fish unrestricted if the landing occurs after 
    December 31; or
        (v) Other measures to ensure that the conservation and management 
    measures of the IATTC are achieved.
        (3) The Regional Administrator will announce any such closures 
    directly to the owners or agents of U.S. vessels who are fishing in or 
    are eligible to fish in the Convention Area.
        (4) As soon as practicable after being advised of the quota 
    attainment or projection under paragraph (b)(2) of this section, the 
    Regional Administrator will publish an announcement of the closure in 
    the Federal Register.
        (c) Use of tender vessels. No person subject to these regulations 
    may use a tender vessel in the Convention Area.
        (d) Transshipments at sea. No person subject to these regulations 
    may transship purse seine-caught tuna from one vessel to another vessel 
    at sea within the Convention Area.
    
    PART 300--[AMENDED]
    
        6. In addition to the amendments set forth under the authority of 
    16 U.S.C. 773 et seq.; 16 U.S.C. 951-961 and 971 et seq.; 16 U.S.C. 
    973-973r; 16 U.S.C. 2431 et seq.; 16 U.S.C. 3371-3378; 16 U.S.C. 
    3636(b); 16 U.S.C. 5501 et seq.; and 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq., in part 
    300, revise all references to ``Regional Director'' to read ``Regional 
    Administrator''.
    [FR Doc. 99-21196 Filed 8-13-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3510-22-F
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
9/13/1999
Published:
08/16/1999
Department:
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule; implementation of Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission (IATTC) recommendations.
Document Number:
99-21196
Dates:
Effective September 13, 1999.
Pages:
44428-44431 (4 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. 990212047-9208-02, I.D. 111998C
RINs:
0648-AL28: Management of U.S. Purse Seine Fishery in the Eastern Pacific Ocean
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/0648-AL28/management-of-u-s-purse-seine-fishery-in-the-eastern-pacific-ocean
PDF File:
99-21196.pdf
CFR: (5)
50 CFR 300.28(b)
50 CFR 300.20
50 CFR 300.21
50 CFR 300.28
50 CFR 300.29