Gulf Fishermens Association v. National Mar ( 2020 )


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  • Case: 19-30006   Document: 00515515221     Page: 1    Date Filed: 08/04/2020
    REVISED August 4, 2020
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Fifth Circuit
    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    August 3, 2020
    No. 19-30006                 Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    Gulf Fishermens Association; Gulf Restoration
    Network; Destin Charter Boat Association; Alabama
    Charter Fishing Association; Fish for America USA,
    Incorporated; Florida Wildlife Federation;
    Recirculating Farms Coalition; Food & Water Watch,
    Incorporated; Center for Food Safety,
    Plaintiffs—Appellees,
    versus
    National Marine Fisheries Service; Eileen Sobeck, in
    her official capacity as Assistant Administrator for
    Fisheries; Doctor Roy Crabtree, in his official
    capacity as Regional Administrator, Southeast Region,
    National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration;
    Doctor Kathryn Sullivan, in her official capacity as
    Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and
    Atmosphere and Administrator for National Oceanic
    and Atmospheric Administration; Wilbur Ross, in his
    official capacity as United States Secretary of
    Commerce,
    Defendants—Appellants.
    Case: 19-30006      Document: 00515515221         Page: 2        Date Filed: 08/04/2020
    No. 19-30006
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Louisiana
    USDC No. 2:16-CV-1271
    Before Higginbotham, Higginson, and Duncan, Circuit Judges.
    Stuart Kyle Duncan, Circuit Judge:
    We consider whether a federal agency may create an “aquaculture,”
    or fish farming, regime in the Gulf of Mexico pursuant to the Magnuson-
    Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act of 1976 (“Magnuson-
    Stevens Act” or “Act”), 
    16 U.S.C. §§ 1801
    –83. The answer is no. The Act
    neither says nor suggests that the agency may regulate aquaculture. The
    agency interprets this silence as an invitation, but our precedent says the
    opposite: Congress does not delegate authority merely by not withholding it.
    See Texas v. United States, 
    809 F.3d 134
    , 186 (5th Cir. 2015), aff’d by equally
    divided Court, 
    136 S. Ct. 2271
     (2016). Undaunted, the agency seeks authority
    in the Act’s definition of “fishing”—the “catching, taking, or harvesting of
    fish.” 
    16 U.S.C. § 1802
    (16) (emphasis added). “Harvesting,” we are told,
    implies gathering crops, and in aquaculture the fish are the crop. That is a
    slippery basis for empowering an agency to create an entire industry the
    statute does not even mention. We will not bite. If anyone is to expand the
    forty-year-old Magnuson-Stevens Act to reach aquaculture for the first time,
    it must be Congress.
    We therefore AFFIRM the district court’s ruling that the challenged
    aquaculture rule exceeds the agency’s statutory authority. See 
    81 Fed. Reg. 1762
     (Jan. 13, 2016), codified at 50 C.F.R. pts. 600 and 622.
    2
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    I.
    A.
    The Magnuson-Stevens Act seeks to “conserve and manage the
    fishery resources found off the coasts of the United States.” 
    16 U.S.C. § 1801
    (b)(1); see also Delta Commercial Fisheries Ass’n v. Gulf of Mexico Fishery
    Mgmt. Council, 
    364 F.3d 269
    , 271 (5th Cir. 2004) (the Act “aims to preserve
    fishery resources by preventing overfishing”). Congress passed the Act in
    1976 after finding that aggressive fishing practices, especially by foreign
    trawlers, had imperiled important fish stocks and the coastal economies
    dependent on them.1 See 
    16 U.S.C. § 1801
    (a)(2) (finding the economies of
    “[m]any coastal areas . . . have been badly damaged by the overfishing of
    fishery resources,” particularly by “[t]he activities of massive foreign fishing
    fleets”). Accordingly, the Act provides a framework for protecting and
    managing fishing and fishery resources in federal waters. See 
    id.
     §§ 1801(b),
    (c) (stating Act’s purposes and policies).
    As relevant here, the Act creates eight Regional Fishery Management
    Councils and tasks them with drafting Fishery Management Plans
    (“FMPs”). Id. §§ 1801(b)(5), 1852–53. Each FMP must identify and
    describe the fishery to which it applies, id. § 1853(a)(2), and contain
    “conservation and management measures” that are “necessary and
    appropriate for the conservation and management of the fishery, to prevent
    overfishing and rebuild overfished stocks, and to protect, restore, and
    promote the long-term health and stability of the fishery,” id.
    § 1853(a)(1)(A). In addition, each FMP must “be consistent with” ten
    “national standards.” Id. § 1851(a). Among these standards are requirements
    1
    See Robert J. McManus, America’s Saltwater Fisheries: So Few Fish, So Many
    Fisherman, 9 NAT. RESOURCES & ENV’T 13, 13 (Spring 1995).
    3
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    to “prevent overfishing while achieving . . . the optimum yield from each
    fishery.” Id. § 1851(a)(1).2
    Today, the Act is administered by the National Marine Fisheries
    Service (“NMFS” or the “agency”), a division of the National Oceanic and
    Atmospheric Administration, by delegation from the Secretary of
    2
    These are the ten standards:
    (1) Conservation and management measures shall prevent overfishing while
    achieving, on a continuing basis, the optimum yield from each fishery for the
    United States fishing industry.
    (2) Conservation and management measures shall be based upon the best scientific
    information available.
    (3) To the extent practicable, an individual stock of fish shall be managed as a unit
    throughout its range, and interrelated stocks of fish shall be managed as a unit or in
    close coordination.
    (4) Conservation and management measures shall not discriminate between
    residents of different States. . . .
    (5) Conservation and management measures shall, where practicable, consider
    efficiency in the utilization of fishery resources; except that no such measure shall
    have economic allocation as its sole purpose.
    (6) Conservation and management measures shall take into account and allow for
    variations among, and contingencies in, fisheries, fishery resources, and catches.
    (7) Conservation and management measures shall, where practicable, minimize
    costs and avoid unnecessary duplication.
    (8) Conservation and management measures shall . . . take into account the
    importance of fishery resources to fishing communities by utilizing economic and
    social data that meet [certain] requirements . . . .
    (9) Conservation and management measures shall, to the extent practicable,
    (A) minimize bycatch and (B) to the extent bycatch cannot be avoided, minimize
    the mortality of such bycatch.
    (10) Conservation and management measures shall, to the extent practicable,
    promote the safety of human life at sea.
    
    16 U.S.C. § 1851
    (a).
    4
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    Commerce. See 
    id.
     §§ 1854, 1855. NMFS reviews each FMP for consistency
    with the Act and other applicable laws. If NMFS fails to act within a specified
    period of time after the council submits an FMP, the plan is approved. Id.
    § 1854(a)(3). Each plan is then implemented through separate regulations,
    which NMFS reviews, id. § 1853(c), and, upon approval, implements
    through final rules, id. § 1854(b).3
    The concept of a “fishery” is central to the Act and to the issues we
    consider in this case. The Act defines “fishery” as follows:
    (A) one or more stocks of fish which can be treated as a unit for
    purposes of conservation and management and which are
    identified on the basis of geographical, scientific, technical,
    recreational, and economic characteristics; and
    (B) any fishing for such stocks.
    Id. § 1802(13). “Fishing,” in turn, is defined as:
    (A) the catching, taking, or harvesting of fish;
    (B) the attempted catching, taking, or harvesting of fish;
    (C) any other activity which can reasonably be expected to
    result in the catching, taking, or harvesting of fish; or
    (D) operations at sea in support of, or in preparation for any
    activity described in subparagraphs (A) through (C).
