[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 116 (Monday, June 17, 2013)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 36117-36122]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-14335]
[[Page 36117]]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 660
[Docket No. 121210694-3514-02]
RIN 0648-XC392
Fisheries Off West Coast States; Coastal Pelagic Species
Fisheries; Annual Specifications
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: NMFS issues this final rule to implement the annual catch
limit (ACL), harvest guideline (HG), and associated annual reference
points for Pacific sardine in the U.S. exclusive economic zone (EEZ)
off the Pacific coast for the fishing season of January 1, 2013,
through December 31, 2013. These specifications were determined
according to the Coastal Pelagic Species (CPS) Fishery Management Plan
(FMP). The 2013 maximum HG for Pacific sardine is 66,495 metric tons
(mt). The initial overall commercial fishing HG, which has been
distributed across the three allocation periods for sardine management,
is 57,495 mt. This amount has been divided across the three seasonal
allocation periods for the directed fishery the following way: January
1-June 30--19,123 mt; July 1-September 14--21,998 mt; and September 15-
December 31--13,374 mt with an incidental set-aside of 1,000 mt for
each of the three periods. This rule is intended to conserve and manage
the Pacific sardine stock off the U.S. West Coast.
DATES: Effective July 17, 2013 through December 31, 2013.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Joshua Lindsay, Southwest Region,
NMFS, (562) 980-4034.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NMFS issues this rule under authority of the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act, 16 U.S.C.
1801 et seq. During public meetings each year, the estimated biomass
for Pacific sardine is presented by NMFS scientists to the Pacific
Fishery Management Council's (Council) Coastal Pelagic Species (CPS)
Management Team (Team), the Council's CPS Advisory Subpanel (Subpanel),
and the Council's Scientific and Statistical Committee (SSC), and the
biomass and the status of the fisheries are reviewed and discussed. The
biomass estimate is then presented to the Council along with the
calculated overfishing limit (OFL), available biological catch (ABC),
annual catch limit (ACL) and harvest guideline (HG), along with
recommendations and comments from the Team, Subpanel, and SSC.
Following review by the Council and after hearing public comment, the
Council adopts a biomass estimate and makes its catch level
recommendations to the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS).
After review of the Council's recommendations and public comments,
NMFS implements through this rule the 2013 ACL, HG, and other annual
catch references, including the OFL and an ABC that takes into
consideration uncertainty surrounding the current estimate of biomass
for Pacific sardine in the U.S. EEZ off the Pacific coast. The CPS FMP
and its implementing regulations require NMFS to set these annual catch
levels for the Pacific sardine fishery based on the annual
specification framework in the FMP. This framework includes a harvest
control rule that determines the maximum HG, the primary management
target for the fishery, for the current fishing season. The HG is
based, in large part, on the current estimate of stock biomass. The
harvest control rule in the CPS FMP is HG = [(Biomass-CUTOFF) *
FRACTION * DISTRIBUTION] with the parameters described as follows:
1. Biomass. The estimated stock biomass of Pacific sardine age one
and above for the 2013 management season is 659,539 mt.
2. CUTOFF. This is the biomass level below which no commercial
fishery is allowed. The FMP established this level at 150,000 mt.
3. DISTRIBUTION. The average portion of the Pacific sardine biomass
estimated in the EEZ off the Pacific coast is 87 percent.
4. FRACTION. The harvest fraction is the percentage of the biomass
above 150,000 mt that may be harvested.
At the November 2012 Council meeting, the Council adopted the 2013
Stock Assessment of the Pacific sardine resource completed by NMFS
Southwest Fisheries Science Center and the resulting Pacific sardine
biomass estimate of 659,539 mt. Based on the framework in the CPS FMP
and recommendations from its SSC and other advisory bodies, the Council
recommended and NMFS is implementing, an OFL of 103,284 mt, ABC of
94,281 mt, an ACL of 94,281 mt (equal to the ABC) and a maximum HG (HGs
under the CPS FMP are operationally similar to annual catch targets
(ACT)) of 66,495 metric tons (mt) for the 2013 Pacific sardine fishing
year. Due to an approximately 33 percent decrease in the biomass
estimate from 2012, the result of the HG formula is approximately
40,000 mt less than the 2012 HG. As described above, annual biomass
estimates are a parameter of the various harvest control rules,
therefore as estimated biomass decreases or increases from one year to
the next, the resulting allowable catch levels, such as the HG, will
necessarily decrease or increase too. These catch specifications are
based on the most recent stock assessment and the control rules
established in the CPS FMP.
