Title 33 › Chapter CHAPTER 49— - INTEGRATED COASTAL AND OCEAN OBSERVATION SYSTEM › § 3603
The President, through the Council, must set up a National Integrated Coastal and Ocean Observation System. The System must work across the whole country and include federal and non-federal equipment, regional observing networks, systems for observing, modeling, managing, and sharing data, a way to turn observations into useful products, and a research and development program. The research program must cover basic and applied research, new technology testing (including unmanned maritime systems), big computing for models, and improvements for regional weather and ocean forecasts. Federal agencies that run assets must help the System and share data that are not restricted. Non-federal and regional assets must be coordinated by the Interagency Ocean Observation Committee or by regional systems. The Council is the policy and oversight body. It must approve System budgets, coordinate with international observing programs, and push research and technology into operations. The Council must create an Interagency Ocean Observation Committee to make annual and long-term plans, send a coordinated budget to Congress with the President’s budget, set observation priorities and data standards, identify gaps, and, subject to available funding, run competitive grants to move new technologies into use. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is the lead agency. NOAA must run a Program Office to handle daily operations, certify and fund regional observing associations, build and run the System’s data management and communication system, report at least once a year, and help users get real-time products for weather, search and rescue, water quality, and harmful algal bloom alerts. Regional associations must be certified by NOAA, meet standards, gather required data, plan strategically, work with local users, and follow financial audit rules. An advisory committee of experts will advise the Administrator and the Committee; members serve 3-year terms renewable once and must meet at least once each year. Non-federal participants acting under the System are treated as part of NOAA for tort liability, and existing certifications or contracts remain valid.
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Navigation and Navigable Waters — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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33 U.S.C. § 3603
Title 33 — Navigation and Navigable Waters
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73