    3
    See generally Anglers Conserv. Network v. Pritzker, 
    809 F.3d 664
    , 667–68 (D.C. Cir.
    2016) (discussing administration of the Act); Lovgren v. Locke, 
    701 F.3d 5
    , 13 (1st Cir. 2012)
    (same); General Category Scallop Fishermen v. Sec’y, U.S. Dep’t of Commerce, 
    635 F.3d 106
    ,
    108–09 (3rd Cir. 2011) (same); Oregon Trollers Ass’n v. Gutierrez, 
    452 F.3d 1104
    , 1108 (9th
    Cir. 2006) (same).
    5
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    Id.
     § 1802(16). When passed, the Act made no reference to aquaculture or
    fish farming.4
    B.
    The Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council (the “Council”)
    comprises Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida. Id.
    § 1852(a)(1)(E). The Council has “authority over the fisheries in the Gulf of
    Mexico seaward of” those five states. Id. In 2009, it became the first regional
    council to put forward a plan to regulate and permit aquaculture. In common
    terms, aquaculture means fish farming: it is “the cultivation of aquatic
    organisms (such as fish or shellfish) especially for food.”5 The practice
    typically entails planting “broodstock,” or wild-caught fish, to spawn the rest
    of the aquaculture stock, which are then harvested. Id.6 As NMFS explains,
    aquaculture “is essentially a farming operation, [in which] all animals
    cultured are intended for harvest.” 
    81 Fed. Reg. 1762
    , 1770 (Jan. 13, 2016).
    The Council developed a “Plan for Regulating Offshore Marine
    Aquaculture in the Gulf of Mexico” (the “Plan”). Under the Plan, the
    Council would approve five to twenty permits for aquaculture operations
    over a ten-year period. Permits would be conditioned on compliance with
    biological, environmental, recordkeeping, and reporting conditions. The
    Council submitted the Plan and a proposed implementing regulation to
    4
    As the district court noted, later amendments contain “discrete and immaterial”
    references to aquaculture. These post-enactment references, as we explain below, lend
    further support to our decision.
    5
    Merriam-Webster Dictionary, Aquaculture (last visited June 23, 2020),
    https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/aquaculture.
    6
    NMFS defines “aquaculture,” somewhat circularly, as “all activities, including
    the operation of an aquaculture facility, involved in the propagation or rearing, or attempted
    propagation or rearing, of allowable aquaculture species in the Gulf [Exclusive Economic
    Zone].” 
    50 C.F.R. § 622.2
    .
    6
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    NMFS. After NMFS took no position on the Plan, it went into effect. In
    2014, NMFS published a proposed Rule to implement the Plan, which
    became final in 2016.7
    In its own words, the Rule “establishes a comprehensive regulatory
    program for managing the development of an environmentally sound and
    economically sustainable aquaculture fishery in Federal waters of the Gulf.”
    81 Fed. Reg. at 1762. Its purpose is “to increase the yield of Federal fisheries
    in the Gulf by supplementing the harvest of wild caught species with cultured
    product.” Id. To that end, the Rule requires aquaculture facilities to obtain
    aquaculture permits. See id. at 1763 (describing requirements for permit
    applications). Applications are submitted to NMFS’s Southeast Regional
    Administrator (the “RA”) who may grant or deny the permit. The Rule
    provides for a 45-day notice-and-comment period upon an application’s
    completion. Id. A permit is valid for ten years initially and must be renewed
    every five years thereafter. Id. at 1762. The Rule contains a number of
    “operational requirements, monitoring requirements, and restrictions” for
    permittees. Id. at 1763–64. Permittees must allow NMFS personnel and
    NMFS-designated third parties access to their facilities to “conduct
    inspections and determine compliance with applicable regulations.” Id. at
    1765. Finally, the Rule contains a plethora of reporting and recordkeeping
    requirements, id. at 1766, and requires permittees to comply with various
    regulations promulgated by other federal agencies, including the
    Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”), id. at 1763, and the Department
    of Agriculture, id. at 1764.
    7
    See Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf, and South Atlantic; Aquaculture, 
    79 Fed. Reg. 51,424
     (Aug. 28, 2014); Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf, and South Atlantic;
    Aquaculture, 
    81 Fed. Reg. 1762
     (Jan. 13, 2016), codified at 50 C.F.R. pts. 600 and 622.
    7
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    The Rule is the first attempt by NMFS or any council to regulate
    aquaculture under the Act. It is no small attempt. The Rule allows for a
    maximum annual production of 64 million pounds of seafood in the Gulf. 
    Id.
    That figure would equal the previous average annual yield “of all marine
    species in the Gulf[] except menhaden[8] and shrimp.” 
    Id.
    C.
    A coalition of fishing and conservation organizations (“Plaintiffs”),9
    concerned about the commercial and environmental impacts of the Rule’s
    proposed regime,10 challenged the Rule in district court. They claimed the
    Rule was invalid because it fell outside the Council’s authority to regulate
    “fisheries” under the Act. The parties cross-moved for summary judgment.
    Relying on the Act’s text, structure, and history, the district court held the
    Act unambiguously forecloses NMFS’s authority to regulate aquaculture.
    The court thus denied Chevron deference to the agency’s construction of the
    Act and granted Plaintiffs summary judgment. See Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v.
    Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc., 
    467 U.S. 837
    , 842–43 (1984) (courts will not defer
    to agency interpretation of an “unambiguous[]” statute). The agency
    8
    Menhaden are prolific fish used for bait and fish oil. Merriam-Webster
    Dictionary, Menhaden, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/menhaden
    (last visited June 23, 2020).
    9
    The organizations (Appellees here) are Gulf Fishermens Association, Gulf
    Restoration Network, Destin Charter Boat Association, Alabama Charter Fishing
    Association, Fish for America USA, Inc., Florida Wildlife Federation, Recirculating Farms
    Coalition, Food & Water Watch, Inc., and Center for Food Safety. Defendants (Appellants
    here) are NMFS, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and three
    officers charged with administering the Act. Where appropriate, “agency” and “NMFS”
    refer to all Defendants.
    10
    Specifically, Plaintiffs worry that the Rule’s expansion of seafood production will
    harm traditional fishing grounds, reduce prices of wild fish, subject wild fish to disease, and
    pollute open waters with chemicals and artificial nutrients.
    8
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    appealed. Before us, it argues the Act is ambiguous as to whether it
    encompasses aquaculture. Because the Rule reasonably resolves this putative
    ambiguity, the agency claims it earns Chevron deference. See 
    id. at 844
     (when
    statute is ambiguous, “a court may not substitute its own construction . . . for
    a reasonable interpretation made by the administrator of an agency”).
    II.
    “We review a summary judgment de novo.” Salinas v. R.A. Rogers,
    Inc., 
    952 F.3d 680
    , 682 (5th Cir. 2020) (citation omitted). Summary
    judgment is required when “there is no genuine dispute as to any material
    fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 56(a).
    The Administrative Procedure Act requires setting aside agency
    action that is “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not
    in accordance with law.” 
    5 U.S.C. § 706
    (2)(A). We review an agency’s
    statutory interpretation—including one concerning the agency’s own
    jurisdiction—under the two-step Chevron framework. See generally Sw. Elec.
