Agency Information Collection Activities: Proposed Collection; Comment Request, 10997-11000 [05-4343]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 43 / Monday, March 7, 2005 / Notices
records to identify and track individuals
performing duties in the safety and
health programs for the Department of
the Navy. To demonstrate compliance
with the Occupational Safety and Heath
Administration, the Navy Occupational
Safety and Heath Program, and related
regulations by identifying the personnel
and their appropriate duties and
requirements associated with these
assigned tasks.
ROUTINE USES OF RECORDS MAINTAINED IN THE
SYSTEM, INCLUDING CATEGORIES OF USERS AND
THE PURPOSES OF SUCH USES:
In addition to those disclosures
generally permitted under 5 U.S.C.
552a(b) of the Privacy Act, these records
or information contained therein may
specifically be disclosed outside the
DoD as a routine use pursuant to 5
U.S.C. 552a(b) (3) as follows:
To the Occupational Safety and
Health Administration during the
course of an on-site inspection.
The DoD ‘Blanket Routine Uses’ that
appear at the beginning of the Navy’s
compilation of systems bf records
notices apply to this system.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR STORING,
RETRIEVING, ACCESSING, RETAINING, AND
DISPOSING OF RECORDS IN THE SYSTEM:
published in the Standard Navy
Distribution List that is available at
https://neds.daps.dla.mil/sndl.htm.
The request should contain
individual’s full name, Social Security
Number, address and should be signed.
RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES:
Individuals seeking to access the
information about themselves contained
in this system of records not accessible
through system interfaces should
address written inquiries to the
Commanding Officer of the local
activity. Official mailing addresses are
published in the Standard Navy
Distribution List that is available at
https://neds.diaps.dla.mil/sndl.htm.
The request should contain the
individual’s full name, Social Security
Number, address and should be signed.
CONTESTING RECORD PROCEDURES:
The Navy’s rules for accessing
records, and for contesting contents and
appealing initial agency determinations
are published in Secretary of the Navy
Instruction 5211.5; 32 CFR part 701; or
may be obtained from the system
manager.
RECORD SOURCE CATEGORIES:
Individual; personnel file excerpts;
medical record excerpts; office files; etc.
STORAGE:
Computerized database.
EXEMPTIONS CLAIMED FOR THE SYSTEM:
RETRIEVABILITY:
None.
Retrieved by individual’s name and
Social Security Number.
[FR Doc. 05–4370 Filed 3–4–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 5001–06–P
SAFEGUARDS:
Computer facilities and terminals pre
located in restricted areas accessible
only to authorized persons that are
properly screened, cleared and trained.
Information is password protected.
Manual records and computer printouts
are available only to authorized
personnel having a need-to-know.
Records are retained for up to their
duration of employment plus 30 years
and then destroyed.
SYSTEM MANAGER(S) AND ADDRESS:
Organizational elements of the
Department of the Navy. Official
mailing addresses are published in the
Standard Navy Distribution List that is
available at https://neds.daps.dla.mit/
sndl.htm.
NOTIFICATION PROCEDURE:
Individuals seeking to determine
whether information about themselves
is contained in this system of records
should address written inquiries to the
Commanding Officer of the local
activity. Official mailing addresses are
18:15 Mar 04, 2005
Energy Information Administration
Agency Information Collection
Activities: Proposed Collection;
Comment Request
Energy Information
Administration (EIA), Department of
Energy (DOE).
ACTION: Agency information collection
activities: proposed collection; comment
request.
AGENCY:
RETENTION AND DISPOSAL:
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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Jkt 205001
The EIA is soliciting
comments on the proposed revision and
three-year extension under section
3507(h)(1) of the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 of the surveys in the Natural
Gas Data Collection Program Package.
The surveys covered by this request
include:
• Form EIA–176, ‘‘Annual Report of
Natural and Supplemental Gas Supply
and Disposition’’
• EIA–191, ‘‘Monthly and Annual
Underground Gas Storage Report’’
SUMMARY:
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10997
• EIA–857, ‘‘Monthly Report of
Natural Gas Purchases and Deliveries to
Consumers’’
• EIA–895, ‘‘Monthly and Annual
Quantity and Value of Natural Gas
Production Report’’ (The EIA proposes
to eliminate the current monthly
reporting of Form EIA–895 and only
require an annual report.)
• EIA–910, ‘‘Monthly Natural Gas
Marketer Survey’’
• EIA–912, ‘‘Weekly Underground
Natural Gas Storage Report’’
In addition, EIA is proposing that the
following new survey be approved by
OMB.
