Case Information
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA SAN JOSE DIVISION OCEANA, INC., Case No. 19-CV-03809-LHK Plaintiff, ORDER REGARDING MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT v. Re: Dkt. Nos. 59, 63, 64 WILBUR L. ROSS, et al., Defendants.
Plaintiff Oceana, Inc. (“Plaintiff”) brings this action against Defendant Wilbur Ross, in his official capacity; Defendant National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (“NOAA”); and Defendant National Marine Fisheries Service (“NMFS”) (collectively, “Government Defendants”). On August 23, 2019, the Court granted California Wetfish Producers Association and Monterey Fish Company Inc.’s (“Intervenor-Defendants”) unopposed motion to intervene. ECF No. 27.
Before the Court are Plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment, Intervenor-Defendants cross-motion for summary judgment, and Government Defendants’ cross-motion for summary judgment. ECF Nos. 59, 63, and 64. Having considered the parties’ submissions, the relevant law, and the record in this case, the Court GRANTS in part and DENIES in part Plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment and Intervenor-Defendants’ and Government Defendants’ cross-motions for summary judgment.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Statutory and Regulatory Background
1. Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act In response to overfishing concerns, Congress enacted the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act of 1976 (“Magnuson-Stevens Act” or “MSA”) to promote the long-term biological and economic sustainability of marine fisheries in U.S. federal waters. See 16 U.S.C. § 1801(a)–(b). The Magnuson-Stevens Act created eight Regional Fishery Management Councils and requires the Councils to create fishery management plans (“FMPs”) aimed at preventing overfishing, along with any amendments to the FMPs. Id. §§ 1852(h)(1), 1801(b)(4), 1854(a)(3). Councils submit FMPs and amendments to the Secretary of Commerce (“Secretary”), who reviews them to determine whether they are consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens Act and other applicable law. Id. §§ 1851(a), 1854(a)(1)(A). The Secretary must publish notice of a Council’s proposed FMP or amendment in the Federal Register and solicit public comment. Id. §§ 1854(a)(1)(B), 1854(a)(5). Within 30 days of the close of the public comment period, the Secretary must either “approve, disapprove, or partially approve [the FMP] or amendment . . . by written notice to the Council.” Id. § 1854(a)(3). If the Secretary does not notify the Council of the Secretary’s decision, the FMP or amendment takes effect as if approved. Id.
FMPs and amendments “do not themselves have any regulatory effect—implementing
regulations must also be enacted in order to effectuate them.”
N. Carolina Fisheries Ass’n, Inc. v.
Gutierrez
,
Chief among the Magnuson-Stevens Act requirements that FMPs, amendments, and regulations must satisfy are the Magnuson-Stevens Act’s ten “national standards for fishery conservation and management.” 16 U.S.C. § 1851(a) (setting out the ten National Standards). This action centers on National Standard One and National Standard Two. Id. §§ 1851(a)(1) (National Standard One), 1851(a)(2) (National Standard Two). National Standard One requires that “[c]onservation and management measures shall
prevent overfishing while achieving, on a continuing basis, the optimum yield from each fishery
for the United States fishing industry.” 16 U.S.C. § 1851(a)(1). The term “overfishing” means “a
rate or level of fishing mortality that jeopardizes the capacity of a fishery to produce the maximum
sustainable yield on a continuing basis.”
Id.
§ 1802(34). Maximum sustainable yield (“MSY”) is
“the largest long-term average catch or yield that can be taken from a stock or stock complex
under prevailing ecological, environmental conditions and fishery technological characteristics.”
50 C.F.R. § 600.310(e)(1)(i)(A). Thus, overfishing is “a rate of fishing which would jeopardize
the capacity of a fishery to produce the [MSY] on a continuing basis.”
Oceana, Inc. v. Bryson
,
“Congress, however, recognized that a certain amount of scientific uncertainty in
predicting a stock’s overfishing level is inevitable,” and as a result, National Standard One
guidelines “operate to ensure that there is no greater than a 50% probability that overfishing will
occur.”
Oceana, Inc. v. Locke
,
National Standard Two requires that “[c]onservation and management measures shall be
based upon the best scientific information available.” 16 U.S.C. § 1851(a)(2). However, “[t]he
fact that scientific information concerning a fishery is incomplete does not prevent [regulation].”
50 C.F.R. § 600.315(b). On the contrary, “by specifying that decisions be based on the best
scientific information
available
, the Magnuson-Stevens Act recognizes that such information may
not be exact or totally complete.”
Midwater Trawlers Coop. v. Dep't of Commerce
,
ACLs are set with reference to the overfishing limit (“OFL”) and the acceptable biological catch (“ABC”). The OFL is a quantifiable factor that is “used to determine if overfishing has occurred, or if the stock or stock complex [of a fishery] is overfished.” 50 C.F.R.
§ 600.310(e)(2)(i)(A). Determining when overfishing has occurred involves a degree of scientific
uncertainty, so in the course of setting an OFL, Councils are also instructed to establish an ABC,
which is “a level of a stock or stock complex’s annual catch that accounts for the scientific
uncertainty in the estimate of OFL and any other scientific uncertainty.”
Id.
§ 600.310(f)(2)(ii)
Because the ABC is the OFL after the OFL has been reduced to account for scientific uncertainty,
a fishery’s ABC is likely to be lower than the fishery’s OFL.
Bryson
,
1. Northern Anchovy
The northern anchovy (“anchovy”) is a small fish that is typically found in schools near the ocean’s surface. 2016 AR 7:146, 174. Anchovy are relatively short-lived, and their populations tend to fluctuate significantly over time. 2016 AR 7:294; 2016 AR 29:831. Anchovy are valuable food sources to a wide variety of predators, including fish, birds, and mammals. 2016 AR 7:146; 2016 AR 45:1161 (noting that diet studies of 32 marine predators found anchovy was the most important forage fish in the California Current Ecosystem).
2. Coastal Pelagic Species Fisheries Management Plan The Pacific Fishery Management Council (“Pacific Council”) is one of the eight Councils created by the Magnuson-Stevens Act. 16 U.S.C. § 1852(a)(1)(F). The Pacific Council is responsible for Pacific Ocean fisheries off the coasts of California, Oregon, and Washington. Id. The Pacific Council’s Coastal Pelagic Species Fishery Management Plan (“CPS FMP”) governs Pacific sardine, Pacific mackerel, anchovy, market squid, and krill. AR 292:13858. [2] The CPS FMP divides the anchovy into two subpopulations, the northern subpopulation and the central subpopulation. Id. This suit concerns the central subpopulation, so future references to “anchovy” refer to the central subpopulation unless otherwise noted.
Although the CPS FMP dates back to 1978, it has been amended a number of times over
the ensuing years.
Bryson
,
Amendment 13 was implemented on November 14, 2011. 2016 AR 31:933–35.
Amendment 13 was a response to the MSRA’s requirement that FMPs incorporate ACLs. 2016
AR 31:933; 16 U.S.C. § 1853(a)(15) (requiring FMPs to establish mechanisms for specifying
ACLs). Amendment 13 implemented “a default management framework” for setting ACLs. 81
Fed. Reg. 74309, 74309 (Oct. 26, 2016); AR 264:16388. The default framework set a monitored
stock’s OFL as equal to the stock’s MSY.