    Power Co. v. EPA, 
    920 F.3d 999
    , 1014 (5th Cir. 2019) (discussing Chevron);
    see also City of Arlington, Tex. v. FCC, 
    569 U.S. 290
    , 306–07 (2013). At step
    one, we ask “whether Congress has directly spoken to the precise question
    at issue.” Chevron, 
    467 U.S. at 842
    . We answer that question by
    “exhaust[ing] all the ‘traditional tools’ of construction,” including “text,
    structure, history, and purpose.” Kisor v. Wilkie, 
    139 S. Ct. 2400
    , 2415 (2019)
    (quoting Chevron, 
    467 U.S. at
    843 n.9; Pauley v. BethEnergy Mines, Inc., 
    501 U.S. 680
    , 707 (1991) (Scalia, J., dissenting)). Our interpretation “must
    account for both the specific context in which language is used and the
    broader context of the statute as a whole.” Util. Air Regulatory Grp. v. EPA,
    
    573 U.S. 302
    , 321 (2014) (citation omitted) (cleaned up). We will not defer
    to “an agency interpretation that is inconsistent with the design and structure
    9
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    of the statute as a whole.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Univ. of Tex. Sw. Med. Ctr. v. Nassar,
    
    570 U.S. 338
    , 353 (2013)) (cleaned up). If that holistic reading of the statute
    settles the matter, Chevron ends: we “must give effect to the unambiguously
    expressed intent of Congress.” Chevron, 
    467 U.S. at 843
    . On the other hand,
    if the statute is “truly ambiguous” on the question, Kisor, 
    139 S. Ct. at 2415
    ,
    we proceed to step two, “asking whether the agency’s construction is
    ‘permissible.’” Sw. Elec. Power Co., 920 F.3d at 1014 (quoting Chevron, 
    467 U.S. at 843
    ). A permissible construction is one that “reasonabl[y]
    accommodat[es] . . . conflicting policies that were committed to the agency’s
    care by the statute.” Chevron, 
    467 U.S. at 845
     (quoting United States v.
    Shimer, 
    367 U.S. 374
    , 382 (1961)).
    III.
    We first ask whether the Magnuson-Stevens Act unambiguously
    precludes the agency from creating an aquaculture regime. The answer is yes.
    Chevron step one is thus the only step we need take to resolve this appeal.
    A.
    We usually start with the text, but more telling here is the Act’s lack
    of text. As far as aquaculture, the Magnuson-Stevens Act is a textual dead
    zone: the original Act does not mention aquaculture or fish farming at all.11
    More to the point, the Act’s provisions defining the agency’s regulatory
    power say nothing about creating or administering an aquaculture or fish
    farming regime. Cf., e.g., 
    16 U.S.C. §§ 1802
    , 1854, 1855. The agency
    concedes this but asks us to treat the chasm as a mere “gap” for it to fill. That
    is, the agency argues it has power to regulate aquaculture because the Act
    11
    Later amendments contain a few references to aquaculture. We explain below
    why those references actually support our holding.
    10
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    “do[es] not unambiguously express Congress’s intent to prohibit the
    regulation of aquaculture.”
    This nothing-equals-something argument is barred by our precedent.
    In Texas v. United States, we held the Immigration and Naturalization Act
    (“INA”) unambiguously foreclosed the Department of Homeland
    Security’s (“DHS”) Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and Lawful
    Permanent Residents (“DAPA”). 
    809 F.3d 134
    , 186 (5th Cir. 2015), aff’d by
    equally divided Court, 
    136 S. Ct. 2271
     (2016). Acknowledging that many of
    DAPA’s provisions were not expressly foreclosed by the INA, we still
    rejected the argument that “congressional silence has conferred on DHS the
    power to act.” 
    Id.
     Chevron step two is not implicated, we said, merely because
    “a statute does not expressly negate the existence of a claimed administrative
    power.” 
    Id. at 186
     (quoting Ethyl Corp. v. EPA, 
    51 F.3d 1053
    , 1060 (D.C. Cir.
    1995)) (emphasis in original). “Were courts to presume a delegation of power
    absent an express withholding of such power,” we explained, “agencies would
    enjoy virtually limitless hegemony, a result plainly out of keeping with
    Chevron and quite likely with the Constitution as well.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Ethyl, 
    51 F.3d at 1060
    ).12
    Similarly, in Ethyl, on which we relied in Texas, the D.C. Circuit
    rejected EPA’s construction of a provision of the Clean Air Act (“CAA”).
    
    51 F.3d at 1054
    . The CAA prohibits fuel additives but directs EPA to waive
    the prohibition for additives that do not interfere with a vehicle’s emissions-
    control systems. 
    Id.
     (citing 
    42 U.S.C. § 7545
    (f)(4)). EPA determined the
    12
    See also Contender Farms, L.L.P. v. U.S. Dep’t of Agric., 
    779 F.3d 258
    , 269 (5th
    Cir. 2015) (“[A]n administrative agency does not receive deference under Chevron merely
    by demonstrating that ‘a statute does not expressly negate the existence of a claimed
    administrative power . . . .’” (quoting Ry. Labor Executives’ Ass’n v. Nat’l Mediation Bd.,
    
    29 F.3d 655
    , 671 (D.C. Cir. 1994) (en banc) (emphasis in original)).
    11
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    petitioner had satisfied that criterion but denied waiver, imagining it could
    “consider other factors” in its waiver decision, including public health. 
    Id.
    (citation omitted). The agency argued that because the emissions provision
    did not mention public health, “Congress ha[d] not directly spoken on the
    issue of whether [EPA] may consider the public health implications of fuel
    additives before granting or denying a . . . waiver.” 
    Id.
     The D.C. Circuit set
    aside the decision, rejecting “the notion that if Congress has not mentioned
    public health in [the additive provision], then Congress is ‘silent or
    ambiguous’ as to that issue” for Chevron purposes. Id. at 1070 (quoting
    Chevron, 
    467 U.S. at 843
    ). The provision was not “ambiguously worded”
    and did not “direct the Agency to adopt implementing regulations” to
    determine its meaning. 
    Id.
     “Rather, the statutory waiver provision
    unambiguously expresse[d] Congress’s intent that the [EPA] consider a fuel
    additive’s effects on vehicles meeting emission standards.” Id.13
    Here, NMFS’s argument parallels DHS’s in Texas and EPA’s in
    Ethyl. The agency claims, not that Act affirmatively empowers it to regulate
    aquaculture, but that the Act fails to “express[] Congress’s unambiguous
    intent to foreclose the regulation of aquaculture.” As Texas and Ethyl teach,
    this argument gets Chevron backwards. “It is only legislative intent to delegate
    such authority that entitles an agency to advance its own statutory
    construction for review under the deferential second prong of Chevron.”
    Ethyl, 
    51 F.3d at 1060
     (quoting Nat. Res. Defense Council v. Reilly, 
    983 F.2d 259
    , 266 (D.C. Cir. 1993)) (cleaned up); see also Am. Bus Ass’n v. Slater, 
    231 F.3d 1
    , 9 (D.C. Cir. 2000) (Sentelle, J., concurring) (“In order for there to be
    13
    Accord Motion Picture Ass’n of Am., Inc. v. FCC, 
    309 F.3d 796
    , 805 (D.C. Cir.
    2002) (rejecting as “entirely untenable” agency position that adopting certain rules “is
    permissible because Congress did not expressly foreclose the possibility” (citing Ry. Labor
    Executives’ Ass’n, 
    29 F.3d at 671
    )).
