Coast Guard, DHS.
Request for public comments.
The Coast Guard seeks public assistance in gathering information regarding the status of research and development of ballast water management systems and analytical technologies/methods used in testing ballast water management systems. The Coast Guard may then provide this information to the 55th Session of the International Maritime Organization's (IMO) Marine Environment Protection Committee (MEPC 55) to inform the Committee during the review of the status of the development of ballast water management systems. Our specific interest is in ballast water management systems that have been rigorously tested both in land-based test platforms and on board ships. We are also interested in technologies/methods for rapid detection, enumeration, and determination of organism viabilities in ballast water.
Comments and related material must reach the Docket Management Facility on or before Friday, June 23, 2006.
You may submit comments identified by Coast Guard docket number USCG–2006–24580 to the Docket Management Facility at the U.S. Department of Transportation. To avoid duplication, please use only one of the following methods:
(1) Web site:
(2) Mail: Docket Management Facility, U.S. Department of Transportation, 400 Seventh Street, SW., Washington, DC 20590–0001.
(3) Fax: 202–493–2251.
(4) Delivery: Room PL–401 on the Plaza level of the Nassif Building, 400
If you have questions on this notice, contact LT Heather St. Pierre, Environmental Standards Division, U.S. Coast Guard, via the ballast water information line at 202–267–2716 or via e-mail at
All comments received will be posted, without change, to
The Coast Guard is interested in receiving information about the current status of the development of ballast water management systems. Specifically, the Coast Guard requests comments to be submitted based on two categories:
• Ballast water management systems that have been carefully tested at all scales, including rigorous land-based testing and tests on board ships; and
• Technologies/methods for rapid detection, enumeration, and determination of organism viabilities in ballast water.
Ballast Water Management System Submissions: For those submissions pertaining to shipboard ballast water management systems, specific areas must be addressed for the submission to be considered pertinent to the discussion during the Review:
(1) Types and sizes of ships, ballast capacities, flow rates, and the geographic region in which the testing occurred;
(2) The availability of commercial infrastructure and support, including sufficient manufacturing capacity to meet initial requirements of the IMO's Ballast Water Convention (At MEPC 53, it was estimated that between 300 and 500 vessels may be subject to the Convention's discharge requirement in 2009);
(3) Concise explanation of system requirements, including space, power, consumables, maintenance and manning requirements; and
(4) Concise quantitative description of the technology's ability to meet IMO's Ballast Water Performance Standard (Regulation D–2) under shipboard circumstances identified in (1) above, including specific information about the ships on which the management system meets this performance standard, and whether or not the IMO guidelines for approval of ballast water management systems were employed.
(1) Types of organisms to which the test technology or method applies;
(2) The intended purpose of the technology/method (detection, enumeration, viability assessment, etc.);
(3) Explanation of how this technology/method will facilitate testing of ballast water treatment systems; and
(4) Cost of the technology/method, to include capital costs and maintenance/annual costs (including personnel, special training, and expendable supplies).
Supporting information—including relevant citations for reported results, not intended for wider dissemination—may also be provided. Such material need not comply with the formatting and page limitations described above. Any material considered proprietary or commercially sensitive should be plainly marked as such. The Coast Guard will retain all information received, and may use the information for development and implementation of regulations and policies.