3. The 2016 Catch Rule and Oceana I
On November 20, 2015, the Service published a proposed rule in the Federal Register to
set an annual catch limit (“ACL”) for the anchovy and other stocks managed by the Coastal
Pelagic Species Fishery Management Plan (“CPS FMP”). AR 88:1968. In line with Amendment
13, the proposed rule would set the anchovy’s ACL equal to the anchovy’s 25,000 mt acceptable
biological catch (“ABC”). AR 88:1968–69. On October 26, 2016, the Service published a final
rule in the Federal Register (“the 2016 Catch Rule”) that set the anchovy’s ACL at 25,000 mt,
equal to the ABC.
The Court held that Plaintiff’s challenge to the overfishing limit (“OFL”) and acceptable biological catch (“ABC”) were timely. Id. at *6–8. Proceeding to the merits, the Court next concluded that the OFL, ABC, and ACL set by the NMFS were not based on the best scientific information available, in violation of National Standard Two. Id . at *9. Specifically, the OFL, ABC, and ACL were “based on a 1991 study by Jon Conrad (‘Conrad Study’)” and the Conrad Study was based on higher estimates of the anchovy’s long-term average biomass. . at *10. Importantly, however, the Court concluded that “recent scientific information indicate[d] that the anchovy has collapsed below the levels found by the [Conrad Study], and thus that the Conrad Study’s [estimates were] no longer accurate.” Id . at *11. The NMFS’s unjustified dismissal of the more recent evidence, as well as its continued adherence to the outdated Conrad Study, rendered its actions arbitrary and capricious. Id . at *15.
Finally, the Court determined that the OFL, ABC, and ACL set in the 2016 Catch Rule violated National Standard One because the limits did not prevent overfishing. Id . at *15. Because the 2016 Catch Rule adopted Amendment 13’s 100,000 mt OFL based on the Conrad Study’s outdated estimates, “it was at minimum arbitrary and capricious for [the NMFS] to fail to consider whether the OFL estimate still prevented overfishing in light of its reliance on the Conrad study.” Id . “It followe[d] that it was also arbitrary and capricious for [the NMFS] to fail to consider whether the ABC and ACL could prevent overfishing in light of its reliance on the OFL.” Id . at *16. “[I]n other words, [the problem] [was] that the ABC [was] justified solely in terms of the OFL and therefore ignore[d] the crucial variable: anchovy abundance. Reducing an outdated OFL by a fixed percentage without considering whether the anchovy population might have changed since 1991 ignores the most important aspect of the problem—the size of the anchovy population.” . (quotation marks omitted). Accordingly, the Court vacated the anchovy OFL, ABC, and ACL set in the 2016 Catch Rule.
On February 15, 2018, Defendants filed a motion to alter or amend the Court’s judgment. Oceana, Inc. v. Ross , No. 16-CV-06784-LHK, ECF No. 63 (N.D. Cal. Feb. 2018). Defendants requested clarification that the Court’s vacatur only applied to the central population of the northern anchovy. Defendants also requested that the Court clarify whether it vacated only the ACL set in the 2016 Catch Rule and not the OFL or ABC on which the ACL was based. Plaintiff opposed the motion on March 1, 2018, id. , ECF No. 64, and Government Defendants replied on March 8, 2018, id. , ECF No. 66.
On June 13, 2018, the Court granted in part and denied in part the motion to alter or amend judgment. Id. , ECF No. 68. The Court noted that “[t]he parties have only ever litigated the reference points set for the central population of the northern anchovy” and that “the Court’s 33- page summary judgment order nowhere discusses the other stocks.” Id . at 2. Therefore, the Court “clarifie[d], if doing so was necessary, that its judgment did not vacate the reference points the Catch Rule set for stocks other than the central population of the northern anchovy.” Id . As to Defendants’ second request, the Court clarified that it “did vacate the OFL and ABC in this case for the central population of the northern anchovy.” Id .
On August 10, 2018, the Defendants appealed the Court’s decision to the Ninth Circuit.
Id. , ECF Nos. 69, 70.
On September 21, 2018, Plaintiff filed a motion to enforce the judgment. Id. , ECF No. 72. Plaintiff noted that more than eight months after the Court issued its January 18, 2018 order granting Plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment and denying Defendants’ cross-motion for summary judgment, Defendants had still not issued a new catch rule and that commercial catch of anchovy had continued without regulation. Id . at 1. Plaintiff requested that the Court direct the NMFS to issue a proposed rule within 90 days after the Court’s decision. Id . at 1–2. Defendants opposed the motion on October 26, 2018, id. , ECF No. 76, and Plaintiff filed a reply on November 9, 2018, id. , ECF No. 77. The Court granted Plaintiff’s motion to enforce the judgment on January 18, 2019. Id. , ECF No. 79. The Court noted that Plaintiff’s summary judgment motion had requested that the Court remand the 2016 Catch Rule to the NMFS to complete a new rule that complies with the law within no more than 90 days from the date of the Court’s MSJ Order. Id . at 9. “Therefore, pursuant to the Court’s January 18, 2018 MSJ Order, Defendants had 90 days to complete a new rule that complie[d] with the Magnuson-Stevens Act and the APA.” Id .
The Court then concluded that Defendants’ appeal of the merits decision did not absolve it from its duty to comply with the Court’s order. . Defendants did not seek a stay to relieve themselves of the requirements of the Court’s order, id . at 10, and therefore, Defendants had not complied with the Court’s order. The Court therefore granted Plaintiff’s motion to enforcement the judgment and ordered the parties to file a joint status update within a month of the order explaining Defendants’ plan to comply with the Magnuson-Stevens Act and the APA and what progress Defendants made to that end. Id . The Court also ordered Defendants to promulgate a new rule in compliance with the Magnuson-Stevens Act and the APA within 90 days of the order. Id . at 13.
On February 19, 2019, the parties filed a joint status update regarding compliance with the Court’s order. Id. , ECF No. 82. The parties disputed Defendants’ proposed rulemaking process, as Defendants stated that they intended to skip the proposed rule and public comment steps in issuing a new Catch Rule. Id . at 2–8.
On February 25, 2019, the Court issued an order compelling Defendants’ compliance. Id. , ECF No. 82. The Court held that its establishment of a deadline for the NMFS to issue a final rule did not excuse the NMFS from issuing a proposed rule and soliciting public comment. Id . at 4. The Court also explained that Defendants “have manufactured alleged impracticability” because Defendants “had over thirteen months to comply with” the Court’s January 18, 2018 order. “Instead, Defendants have required Plaintiff to seek to enforce this order” and Defendants have “adopted a new strategy to evade the APA’s proposed rule and public comment requirements.” Id. at 5. The Court noted that “[a] finding that the Defendants are acting in bad faith may be appropriate” and that “[i]f Defendants engage in a pattern of bad faith behavior, the Court may invite a motion for sanctions.” Id . The Court then ordered the parties to file a joint statement proposing a schedule for notice and comment rulemaking. Id.