    12
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    an ambiguous grant of power, there must be a grant of power in the first
    instance.”). Instead of identifying any intent to delegate authority here, the
    agency can claim only that Congress did not withhold the power the agency
    now wishes to wield. Once again, this is the argument that presumes power
    given if not excluded. We have resisted that siren song before, see Texas, 809
    F.3d at 186, and we again decline to be seduced.
    Fond of animal metaphors, courts like to say “Congress does not ‘hide
    elephants in mouseholes.’” Chamber of Commerce v. U.S. Dep’t of Labor, 
    885 F.3d 360
    , 376 (5th Cir. 2018) (quoting Whitman v. Am. Trucking Ass’ns, Inc.,
    
    531 U.S. 457
    , 468 (2001)). The agency’s argument here is all elephant and no
    mousehole. It asks us to believe Congress authorized it to create and regulate
    an elaborate industry the statute does not even mention. Because we cannot
    suspend our disbelief that high, we reject the agency’s position.
    B.
    Unable to land support for its interpretation in the words of the Act,
    the agency goes angling for ambiguity. It argues the Act’s text is sufficiently
    open-ended to give it leeway to create an aquaculture regime. See, e.g., Cuozzo
    Speed Technologies, LLC v. Lee, 
    136 S. Ct. 2131
    , 2142 (2016) (explaining,
    “where a statute leaves a ‘gap’ or is ‘ambiguous,’ we typically interpret it as
    granting the agency leeway” to regulate (quoting United States v. Mead Corp.,
    
    533 U.S. 218
    , 229 (2001) (cleaned up)). The agency fixes on the word
    “harvesting” in the definition of “fishing.” See 
    16 U.S.C. § 1802
    (16)
    (“fishing” means “the catching, taking, or harvesting of fish”). Recall that
    the Act empowers councils to regulate “fisheries,” 
    id.
     § 1852(a)(1)(E),
    whose definition includes “fishing” for stocks of fish, id. § 1802(13)(B). The
    agency contends the word “harvesting” is roomy enough to include
    13
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    aquaculture, because it may mean gathering or reaping a crop.14 The crop
    reaped from an aquaculture “fishery,” we are told, would be the farmed fish.
    The district court correctly rejected this argument.
    To address the agency’s argument, we focus first on the words of the
    definition itself—the “catching, taking, or harvesting of fish.” Infra
    III(B)(1). We then situate that definition within the Act’s broader structure.
    Infra III(B)(2). Through either lens, the agency’s implausible reading of the
    definition of “fishing” to encompass aquaculture does not fall “within the
    range of meanings that could be plausibly attributed to the relevant statutory
    language.” Sw. Elec. Power Co., 920 F.3d at 1024 (quoting Richard J.
    Pierce, Jr., Administrative Law Treatise § 3.6).
    1.
    First, the words. The agency puts far more weight on “harvesting” in
    § 1802(16) than it can bear. It argues that one meaning of the term
    (“gathering a crop”) quietly opens the door to an elaborate regime of farming
    fish for “harvest.”
    That is not how to read statutes. As the district court reasoned, far
    better to read “harvesting” as synonymous with the adjacent terms
    “catching” and “taking.” See, e.g., United States v. Buluc, 
    930 F.3d 383
    , 390
    (5th Cir. 2019) (discussing noscitur a sociis or “associated-words” canon
    under which a “string of statutory terms . . . should be given related
    meaning” (quoting S.D. Warren Co. v. Me. Bd. of Envtl. Prot., 
    547 U.S. 370
    ,
    14
    See, e.g., Oxford             English        Dictionary, harvest, v.,
    https://tinyurl.com/y9ssjdo4 (last visited June 23, 2020) (defining “harvest” as “[t]o reap
    and gather in” a “ripe crop”).
    14
    Case: 19-30006         Document: 00515515221               Page: 15        Date Filed: 08/04/2020
    No. 19-30006
    378 (2006))).15 “Catching” and “taking” both mean “seizing” or
    “capturing” an organism—here, fish.16 As the district court put it, these
    terms “more appropriately describe traditional fishing activities,” and so
    “harvesting” more likely “refer[s] only to the traditional fishing of wild
    fish.” One dictionary entry does not override a term’s surrounding context.
    The reverse is true: a word with “many dictionary definitions . . . must draw
    its meaning from its context.” Kucana v. Holder, 
    558 U.S. 233
    , 245 (2010)
    (cleaned up).17 “Harvesting” may also mean “[t]o kill or remove wild
    18
    animals” from their habitat.               Linking the term with “catching” and
    “taking” in § 1802(16) points to that meaning rather than to “gathering a
    crop.”
    The agency objects to this use of the associated-words canon, arguing
    the definition’s “structure” shows the three terms were not meant to have
    similar meaning. The agency does not explain why this is so. All the canon
    requires is an “association” or “gathering” of terms that “have some quality
    15
    See also Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law 195
    (2012) (the canon advises that “words grouped in a list should be given related meanings”
    (quoting Third Nat’l Bank in Nashville v. Impac Ltd., 
    432 U.S. 312
    , 322 (1977))).
    16
    See Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 351 (1986)
    (defining “catching” as “to capture or seize”); id. at 2329 (defining “take” as “to seize or
    capture physically”).
    17
    See also Kirtseang v. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 
    568 U.S. 519
    , 531 (2013) (same);
    Ardestani v. INS, 
    502 U.S. 129
    , 135 (1991) (same); see generally SCALIA & GARNER at 418
    (whereas a dictionary definition “states the core meanings of a term,” it “cannot delineate
    the periphery” and readers must “use the context in which a given word appears to
    determine its aptest, most likely sense”).
    18
    Oxford English Dictionary, harvest, v., https://tinyurl.com/y9ssjdo4
    (last visited June 23, 2020); see also Merriam-Webster Dictionary, harvest, v.,
    https://tinyurl.com/yc7nkfa9 (last visited June 23, 2020) (defining “to harvest” as “to
    gather, catch, hunt, or kill (salmon, oysters, deer, etc.) for human use, sport, or population
    control”) (second definition).
    15
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    in common.” See Buluc, 930 F.3d at 390–91 (quoting S.D. Warren Co., 547
    U.S. at 379–80; Scalia & Garner at 196 (2012)). When referring to
    “fish,” the terms have a common meaning.19 For instance, federal courts
    often use the terms “catch,” “take,” and “harvest” interchangeably when
    discussing fish. See, e.g., Washington v. Wash. State Commercial Passenger
    Fishing Vessel Ass’n, 
    443 U.S. 658
    , 663, 664 (1979) (referring to migrating
    salmon that would be “caught or ‘harvested,’” as well as “tak[en],” by
    fishermen).20 Indeed, in other provisions Magnuson-Stevens itself uses the
    term “harvest” as synonymous with a “catch” of fish.21
    19
    For that reason, the agency’s reliance on Graham County Soil & Water
    Conservation District v. United States, 
    559 U.S. 280
     (2010), is mistaken. Graham County
    declined to apply the canon to make the phrase “congressional, administrative, or GAO”
    in the False Claims Act mean “congressional, federal administrative, or GAO.” 
    559 U.S. at 286
     (quoting 
    31 U.S.C. § 3730
    (e)(4)(A)). In that case, however, the listed words—unlike
    those before us—were “quite distinct from each other” and “too disparate” to trigger the
    canon. 
    Id. at 288, 289
    . The district court properly relied on Jarecki v. G.D. Searle & Co. for
    the proposition that while the noscitur a sociis canon is not “inescapable,” it is “often wisely
    applied where a word is capable of many meanings in order to avoid the giving of
    unintended breadth to the Acts of Congress.” 
