Federal Register - September 29, 2021
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Source: Federal Register
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 186 / Wednesday, September 29, 2021 / Notices
The LOA, LOA request, and supporting documentation are available online at: www.fisheries.noaa.gov/
action/incidental-take-authorization-oiland-gas-industry-geophysical-surveyactivity-gulf-mexico. In case of problems accessing these documents, please call the contact listed below see FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ben Laws, Office of Protected Resources, NMFS, 301 4278401.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
ADDRESSES:
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Background Sections 101a5A and D of the MMPA 16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq. direct the Secretary of Commerce to allow, upon request, the incidental, but not intentional, taking of small numbers of marine mammals by U.S. citizens who engage in a specified activity other than commercial fishing within a specified geographical region if certain findings are made and either regulations are issued or, if the taking is limited to harassment, a notice of a proposed authorization is provided to the public for review.
An authorization for incidental takings shall be granted if NMFS finds that the taking will have a negligible impact on the species or stocks, will not have an unmitigable adverse impact on the availability of the species or stocks for subsistence uses where relevant, and if the permissible methods of taking and requirements pertaining to the mitigation, monitoring and reporting of such takings are set forth. NMFS has defined negligible impact in 50 CFR 216.103 as an impact resulting from the specified activity that cannot be reasonably expected to, and is not reasonably likely to, adversely affect the species or stock through effects on annual rates of recruitment or survival.
Except with respect to certain activities not pertinent here, the MMPA
defines harassment as any act of pursuit, torment, or annoyance which i has the potential to injure a marine mammal or marine mammal stock in the wild Level A harassment; or ii has the potential to disturb a marine mammal or marine mammal stock in the wild by causing disruption of behavioral patterns, including, but not limited to, migration, breathing, nursing, breeding, feeding, or sheltering Level B
harassment.
On January 19, 2021, we issued a final rule with regulations to govern the unintentional taking of marine mammals incidental to geophysical survey activities conducted by oil and gas industry operators, and those persons authorized to conduct activities
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on their behalf collectively industry operators, in Federal waters of the U.S. Gulf of Mexico GOM over the course of 5 years 86 FR 5322. The rule was based on our findings that the total taking from the specified activities over the five-year period will have a negligible impact on the affected species or stocks of marine mammals and will not have an unmitigable adverse impact on the availability of those species or stocks for subsistence uses. The rule became effective on April 19, 2021.
Our regulations at 50 CFR 217.180 et seq. allow for the issuance of LOAs to industry operators for the incidental take of marine mammals during geophysical survey activities and prescribe the permissible methods of taking and other means of effecting the least practicable adverse impact on marine mammal species or stocks and their habitat often referred to as mitigation, as well as requirements pertaining to the monitoring and reporting of such taking. Under 50 CFR
217.186e, issuance of an LOA shall be based on a determination that the level of taking will be consistent with the findings made for the total taking allowable under these regulations and a determination that the amount of take authorized under the LOA is of no more than small numbers.
NMFS issued an LOA to bp on July 13, 2021, for the take of marine mammals incidental to zero offset vertical seismic profile VSP
geophysical surveys planned to occur over approximately 5 years within existing bp prospects and/or fields, including the Mad Dog, Na Kika, Thunder Horse, and Atlantis prospects located in the Green Canyon Mad Dog and Atlantis, Mississippi Canyon Na Kika and Thunder Horse, and Atwater Valley Atlantis areas of the central GOM see Figure 1 in bps application.
Please see the Federal Register notice of issuance 86 FR 38018; July 19, 2021
for additional detail regarding the LOA
and the survey activity.
Bp anticipates a total of 10 zero offset VSP surveys over the period of LOA
effectiveness, with each survey expected to require 2 days total of 20 days over the period of effectiveness. Bp anticipates that no more than two surveys would occur in any one year.
However, due to the potential for unforeseen circumstances that would require a longer duration to accomplish the survey objectives, bp indicated it may conduct up to seven zero offset VSP survey days in any one year. Since issuance of the LOA, no survey work has occurred.
Consistent with the preamble to the final rule, the survey effort proposed by
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bp in its LOA request was used to develop LOA-specific take estimates based on the acoustic exposure modeling results described in the preamble 86 FR 5322, 5398; January 19, 2021. These results provided an estimate of four killer whale Level B
harassment events per year of zero offset VSP survey effort based on the maximum seven days per year.
Consistent with other situations involving the low likelihood of encounter for rare species such as killer whales in the GOM, NMFS authorized take of a single group of average size, which is seven representing a single potential encounter Maze-Foley and Mullin, 2006. NMFS has reconsidered the available information and determined that no killer whale take is likely, and has re-issued the LOA to reflect this.
As discussed in the final rule, the density models produced by Roberts et al. 2016 provide the best available scientific information regarding predicted density patterns of cetaceans in the U.S. GOM. The predictions represent the output of models derived from multi-year observations and associated environmental parameters that incorporate corrections for detection bias. However, in the case of killer whalesa rare GOM speciesthe model is informed by few data. The models authors noted the expected non-uniform distribution of this rarelyencountered species and expressed that, due to the limited killer whale data available to inform the model because they are rare, it should be viewed cautiously Roberts et al., 2015.
Moreover, the rarity of encounter during seismic surveys is not likely to be the product of high bias on the probability of detection 86 FR 5322; January 19, 2021. In addition, killer whales typically occur only in particularly deep water, which is not where the bp survey activity will take place.
While this information is reflected through the density model informing the acoustic exposure modeling results, there is relatively high uncertainty associated with the model for this species, and the acoustic exposure modeling applies mean distribution data over areas where the species is in fact less likely to occur. Based on this, NMFS determined that the generic acoustic exposure modeling results for killer whales will generally result in estimated take numbers that are inconsistent with the assumptions made in the rule regarding expected killer whale take 86 FR 5322, 5403; January 19, 2021. In addition as noted in the notice of issuance for the LOA 86 FR
38018; July 19, 2021, differences
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