• EIA–913, ‘‘Monthly and Annual
Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) Storage
Report’’
Comments must be filed by May
6, 2005. If you anticipate difficulty in
submitting comments within that
period, contact the person listed below
as soon as possible.
ADDRESSES: Send comments to Mr.
Stephen Nalley, Natural Gas Division,
Office of Oil and Gas, Energy
Information Administration. To ensure
receipt of the comments by the due date,
submission by fax (202–586–4420) or email (stephen.nalley@eia.doe.gov) is
recommended. The mailing address is
Mr. Stephen Nalley, Energy Information
Administration, U.S. Department of
Energy, 1000 Independence Ave., SW,
EI–44, Washington, DC 20585. Also, Mr.
Nalley may be contacted by telephone at
202–586–0959.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Requests for additional information or
copies of any forms and instructions
should be directed to Mr. Nalley at the
address listed above.
Also, the draft forms and instructions
are available on the EIA Web site at
https://www.eia.doe.gov/oil_gas/fwd/
proposed.html.
DATES:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
II. Current Actions
III. Request for Comments
I. Background
The Federal Energy Administration
Act of 1974 (Pub. L. 93–275, 15 U.S.C.
761 et seq.) and the DOE Organization
Act (Pub. L. 95–91, 42 U.S.C. 7101 et
seq.) require the EIA to carry out a
centralized, comprehensive, and unified
energy information program. This
program collects, evaluates, assembles,
analyzes, and disseminates information
on energy resource reserves, production,
demand, technology, and related
economic and statistical information.
This information is used to assess the
adequacy of energy resources to meet
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both near and longer-term domestic
demands.
The EIA, as part of its effort to comply
with the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 (Pub. L. 104–13, 44 U.S.C. Chapter
35), provides the general public and
other Federal agencies with
opportunities to comment on the
collection of energy information
conducted by or in conjunction with the
EIA. Any comments received help the
EIA prepare data requests that maximize
the utility of the information collected,
and assess the impact of collection
requirements on the public. As required
by section 3507(h)(1) of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, the EIA will
later seek approval by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB).
The natural gas surveys included in
the Natural Gas Data Collection Program
Package collect information on natural
gas production, underground storage,
transmission, distribution, and
consumption by sector, and wellhead
and consumer prices. This information
is used to support public policy
analyses of the natural gas industry and
estimates generated from data collected
on these surveys are posted to the EIA
Web site (https://www.eia.doe.gov) in
various EIA products, including the
Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report
(WNGSR), Natural Gas Monthly (NGM),
Natural Gas Annual (NGA), Monthly
Energy Review (MER), Short-Term
Energy Outlook (STEO), Annual Energy
Outlook (AEO), and Annual Energy
Review (AER). Respondents to EIA
natural gas surveys include State
agencies, underground storage
operators, transporters, marketers, and
distributors. Each form included as part
of this package is discussed in detail
below.
EIA–176, ‘‘Annual Report of Natural
and Supplemental Gas Supply and
Disposition’’
In conjunction with data collected in
other EIA surveys, Form EIA–176
provides EIA with the major elements of
information required to develop annual
gas supply and disposition balances and
relevant cost, price, and related
information at the State level. It is used
for the following purposes:
(1) To develop and make available to
Congress, State government, and the
public an accurate quantified overview
of the supply of natural and
supplemental gas available to each of
the States from all sources both internal
and external to the State, and the
manner in which such supply was
utilized or otherwise disposed of,
(2) To determine the quantity of
natural and supplemental gas consumed
within each of the States by market
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sector, the average sales prices for such
gas, and the changes in consumption
and price patterns over time.
EIA–191, ‘‘Monthly and Annual
Underground Gas Storage Report’’
Form EIA–191 is comprised of a
monthly (EIA–191M) and annual (EIA–
191A) schedule. The EIA–191M
currently requests monthly data on the
location and operations of all active
underground natural gas storage fields.
The EIA–191A collects data on total
field capacity, operation capability and
field type as of December 31 of the
reporting year. Storage data are a critical
link in understanding the deliverability
of the natural gas system of the United
States and overall system operations.
The information collected on Form
EIA–191 will be used in the following
ways:
(1) To provide State-level data on
underground natural gas storage with
respect to injections, withdrawals,
inventories, and type of storage facility,
location, and capacity. These data will
be made available through EIA’s NGM,
NGA, MER, and AER. Monthly data
collection also provides reliable
baseline data on storage operations
necessary for analyses, modeling, and
comparison with normal industry
operations in cases of severe weather,
natural disaster, or other extreme
circumstances,
(2) To provide data on all aspects of
underground natural gas storage to
enable EIA and other elements of DOE
to identify and assess the supplies of gas
in storage by geographic location.
