Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 67— - AQUATIC NUISANCE PREVENTION AND CONTROL › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - PREVENTION OF UNINTENTIONAL INTRODUCTIONS OF NONINDIGENOUS AQUATIC SPECIES › § 4712
Requires the Task Force and the Secretary to study how ballast water affects U.S. waters and to survey key places. They must check how ballast water exchange changes the number and kinds of native plants and animals in estuaries, oceans, and fresh waters. They must find any areas where exchanging ballast water is safe, and study whether non‑Great Lakes places like Lake Champlain are at risk from invasive species. The Secretary must study whether ships bring in invasive species to U.S. waters (except the Great Lakes), look at how big a problem shipping is, consider ways to control introductions, and see if regional rules or national rules would work better. The Task Force and the Secretary will do surveys of Chesapeake Bay, San Francisco Bay, Honolulu Harbor, and other high‑risk estuaries to learn how invasions happen and how well ballast water rules work. The Columbia River system will get a special survey with local schools and states. Reports on some of these studies were required no later than 18 months after November 29, 1990. The Secretary must keep a national clearinghouse of ballast water data with the Task Force and the Smithsonian. Vessel owners must send the approved ballast water report form (OMB 1625–0069) to the clearinghouse within 6 hours after arriving at a U.S. port, unless the trip stayed inside a single local port zone. One report can cover several discharges in the same port. States can require earlier reports for arrivals. The clearinghouse must share reports with States right away and make the data public in a searchable form within 30 days. By July 1, 2019, and every year after, the Secretary must make a report that analyzes the past two years of data and give it to Congress and the Task Force and post it for the public. The Secretary is urged to work through the International Maritime Organization with other countries. The Under Secretary may fund peer‑reviewed research grants up to $750,000 for Chesapeake Bay, $500,000 for the Gulf of Mexico, $500,000 for the Pacific Coast, $500,000 for the Atlantic Coast, and $750,000 for the San Francisco Bay‑Delta Estuary. Within one year after December 4, 2018, the Secretary must form a working group to share federal and state vessel reporting and enforcement data.
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Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 4712
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 18, 2026
Release point: 119-83