Identification of Nations Engaged in Illegal, Unreported, or Unregulated Fishing, Bycatch, or Shark Fishing

Published date30 June 2020
Citation85 FR 39166
Record Number2020-14028
SectionNotices
CourtCommerce Department,National Oceanic And Atmospheric Administration
Federal Register, Volume 85 Issue 126 (Tuesday, June 30, 2020)
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 126 (Tuesday, June 30, 2020)]
                [Notices]
                [Pages 39166-39167]
                From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
                [FR Doc No: 2020-14028]
                [[Page 39166]]
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                DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
                National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
                [RTID 0648-XQ009]
                Identification of Nations Engaged in Illegal, Unreported, or
                Unregulated Fishing, Bycatch, or Shark Fishing
                AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
                Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
                ACTION: Notice; request for information.
                -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                SUMMARY: NMFS is seeking information regarding nations whose vessels
                are engaged in illegal, unreported, or unregulated (IUU) fishing,
                bycatch of protected living marine resources (PLMR), and/or fishing
                activities in waters beyond any national jurisdiction that target or
                incidentally catch sharks. Such information will be reviewed for the
                purposes of the identification of nations pursuant to the High Seas
                Driftnet Fishing Moratorium Protection Act (Moratorium Protection Act)
                and ongoing implementation of the Marine Mammal Protection Act Import
                Provisions.
                DATES: Information should be received on or before December 31, 2020.
                ADDRESSES: Information may be submitted either by mail to: NMFS Office
                of International Affairs and Seafood Inspection, Attn.: MSRA
                Information, F/IS 1315 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, MD 20910, or
                electronically to: [email protected].
                FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kent Laborde, phone 301-427-8364, or
                email [email protected].
                SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Moratorium Protection Act requires the
                Secretary of Commerce (Secretary) to issue a Biennial Report to
                Congress that identifies nations whose vessels are engaged in IUU
                fishing, bycatch of PLMR, and/or fishing activities in waters beyond
                any national jurisdiction that target or incidentally catch sharks.
                NMFS is soliciting information from the public regarding fishing
                activities by foreign fishing vessels within the last three years that
                may support identification of those nations in the Biennial Report.
                 The Shark Conservation Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-348) amended the
                Moratorium Protection Act by requiring action by the United States to
                strengthen shark conservation globally, including the potential
                identification of nations fishing for sharks on the high seas. In
                November 2015, the Illegal, Unreported, and Unregulated Fishing
                Enforcement Act of 2015 (IUUFEA) (Pub. L. 114-81) further amended the
                Moratorium Protection Act by, among other things, expanding the scope
                of information that can be used for the identification of nations to
                three years for the IUU fishing and bycatch provisions. In December
                2016 the Ensuring Access to Pacific Fisheries Act (EAPFA) (Pub. L. 114-
                327) amended the Moratorium Protection Act by also expanding the scope
                of information that can be used for the identification of nations to
                three years for the shark provisions.
                 Specifically, the Moratorium Protection Act requires the Secretary
                to identify in a biennial report to Congress those nations whose
                fishing vessels are engaged, or have been engaged at any point during
                the preceding three years, in IUU fishing. The definition of IUU
                fishing can be found at 50 CFR 300.201 and includes:
                 (1) Fishing activities that violate conservation and management
                measures required under an international fishery management agreement
                to which the United States is a party, including catch limits or
                quotas, capacity restrictions, bycatch reduction requirements, shark
                conservation measures, and data reporting;
                 (2) In the case of non-parties to an international fishery
                management agreement to which the United States is a party, fishing
                activities that would undermine the conservation of the resources
                managed under that agreement;
                 (3) Overfishing of fish stocks shared by the United States, for
                which there are no applicable international conservation or management
                measures or in areas with no applicable international fishery
                management organization or agreement, that has adverse impacts on such
                stocks;
                 (4) Fishing activity that has an adverse impact on vulnerable
                marine ecosystems such as seamounts, hydrothermal vents, cold water
                corals and other vulnerable marine ecosystems located beyond any
                national jurisdiction, for which there are no applicable conservation
                or management measures or in areas with no applicable international
                fishery management organization or agreement; and
                 (5) Fishing activities by foreign flagged vessels in U.S. waters
                without authorization of the United States.