EIA–857, ‘‘Monthly Report of Natural
Gas Purchases and Deliveries to
Consumers’’
Monthly State-level data collected on
the Form EIA–857 consist of average
price of natural gas purchased by local
distribution companies at their city
gates, consumption of natural gas by
sector, and average sales price by sector.
These data are necessary to provide
timely information needed to measure
the combined impact of government,
industry, and consumer actions;
geographic location; climatic
conditions; and other factors on the
natural gas industry and natural gas
consumers. The data collected on the
Form EIA–857 are used to develop
information for publication in EIA’s
STEO, NGM, and MER, and to make the
data available to Congress, State
governments, industry, and the public.
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EIA–895, ‘‘Monthly and Annual
Quantity and Value of Natural Gas
Production Report’’
Form EIA–895 is a voluntary survey,
which is comprised of monthly (EIA–
895M) and annual (EIA–895A)
schedules. The EIA–895M collects
monthly information from the
appropriate State agencies concerning
natural gas production. It provides
details on gross withdrawals from gas
and oil wells and from coalbed methane
wells, volumes vented and flared,
volumes of nonhydrocarbon gases
removed, gas used as fuel on leases, and
the amount of natural gas available for
market. These data are routinely
collected by States for taxation,
conservation, or statistical purposes. In
addition to providing an annual
summary of the monthly collected data,
the EIA–895A provides detail on the
value of marketed production.
EIA–910, ‘‘Monthly Natural Gas
Marketer Survey’’
Form EIA–910 collects monthly
information for developing accurate
estimates of State-level prices paid by
residential and commercial consumers
of natural gas in states where a choice
program exists. Data from the EIA–910
are combined with data from the EIA–
857 to produce more complete and
accurate price estimates.
EIA–912, ‘‘Weekly Underground Natural
Gas Storage Report’’
The EIA–912 data collection responds
to requests to provide weekly measures
of natural gas underground storage
operations. Through this survey
instrument, EIA provides a weekly data
series on underground storage of natural
gas similar to what was previously
published by the American Gas
Association (AGA). AGA discontinued
its data collection on May 1, 2002. EIA
first released data from the survey on
May 9, 2002. Data are now published
weekly in the WNGSR. EIA uses the
data to prepare analytical products
assessing storage operations in the three
AGA regions and their impact on
supplies available for the winter heating
season, and in more detailed analyses
correlating demand, heating-degreedays, and prior inventory levels. Such
correlations help EIA to understand the
impact of storage operations on natural
gas supply and demand.
EIA–913, ‘‘Monthly and Annual
Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) Storage
Report’’
In 2003, EIA proposed a survey to
monitor the monthly volume of LNG in
storage and annual operational
capacities of active LNG storage
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facilities in the United States. However,
EIA did not implement this proposal
due to modest public interest and
limited budget resources. At the time of
that decision, EIA committed to monitor
the LNG market and reevaluate the
usefulness of an LNG storage survey at
a later date. EIA has prepared a revised
proposal that has reduced the budget
requirements and has also reduced the
survey scope. The current proposal is
discussed further in Section II.
Please refer to the proposed forms and
instructions for more information about
the purpose, who must report, when to
report, where to submit, the elements to
be reported, detailed instructions,
provisions for confidentiality, and uses
(including possible nonstatistical uses)
of the information. For instructions on
obtaining materials, see the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section.
II. Current Actions
EIA will be requesting a three-year
extension of the collection authority for
each of the above-referenced surveys,
including the proposed new EIA–913. In
addition, EIA proposes the changes
outlined below that affect the EIA–176,
EIA–191, EIA–857, EIA–895, EIA–910,
EIA–912, and EIA–913.
Form EIA–176, ‘‘Annual Report of
Natural and Supplemental Gas Supply
and Disposition’’
No significant changes are proposed
for the EIA–176. Minor changes will be
made to the survey form and
instructions in order to provide
simplicity and clarity. Although EIA
proposes to continue the collection of
the ‘‘Operation type’’ data, EIA is
requesting comments regarding the
practical utility of the data. EIA
proposes to add a question about the use
of alternative fueled vehicles to assist in
the development of a comprehensive
survey frame of respondents for the
EIA–886, ‘‘Annual Survey of Alternative
Fueled Vehicles Suppliers and Users.’’