The Council also recommended, and NMFS is implementing, a reduced
initial overall commercial fishing HG of 57,495 mt allocated across the
three allocation periods for sardine management. This number has been
reduced from the maximum HG of 66,495 mt by 9,000 mt: (i) For potential
harvest by the Quinault Indian Nation of up to 6,000 mt; and (ii) 3,000
mt, which is initially reserved for potential use under an exempted
fishing permit(s) (EFPs). The Council also recommended and NMFS is
implementing that incidental catch set asides be put in place for each
allocation period. The purpose of the incidental set-aside allotments
and allowance of an incidental catch-only fishery is to allow for the
restricted incidental landings of Pacific sardine in other fisheries,
particularly other CPS fisheries, when a seasonal directed fishery is
closed. The intent of this measure is to reduce of Pacific sardine in
other CPS fisheries and allow for continued prosecution of these other
important fisheries that may incidentally catch sardine if and when the
sardine fishery is closed.
For the 2013 Pacific sardine fishing season, the incidental set
asides and adjusted directed harvest levels for each period are shown
in the following table in metric tons:
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January 1- June July 1- September 15-
30 September 14 December 31 Total
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Total Seasonal Allocation............... 20,123 22,998 14,374 57,495
(35%) (40%) (25%)
[[Page 36118]]
Incidental Set Aside.................... 1,000 1,000 1,000 3,000
Adjusted Directed Harvest Allocation.... 19,123 21,998 13,374 54,495
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The 2013 HG is already well below the ACL, and additional inseason
accountability measures are in place to ensure the actual catch levels
never exceed the HG. If during any of the seasonal allocation periods
the applicable directed harvest allocation is projected to be taken,
fishing will be closed to directed harvest and only incidental harvest
would be allowed. For the remainder of the period, any incidental
Pacific sardine landings will be counted against that period's
incidental set-aside. As an additional accountability measure, the
incidental fishery will also be constrained to a 40 percent by weight
incidental catch rate when Pacific sardine are landed with other CPS so
as to minimize the targeting of Pacific sardine and reduce potential
discard of sardine. In the event that an incidental set-aside is
projected to be attained, the incidental fishery will be closed for the
remainder of the period. If the set-aside is not fully attained or is
exceeded in a given seasonal period, the directed harvest allocation in
the following seasonal period will automatically be adjusted upward or
downward accordingly to account for the discrepancy. Additionally, if
during any seasonal period the directed harvest allocation is not fully
attained or is exceeded, then the following period's directed harvest
total will be adjusted to account for the discrepancy as well.
If the total HG or these apportionment levels for Pacific sardine
are reached or are expected to be reached, the Pacific sardine fishery
will be closed until it re-opens either the next period per the
allocation scheme or at the beginning of the next fishing season. The
NMFS Southwest Regional Administrator will publish a notice in the
Federal Register announcing the date of any closure to either directed
or incidental fishing. Additionally, to ensure that the regulated
community is informed of any closure, NMFS will also make announcements
through other means available, including fax, email, and mail to
fishermen, processors, and state fishery management agencies.
At the March 2013 Council meeting, the Council approved and
subsequently made a recommendation to NMFS to approve an EFP for all of
the 3,000 mt EFP set-aside. NMFS will likely make a decision on whether
to issue an EFP for Pacific sardine sometime prior to the start of the
second seasonal period (July 1, 2013). Any set-aside attributed to an
EFP designed to be conducted during the closed fishing time in the
second allocation period (prior to September 15), but not utilized,
will roll into the third allocation period's directed fishery.
As explained in the proposed rule, 6,000 mt of the HG is being set
aside for use by the Quinault Indian Nation. NMFS will consult with
Quinault Department of Fisheries staff and Quinault Fisheries Policy
representatives at the end of the second allocation period to determine
whether any part of this set-aside is available for transfer into the
non-tribal directed fishery.
Detailed information on the fishery and the stock assessment are
found in the report ``Assessment of the Pacific Sardine Resource in
2012 for U.S. Management in 2013'' (see ADDRESSES).