                 In addition, the Secretary must identify in the biennial report
                those nations whose fishing vessels are engaged, or have been engaged
                at any point during the preceding three years in fishing activities in
                waters beyond any national jurisdiction that result in bycatch of a
                PLMR, or beyond the U.S. exclusive economic zone (EEZ) that result in
                bycatch of a PLMR shared by the United States, and that have not
                implemented measures to address that bycatch that are comparable in
                effectiveness to U.S. regulatory requirements. In this context, PLMR
                are defined as non-target fish, sea turtles, sharks, or marine mammals
                that are protected under U.S. law or international agreement, including
                the Marine Mammal Protection Act, the Endangered Species Act, the Shark
                Finning Prohibition Act, and the Convention on International Trade in
                Endangered Species of Wild Flora and Fauna. PLMR do not include
                species, except sharks, managed under the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
                Conservation and Management Act, the Atlantic Tunas Convention Act, or
                any international fishery management agreement. A list of species
                considered as PLMR for this purpose is available online at: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/webdam/download/94902391.
                 Furthermore, the Shark Conservation Act and the EAPFA requires that
                the Secretary identify nations in a biennial report to Congress whose
                fishing vessels are engaged, or have been engaged during the preceding
                three years prior to the biennial report in fishing activities or
                practices in waters beyond any national jurisdiction that target or
                incidentally catch sharks and the nation has not adopted a regulatory
                program to provide for the conservation of sharks, including measures
                to prohibit removal of any of the fins of a shark (including the tail)
                and discarding the carcass of the shark at sea, that is comparable to
                that of the United States, taking into account different conditions.
                 More information regarding the identification process and how the
                information received will be used in that process can be found in the
                regulations codified at 50 CFR 300.200. Note that the timeframe for
                activities to be considered for IUU fishing, bycatch, and shark
                identifications has not yet been changed in the implementing
                regulations to reflect the amendments in the IUUFEA and EAPFA, which
                extend the timeframe to three years in each case.
                 The sixth biennial report to Congress was submitted in September
                2019 and is available online at: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/webdam/download/96874380. The report identified three nations for IUU fishing.
                 In fulfillment of its requirements under the Moratorium Protection
                Act, NMFS is preparing the seventh biennial report to Congress, which
                will identify nations whose fishing vessels are
                [[Page 39167]]
                engaged in IUU fishing or fishing practices that result in bycatch of
                PLMR, and/or shark catch in waters beyond any national jurisdiction
                without a regulatory program comparable to the United States. NMFS is
                soliciting information from the public that could assist in its
                identification of nations engaged in activities that meet the criteria
                described above for IUU fishing, PLMR bycatch, or shark catch in waters
                beyond any national jurisdiction. Some types of information that may
                prove useful to NMFS include:
                 Documentation (photographs, etc.) of IUU activity or
                fishing vessels engaged in PLMR bycatch or catch of sharks on the high
                seas;
                 Documentation (photographs, etc.) of fishing vessels
                engaged in shared PLMR bycatch in any waters beyond the U.S. EEZ;
                 Fishing vessel records;
                 Trade data supporting evidence that a nation's vessels are
                engaged in shark catch on the high seas;
                 Reports from off-loading facilities, port-side government
                officials, enforcement agents, military personnel, port inspectors,
                transshipment vessel workers and fish importers;
                 Sightings of vessels included on Regional Fisheries
                Management Organization (RFMO) IUU vessel lists;
                 RFMO catch documents and statistical document programs;
                 Nation's domestic regulations for bycatch and shark
                conservation and management;
                 Action or inaction at the national level, resulting in
                non-compliance with RFMO conservation and management measures, such as
                exceeding quotas or catch limits, or failing to report or misreporting
                data of the nation's fishing activities; and
                 Reports from governments, international organizations, or
                nongovernmental organizations.
                 NMFS will consider all available information, as appropriate, when
                making a determination whether or not to identify a particular nation
                in the biennial report to Congress. As stated previously, NMFS is
                limited in the time frame for data it may use as the basis of a
                nation's identification. Appropriate information includes IUU fishing
                activity, bycatch of PLMR, and shark fishing activity in waters beyond
                any national jurisdiction that occurred in 2018, 2019 and 2020.