    367 U.S. 303
    , 307 (1961). This is just such a
    situation: the canon saves the definition of “fishing” from a construction that would
    drastically (and, as discussed in the next section, awkwardly) expand the Act.
    20
    See also Yates v. United States, 
    574 U.S. 528
    , 531 (2015) (plurality op.) (“John
    Yates, a commercial fisherman, caught undersized red grouper in federal waters in the Gulf
    of Mexico. To prevent federal authorities from confirming that he had harvested undersized
    fish, Yates ordered a crew member to toss the suspect catch into the sea.”); Douglas v.
    Seacoast Prods., Inc., 
    431 U.S. 265
    , 269 n.3 (1977) (discussing the U.S. menhaden “fishery”
    and interchangeably using the terms “catch,” “harvest,” “taken,” and “caught”);
    Trawler Diane Marie, Inc. v. Kantor, 
    91 F.3d 134
     (4th Cir. 1996) (Table) (“With the
    renouncement of its Alaskan registration, the MR. BIG . . . could harvest as many scallops
    as it could catch and carry.”) (emphases added).
    21
    See, e.g., 
    16 U.S.C. § 1802
    (23) (defining “individual fishing quota” as a “limited
    access system to harvest a quantity of fish, expressed by . . . a percentage of the total
    allowable catch of a fishery” (emphases added)); 
    id.
     § 1802(26) (same); id. § 1821(h)(2)(A)
    (referring to “a situation where a fleet of harvesting vessels transfers its catch . . . to another
    vessel” (emphases added)); id. § 1855(i)(1)(B)(i) (referring to “the annual percentage of
    16
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    The agency also objects that the district court wrongly injected the
    concept of “traditional fishing of wild fish” into the Act. That is a puzzling
    objection, given one of the Act’s goals is to remedy the “overfishing of
    fishery resources” caused by “[c]ommercial and recreational fishing,” as
    well as “the activities of massive foreign fishing fleets.” 
    16 U.S.C. § 1801
    (3).22 To us, this sounds like concern over “traditional fishing of wild
    fish.” In any event, the agency misunderstands the district court’s rationale.
    The court used the phrase “traditional fishing of wild fish” merely to
    contrast with “farming of fish.” Specifically, it reasoned that “catching” and
    “taking” are terms that “describe traditional fishing activities and would be
    awkward in reference to the farming of fish.” Just so, the term “harvesting
    should be read similarly to refer only to the traditional fishing of wild fish.”
    This is a straightforward—and correct—use of the associated-words canon
    to pin down the most likely meaning of “harvesting.”23
    the total allowable catch, guideline harvest level, or other annual catch limit” (emphases
    added)); 
    id.
     § 1881a(e)(2)(B) (Secretary may structure private fishery surveys “by
    permitting the contractor to harvest on a subsequent voyage and retain for sale a portion of
    the allowable catch of the surveyed fishery” (emphases added)); id. § 1881(a)(e)(2)(C)
    (same).
    22
    The Act contains numerous provisions that unmistakably refer to matters
    associated with the “traditional fishing of wild fish.” See, e.g., id. § 1853(a)(1) (requiring
    FMP to be “applicable to foreign fishing and fishing by vessels of the United States”); id.
    § 1853(a)(2) (requiring FMP to “contain a description of the fishery, including . . . the
    number of vessels involved, the type and quantity of fishing gear used, . . . any recreational
    interests in the fishery, and the nature and extent of foreign fishing and Indian treaty fishing
    rights”); id. § 1853(a)(13) (requiring FMP to “include a description of the commercial,
    recreational, and charter fishing sectors which participate in the fishery”).
    23
    For similar reasons, we also disagree with the agency that the district court
    incorrectly limited the Act’s scope to “wild fish.” Again, the court used “wild fish” merely
    to contrast with “farmed fish,” not to address the specific kinds of fish covered by the Act.
    No one contests that the Act defines “fish” broadly to embrace “all other forms of marine
    17
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    The agency further argues that the district court’s interpretation
    slights the term “harvesting,” making it redundant with “catching” and
    “taking.” This invokes the anti-surplusage canon, which encourages courts
    to give effect to “all of [a statute’s] provisions, so that no part will be
    inoperative or superfluous, void or insignificant.” Latiolais v. Huntington
    Ingalls, Inc., 
    951 F.3d 286
    , 294 (5th Cir. 2020) (en banc) (quoting Corley v.
    United States, 
    556 U.S. 303
    , 314 (2009)). But that canon “yields to context,”
    
    id.
     (citation omitted), and we have explained that, in context, the three terms
    are synonymous. Sometimes Congress writes statutes this way, either due to
    a “not uncommon sort of lawyerly iteration,” 
    id.
     (quoting Freeman v. Quicken
    Loans, Inc., 
    566 U.S. 624
    , 635 (2012)), or “out of an abundance of caution,”
    Fort Stewart Sch. v. Fed. Labor Relations Auth., 
    495 U.S. 641
    , 646 (1990). And,
    even on the agency’s reading, the term “harvesting” is no more superfluous
    than “catching” and “taking” are to each other. The bottom line: “If the
    meaning of a text is discernibly redundant, courts should not invent new
    meaning to avoid superfluity at all costs.” Latiolais, 951 F.3d at 294. We
    decline the agency’s invitation to do so here.24
    animal and plant life other than marine mammals and birds.” Id. § 1802(12). That
    definition, however, says nothing about whether the Act opens the door to aquaculture.
    24
    The agency relies on Babbitt v. Sweet Home Chapter of Communities for a Great
    Oregon, which applied the anti-surplusage canon to “take” in the Endangered Species Act
    (“ESA”). 
    515 U.S. 687
    , 690 (1995). The ESA penalizes “taking” an endangered species,
    defining “take” as “harass, harm, pursue, wound, or kill.” 
    Id.
     (cleaned up). The Secretary
    of the Interior defined “harm” to include modifying a habitat. 
    Id.
     The Court upheld that
    reading, in part because it prevented “harm” from duplicating the other words in the
    definition of “take”. 
    Id. at 698
    . Similarly, it held the D.C. Circuit erred by using noscitur a
    sociis to deny “harm” any “independent meaning.” 
    Id. at 702
    . Sweet Home does not
    support the agency’s position. As relevant here, Sweet Home rejected noscitur a sociis largely
    because “[t]he statutory context of ‘harm’ suggest[ed] that Congress meant that term to
    serve a particular function in the ESA, consistent with, but distinct from, the functions of
    the other verbs used to define ‘take.’” 
    Id. at 702
    . But here nothing suggests “harvesting”
    in 
    16 U.S.C. § 1802
    (16) was meant to carry any more water than “catching” or “taking.”
    18
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    The agency also relies on the breadth of some of the Act’s terms to
    show an expansive meaning of “harvesting.” For example, it cites § 1855(d),
    giving the agency “general responsibility to carry out any fishery
    management plan” and empowering it to “promulgate such regulations . . .
    as may be necessary to discharge such responsibility or to carry out any other
    provision of this chapter.” It also cites language defining “fishery resources”
    to include “any fishery” and “any stock of fish.” 
    16 U.S.C. § 1802
    (15)
    (emphases added). We are unpersuaded. These provisions are like “the
    broad grants of authority” DHS vainly relied on in Texas.25 We refused to
    read such provisions to expand the agency’s power beyond the statute’s
    terms. So too here. The grant of authority to promulgate “necessary”
    regulations cannot expand the scope of the provisions the agency is tasked
    with “carry[ing] out.” 