On January 31, 2013, NMFS published a proposed rule for this action
and solicited public comments (78 FR 6794). NMFS received multiple
comments from one commenter regarding the Pacific sardine annual
specifications.
Comment 1: The commenter requested that NMFS disapprove the
proposed action because the annual catch limit, harvest guideline (HG),
and associated reference points such as the OFL, do not reflect the
best available science for setting catch levels and will result in
catch levels that fail to prevent overfishing, fail to achieve optimum
yield (OY), are detrimental to the sardine stock as well as sardine
predators and that ecological factors were not considered during the
process of developing these specifications. Specifically, the commenter
states that the value used for the FMSY parameter in the OFL
control rule for 2013 does not represent the best available
information, questions the use of the mid-year biomass estimate from
the stock assessment used to determine the 2013 catch levels, and
suggests that the distribution parameter be revised because it does not
reflect catch levels in Mexico and Canada. Additionally, the commenter
questions the values used for the CUTOFF and FRACTION parameters of the
HG control rule as well as the overfished criteria for Pacific sardine.
Response: The CPS FMP and its implementing regulations require NMFS
to set an OFL, ABC, ACL and HG for the Pacific sardine fishery using
the control rules set in the FMP. Reconsideration of the existing
control rules and their parameters, as well as other aspects of Pacific
sardine management such as overfished criteria, is beyond the scope of
this rulemaking. However, in addition to responding to the comments
about the 18% FMSY parameter used in the OFL control rule,
the mid-year biomass estimate used for setting 2013 harvest levels
(OFL, ABC/ACL and HG), for information purposes only, NMFS will respond
to some aspects of the comments that are beyond the scope of this
action, such the distribution parameter used in the three control
rules.
Disapproving this action, as requested by the commenter because of
their perceived conservation concerns (as explained above), would allow
the fishery to take place without any HG or quota. The HG and seasonal
allocations, along with the OFL and ABC, are the principal mechanisms
for preventing overfishing of Pacific sardine and managing the fishery
at a level that will achieve OY while allowing equitable access to all
sectors of the fishery.
The commenter stated that the 2013 harvest levels do not achieve
OY, do not prevent overfishing, and that ecological factors were not
considered in the setting of the 2013 catch levels. With regard to OY,
as described in the FMP, catch levels determined from the HG formula
will result in OY. The 2013 HG (i.e., the directed fishing management
target for the 2013 season) was determined using this HG formula.
Directed commercial fishing is not allowed above this level and
management measures are in place to prevent the fishery from exceeding
it (i.e., in-season catch monitoring, in-season closures and incidental
catch set-asides). As it relates to overfishing, the 2013 HG catch
level is approximately 36,000 mt below the 2013 OFL, providing a large
buffer against overfishing. This lower HG is the result of OY
considerations, including ecological, and the management strategy in
the CPS FMP that for 2013 establishes a catch level much lower than is
needed to simply avoid overfishing or because of a risk of exceeding
the ABC/ACL due to management uncertainty. These
[[Page 36119]]
considerations and precautions are based on the environmentally driven
dynamic nature of the Pacific sardine stock as well as its importance
in the ecosystem as forage for other species. Additionally, the HG
control rule explicitly protects the stock from approaching an
overfished condition (while explicitly reducing fishing if biomass
decreases) through the use of a 150,000 mt CUTOFF parameter (level at
fishing is prohibited) that is three times that of the overfished level
(50,000 mt). Although not the subject of this rulemaking, the commenter
questions the values used for the CUTOFF parameter as well as the
overfished level. NMFS notes that the use of a CUTOFF parameter is not
a requirement of the MSA or National Standard Guidelines and it is a
proactive and precautionary policy choice of the CPS FMP to have an
explicit rebuilding mechanism built into the control rule. With regards
to the overfished level, it represents the best available science and
is the level that on average can be expected to rebuild the stock in
ten years. Additionally, low biomass conditions for Pacific sardine may
result from overfishing, unfavorable environmental conditions, or both
acting in concert. Experience with CPS stocks around the world
indicates that overfished/low biomass conditions usually occur when
unfavorable environmental conditions and high fishing mortality rates
occur at the same time. Management measures for sardine do not,
however, depend on whether a low biomass condition was due to excess
fishing or unfavorable environmental conditions, because reductions in
fishing mortality are required in either case.