On March 1, 2019, the parties filed a joint schedule. ., ECF No. 83. Pursuant to the parties’ joint schedule, the Court filed an order that same day requiring the NMFS to submit a proposed rule to the Office of the Federal Register for publication by April 5, 2019; provide a 15- day public comment period from the date of publication of the proposed rule in the Federal Register; and no later than May 28, 2019, submit a final rule to the Office of the Federal Register for publication. Id. , ECF No. 84.
4. The 2019 Catch Rule
On April 8, 2019, the NMFS published a proposed rule in the Federal Register to set an ACL for the anchovy and other stocks managed by the CPS FMP. AR 292:17233–17236. The NMFS proposed an OFL of 94,290 mt, and pursuant to Amendment 13’s framework to set ABC values at 25 percent of OFL for “a 75-percent scientific uncertainty buffer,” proposed an ABC of 23,573 mt and an ACL of 23,573 mt. Id . at 17233–17234.
On May 31, 2019, the NMFS published a final rule in the Federal Register (“the 2019 Catch Rule”). AR 264:16386–16392. The 2019 Catch Rule averaged anchovy abundance estimates from the three most recent years (2016–2018) and arrived at an average biomass of 394,519 mt. Id . at 16387–16388. The 2019 Catch Rule did not rely on the 100,000 mt default maximum sustainable yield (“MSY”) value to set the overfishing limit (“OFL”), and instead, the NMFS calculated a new OFL by multiplying the average biomass from 2016–2018 by an estimate of the rate of fishing mortality for anchovy at MSY (0.239). Id . at 16387. This yielded an MSY and OFL of 94,290 mt. Id . at 16387–16388. The NMFS then calculated an acceptable biological catch (“ABC”) of 23,573 by reducing the OFL by 75% pursuant to Amendment 13. Id. The NMFS then set the annual catch limit (“ACL”) to equal the ABC at 23,573 mt. . C. Procedural History On June 28, 2019, Plaintiff filed a complaint that challenged the OFL, ABC, and ACL set in the 2019 Catch Rule as well as Amendments 8 and 13 to the CPS FMP. ECF No. 1. On July 18, 2019, the Court related the instant action to the Court’s prior action involving the 2016 Catch Rule. ECF No. 15.
On August 23, 2019, the Court granted California Wetfish Producers Association and Monterey Fish Company Inc.’s (“Intervenor-Defendants”) unopposed motion to intervene. ECF No. 27.
On January 31, 2020, United States Magistrate Judge Susan van Keulen issued an order granting in part and denying in part Plaintiff’s motion to compel completion of the administrative record. ECF No. 49. On February 12, 2020, the Court denied Defendant’s motion for relief from Judge van Keulen’s order. ECF No. 57.
On May 5, 2020 Judge van Keulen issued another order granting in part and denying in part Plaintiff’s motion to compel production of documents withheld from the second supplemental administrative record. ECF No. 69.
On March 17, 2020, Plaintiff filed a motion for summary judgment. ECF No. 59
(“Plaintiff’s MSJ”). On April 20, 2020, Intervenor-Defendants filed their cross-motion for
summary judgment and opposition to Plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment. ECF No. 63
(“Intervenor-Defendants’ MSJ”). That same day, Government Defendants also filed their cross-
motion for summary judgment and opposition to Plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment. ECF
No. 64 (“Government MSJ”). On May 22, 2020, Plaintiff filed its combined opposition to
Defendants’ motions for summary judgment and reply in support of Plaintiff’s motion for
summary judgment. ECF No. 71 (“Plaintiff’s Reply”). On June 11, 2020, Intervenor-Defendants
and Government Defendants filed their own reply briefs in support of their cross-motions for
summary judgment. ECF No. 72 (“Intervenor-Defendants’ Reply”); ECF No. 73 (“Government
Reply”).
II. LEGAL STANDARD
A. Administrative Procedure Act Review
The Magnuson-Stevens Act adopts the Administrative Procedure Act’s (“APA”) “standard
for judicial review of agency action set forth in 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A).”
Or. Trollers Ass’n v.
Gutierrez
,
Under the APA, courts must set aside an agency action where the action is “arbitrary,
capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law” or was taken “without
observance of procedure required by law.” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A), (D). This review is deferential
and narrow, and “[t]he court is not empowered to substitute its judgment for that of the agency.”
Citizens to Pres. Overton Park, Inc. v. Volpe
,
Nonetheless, “to withstand review the agency must articulate a rational connection
between the facts found and the conclusions reached.”
Bosworth,
B. Summary Judgment
In general, summary judgment is appropriate if, viewing the evidence and drawing all
reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, there are no genuine
disputes of material fact, and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P.
56(a);
see Celotex Corp. v. Catrett
,
III. DISCUSSION
Plaintiff argues that the overfishing limit (“OFL”), acceptable biological catch (“ABC”), and annual catch limit (“ACL”) set in the 2019 Catch Rule are unlawful in three ways. First, Plaintiff asserts that the 2019 Catch Rule violates National Standard Two because it is not based on the best scientific information available. Second, Plaintiff contends that the 2019 Catch Rule violates National Standard One because it does not prevent overfishing. Third, Plaintiff argues that the 2019 Catch Rule violates National Standard One by failing to account for the needs of anchovy predators.
Plaintiff also argues that Amendment 13 to the Pacific Council’s Coastal Pelagic Species Fishery Management Plan (“CPS FMP”) is unlawful. Specifically, Plaintiff challenges Amendment 13 both directly and as applied in the 2019 Catch Rule.
The Intervenor Defendants and the Government Defendants make overlapping summary
judgment arguments, so the Court refers to them collectively as “Defendants.” The Court first
considers Defendants’ threshold argument that Plaintiff’s direct challenge to Amendment 13 is
untimely. The Court then considers Plaintiff’s argument that in directly challenging Amendment
13, Plaintiff may rely on information that post-dated Amendment 13’s promulgation in 2011. The
Court concludes that Plaintiff’s challenge to Amendment 13 is timely, but that based on
controlling Ninth Circuit precedent, the relevant administrative record is the one compiled at the
time the NMFS promulgated Amendment 13. Because Plaintiff does not point to any evidence
from that 2011 administrative record, Plaintiff’s direct challenge to Amendment 13 to the CPS
FMP fails.
The Court then turns to the merits of Plaintiff’s arguments regarding the 2019 Catch Rule.
As before, in
Oceana I,
Plaintiff may challenge Amendment 13
as applied
in the 2019 Catch Rule.
Oceana I
,
A. Plaintiff’s Direct Challenge To Amendment 13 To The CPS FMP Is Timely Defendants argue that Plaintiff cannot directly challenge Amendment 13 to the CPS FMP because Amendment 13 was promulgated in 2011, and any challenge is therefore untimely. Plaintiff argues that it can directly challenge Amendment 13 because the 2019 Catch Rule is an action taken under Amendment 13, and therefore, its challenge is timely. Plaintiff’s MSJ at 21.