    Id.
     § 1855(d). And the grant of authority over “any
    fishery” and “any stock of fish,” id. § 1802(15), still depends on whether the
    relevant stock is a “fishery,” which, in turn, turns on the definition of
    “fishing.” As explained, nothing in the definition plausibly suggests the
    agency has been given authority to regulate aquaculture.
    Finally, we point out a more fundamental problem with the agency’s
    position. In 1976, when Magnuson-Stevens was passed, Congress knew what
    aquaculture was and how to confer authority to regulate it. Only four years
    earlier, Congress had amended the Federal Water Pollution Control Act of
    1948 to give EPA authority to regulate “aquaculture project[s].” An Act to
    Amend the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, Pub. L. 92-500, § 318(a), 
    86 Stat. 816
    , 877 (1972), codified at 
    33 U.S.C. § 1328
    (a). Subsequently, in 1992
    25
    See 809 F.3d at 183 (citing 
    6 U.S.C. § 202
    (5) (providing DHS “shall be
    responsible for . . . [e]stablishing national immigration enforcement policies and
    priorities”), and 
    8 U.S.C. § 1103
    (a)(3) (providing Secretary “shall establish such
    regulations . . . and perform such other acts as he deems necessary for carrying out his
    authority under the provisions of this chapter”)).
    19
    Case: 19-30006         Document: 00515515221               Page: 20       Date Filed: 08/04/2020
    No. 19-30006
    and 2007, Congress even added three specific references in parts of
    Magnuson-Stevens to “aquaculture” and “fish farms.”26 As the district
    court concluded, while these “discrete and immaterial provisions” do not
    purport to empower NFMS to regulate aquaculture, they do show that
    Congress knows how to legislate on the subject when it wishes. See, e.g.,
    Russello v. United States, 
    464 U.S. 16
    , 23 (1983) (“[W]here Congress includes
    particular language in one section of a statute but omits it in another, it is
    presumed that Congress acts intentionally and purposely.” (cleaned up)).27
    In light of that, the agency’s position appears all the more unfathomable.
    From one word—“harvesting”—the agency would conjure up authority
    over aquaculture that Congress knew how to give, but never gave. That does
    not hold water.
    2.
    So far, we have seen that the definition of “fishing” in § 1802(16), on
    its own terms, forecloses the agency’s interpretation. That result is
    reinforced when we read the definition “in context and with reference to the
    26
    In 1992, Congress provided resources “to restore overfished New England
    groundfish stocks through aquaculture or hatchery programs.” Pub. L. No. 102-567,
    § 902(a), 
    106 Stat. 4270
    , 4318 (1992), codified at 
    16 U.S.C. § 1863
    (a)(E). In 2007, Congress
    established programs “to educate and inform consumers about the quality and
    sustainability of wild fish or fish products farmed through responsible aquaculture.” Pub.
    L. No. 109-479, § 109, 
    120 Stat. 3575
    , 3595 (2007), codified at 
    16 U.S.C. §§ 1855
    (j)(1)–(2).
    The same amendment delineated the status of “an individual who owns or operates a fish
    farm outside of the United States.” 
    Id.
     § 103(j), 120 Stat. at 3583, codified at 
    16 U.S.C. § 1852
    (d)(2)(D)(iii).
    27
    The agency’s rejoinder is unpersuasive. It claims there is no evidence “that
    Congress actually considered the question of NMFS’s regulating aquaculture” and
    rejected that possibility. See Coastal Conservation Ass’n v. U.S. Dep’t of Commerce, 
    846 F.3d 99
    , 106 (5th Cir. 2017) (negative-implication canon does not apply “unless it is fair to
    suppose that Congress considered the unnamed possibility and meant to say no to it”). But
    the 1972 Federal Water Pollution Control Act amendment is precisely such evidence.
    20
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    larger statutory scheme.” Sw. Elec. Power Co., 920 F.3d at 1024 (citing FDA
    v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., 
    529 U.S. 120
    , 132 (2000)).28 As the
    district court pointed out, there are “various ways in which [the Act] is
    nonsensical when applied to aquaculture.” That is correct. When
    aquaculture is viewed as a “fishery,” some of the Act’s core requirements
    stop making sense. We will not defer to an agency interpretation that is
    “inconsistent with the design and structure of the statute as a whole.” Util.
    Air Regulatory Grp. v. EPA, 
    573 U.S. 302
    , 321 (2014) (citation omitted).
    The Rule’s innovation is to equate an “aquaculture facility” with a
    “fishery” under the Act.29 But the Act makes demands on a fishery that
    cannot apply to an aquaculture facility. Importantly, each fishery must have
    a plan (the “FMP”) with measures designed “for the conservation and
    management of the fishery, [and] to prevent overfishing and rebuild overfished
    stocks.” 
    16 U.S.C. § 1853
    (a)(1)(A) (emphases added). Easy to see how this
    applies to a typical fishery: the FMP must have measures, like annual catch
    limits, that will prevent taking too many fish out of the relevant fishery.30 But
    try applying this idea to aquaculture, and your line will become hopelessly
    snarled. “Since aquaculture is essentially a farming operation,” the Rule tells
    us, “all animals cultured are intended for harvest and cannot undergo
    28
    See also, e.g., United States v. Transocean Deepwater Drilling, Inc., 
    767 F.3d 485
    ,
    496 (5th Cir. 2014) (we interpret statutes by “looking at the full text of the statute, rather
    than one isolated clause, along with the statute’s structure and its public safety purpose”).
    29
    See, e.g., 81 Fed. Reg. at 1762 (Rule establishes a program for managing an
    “aquaculture facility” in the Gulf of Mexico); id. (“The aquaculture facility is managed
    under the FMP.”); id. (Rule authorizes a “Gulf aquaculture permit” that “authorizes
    operation of an offshore aquaculture facility in the Gulf EEZ”).
    30
    See, e.g., International Fisheries; Pacific Tuna Fisheries; 2019 and 2020
    Commercial Fishing Restrictions for Pacific Bluefin Tuna in the Eastern Pacific Ocean, 
    84 Fed. Reg. 18,409
     (May 1, 2019) (establishing annual catch limits on Pacific bluefin tuna),
    codified at 50 C.F.R. pt. 300.
    21
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    overfishing or become overfished.” 81 Fed. Reg. at 1771 (emphasis added).31
    Other provisions of the Act are also geared to prevent “overfishing” a
    fishery,32 including one of the national standards every FMP must honor.33
    Equating a “fishery” with an aquaculture facility effectively erases these
    provisions from the Act.34
    The agency responds that aquaculture may help mitigate overfishing
    with respect to “other stocks of fish”—that is, other fisheries. That is
    mistaken. The Act specifies when an FMP must address the specific fishery
    that is the subject of the plan. See generally 
    16 U.S.C. §§ 1853
    (a)(1)(A), (a)(2),
    (3), (5)–(7), (10), (11), (13)–(15) (applying FMP requirements to “the
    fishery” in question). As to overfishing, an FMP must “specify objective and
    measurable criteria for identifying when the fishery to which the plan applies is
    overfished,” and must “establish a mechanism for specifying annual catch
    31
    See also 81 Fed. Reg. at 1784 (stating “it is not possible to overharvest cultured
    animals”).