Furthermore, ecological factors such as the life-cycles,
distributions, and population dynamics of the Pacific sardine, as well
as their role as forage were considered and evaluated in developing the
various control rules. Beyond the ecological factors used in the
development of the control rules, other ecological information related
to the annual management of CPS is presented to the Council through the
annual CPS Stock Assessment and Fishery Evaluation which contains a
chapter titled Ecosystem Considerations. In this chapter, information
on climate and oceanographic conditions such as El Ni[ntilde]o and the
Pacific Decadal Oscillation are presented, as well as ecosystem trends
and indicators relevant to CPS such as sea surface temperature, ocean
productivity and copepod abundance. Additionally, NMFS also considered
ecological information in its review of the 2013 Pacific sardine
specifications through both the Environmental Assessment (EA) and the
Essential Fish Habitat consultation. The EA analyzed the effects of the
proposed action on the environment, which included an examination of
available ecosystem and predator/prey modeling efforts. NMFS is unaware
of any additional ecological factors that warranted changes to the
proposed 2013 Pacific sardine specifications.
Contrary to the opinion of the commenter, the 2013 Pacific sardine
ACL, HG, and associated annual reference points are based on the best
available science. As explained above under SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION,
this year's biomass estimate used for the 2013 specifications went
through extensive review, and along with the resulting OFL and ABC, was
endorsed by the Council's SSC and NMFS as the best available science.
As noted by the commenter, the SSC did recommend that future
evaluations of the harvest control rules consider basing annual
management on the biomass estimate from the stock assessment that
aligns with at the start of the fishing year (currently management is
based on the mid-year biomass estimate versus the end-year biomass from
the stock assessment), however such a change has not been formally
evaluated and the SSC did not recommend deviating from using the mid-
year biomass estimate (which has been the practice for the last ten
years) for management in 2013.
As it relates to the 2013 OFL, the commenter voiced concern with
regard to the value (18 percent) used for the FMSY parameter
in the OFL and ABC control rules. The value of the FMSY
parameter used in the OFL and the ABC control rules is not prescribed
in the FMP. The value used for 2013 of 18 percent represented the best
available science and was endorsed by the SSC and NMFS. This value was
also recommended as best available science for setting the 2012 annual
specifications. Using 18% (the result of modeling work in 2011) was
recommended for both 2012 and 2013 as an alternative to the default
option of applying the temperature-stock relationship that is used for
determining the FRACTION parameter due to uncertainty surrounding this
relationship. The default option would have resulted in an
FMSY of 19.85%. NMFS acknowledges that future work,
particularly work involving sardine recruitment success and
environmental variables, may provide alternative ways of estimating
FMSY for these control rules, however a new approach would
need to be analyzed and then reviewed by the SSC, the Council, and NMFS
before it could be used in management.
In the three control rules, the U.S. catch levels for Pacific
sardine are prorated by an ``estimate of the portion of the stock
resident in U.S. waters'' using a ``distribution parameter'' of 87%.
This approach is laid out in the FMP itself, and is intended to account
for the fact that some level of the sardine stock exists outside of US
waters and can therefore be subject to harvest by fisheries in
neighboring countries. The 87% was chosen based on the best information
available, and in light of the absence of an international agreement
governing management of Pacific sardine off the West Coast. The
commenter however, inappropriately conflates stock biomass distribution
with catch distribution. The distribution parameter, as defined in the
FMP, is an estimate of the long-term average of the portion of total
stock biomass occurring in U.S. waters, and is simply a way to prorate
the biomass estimate used to calculate U.S. catch levels, it is not a
prescription of actual catch levels by fishing vessels of the U.S.,
Canada and Mexico in any given year.