In 2011, Amendment 13 set the anchovy’s acceptable biological catch (“ABC”) at 25% of
overfishing limit (“OFL”). AR 196:13956. The ABC is a catch level that accounts for scientific
uncertainty around the OFL estimate, and is therefore usually a lower number. 50 C.F.R. §§
600.310(f)(2)(ii), 600.310(f)(3);
Bryson
,
In other words, the 2019 Catch Rule implements Amendment 13’s “ABC control rule . . ., which provides for a 75 percent reduction to the OFL.” AR 264:16390. The 2019 Catch Rule then “sets the ACL equal to the ABC per the framework in the FMP,” as “[t]he CPS FMP states that the ACL for stocks in the monitored management category are set equal to their ABC or lower if it is determined necessary to prevent overfishing or for other [optimum yield] considerations.” Id . at 16387. Finally, pursuant to Amendment 13, the 2019 Catch Rule permits the ACL to “remain in place until new scientific information becomes available to warrant changes.” . at 16386. The Magnuson-Stevens Act provides that challenges to regulations and actions must be filed within 30 days after “the date on which the regulations are promulgated or the action is published in the Federal Register.” 16 U.S.C. § 1855(f)(1). The 2019 Catch Rule was published on May 31, 2019. AR 264:16386. Plaintiff filed its complaint on June 28, 2019. ECF No. 1. Plaintiff’s challenge to the 2019 Catch Rule is therefore timely. By the same token, Plaintiff’s suit is untimely as to Amendment 13, which was promulgated in 2011. AR 31:933; AR 30:890.
However, as the Court previously concluded in
Oceana I
with respect to the 2016 Catch
Rule,
Oregon Trollers
permits plaintiffs to challenge regulations after the 30-day period through a
suit challenging an action taken under the regulation.
Oceana I
,
“Actions” are defined as “actions that are taken by the Secretary under regulations which
implement a fishery management plan . . . .” 16 U.S.C. § 1855(f)(2);
see Or. Trollers
, 452 F.3d at
1112–16 (discussing definition of “action”). Actions must also be published in the Federal
Register.
Or. Trollers
,
The 2019 Catch Rule satisfies the definition of “Actions” because the Catch Rule
implements ACLs pursuant to Amendment 13 and because the Catch Rule was published in the
Federal Register. AR 196:13956 (final rule for Amendment 13 noting that it sets a process for
establishing ACLs);
see also
AR 264:16386–16392 (repeatedly referring to the 2019 Catch Rule
as “this action”). Plaintiff therefore argues that Plaintiff’s timely challenge to the 2019 Catch Rule
(the action) also allows Plaintiff to challenge Amendment 13 (the regulation).
Oregon Trollers
stemmed from a 1989 amendment to the FMP that managed Pacific
salmon fisheries, including the Klamath River fall chinook.
The Oregon Trollers plaintiffs, primarily fishermen and fishing-related businesses, brought a suit challenging the 2005 fishery restriction (the action) and the 1989 amendment (the regulation) in federal court. Id. at 1108, 1112. Plaintiffs’ suit was commenced within 30 days of the 2005 fishery restrictions’ publication in the Federal Register. Id. at 1111. The Service therefore did not dispute that the plaintiffs’ suit was timely as to the fishery restrictions. Instead, the Service argued that plaintiffs’ suit was untimely as to the underlying 1989 amendment because “under § 1855(f)(1) plaintiffs should have filed their challenge within thirty days of the promulgation of [the 1989 amendment], and . . . their suit is therefore sixteen years too late.” Id. at 1112. The Ninth Circuit rejected this argument and held that section 1855(f)(1)’s plain language and legislative history demonstrated that plaintiffs were entitled to challenge both the action and the underlying regulation. Id. at 1112–13. The instant case mirrors Oregon Trollers . In the instant case, Amendment 13 created a process for setting annual catch limits (“ACLs”). AR 196:13956 (“The purpose of Amendment 13 is to amend the CPS FMP to comply with . . . the new requirement to establish a process for setting ACLs . . . .”). The 2019 Catch Rule complies with Amendment 13 by implementing Amendment 13’s “ABC [acceptable biological catch] control rule . . ., which provides for a 75 percent reduction to the OFL [overfishing limit].” AR 264:16390. Furthermore, pursuant to Amendment 13, the 2019 Catch Rule “sets the ACL [annual catch limit] equal to the ABC [acceptable biological catch] per the framework in the FMP [fishery management plan],” as “[t]he CPS FMP [Coastal Pelagic Species Fishery Management Plan] states that the ACL [annual catch limit] for stocks in the monitored management category are set equal to their ABC [acceptable biological catch] or lower if it is determined necessary to prevent overfishing or for other [optimum yield] considerations.” . at 16387. Finally, pursuant to Amendment 13, the 2019 Catch Rule permits the ACL [annual catch limit] to “remain in place until new scientific information becomes available to warrant changes.” . at 16386.
In sum, the Court finds that Plaintiff’s timely challenge to the 2019 Catch Rule also allows Plaintiff to directly challenge Amendment 13. In particular, Plaintiff may directly challenge Amendment 13’s decision to set the anchovy’s acceptable biological catch (“ABC”) and annual catch limit (“ACL”) at 25% of overfishing limit (“OFL”) and the ability to set annual catch limits (“ACLs”) “for multiple years until such time as the species becomes actively managed or new scientific information becomes available.” AR 196:13956. Furthermore, Plaintiff may also timely challenge Amendment 13 as applied in the 2019 Catch Rule.
B. Plaintiff May Only Rely Upon Evidence That Was Presented To The NMFS In 2011 In Directly Challenging Amendment 13 To The CPS FMP The Court next considers what evidence Plaintiff may rely upon in directly challenging Amendment 13. Plaintiff argues that it may rely upon evidence compiled after the 2011 promulgation of Amendment 13—specifically, the administrative record in the instant case. Defendants contend that the relevant administrative record is the one compiled at the time the NMFS promulgated Amendment 13. Plaintiff’s Reply at 32–33. Notably, Plaintiff’s challenge to Amendment 13 is based entirely on evidence compiled after the 2011 promulgation of Amendment 13. Therefore, if the relevant administrative record is the one compiled in 2011— when the NMFS promulgated Amendment 13—Plaintiff’s challenge to Amendment 13 necessarily fails.
“Judicial review of an agency decision typically focuses on the administrative record in
existence at the time of the decision . . . .”
Sw. Ctr. For Biological Diversity v. U.S. Forest Serv.
,
In
Oregon Trollers
, after the Ninth Circuit concluded that the plaintiffs’ challenge to the
1989 regulation to the FMP was timely, the Ninth Circuit addressed the merits.
This explicit holding from Oregon Trollers is dispositive. Here, Plaintiff may timely challenge Amendment 13, which was promulgated in 2011, because the 2019 Catch Rule’s overfishing limit (“OFL”), acceptable biological catch (“ABC”), and annual catch limit (“ACL”) values are based on Amendment 13. In doing so, however, “[t]he relevant administrative record for these purposes is the record compiled in” 2011 to support Amendment 13. . As a result, because Plaintiff’s challenge to Amendment 13 is based entirely on evidence compiled after the 2011 promulgation of Amendment 13, Plaintiff’s direct challenge to Amendment 13 necessarily fails.
The Court therefore GRANTS Intervenor-Defendants’ and Government Defendants’ cross- motions for summary judgment and DENIES Plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment with respect to Plaintiff’s direct challenge to Amendment 13 to the Coastal Pelagic Species Fishery Management Plan (“CPS FMP”).
