Title 33 › Chapter 50— FEDERAL OCEAN ACIDIFICATION RESEARCH AND MONITORING › § 3705
The Secretary must create and run an ocean acidification program at NOAA to do research, long-term monitoring, coordination, and other work that follows the strategic research plan. The program must support teams from different sciences, use and add to existing ocean observing systems (including national and global assets), and choose monitoring locations to use resources well. It must study ecosystem and social/economic impacts, find ways to adapt and reduce damage, give technical help to vulnerable States, local and Tribal governments, communities, and industries, and include education and public outreach. The program must also coordinate with international science groups, fund research and outreach through competitive grants (which can be done with other agencies), and keep a permanent way for industry, coastal groups, fishery councils, non‑Federal managers, community networks, indigenous groups, and scientists to advise on monitoring needs. The Secretary can use contracts, grants, leases, or cooperative agreements as needed. NOAA must be the lead federal agency coordinating the national response and can make agreements with other agencies, governments, and international partners. NOAA must keep an online information exchange and a public data archive that holds ocean and coastal acidification data from federal research, governments, academics, citizen scientists, industry, voluntary Tribal submissions, and existing federal data. The data should follow standards so it is easy to find, access, combine, and reuse.
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Navigation and Navigable Waters — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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33 U.S.C. § 3705
Title 33 — Navigation and Navigable Waters
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60