Form EIA–191, ‘‘Monthly and Annual
Underground Gas Storage Report’’
In addition to several minor changes
to the instructions and monthly and
annual schedules of Form EIA–191 for
the purpose of simplicity and clarity,
EIA proposes significant revisions to the
data collected under Form EIA–191 as
detailed below:
EIA–191A
In an effort to reduce respondent
burden and simplify reporting
requirements, EIA proposes to eliminate
the ‘‘Pipelines to which this field is
connected,’’ as well as to eliminate the
check boxes used to note if data have
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18:15 Mar 04, 2005
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changed from the previous annual
report. EIA proposes to add the
collection of ‘‘Working Gas Capacity’’
and the field status (i.e. active,
abandoned, depleting, etc.) as of
December 31 of each year. EIA is
proposing that the data collected on the
revised Annual Schedule of the EIA–
191 will not be confidential, making
individual company data of the
following types available to the public:
Storage Field Names, Reservoir Names,
Location, Type of Facility, Total Field
Capacity, Working Gas Capacity, and
Maximum Deliverability, for all natural
gas storage fields reporting on the EIA–
191A.
EIA–191M
In an effort to reduce respondent
burden, EIA proposes to eliminate the
request for ‘‘Peak day’’ and ‘‘Peak day
withdrawals’’ from the EIA–191M. The
addition of a check box to signal
capacity change for the field will be
added.
Form EIA–857, ‘‘Monthly Report of
Natural Gas Purchases and Deliveries to
Consumers’’
No significant changes are proposed
for the Form EIA–857. The instructions
will include minor changes to provide
simplicity and clarity. Although EIA
proposes to continue the collection of
the ‘‘Purchased City-Gate’’ data, EIA is
requesting comment regarding the
practical utility of the data.
Form EIA–895, ‘‘Annual and Monthly
Quantity and Value of Natural Gas
Production Report’’
In addition to several minor changes
to the instructions of Form EIA–895,
EIA proposes significant revisions to the
data collected under Form EIA–895 as
detailed below:
EIA–895A
EIA proposes to continue collecting
the annual data with no significant
change.
EIA–895M
EIA proposes to eliminate the current
monthly schedule for Form EIA–895 as
a source of production and disposition
of natural gas components and used to
calculate monthly marketed production
estimates. Estimates based on the EIA–
914, ‘‘Monthly Natural Gas Production
Report,’’ will replace this monthly data
source. Thus, there will be no monthly
reporting with Form EIA–895.
Form EIA–910, ‘‘Monthly Natural Gas
Marketer Survey’’
No significant changes are proposed
for the EIA–910. Minor changes will be
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10999
made to the survey form and
instructions.
Form EIA–912, ‘‘Weekly Underground
Natural Gas Storage Report’’
No significant changes are proposed
for the EIA–912. Minor changes will be
made to the survey form and
instructions.
Form EIA–913, ‘‘Monthly (September–
March) and Annual Liquefied Natural
Gas (LNG) Storage Report’’
In 2003, EIA proposed to collect
monthly and annual LNG storage
information, but decided not to
implement that proposal at that time.
EIA promised to continue to monitor the
LNG market and reconsider the
proposed survey at a future time. LNG
has an increasingly important role as a
source of natural gas supply, especially
during periods of peak demand.
Therefore, EIA is proposing to conduct
LNG storage surveys, subject to funds
being provided in the FY2007 budget. If
funding is made available, the survey
would most likely not begin until
calendar year 2007.
The current LNG survey proposal is
different from the 2003 LNG Storage
Report proposal. The current proposal
would have the survey operate
seasonally and monitor monthly storage
levels during September through March
only, whereas the 2003 proposal would
have monitored monthly storage levels
throughout the entire year. The current
proposal also requires that respondents
report only one monthly data item; i.e.,
the amount of LNG in storage as of the
report date. The 2003 proposal required
respondents to report the amount of
LNG in storage, LNG additions, LNG
withdrawals, LNG peak day and LNG
peak day withdrawals. Additionally,
unlike the 2003 proposed survey, the
2005 proposed monthly survey would
be administered via the telephone in
order to increase timeliness of product
dissemination and reduce respondent
burden. The proposed annual survey
form is similar to the one included in
the 2003 proposal. Respondents will be
required to report: Storage facility name,
state location of the storage facility,
storage facility design capacity,
maximum liquefaction design capacity,
maximum vaporization design capacity,
trailer loading/unloading ability and
number of bays, and whether the
capacity had changed from what was
previously reported.