The Court notes, however, that Defendants do not dispute that Plaintiff may challenge
Amendment 13 as applied in the 2019 Catch Rule and that Plaintiff may rely upon the instant
case’s administrative record to do so. Government Reply at 13–14. Similarly, in
Oceana I
, the
Court held that Plaintiff could challenge Amendment 13 as applied in the 2016 Catch Rule based
on the evidence then before the Court.
Oceana I
,
C. The 2019 Catch Rule Violates National Standard Two’s Requirement That Actions Be Based Upon The Best Scientific Information Available Plaintiff and Defendants dispute whether the 2019 Catch Rule complies with National Standard Two’s requirement that actions be “based upon the best scientific information available.” 16 U.S.C. § 1851(a)(2). Plaintiff argues that the 2019 Catch Rule unlawfully set the overfishing limit (“OFL”), acceptable biological catch (“ABC”), and annual catch limit (“ACL”) based only on average abundance data from 2016 to 2018, a timeframe when the anchovy population was increasing. According to Plaintiff, in setting those limits, the NMFS effectively ignored two recent studies, MacCall (2016) and Thayer et al. (2017), which purportedly demonstrate that anchovy abundance fluctuates widely such that setting the OFL, ABC, and ACL based only on 2016 to 2018 is not based on the best scientific information available. Instead, Plaintiffs contend that the NMFS had to also consider MacCall (2016) and Thayer et al. (2017), which analyze anchovy abundance data from 1951 to 2015 and are the only studies showing anchovy biomass estimates from 2009-2014, when anchovy abundance was particularly low.
Defendants primarily advance two arguments in response. First, Defendants argue that the NMFS could reasonably reject the MacCall (2016) and Thayer et al . (2017) studies based on methodological uncertainties present in the studies. Second, Defendants contend that in any event, the NMFS did consider the scientific information in MacCall (2016) and Thayer et al . (2017) and found that the evidence was consistent with the limits set in the 2019 Catch Rule. The Court addresses each of Defendant’s arguments in turn and finds that neither is persuasive. The Court therefore concludes that MacCall (2016) and Thayer et al. (2017) are the best scientific information available and that Defendants improperly failed to address this evidence in violation of National Standard Two. 1. The NMFS Fails to Discredit Plaintiff’s Evidence Defendants’ first argument is that Plaintiff’s scientific evidence is so flawed that the NMFS could wholly disregard it. Plaintiff claims that its scientific evidence is the best scientific
information available, and therefore the NMFS had to consider it.
National Standard Two of the Magnuson-Stevens Act requires that “[c]onservation and
management measures shall be based upon the best scientific information available.” 16 U.S.C.
§ 1851(a)(2). Regulations defining National Standard Two further specify that fishery
management measures “must take into account the best scientific information available at the time
of preparation,” 50 C.F.R. § 600.315(b)(2), which includes “biological, ecological, environmental,
economic, and sociological scientific information,”
id
. § 600.315(a)(1). As the Court previously
explained, the NMFS “‘may not disregard superior data’ and section 1851(a)(2) challenges may
prevail if ‘there is some indication that superior or contrary data was available and that the agency
ignored such information.’”
Oceana I
,
Plaintiff’s scientific evidence concerns two studies, MacCall (2016) and Thayer et al. (2017). MacCall (2016) is a 2016 peer-reviewed study led by former NMFS scientist Alec MacCall, who produced prior anchovy stock estimates and co-authored the Northern Anchovy Fishery Management Plan, which was later expanded into the current Coastal Pelagic Species Fishery Management Plan (“CPS FMP”). AR 417: 19372–19379 (Alec MacCall, et al., Recent collapse of northern anchovy biomass off California , 175 Fisheries Research 87–94 (2016)).
Thayer et al. (2017) is a 2017-peer reviewed study that builds on the analysis of MacCall (2016) and extends anchovy abundance estimates past 2011. AR 388:18917–18924 (J.A. Thayer, et al. , California Anchovy Population Remains Low , 58 CalCOFI Rep. 69–76 (2017)). Thayer et al. (2017)’s lead author is Julie Thayer, one of the co-authors of MacCall (2016). Id. The remaining co-authors for Thayer et al. (2017) are the same co-authors as MacCall (2016), including Alec MacCall. . MacCall (2016) and Thayer et al. (2017) provide analyses of anchovy abundance data from 1951 to 2015 and reveal that anchovy abundance has fluctuated far more dramatically than previous studies showed. AR 417: 19372–19379; AR 388:18917–18924. For example, Thayer et al. (2017) concluded that anchovy biomass dropped 77% in a single year (1986 to 1987), dropped 90% over a two-year period (2005 to 2007), and dropped by 99% over a four-year period (2005 to 2009). AR 282:16459–60, 1611–12, 16614; AR 388:18920, 18924. In light of this evidence, Plaintiff contends that the catch limits in the 2019 Catch Rule are insufficient to prevent overfishing “when abundance levels drop by more than 90 percent below the average biomass NM FS assumed as the basis for its catch limits.” Plaintiff’s MSJ at 9. Indeed, according to the scientific evidence, anchovy abundance levels remained historically low through 2014. AR 388:18924.
Defendants contend that the NMFS did not have to take these scientific studies into account when promulgating the 2019 Catch Rule because these scientific studies were so flawed that the NMFS could wholly disregard them. AR 264:16388–16389; Government MSJ at 6. Specifically, Defendants argue that “Thayer [ et al. (2017)] (which extends the [MacCall (2016)] estimates beyond 2011) calculated the anchovy abundance in 2015 [at] only 5,300 [mt]” but then updated their 5,300 mt estimate for 2015 to 92,100 mt. Government MSJ at 6. Defendants argue that this is proof that Thayer et al . (2017) is unreliable, and that because MacCall (2016) and Thayer et al. (2017) failed to update their comparatively low biomass estimates from 2009 to 2014, the NMFS could properly disregard estimates from those years.
The Court disagrees. First, Defendants’ central contention—namely, that Thayer et al. (2017) is inaccurate and unreliable because the scientific study updated its anchovy abundance estimates for 2015, yet failed to “correct” its estimates for 2009 to 2014—fails on the facts. As Plaintiff points out, Thayer et al . (2017) provided anchovy abundance estimates for 1951 to 2015 based on data collected from annual California Cooperative Oceanic Fisheries Investigation (“CalCOFI”) surveys that count anchovy eggs and larvae. AR 388:18917–18919. Generally, two CalCOFI surveys occur every year, one in the spring and one in the winter. However, in 2015, only data from the earlier 2015 survey was available at the time Thayer et al . (2017) prepared its preliminary abundance estimate for 2015. AR 388:18919. Indeed, the 2015 preliminary abundance estimate in Thayer et al . (2017) explicitly noted that “[a]s of this analysis, January data were not yet available for 2015.” . When the authors of Thayer et al . (2017) updated their 2015 estimates in 2018, they explained that “as new CalCOFI data . . . bec[ame] available,” the authors of Thayer et al . (2017) then updated their 2015 anchovy abundance estimates. AR 350:17991. Nowhere did Thayer et al . (2017) make any suggestion that estimates from 2009 to 2014 needed “updating” or “correcting,” as those estimates already reflected data from all spring and winter surveys for those years.