                Information should be as specific as possible as this will assist NMFS
                in its review. NMFS will consider several criteria when determining
                whether information is appropriate for use in making identifications,
                including:
                 Corroboration of information;
                 Whether multiple sources have been able to provide
                information in support of an identification;
                 The methodology used to collect the information;
                 Specificity of the information provided;
                 Susceptibility of the information to falsification and
                alteration; and
                 Credibility of the individuals or organization providing
                the information.
                 With regard to marine mammals, NMFS is also seeking information on
                foreign commercial fishing operations that export fish and fish
                products to the United States and the level of incidental and
                intentional mortality and serious injury of marine mammals in those
                fisheries. NMFS will use this information to identify harvesting
                nations with commercial fishing operations that export fish and fish
                products to the United States and classify those fisheries based on
                their frequency of marine mammal interactions as either ``exempt'' or
                ``export'' fisheries as part of its development of the List of Foreign
                Fisheries (LOFF). The classification of a fishery on the final LOFF
                determines which regulatory requirements will be applicable to that
                fishery for it to receive a comparability finding necessary to export
                fish and fish products to the United States from that fishery (see 81
                FR 54390, August 15, 2016). The Draft 2020 LOFF can be found at:
                https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/foreign/international-affairs/list-foreign-fisheries.
                 NMFS has published a final 2017 LOFF (83 FR 11703, March 16, 2018)
                and a draft 2020 LOFF (85 FR 15116, March 17, 2020), as required by the
                regulations implementing the Fish and Fish Product Import Provisions of
                the Marine Mammal Protection Act. The LOFF reflects information
                received in its response to information requests to nations and the
                public (82 FR 2961, January 10, 2017) and during the comment period on
                interactions between commercial fisheries exporting fish and fish
                products to the United States and marine mammals, and updates and
                revisions to the draft LOFF (82 FR 39762, August 22, 2017) as well as
                information that nations supplied during each revision of the LOFF and
                in their 2019 Progress Report submission.
                 NMFS will issue a Final LOFF in 2020. NMFS periodically updates the
                LOFF and is preparing to make Comparability Finding determinations in
                2021. Therefore, NMFS is soliciting information from harvesting
                nations; other foreign, regional, and local governments; regional
                fishery management organizations; nongovernmental organizations;
                industry organizations; academic institutions; and citizens and citizen
                groups to identify commercial fishing operations with intentional or
                incidental mortality and serious injury of marine mammals. For each
                item we are requesting you identify the exporting nation as the
                harvesting nation, the processing or intermediary nation, or both. For
                fisheries exporting fish and fish products to the United States NMFS is
                requesting the following information:
                 Number of participants,
                 Number of vessels,
                 Gear type,
                 Target species,
                 Area of operation,
                 Fishing season, and
                 Information regarding the frequency of marine mammal
                incidental and intentional mortality and serious injury.
                 Such information may include fishing vessel records; reports of on-
                board fishery observers; information from off-loading facilities, port-
                side government officials, enforcement agents, transshipment vessel
                workers and fish importers; government vessel registries; RFMO or
                intergovernmental agreement documents, reports, and statistical
                document programs; appropriate catch certification programs; and
                published literature and reports on commercial fishing operations with
                intentional or incidental mortality and serious injury of marine
                mammals.
                 NMFS will consider all available information, as appropriate.
                Information should be as specific as possible as this will assist NMFS
                in its review. NMFS will consider several criteria when determining
                whether information is appropriate for use in revisions to the LOFF or
                Comparability Finding determinations, including:
                 Corroboration of information;
                 Whether multiple sources have been able to provide
                information in support of an identification;
                 The methodology used to collect the information;
                 Specificity of the information provided;
                 Susceptibility of the information to falsification and
                alteration; and
                 Credibility of the individuals or organization providing
                the information.
                 Dated: June 24, 2020.
                Alexa Cole,
                Director, Office of International Affairs and Seafood Inspection,
                National Marine Fisheries Service.
                [FR Doc. 2020-14028 Filed 6-29-20; 8:45 am]
                BILLING CODE 3510-22-P
                

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