As part of the rationale presented by the commenter as to why the
current value of 87 percent for the DISTRIBUTION parameter is
incorrect, the commenter points to sardine catch in Mexico and the fact
that Mexico caught 51 percent of the total coastwide catch in 2011. The
commenter states that because Mexico caught 51 percent of the total
Pacific sardine catch that year, and this value exceeds 13 percent (the
percent of total biomass assumed under the current default approach to
occur outside U.S. waters), that the 87 percent biomass distribution
used in the FMP is therefore incorrect. However, this rationale
confuses the concepts of catch and biomass with other incorrect
assumptions. For instance, the sardine control rules were not developed
with the assumption that the entire sardine biomass is readily
available to the U.S. fleet, that there are no other fishing
restrictions, or that U.S. fishing restrictions match those of other
countries. Obviously, these assumptions are not correct. For instance
due to the seasonal allocation structure of the U.S. sardine HG and
seasonal closures that occurred 2011 the U.S. fishery was only open for
83 days that year, while Mexico and Canada were not bound by this same
restriction. The U.S. fishery is also bound by other restrictions such
as limited entry and trip limits that likely reduce the total amount of
sardines caught in U.S. waters. In fact, the U.S. only caught 34
percent of the total
[[Page 36120]]
coastwide catch in 2011, which resulted in only a 5 percent stock
exploitation rate by the U.S. Additionally, because of the migratory
nature of the sardine stock and their movement between spawning grounds
and feeding grounds, both of which change annually and seasonally, the
biomass in any given year is not evenly distributed along the coast and
therefore not equally available to any country or evenly distributed
among specific fleet or port complexes within the U.S. Therefore, the
87% distribution parameter is not ``incorrect'' merely because it does
not reflect catch levels between the three countries in any one year;
it was neither intended to reflect catch levels nor keep total catches
under a certain level as the commenter states.
Additionally, the commenter points to ongoing work by the NMFS
Southwest Fisheries Science Center that is examining sardine stock
structure along the west coast; along with potential ways to determine
and differentiate the two subpopulations of Pacific sardine within
landings in Southern California and Mexico. Although such research, as
that referenced by the commenter, may eventually help distinguish the
catch of the two sardine subpopulations, 87 percent still represents
the best available science with regard to overall biomass distribution
and is therefore appropriate for use in the sardine control rules.
NFMS recognizes that properly accounting for the trans-boundary
nature of stocks, such as Pacific sardine, is difficult. The CPS FMP
sets sardine harvest levels for U.S. fisheries by prorating the biomass
used to calculate the target harvest level according to the portion of
the stock estimated to be in U.S. waters on average over time. The
primary advantage of prorating the total target harvest level is that
U.S. fisheries can be managed unilaterally in a responsible manner that
is consistent with the MSA. Although estimates of Mexican and Canadian
landings are not considered explicitly in determining annual harvest
levels for U.S. waters, landings and fishery data from both Mexico and
Canada are used to assess the coastwide biomass. Therefore, because the
allowable harvest level in U.S. waters ultimately depends on this
biomass estimate, U.S. harvest will be reduced if the stock is depleted
by fishing in either Mexico or Canada.
Finally, with regard to the commenter's concern that U.S. fishing
levels exceed a combined United States, Mexico and Canada overfishing
limit, this is unfounded because there is no such coastwise limit:
Pacific sardine is not managed under an international agreement, and
the FMP does not prescribe an international overfishing level. However,
NMFS will continue to monitor the total exploitation status of the
stock to assess whether the stock is becoming overfished. Additionally,
recent years' exploitation rates have been relatively conservative and
well below levels that are likely to cause the stock to become
overfished. The total international exploitation rate on the stock has
averaged approximately only 13 percent over the last 10 years and in
2011 was about 15 percent, with U.S. annual exploitation rates
averaging 7 percent since 2000; the 2011 U.S. exploitation rate was
about 5 percent. Beyond prorating the biomass to calculate U.S.
harvest, the Council and NOAA might consider alternative ways of
accounting for the transboundary nature of the stock in the future.
Additionally, because sardine is a variable stock that undergoes
extended periods of low and high biomass even in the absence of
fishing, to help ensure Pacific sardine is not overfished, under the
FMP's harvest policy whether sardine biomass decreases as a result of
fishing pressure or environmental conditions, harvest in U.S. waters
will automatically decrease as well. Because of this precautionary
feature of the harvest control rule, the approximately 33 percent
decline in biomass from 2012 to 2013, has resulted in a 60 percent
decrease in the 2013 HG compared to 2012.
Comment 2: The same commenter also stated that the Environmental
Assessment (EA) prepared for this action was inadequate because it
should have included a greater range of alternatives, and because
alternative methods for determining the annual specifications should be
analyzed in an Environment Impact Statement (EIS).