Defendants entirely fail to respond to Plaintiff’s explanation about the update to 2015 anchovy abundance estimates in Thayer et al. (2017). Not surprisingly, Defendants’ reply briefs abandon their argument that Plaintiff’s proffered evidence was unreliable and could therefore be disregarded.
Second, the NMFS does not present any alternative abundance estimates for 2009 to 2014,
the years in which Thayer
et al.
(2017) estimate historically low anchovy abundance. Without any
competing information to rely upon, the NMFS could not have concluded that Thayer
et al.
(2017)
and its estimates for 2009 to 2014 were not the best scientific information available.
See Or.
Trollers
,
Instead, the Court concludes that MacCall (2016) and Thayer et al. (2017) constitute the best scientific information available regarding recent anchovy abundance estimates and anchovy population fluctuations. 2. The Overfishing Limit, Acceptable Biological Catch, and Annual Catch Limit Were Not Based On The Best Scientific Information Available In the alternative, Defendants contend that even if MacCall (2016) and Thayer et al. (2017) 15 constitute the best scientific information available, the NMFS did not disregard these scientific 16 studies in crafting the 2019 Catch Rule. According to Defendants, though the NMFS only utilized 17 data from 2016 to 2018 to set the OFL, ABC, and ACL, the average biomass from 2016 to 2018 18
was generally in line with the average biomass estimates from MacCall (2016) and Thayer et al. 19
(2017), such that the Court should find that the NMFS did consider the best scientific information 20
available.
21
Specifically, as noted above, the 2019 Catch Rule set the OFL, ABC, and ACL by 22
analyzing anchovy abundance estimates from 2016 to 2018, which were years where the anchovy 23
population was rapidly increasing. AR 264:16387–16388. With anchovy abundance estimates of 24
151,558 mt (2016), 308,173 mt (2017), and 823,826 mt (2018), the 2019 Final Rule calculated an 25
average biomass of 394,519 mt. . at 16388. The NMFS then multiplied this average by an
26
estimate of the rate of fishing mortality for anchovy at MYS (0.239), which yielded an OFL of 27 24
94,290 mt. Id . The NMFS then calculated an ABC of 23,573 by reducing the OFL by 75% pursuant to Amendment 13 and set the ACL to equal the ABC at 23,573 mt. Id .
In crafting the 2019 Catch Rule, the “NMFS note[d] . . . that if one were to compare the MacCall and Thayer time series of biomass estimates to the information that [the] NMFS used to calculate the OFL in this final rule, the range of estimates . . . are actually fairly similar.” AR 264:16389. According to the NMFS, “the Thayer papers actually produce[] an average biomass value of 425,000 mt[], which is higher than the average of the three years used by NMFS.” Id .
Defendants’ argument fails because this simple comparison does not demonstrate that the
NMFS actually considered the specific scientific information in MacCall (2016) and Thayer
et al.
(2017). “Stating that a factor was considered . . . is not a substitute for considering it.”
Beno v.
Shalala
,
The evidence in the record does not demonstrate that NMFS considered any of this
evidence in promulgating the 2019 Catch Rule. Rather, the NMFS first attempted to discredit this
evidence, and when that failed, merely asserted that it considered this evidence because the long
term averages from MacCall (2016) and Thayer
et al
. (2017), which analyzed anchovy abundance
data from 1951 to 2015, approximated the average anchovy biomass estimates from 2016 to 2018.
But by averaging anchovy biomass estimates and setting unchanging OFL, ABC, and ACL values
for an indefinite period of time, the 2019 Catch Rule entirely fails to account for drastic anchovy
population fluctuations that are only documented by MacCall (2016) and Thayer
et al.
(2017).
The 2019 Catch Rule’s framework fails to consider its effects on the anchovy population when the
best scientific information available establishes that the anchovy population can drop by as much
as 77% in a single year, 90% over two years, or even 99% over four years. AR 388:18924.
Faced with this information, the Court concludes that the OFL, ABC, and ACL as set in
the 2019 Catch Rule are arbitrary and capricious because the NMFS has “offered an explanation
for its decision that runs counter to evidence before the agency.”
Pac. Dawn
,
Moreover, the fact that the NMFS calculated unchanging OFL, ABC, and ACL values for an indefinite period of time based on data from 2016 to 2018—years in which the anchovy population was drastically increasing—demonstrates that the NMFS did not consider the best scientific information available from MacCall (2016) and Thayer et al. (2017).
In sum, the Court concludes that the OFL, ABC, and ACL are arbitrary and capricious because the OFL, ABC, and ACL are not based on the best scientific information available.
D. The 2019 Catch Rule Violates National Standard One’s Requirement to Prevent Overfishing
Plaintiff next argues that the OFL, ABC, and ACL violate National Standard One because they do not prevent overfishing. 16 U.S.C. § 1851(a)(1). Specifically, Plaintiff argues that the NMFS’s decision to set static OFL, ABC, and ACL values for an indefinite period of time will not prevent overfishing because (1) anchovy abundance is known to drop well below those limits, and (2) the 75% buffer between the OFL and the ABC and ACL fails to account for the drastic population variability evidence in the record.
National Standard One requires that “[c]onservation and management measures shall
prevent overfishing while achieving, on a continuing basis, the optimum yield from each fishery
for the United States fishing industry.”
Id.
Overfishing is a rate of fishing “that jeopardizes the
capacity of a fishery to produce [MSY] on a continuing basis.”
Id.
§ 1802(34). MSY is “the
largest long-term average catch or yield that can be taken from a stock.” Consequently,
overfishing is “a rate of fishing which would jeopardize the capacity of a fishery to produce the
[MSY] on a continuing basis.”
Bryson
,
The preceding discussion of the best scientific information largely resolves this dispute. As discussed above, Plaintiff has provided substantial evidence that the anchovy population is prone to drastic population fluctuations and has done so in recent years. Nonetheless, the NMFS crafted the OFL, ABC, and ACL values in the 2019 Catch Rule by averaging anchovy biomass from only three years with relatively high anchovy abundance (2016 to 2018) and ignoring data from years with low anchovy abundance. Again, the 2019 Catch Rule set the OFL, ABC, and ACL by analyzing anchovy abundance estimates from only 2016 to 2018, which were years where the anchovy population was rapidly increasing. AR 264:16387–16388. With anchovy abundance estimates of 151,558 mt (2016), 308,173 mt (2017), and 823,826 mt (2018), the 2019 Final Rule calculated an average biomass of 394,519 mt. Id . at 16388. This value was drastically higher than anchovy abundance estimates from 2009 to 2014, where estimates typically placed the anchovy population at no more than 20,000 mt. The NMFS then multiplied the 394,519-mt average by an estimate of the rate of fishing mortality for anchovy at MYS (0.239), which yielded an OFL of 94,290 mt. Id . The NMFS then calculated an ABC of 23,573 by reducing the OFL by 75% pursuant to Amendment 13 and set the ACL to equal the ABC at 23,573 mt. .
