Title 33 › Chapter CHAPTER 33A— - MARINE DEBRIS RESEARCH, PREVENTION, AND REDUCTION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - NOAA AND COAST GUARD PROGRAMS › § 1952
Creates a Marine Debris Program inside NOAA to find the sources of ocean trash, measure the problem, stop more debris, clean it up, and reduce harm to sea life, the U.S. economy, and safe navigation. The program must work nationwide and regionally with States, Tribes, and others. It must focus on debris that threatens marine life and boats, help reduce lost fishing gear by researching safer gear and marking systems and by creating nonregulatory incentives, run public outreach and education, and help plan and coordinate responses to "severe marine debris events" (a severe event is declared by the Under Secretary or at a Governor’s request). Plans for severe events must include agency coordination, checks of debris type, amount and path, and estimates of likely impacts on health, navigation, natural resources, tourism, and aquaculture. The program may also push for international action (except for vessel discharges) and give technical help to improve waste systems abroad. In severe events, the program can help with cleanup or other appropriate actions. The program can make cooperative agreements, contracts, and grants to carry out these tasks. Normally Federal grant money cannot pay more than 50 percent of a project’s cost, and non-Federal matching can include in-kind help. The Under Secretary may waive the match rule if applicants truly cannot meet it and the project’s benefit is greater than the public interest in the match. For activities tied to a declared severe event, the Federal share may be 100 percent if outside money was given to the Federal Government for that response, or 75 percent otherwise. Payments or in-kind work under an administrative consent order or judicial consent decree may count as the non-Federal share if authorized, but money from other orders cannot. States, local and Tribal governments, colleges, nonprofits, and businesses with marine debris expertise may apply. The Under Secretary will review, approve or deny proposals, notify applicants, require regular progress reports, and may provide in-kind NOAA support for some contracted projects.
Full Legal Text
Navigation and Navigable Waters — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
33 U.S.C. § 1952
Title 33 — Navigation and Navigable Waters
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73