Response: This year's specifications fall within the analysis in
the EIS prepared for the CPS FMP under the National Environmental
Policy Act. The EA completed for this action demonstrates that the
implementation of the 2013 catch levels for the Pacific sardine fishery
based on the HG and ABC control rules in the FMP will not significantly
impact the quality of the human environment. Therefore a new EIS is not
necessary.
With regard to the scope and range of alternatives, the six
alternatives analyzed in the EA was a reasonable number and covered an
appropriate scope based on the limited nature of this action, which is
described above. The six alternatives (including the proposed action)
were objectively evaluated in recognition of the purpose and need of
this action and the framework process in place based on the HG and ABC
control rules for setting catch levels for Pacific sardine. The CPS FMP
describes a specific framework process for annually setting required
catch levels and reference points. Although there is some flexibility
built into this process concerning determinations of scientific and
management uncertainty, there is little discretion in the OFL control
rules (level for determining overfishing), the ABC control rule (used
to determine the ACL), or the HG control rule (level at which directed
fishing is stopped), with the annual biomass estimate being the primary
determinant in both these levels.
Classification
The Administrator, Southwest Region, NMFS, determined that this
action is necessary for the conservation and management of the Pacific
sardine fishery and that it is consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management Act and other applicable laws.
This final rule is exempt from review under Executive Order 12866.
The results of the Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA)
completed for this action are below. For copies of the complete FRFA,
please see the ADDRESSES section above. No issues were raised by public
comments in response to the Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
(IRFA) prepared pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act for this
action or on the economic impacts of the rule generally. As well as
stated below, a description of the action, why it is being considered,
and the legal basis for this action are contained at the beginning of
this section in the preamble and in the SUMMARY section of the
preamble.
The purpose of this action is to implement the 2013 annual
specifications for Pacific sardine in the U.S. EEZ off the Pacific
coast. The CPS FMP and its implementing regulations require NMFS to set
an OFL, ABC, ACL and HG or ACT for the Pacific sardine fishery based on
the specified harvest control rules in the FMP. A specific harvest
control rule is applied to the current stock biomass estimate to derive
the annual HG, which is used to manage the directed commercial take of
Pacific sardine.
The HG is apportioned based on the following allocation scheme: 35
percent of the HG is allocated coastwide on January 1; 40 percent of
the HG, plus any portion not harvested from the initial allocation is
then reallocated coastwide on July 1; and on September 15 the remaining
25 percent, plus any portion not harvested from earlier allocations
will be released. If the total
[[Page 36121]]
HG or these apportionment levels for Pacific sardine are reached at any
time, the Pacific sardine fishery will close until either it re-opens
per the allocation scheme or the beginning of the next fishing season.
There is no limit on the amount of catch that any single vessel can
take during an allocation period or the year; the HG and seasonal
allocations are available until fully utilized by the entire CPS fleet.
The U.S. Small Business Administration defines small businesses
engaged in fishing as those vessels with annual revenues of or below $4
million. The small entities that would be affected by this action are
the vessels that compose the West Coast CPS small purse seine fleet. In
2012 there were approximately 96 vessels permitted to operate in the
directed sardine fishery component of the CPS fishery off the U.S. West
Coast; 55 are vessels in the Federal CPS limited entry fishery off
California (south of 39 N. lat.), and a combined 23 vessels in Oregon
and Washington's state Pacific sardine fisheries. The annual per vessel
revenue in 2012 for the West Coast CPS finfish fleet was well below $4
million and no vessels reported revenue of greater than $4 million;
therefore, all of these vessels are considered small businesses under
the RFA. Because each affected vessel is a small business, this action
has an equal effect on all of these small entities, and there will not
be any disproportionate impact on small entities.
The profitability of these vessels as a result of this action is
based on the average Pacific sardine ex-vessel price per mt. NMFS used
average Pacific sardine ex-vessel price per mt to conduct a
profitability analysis because cost data for the harvesting operations
of CPS finfish vessels was unavailable.
For the 2012 fishing year approximately 105,000 mt were available
for harvest by the directed fishery. Approximately 95,000 mt (21,000 in
California and 74,000 mt in Oregon and Washington) of this HG were
harvested during the 2012 fishing season, for an estimated ex-vessel
value of $20 million. Using these figures, the average 2012 ex-vessel
price per mt of Pacific sardines was approximately $208.