The NMFS then set the ACL’s 23,573 mt limit for an indefinite period of time without a mechanism to respond to significant changes in anchovy abundance, even though the best scientific information available established that anchovy population fluctuations are common and extreme. Given this backdrop, it was at minimum arbitrary and capricious for the NMFS to fail to consider whether the OFL, ABC, and ACL would still prevent overfishing, especially given that the anchovy population will fluctuate again in the future. Furthermore, though the NMFS reduced the OFL by 75% to calculate the ABC and ACL, such reductions will again be insufficient in years when the anchovy population drastically declines. Again, as an example, Thayer et al. (2017) concluded that anchovy biomass dropped 77% in a single year (1986 to 1987), dropped 90% over a two-year period (2005 to 2007), and dropped by 99% over a four-year period (2005 to 2009). AR 282:16459–60, 1611–12, 16614; AR 388:18920, 18924. The precautionary 75% buffer between the OFL and the ABC and ACL would not prevent overfishing when the anchovy population similarly decreases in the future.
Defendants offer three arguments in response. First, Defendants argue that the recent anchovy population increases demonstrate that overfishing will not occur. Second, Defendants claim that evidence in the record supports the NMFS’s decision to set unchanging OFL, ABC, and ACL values for an indefinite period of time. Third, Defendants argue that because anchovy population fluctuations are the result of changing environmental conditions and not fishing, setting the 2019 Catch Rule’s OFL, ABC, and ACL at historical values will not lead to overfishing. The Court addresses each in turn and finds that none is persuasive.
1. Recent Increases In The Anchovy Population Do Not Establish That The 2019 Catch Rule Will Prevent Overfishing
First, Defendants contend that even if the anchovy stock declined to similarly low levels as calculated in MacCall (2016) and Thayer et al. (2017), overfishing is unlikely to occur because following the “relatively lower levels [of anchovy biomass]” from 2009 to 2015, “fishing continued at historical levels and the stock recovered very substantially in the immediately following years according to all of the available biomass estimates.” AR 264:16390–16391.
Put differently, Defendants’ argument is that though the anchovy population drastically declined from 2009 to 2015, fishing continued apace, and in the immediate years, the anchovy population rebounded such that fishing from 2009 to 2015 was not at a rate that “jeopardize[d] the capacity of [the] fishery to produce the [MYS] on a continuing basis.” See Bryson , 940 F. Supp. 2d at 1036. Therefore, because the NMFS seeks to set OFL, ABC, and ACL values similar to those from 2009 to 2015, the NMFS argues that it will necessarily prevent overfishing. This argument is misleading. Defendants consistently argue that overfishing did not occur
even during years of low abundance because “fishing continued at historical levels through that whole period.” Government MSJ at 2, 16. However, fishing at historical levels has never approximated the actual limits set in the ACL. As Intervenor-Defendants acknowledge, and the evidence supports, “[s]ince 1983[,] the average catch of norther anchovy . . . has been ~7,000 metric tons.” 2016 AR 62:1278; Intervenor-Defendants’ MSJ at 2 (“[C]atch levels declined precipitously and have remained low—approximately 7000 MT on average since 1982.”). Indeed, the 2019 Catch Rule itself notes that “[t]he annual average harvest from 2009 to 2018 for central anchovy was 7,020 mt.” AR 264: 16392. In other words, anchovy fishing has “remained well below [its] respective ABC/ACL levels [of 25,000 mt] since implementation of the CPS FMP in 2000.” 2016 AR 165:2879; see also id ., fig. 2 (comparing annual catches of anchovy to ACL of 25,000 mt). This is particularly true for 2009 to 2013, when fishing levels were even lower. Supp. AR 11:19868 (2,668 mt in 2009; 1,026 mt in 2010; 2,601 mt in 2011; 2,488 mt in 2012; and 6,019 mt in 2013).
Therefore, the recent increases do not establish that the current 23,573-mt ACL limit will prevent overfishing. As such, Defendants’ first argument fails.
2. Defendants’ Single Piece of Proffered Evidence Does Not Demonstrate That Setting Static OFL, ABC, and ACL Values For an Indefinite Period of Time Will Prevent Overfishing
Defendants’ second argument is that evidence in the record shows that setting static OFL, ABC, and ACL values for an indefinite period of time is more than 50% likely to prevent overfishing as is required by National Standard One. As previously discussed, “Congress . . . recognized that a certain amount of scientific uncertainty in predicting a stock’s overfishing level is inevitable,” and as a result, National Standard One guidelines “operate to ensure that there is no greater than a 50% probability that overfishing will occur.” Oceana, Inc. v. Locke , 831 F. Supp. 2d 95, 128 (D.D.C. 2011) (citing 50 C.F.R. § 600.310(f)); Massachusetts v. Pritzker , 10 F. Supp. 3d 208, 213 (D. Mass. 2014) (“The objective of the control rule is to provide a buffer between OFL and ABC such that there is less than a 50% chance that overfishing will occur.”). 50 C.F.R. § 600.310(f)(2)(i) states that ABC “could be based on an acceptable probability (at least 50 percent) that catch equal to the stock’s ABC will not result in overfishing.” Here, Defendants point to an analysis conducted by Dr. Andre E. Punt of the University of Washington for the Pacific Council’s Scientific and Statistical Committee. AR 309:17390; AR 310:17408. The analysis shows that less frequent adjustments to OFL can protect against overfishing where there is a large buffer or reduction from OFL to ABC. AR 310:17409. Specifically, Dr. Punt states that the probability of the stock being overfished is 20.5% for annual OFLs, 27.5% for two-year OFLs, 38.7% for five-year OFLs, and 38.8% for ten-year OFLs. AR 310:17409. Based on this, Defendants assert that “[w]hile longer-term OFLs were associated with higher risk, the level of risk with a constant OFL over several years was still well below the 50% risk level allowed by the MSA.” Intervenor-Defendants MSJ at 6.
As Plaintiff points out, Dr. Punt’s analysis is not relevant to the 2019 Catch Rule. Most importantly, Dr. Punt’s analysis does not rely on the 2019 Catch Rule’s MSY. Instead, the analysis relies on far lower long-term MSY values. Specifically, Dr. Punt’s analysis relies on MSY values ranging from 18,000 mt to 61,000 mt, AR 309:17398, but the 2019 Catch Rule utilizes an MSY of 94,290 mt. AR 264:25196 (2019 Catch Rule explaining that “OFLs are set equal to estimates of MSY” and setting OFL at 94,290 mt). The 2019 Catch Rule never utilizes Dr. Punt’s MSY values in setting the OFL, ABC or ACL. To reiterate, MSY—or maximum sustainable yield—is important because overfishing is “a rate of fishing which would jeopardize the capacity of a fishery to produce the [MSY] on a continuing basis.” Bryson , 940 F. Supp. 2d at 1036; 16 U.S.C. § 1802(34) (defining overfishing as “a rate or level of fishing mortality that jeopardizes the capacity of a fishery to produce the maximum sustainable yield on a continuing basis”).