    32
    See, e.g., 
    16 U.S.C. § 1853
    (a)(10) (plan must specify criteria “for identifying
    when the fishery to which the plan applies is overfished,” and, “in the case of a fishery which
    the Council or the Secretary has determined is approaching an overfished condition or is
    overfished, contain conservation and management measures to prevent overfishing or end
    overfishing and rebuild the fishery”); 
    id.
     § 1853(a)(15) (plan must have a “mechanism for
    specifying annual catch limits . . . at a level such that overfishing does not occur in the
    fishery” (emphases added)).
    33
    See id. § 1851(a)(1) (requiring any FMP, “and any regulation promulgated to
    implement such plan,” to be consistent with national standards including “[c]onservation
    and management measures [that] shall prevent overfishing” (emphasis added)).
    34
    Same for the Act’s requiring an FMP to assess a fishery’s “maximum sustainable
    yield and optimum yield.” See 
    16 U.S.C. §§ 1853
    (a)(3), 1851(a)(1). An aquaculture
    facility’s “yield” is by definition 100% because—again, as the Rule itself states—“all
    animals cultured are intended for harvest.” 81 Fed. Reg. at 1770 (emphasis added). So, it
    makes no sense to talk about the “maximum sustainable yield” or “optimum yield” from
    an aquaculture facility. Cf. 
    16 U.S.C. § 1802
    (33) (defining “optimum,” in part, as referring
    to “an overfished industry”).
    22
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    limits . . . at a level such that overfishing does not occur in the fishery.” 
    Id.
    § 1853(a)(10), (15) (emphases added).35 Here, the regulated fishery includes
    only aquaculture facilities, see 81 Fed. Reg. at 1762, and the overfishing
    requirements apply to those “fisheries,” not others.36
    The agency also invokes its general authority under the Act to
    “prescribe such other measures, requirements, or conditions and restrictions
    as are determined to be necessary and appropriate for the conservation and
    management of the fishery.” 
    16 U.S.C. § 1853
    (b)(14). It claims regulating
    aquaculture is “necessary and appropriate” to conserve fishing resources,
    perhaps by diminishing demand on wild fisheries. But, as discussed already,
    the Act’s pertinent conservation provisions apply to each FMP and per fishery.
    In other words, the Act requires each management plan to employ
    conservation techniques for the given fishery, not for all fisheries or the
    ecosystem as a whole. Accordingly, the Act defines “fishery” as “one or
    more stocks of fish which can be treated as a unit for purposes of conservation and
    management.” 
    Id.
     § 1802(13) (emphasis added). Here, the Rule conceives all
    Gulf aquaculture as one “fishery,” 81 Fed. Reg. at 1762, such that the Act’s
    35
    When the Act requires an FMP to consider impacts on other fisheries, it says so.
    See id. § 1853(a)(9)(B) (plan must include an impact statement analyzing likely effects on,
    inter alia, “participants in the fisheries conducted in adjacent areas under the authority of
    another Council”). Such references to other fisheries do not appear in the Act’s overfishing
    measures discussed above.
    36
    The agency cites no textual basis showing that one fishery can be regulated to
    prevent overfishing in another fishery. It quotes only the definition of “conservation and
    management,” which refers to measures for “rebuilding, restoring, or maintaining[] any
    fishery resource and the marine environment.” Id. § 1802(5)(A) (emphasis added). But the
    word “any” merely confirms that conservation measures include all of the “fishery
    resources” in § 1802(15). In any event, the agency does not explain how one word in the
    definition of “conservation and management” overrides the Act’s express requirements
    that overfishing measures apply to the specific regulated fishery. See, e.g., id. § 1802(a)(10)
    (referring to overfishing criteria applicable to “the fishery to which the plan applies”).
    23
    Case: 19-30006         Document: 00515515221              Page: 24       Date Filed: 08/04/2020
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    required conservation techniques apply only to that “fishery,” not all Gulf
    fishing or all fishing under the Act’s ambit.
    Finally, we note the agency itself has conceded the Act fits poorly with
    aquaculture. In the Rule’s environmental impact statement, NMFS candidly
    stated that “[t]he [Act] was . . . not explicitly written for managing at sea fish
    farming or aquaculture operations.” Accordingly, “[m]any of the principles
    and concepts that guide wild stock management under the [Act] are either of
    little utility or not generally applicable to the management of aquaculture
    operations” (emphasis added).37 The agency thus admitted that “[m]any”
    of the Act’s “legal requirements do not fit well or are difficult to satisfy with
    respect to aquaculture, thereby making them seem less useful or even
    unnecessary.” “Despite this lack of conceptual similarity,” the agency
    nonetheless insisted that “offshore aquaculture falls within the realm of
    activities subject to regulatory control under the [Act] and therefore must be
    accommodated within the existing legal framework.” This was the district
    court’s reaction, which we find apt:
    Contrary to the NMFS’s position, this Court does not view the
    incompatibility of the requirements of the [Magnuson-Stevens
    Act] with aquaculture operations as an unfortunate
    happenstance, but rather, as a clear indication that Congress
    did not intend for the [Act] to grant NMFS the authority to
    regulate aquaculture.38
    ***
    37
    Accord 81 Fed. Reg. at 1762 (“[M]any of the principles and concepts that guide
    wild stock management are not generally applicable to the management of an aquaculture
    fishery.”).
    38
    Given our conclusion that the Act’s text and structure foreclose the agency’s
    interpretation, we need not reach the district court’s conclusion that the Act’s legislative
    history also fails to support the agency’s position.
    24
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    The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
    25
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    Stephen A. Higginson, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    Through     the   Magnuson-Stevens       Fishery     Conservation    and
    Management Act of 1976 (Magnuson Act) and its national standards, 
    16 U.S.C. §§ 1801
    –1882, Congress delegated to the Commerce Department
    expansive authority to regulate, manage, and conserve fish in the exclusive
    economic zone. Specifically, the Commerce Department’s National Marine
    Fisheries Service (NMFS), in conjunction with eight independent regional
    fishery management councils, “will exercise . . . exclusive fishery
    management authority over all fish, and all Continental Shelf fishery resources,
    within the exclusive economic zone.” § 1811(a) (emphasis added); see also §§
    1851, 1854–55; see generally Oregon Trollers Ass’n v. Gutierrez, 
    452 F.3d 1104
    ,
    1008 (9th Cir. 2006); Kramer v. Mosbacher, 
    878 F.2d 134
    , 135 (4th Cir. 1989).
    Congress provided that this expansive authority should be used to “conserve
    and manage the fishery resources found off the coasts of the United States . .
    . by . . . exploring, exploiting, conserving, and managing all fish,” “promote
    domestic commercial and recreational fishing under sound conservation and
    management principles,” and “encourage the development by the United
    States fishing industry of fisheries which are currently underutilized or not
    utilized by United States fishermen.” § 1801(b)(1), (3), (6) (emphasis
    added).
    In turn, the Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council, comprised
    of members from the five Gulf states, eleven of whom are nominated by those
    states’ governors, spent six years discussing offshore aquaculture before
    adopting the Plan for Regulating Offshore Marine Aquaculture in the Gulf of
    Mexico. That plan, which went into effect in 2009, regulates and permits
    greatly enhanced takes of fish through the operation of offshore structures
    26
    Case: 19-30006         Document: 00515515221               Page: 27       Date Filed: 08/04/2020
    No. 19-30006
    and nets wherein fish are bred and from which fish are harvested.1
    Thereafter, in 2014, NMFS published its Proposed Rule to implement the
    plan; and, in January 2016, its Final Rule. See generally 81 Fed Reg. 1762 (Jan.