The directed commercial fishing HG for the 2013 Pacific sardine
fishing season (January 1, 2013 through December 31, 2013) is 57,495
(mt). This HG is approximately 47,000 mt less than the directed
commercial fishing HG for 2012. If the fleet were to take the entire
2013 HG, and assuming a coastwide average ex-vessel price per mt of
$204 (average of 2011 and 2012 ex-vessel), the potential revenue to the
fleet would be approximately $12 million. Therefore, this action will
decrease the affected small entities' potential profitability compared
to last season, due to the lower HG this fishing season. However,
although there will likely be a drop in profitability to sardine
harvesting vessels based on this rule compared to last season, from
2007 through 2011 the average coastwide annual ex-vessel revenue was
$12.5 million; therefore, at current ex-vessel price per mt, the HG for
2013 should provide similar revenue to the five years preceding 2012.
Furthermore, as occurred in 2012, unused sardine from the potential EFP
or the release of any unused portion of the 6,000-mt set-aside for the
Quinault Indian Nation might be used to supplement the amount available
to the directed fishery during the third allocation period (September
15 through December 31), thereby slightly increasing the potential
revenue to the fleet.
Additionally, revenue derived from harvesting Pacific sardine is
typically only one factor determining the overall revenue for a
majority of the vessels that harvest Pacific sardine; as a result, the
economic impact to the fleet from this action cannot be viewed in
isolation. From year to year, depending on market conditions and
availability of fish, most CPS/sardine vessels supplement their income
by harvesting other species. Many vessels in California also harvest
anchovy, mackerel, and in particular squid, making Pacific sardine only
one component of a multi-species CPS fishery. For example, market squid
have been readily available to the fishery in California over the last
three years with total annual ex-vessel revenue averaging approximately
$66 million over that time, compared to an annual average ex-vessel
from sardine of $16 million over that same time period. Additionally,
many sardine vessels that operate off of Oregon and Washington also
fish for salmon in Alaska or squid in California during times of the
year when sardine are not available.
These vessels typically rely on multiple species for profitability
because abundance of sardine, like the other CPS stocks, is highly
associated with ocean conditions and different times of the year, and
therefore are harvested at various times and areas throughout the year.
Because each species responds to ocean conditions in its own way, not
all CPS stocks are likely to be abundant at the same time; therefore,
as abundance levels and markets fluctuate, it has necessitated that the
CPS fishery as a whole rely on a group of species for its annual
revenues. Therefore, although there will be a potential reduction in
sardine revenue for the small entities affected by this action as
compared to the previous season, it is difficult to predict exactly how
this reduction will impact overall annual revenue for the fleet.
There are no significant alternatives to this action that would
accomplish the objectives of the Magnuson-Stevens Act and would also
minimize any significant economic impact of this action on the affected
small entities. The CPS FMP and its implementing regulations require
NMFS to set an annual HG for the Pacific sardine fishery based on the
harvest formula in the FMP. The harvest formula is applied to the
current stock biomass estimate to determine the HG. Therefore, if the
estimated biomass decreases or increases from one year to the next, the
HG will necessarily decrease or increase too. Because the current stock
biomass estimate decreased from 2012 to 2013, the HG also decreased.
Determining the annual HG merely implements the established procedures
of the FMP with the goal of continuing to provide expected net benefits
to the nation, regardless of what the specific allowable harvest of
Pacific sardine is determined to be for 2013.
There are no reporting, record-keeping, or other compliance
requirements required by this rule. Additionally, no other Federal
rules duplicate, overlap, or conflict with this rule.
Small Business Compliance Guide
Section 212 of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness
Act of 1996 states that, for each rule or group of related rules for
which an agency is required to prepare a FRFA, the agency shall publish
one or more guides to assist small entities in complying with the rule,
and shall designate such publications as ``small entity compliance
guides.'' The agency shall explain the actions a small entity is
required to take to comply with a rule or group of rules. As part of
this rulemaking process, a notice to fishermen that also serves as a
small entity compliance guide (guide) was prepared and will be
distributed to fishermen and processors. The guide is also available on
the internet at http://swr.nmfs.noaa.gov. Copies of this final rule and
guide, i.e., the notice to fishermen, will be available upon request
from the Southwest Regional Office (see ADDRESSES).
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
[[Page 36122]]
Dated: June 11, 2013.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, performing the
functions and duties of the Assistant Administrator for Fisheries,
National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2013-14335 Filed 6-14-13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P