Defendants do not engage with the substance of Plaintiff’s argument or attempt to explain how Dr. Punt’s analysis remains relevant in light of these stark differences. Government Reply at 8–9. Instead, Defendants conclusorily state that these are mere methodological objections and should be discounted. . As a result, Defendants fail to adequately respond to Plaintiff’s argument that Dr. Punt’s analysis is not pertinent to the OFL, ABC, and ACL values as set in the 2019 Catch Rule. The Court therefore rejects Defendant’s second argument. 3. The Fact That Environmental Conditions Drive Anchovy Population Fluctuations Does Not Support The NMFS’s Position That The 2019 Catch Rule Will Prevent Overfishing Defendant’s final argument is that fishing at current levels is not responsible for anchovy population declines and that instead, environmental conditions are largely driving the drastic anchovy population fluctuations. Therefore, Defendants assert that historical catch limits have a limited effect on the anchovy population, which will rebound as environmental conditions return to normal. As a result, Defendants assert that the 2019 Catch Rule’s limits, which are largely consistent with prior limits, will prevent overfishing and that the NMFS did not need to consider how fishing levels may interact with environmental conditions to impact the anchovy population. Government Reply at 6 (“[A]s NMFS found in adopting the guidelines, a decline in biomass in a given year due to temporary environmental factors while fishing continues does not mean that . . . there is ‘overfishing.’”).
Defendants’ position contradicts the NMFS’s own regulatory guidelines, which require the NMFS to consider environmental conditions in setting catch limits. To begin, MSY is itself defined as “the largest long-term average catch or yield that can be taken from a stock or stock complex under prevailing ecological, environmental conditions and fishery technological characteristics.” 50 C.F.R. § 600.310(e)(1)(i)(A). Elsewhere, the governing guidelines recognize that management measures consider and address environmental changes. For example, the regulations state that “Councils should consider the management objectives of their FMPs and their management framework to determine the relevant social, economic, and ecological factors used to determine [optimum yield].” Id . § 600.310(e)(3)(iii)(B). In giving examples of ecological factors that should be considered, the regulations explicitly recognize that “ecological or environmental conditions that stress marine organisms or their habitat, such as natural and manmade changes,” are “[a]lso important.” Id . § 600.310(e)(3)(iii)(B)(3). In sum, to simply state that anchovy abundance is largely driven by environmental conditions does not absolve the NMFS from its responsibility to take those environmental conditions into account when setting the OFL, ABC, and ACL. Moreover, the need to account for environmental conditions alongside fishing is all the more salient because evidence indicates that fishing can exacerbate natural declines in the anchovy population. Defendants repeatedly cite to a 2018 study authored by Sam McClatchie of the NOAA Fisheries Service, Southwest Fisheries Science Center, Fisheries Resources Division, and others. AR 348:17975–17977 (S. McClatchie, R.D. Vetter, and I.L. Hendy, Forage fish, small pelagic fisheries and recovering predators: managing expectations , 21 Animal Conservation 445– 47 (2018)); see Government MSJ at 14, 21 (citing McClatchie (2018)); Government Reply at 7 (same). Defendants rely on McClatchie (2018) for its statement that “it is well documented that forage fish populations collapse repeatedly and these collapses are a common feature of sardine and anchovy population dynamics, even in the absence of commercial fishing.” AR 348:17976. However, McClatchie (2018) also notes that “it is recognized that fishing pressure on pelagic forage fish [such as anchovy] can increase the probability, and even the rate of stock collapse.” .
Other evidence confirms this finding. For example, an October 2018 letter from Dr. Simon Dedman of the Farallon Institute that was sent to the Pacific Council noted that “[t]he high efficiency of commercial fishing has scope to combine catastrophically with anchovy’s habit of pooling in high densities inshore when their total abundance is low, such that an inappropriately high ACL could presage a population crash.” AR 366:18233 (quoting multiple studies). Indeed, a peer-reviewed 2015 study analyzing “small pelagic fish, such as herrings, anchovies, and sardines,” noted that fishing can “exacerbate naturally caused collapses, because shifts in populations’ spatial distributions coupled with fish schooling behavior allows fisheries to be economically viable even when abundance is low.” AR 282:16523 (Timothy E. Essington et al., Fishing amplifies forage fish population collapses (2015)).
Defendants attempt to discredit this 2015 peer-reviewed study because the study analyzed fishing populations that were subject to high levels of fishing—sometimes in excess of 60% of biomass. See id . at 16525. What Defendants fail to recognize, however, is that in the years when the anchovy population drastically declines—such as when the anchovy population declined 90% from 2005 to 2007—fishing could reach similar levels as a proportion of total biomass. Indeed, as noted previously, MacCall (2016) and Thayer et al. (2017) noted that from 2009 to 2014, the anchovy population crashed and stayed below 20,000 mt for a prolonged period. Fishing at levels permissible under the 2019 Catch Rule—specifically, the ACL of 23,573 mt—would have resulted in high levels of fishing—the type which the aforementioned study noted could “exacerbate naturally caused collapses.” AR 282:16523.
Accordingly, the NMFS was required to consider the substantial evidence in the record indicating that fishing could exacerbate population fluctuations and declines, even if the population fluctuations were largely driven by environmental factors.
In sum, it was arbitrary and capricious for the NMFS to set static OFL, ABC, and ACL
values for an indefinite period of time because the evidence did not demonstrate that those limits
would prevent overfishing. Instead, evidence demonstrated that anchovy abundance is known to
drop below the limits set in the 2019 Catch Rule and that the 75% buffer between the OFL and the
ABC and ACL does not account for drastic anchovy population variability. As a result, the NMFS
has “offered an explanation for its decision that runs counter to evidence before the agency.”
Pac.
Dawn
,
Accordingly, the Court GRANTS Plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment and DENIES Intervenor-Defendants’ and Government Defendants’ cross-motions for summary judgment with respect to Plaintiff’s challenge to the 2019 Catch Rule.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court GRANTS Intervenor-Defendants’ and Government
Defendants’ cross-motions for summary judgment and DENIES Plaintiff’s motion for summary
judgment with respect to Plaintiff’s direct challenge to Amendment 13 to the CPS FMP. The
Court GRANTS Plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment and DENIES Intervenor-Defendants’
and Government Defendants’ cross-motions for summary judgment with respect to Plaintiff’s
challenge to the 2019 Catch Rule.
The Court therefore VACATES the 2019 Catch Rule and remands the 2019 Catch Rule for
further action consistent with this order. The Court declines Plaintiff’s invitation to “require” the
NMFS to “issue a new catch rule [that] ensure[s] . . . annual limits are adjusted annually.”
Plaintiff’s Reply at 38. The Court will not dictate the substance of any new catch rule on remand.
Asarco
,
Defendants shall promulgate a new rule in compliance with the Magnuson-Stevens Act and the APA within 120 days of the Court’s instant order. The Court also orders the parties to meet and confer to propose a schedule compliant with 16 U.S.C. § 1855(d) and the APA. The parties shall file a joint statement that does not exceed eight pages and that proposes such a schedule by September 11, 2020. The parties shall also identify any areas of agreement or disagreement. For areas of disagreement, the parties shall provide a brief justification for their separate proposals.
IT IS SO ORDERED. Dated: September 2, 2020
______________________________________ LUCY H. KOH United States District Judge
Notes
[1] The NMFS is a subagency of NOAA, which is part of the Department of Commerce.
Fishermen's Finest, Inc. v. Locke
,
[2] “Pelagic” species live in the water column as opposed to near the sea floor, and are generally found between the ocean’s surface and 1,000 meters below the surface. AR 29:831.