    13, 2016).
    I would uphold NMFS’s decision that it may regulate how fish are
    reared and harvested in the exclusive economic zone because this authority
    follows from Congress’s expansive grant of authority to conserve and manage
    offshore “fishery resources,” without distinguishing between methods of
    fishing or types of fish. See § 1802(15) (defining “fishery resource” as “any
    fishery, any stock of fish, any species of fish, and any habitat of fish”
    (emphasis added)).
    As the majority notes, Congress’s statutory delegation to NMFS does
    not delimit “aquaculture” as an industry distinct from other types of fishing.
    I would say that is because fishing, from time immemorial, has involved
    ingenious varieties of lines, pots, cages, nets and enclosures. The Magnuson
    Act responsibility given to NMFS—to conserve, maintain, and manage
    offshore fisheries—comprehends not just familiar mariculture methods like
    mussel lines and lobster traps, see, e.g., Duckworth v. United States ex rel.
    Locke, 
    705 F. Supp. 2d 30
    , 45–46 (D.D.C. 2010), fish hatcheries, see, e.g.,
    Gutierrez, 
    452 F.3d at 1109
    , 1117–19, and towed mesh cages capable of
    growing up to 2,000 fish, see Kahea v. NMFS, 
    2012 WL 1537442
    , at *8–*10
    (D. Haw. 2012), affirmed in relevant part, 544 F. App’x 675 (9th Cir. 2013),
    but also the more modern and enlarged methods contemplated by the Final
    Rule.
    1
    The timing of the plan was not coincidental. The United States had become
    deeply reliant on imported seafood to meet demand. Kristen L. Johns, Note, Farm Fishing
    Holes: Gaps in Federal Regulation of Offshore Aquaculture, 86 S. CAL. L. REV. 681, 683 (2013)
    (observing that, in 2011, the United States imported 91% of its seafood supply).
    27
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    No. 19-30006
    Regardless, even if the Magnuson Act’s capacious regulatory grant
    does not unequivocally comprehend aquaculture, I would say it is at least
    ambiguous.2 Indeed, to read out ambiguity, I would have to say either, as
    appellees do, that fish farming is not “fishing,” or, as the district court did,
    that “fishing” only means what it meant “traditionally” when the Magnuson
    Act was passed in 1976, assertedly the capture of “wild” fish. But cf. Bostock
    v. Clayton Cty., 
    140 S. Ct. 1731
    , 1745 (2020) (“[C]ontentions about what . . .
    the law was meant to do, or should do, [do not] allow us to ignore the law as
    it is.”).
    Each of these understandings is plausible but neither is an
    unambiguously correct interpretation of the statutory language. That is
    because Congress provided an expansive definition of “fishing,” explicitly
    including “any operations at sea in support of” “any other activity which can
    reasonably be expected to result in the catching, taking, or harvesting of fish.”
    § 1802(16) (emphasis added).3 Spawning, raising, and then taking or
    2
    The majority classifies NMFS’s position as “nothing-equals-something.” But I
    understand NMFS to be relying on the broad language in the statute and the broad purposes
    of the statute to argue—I think convincingly—that it is at least ambiguous whether the
    plain language of the statute encompasses aquaculture. See Envtl. Integrity Project v. EPA,
    
    960 F.3d 236
    , 246–47 (5th Cir. 2020) (“Under Chevron, we defer to an agency’s
    interpretation when it reasonably resolves a genuine statutory ambiguity.”). NMFS argues
    separately against what it perceives to be “nothing-equals-something” analysis where
    courts insert limiters like “wild” or “traditional” onto Congress’s “any/all” statutory
    grant.
    3
    The majority applies the noscitur a sociis canon of statutory interpretation to
    conclude that “harvesting” is “synonymous with” “catching” and “taking.” In applying
    the noscitur a sociis canon, courts should focus on the “most general quality—the least
    common denominator, so to speak—relevant to the context.” Antonin Scalia &
    Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law 196 (2012). As I read the statute, the least
    common denominator is extraction of “any fish” from the water. Both “harvest” and
    “take” could be used to describe aquaculture, where fish are raised in offshore enclosures
    28
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    No. 19-30006
    harvesting fish from offshore nets, pens, or other enclosures are “operations
    at sea” supporting “any . . . activity” that results in the taking or harvesting
    of fish. See 
    id.
    In fact, ambiguity enters only when one considers the majority’s
    points that other provisions of the Act, separate and distinct from NMFS’s
    authorizing text, may be inapt when applied to modern methods of rearing
    and harvesting fish in and from enclosed offshore waters. These points are
    well taken,4 but do not unambiguously resolve the issue. See City of Dallas v.
    F.C.C., 
    118 F.3d 393
    , 395 (5th Cir. 1997) (holding that a court must “defer to
    the agency’s reasonable construction” of a statute if there is ambiguity after
    applying all of the traditional tools of interpretation, including analysis of the
    “design of the statute as a whole”).
    Therefore, applying Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Nat. Res. Def. Council,
    Inc., 
    467 U.S. 837
     (1984), I would defer to the agency’s reasonable
    interpretation. Envtl. Integrity Project v. EPA, 
    960 F.3d 236
    , 246–47 (5th Cir.
    2020). Interpreting the Magnuson Act to permit regulation of aquaculture is
    reasonable. Aquaculture fits within the Act’s broad definitions of “fishery
    resources” and “fishing,” and regulating aquaculture fits within the Act’s
    mandate to manage and conserve “all fish, and . . . fishery resources, within
    the exclusive economic zone.” §§ 1802(15)–(16), 1811(a).
    ***
    and then “harvested” or “taken” from those enclosures, so the noscitur a sociis canon—
    in my view—does not limit the appropriate interpretation of “harvest” to wild fish.
    4
    See Read Porter & Rebecca Kihslinger, Federal Environmental Permitting of
    Offshore Aquaculture: Coverage and Challenges, 45 ENVTL. L. REP. NEWS & ANALYSIS
    10875, 10881 (2015).
    29
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    No. 19-30006
    Congress’s clear purpose to conserve and maintain our nation’s
    offshore fisheries, coupled with its explicit and capacious grant of authority
    over “all fish,” lead me to conclude that modern aquaculture methods of
    fishing fit vitally in, not out of, the Magnuson Act regime.5 Alternatively, I
    would find that the statutory grant of authority is at least open on that point,
    obliging us to defer to the NMFS’s reasonable interpretation before
    invalidating over a decade of state and federal officials’ efforts, along with
    private experts, to draft a “fishery management” plan that reconciles myriad
    commercial, environmental, and recreational interests.6
    5
    Multiple other federal agencies regulate aquaculture, including the Army Corps
    of Engineers, the Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
    and the Department of Agriculture. Scholars have noted, however, that “the [Magnuson
    Act] is an important link in protecting the environment from the impacts of offshore
    aquaculture because it authorizes NMFS to deploy management measure and permit
    conditions . . . that are not adequately addressed by other regulatory programs.” Porter &
    Kihslinger, supra note 4, at 10882.
    6
    Notably, these interests include conservation and management of wild fish, which
    no one disputes as a fundamental purpose of the Magnuson Act. See Porter & Kihslinger,
    supra note 4, at 10882, 10892–93. It would be puzzling if the broad authority to manage and
    conserve wild fish under the Magnuson Act in no way permitted regulation of fish reared
    in, harvested from, and impacting the same waters.
    30
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 19-30006

Filed Date: 8/4/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/5/2020

Authorities (29)

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