[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 33, Volume 1]

[Revised as of July 1, 2005]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 33CFR62.21]



[Page 145-147]

 

                TITLE 33--NAVIGATION AND NAVIGABLE WATERS

 

         CHAPTER I--COAST GUARD, DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY

 

PART 62_UNITED STATES AIDS TO NAVIGATION SYSTEM--Table of Contents

 

              Subpart B_The U.S. Aids to Navigation System

 

Sec. 62.21  General.





    (a) The navigable waters of the United States and non-navigable 

State waters after December 31, 2003, are marked to assist navigation 

using the U.S. Aids to Navigation System, a system consistent with the 

International Association of Lighthouse Authorities (IALA) Maritime 

Buoyage System. The IALA Maritime Buoyage System is followed by most of 

the world's maritime nations and will improve maritime safety by 

encouraging conformity in buoyage systems worldwide. IALA buoyage is 

divided into two regions made up of Region A and Region B. All navigable 

waters of the United States follow IALA Region B, except U.S. 

possessions west of the International Date Line and south of 10 degrees 

north latitude, which follow IALA Region A. Lateral aids to navigation 

in Region A vary from those described throughout this Subpart. Non-

lateral aids to navigation are the same as those used in Region B. See 

Sec. 62.25. Appropriate nautical charts and publications should be 

consulted to determine whether the Region A or Region B marking schemes 

are in effect for a given area.

    (b) The U.S. Aids to Navigation System is designed for use with 

nautical charts. Nautical charts portray the physical features of the 

marine environment, including soundings and other submarine features, 

landmarks, and other aids necessary for the proper navigation of a 

vessel. This crucial information cannot be obtained from other sources, 

even ones such as topographic maps, aeronautical charts, or atlases. The 

exact meaning of an aid to navigation may not be clear to the mariner 

unless the appropriate chart is consulted, as the chart illustrates the 

relationship of the individual aid to navigation to channel limits, 

obstructions, hazards to navigation, and to the total aids to navigation 

system.

    (c) The navigator should maintain and consult suitable publications 

and instruments for navigation depending on the vessel's requirements. 

This shipboard equipment is separate from the aids to navigation system, 

but is often



[[Page 146]]



essential to its use. The following publications are available from the 

U.S. Government to assist the navigator:

    (1) The Light List, published by the Coast Guard and available 

through the Government Printing Office or authorized sales agents, lists 

federal and private aids to navigation. It includes all major Federal 

aids to navigation and those private aids to navigation, which have been 

deemed to be important to general navigation, and includes a physical 

description of these aids and their locations.

    (2) The United States Coast Pilot, published by the National Ocean 

Service and available through that agency or authorized nautical chart 

sales agents, supplements the information shown on nautical charts. 

Subjects such as local navigation regulations, channel and anchorage 

peculiarities, dangers, climatalogical data, routes, and port facilities 

are covered.

    (3) Local Notices to Mariners are published by local Coast Guard 

District Commanders. Persons may be placed on the mailing list to 

receive local Notices by contacting the Aids to Navigation and Waterway 

Management Branch of the appropriate Coast Guard District. These notices 

pass information affecting navigation safety. Changes to aids to 

navigation, reported dangers, scheduled construction or other 

disruptions, chart corrections and similar useful marine information is 

made available through this publication.

    (4) The Notice to Mariners is a national publication, similar to the 

Local Notice to Mariners, published by the National Imagery and Mapping 

Agency. The notice may be obtained free of charge from commercial 

maritime sources and, upon request, to Defense Logistics Agency, Defense 

Supply Center Richmond, ATTN: JNB, 8000 Jefferson Davis Highway, 

Richmond, VA 23297-5100 or FAX 804-279-6510, ATTN: Accounts Manager, 

RMF. A letter of justification should be included in the request. This 

publication provides ocean going vessels significant information on 

national and international navigation and safety.

    (5) The mariner should also listen to Coast Guard Broadcast Notices 

to Mariners. These broadcasts update the Local Notice to Mariners with 

more timely information. Mariners should monitor VHF-FM channel 16 to 

locate Coast Guard Marine Information Broadcasts.

    (d) The U.S. Aids to Navigation System is primarily a lateral system 

which employs a simple arrangement of colors, shapes, numbers, and light 

characteristics to mark the limits of navigable routes. This lateral 

system is supplemented by nonlateral aids to navigation where 

appropriate.

    (e) Generally, lateral aids to navigation indicate on which side of 

a vessel an aid to navigation should be passed when the vessel is 

proceeding in the Conventional Direction of Buoyage. Normally, the 

Conventional Direction of Buoyage is the direction in which a vessel 

enters navigable channels from seaward and proceeds towards the head of 

navigation. In the absence of a route leading from seaward, the 

Conventional Direction of Buoyage generally follows a clockwise 

direction around land masses. For example, proceeding southerly along 

the Atlantic Coast, from Florida to Texas along the Gulf Coast, and 

northerly along the Pacific Coast are considered as proceeding in the 

Conventional Direction of Buoyage. In some instances, this direction 

must be arbitrarily assigned. Where doubt exists, the mariner should 

consult charts and other nautical publications.

    (f) Although aids to navigation are maintained to a reasonable 

degree of reliability, the rigors of the marine environment and various 

equipment failures do cause discrepancies on occasion.

    (g) The Coast Guard makes reasonable efforts to inform the navigator 

of known discrepancies, and to correct them within a reasonable period 

of time, depending upon resources available. Occasionally, a temporary 

aid to navigation, which provides different but similar service, is 

deployed until permanent repairs can be made to the original aid. 

Notification of such temporary changes is made through the notice to 

mariners system.

    (h) Mariners should exercise caution when using private aids to 

navigation because private aids are often established to serve the needs 

of specific users rather than general navigation



[[Page 147]]



and their purpose may not be obvious to casual users; and, discrepancies 

to private aids are often detected, reported, and corrected less 

promptly than discrepancies to Coast Guard aids to navigation.



[CGD 86-031, 52 FR 42640, Nov. 6, 1987, as amended by CGD 88-018, 54 FR 

48608, Nov. 24, 1989; CGD 97-018, 63 FR 33573, June 19, 1998; USCG-2001-

9286, 66 FR 33640, June 25, 2001]