All operators of facilities that store
LNG for baseload, seasonal, and peak
demand delivery in the United States, or
for delivery to United States customers
for these purposes would be required to
complete the mandatory report. This
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will include operators with LNG
inventories such as distribution
companies, pipeline companies,
liquefaction facilities, LNG wholesalers,
and marine terminals providing peaking
storage services. The survey coverage
will not include LNG inventories held
by any industrial, residential,
commercial, or power generation
operations for ultimate consumption.
Respondents would be required to
complete the EIA–913 Annual Schedule
at the start of the survey and
subsequently once a year in September
thereafter and whenever a new facility
begins operation or a change in storage
operator or storage capacity occurs. The
EIA would contact the respondents on
the first Monday of the month or the
first business day after the first Monday
of the month in the event of a holiday.
The aggregate data collected on the
Form EIA–913 for the United States and
several multi-state regions would be
used to develop national and regional
level estimates for publication in the
NGM, MER, and NGA; no State level
data would be published. EIA proposes
that monthly respondent data would be
treated as sensitive, proprietary
information while respondent data from
the annual schedule would not be
confidential.
III. Request for Comments
Prospective respondents and other
interested parties should comment on
the actions discussed in items II and III.
The following guidelines are provided
to assist in the preparation of comments.
Please indicate to which form(s) your
comments apply.
General Issues
A. Is the proposed collection of
information necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
agency and does the information have
practical utility? Practical utility is
defined as the actual usefulness of
information to or for an agency, taking
into account its accuracy, adequacy,
reliability, timeliness, and the agency’s
ability to process the information it
collects.
B. What enhancements can be made
to the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected?
As a Potential Respondent to the
Request for Information
A. Would burden be reduced if
applicable data were collected in Btu
(heat content) rather than Mcf basis
(volumetric, as it is on some surveys)?
B. Would burden be increased if EIA
adopted a standard mandatory revision
rule for its natural gas surveys requiring
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resubmission of data for revisions
greater than 4 percent?
C. Are the instructions and definitions
clear and sufficient? If not, which
instructions need clarification?
D. Can the information be submitted
by the due date?
E. Public reporting burden for the
surveys included in the Natural Gas
Data Collection Program Package is
shown below as an average hour(s) per
response. The estimated burden
includes the total time necessary to
provide the requested information. In
your opinion, how accurate is this
estimate for the proposed forms?
(1) Form EIA–176, ‘‘Annual Report of
Natural and Supplemental Gas Supply
and Disposition’’; 12 hours per
response.
(2) Form EIA–191A, ‘‘Annual
Underground Gas Storage Report’’; 1
hour per response.
(3) Form EIA–191M, ‘‘Monthly
Underground Gas Storage Report’’; 2.5
hours per response.
(4) Form EIA–857, ‘‘Monthly Report
of Natural Gas Purchases and Deliveries
to Consumers’’; 3.5 hours per response.
(5) Form EIA–895, ‘‘Annual Quantity
and Value of Natural Gas Production
Report’’; .5 hours per response.
(6) Form EIA–910, ‘‘Monthly Natural
Gas Marketer Survey’’; 2 hours per
response.
(7) Form EIA–912, ‘‘Weekly
Underground Natural Gas Storage
Report’’; 0.5 hour per response.
(8) Form EIA–913A, ‘‘Annual
Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) Storage
Report’’; 1 hour per response.
(9) Form EIA–913M, ‘‘Monthly
(September–March) Liquefied Natural
Gas (LNG) Storage Report’’; 0.5 hour per
response.
F. The agency estimates that the only
cost to a respondent is for the time it
will take to complete the collection.
Will a respondent incur any start-up
costs for reporting, or any recurring
annual costs for operation, maintenance,
and purchase of services associated with
the information collection?
G. What additional actions could be
taken to minimize the burden of this
collection of information? Such actions
may involve the use of automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology.
I. Does any other Federal, State, or
local agency collect similar information?
If so, specify the agency, the data
element(s), and the methods of
collection.
As a Potential User of the Information
To Be Collected
A. Is the information useful at the
levels of detail to be collected?
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B. For what purpose(s) would the
information be used? Be specific.
C. Are there alternate sources for the
information and are they useful? If so,
what are their weaknesses and/or
strengths?
D. Would the information be more
useful if published uniformly in Btu
rather than volumetrically? Which is the
perceived industry standard?
Comments submitted in response to
this notice will be summarized and/or
included in the request for OMB
approval of the form. They also will
become a matter of public record.
Authority: Sec. 3507(h)(1) of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (Pub. L.
104–13, 44 U.S.C. Chapter 35).
Issued in Washington, DC, on March 1,
2005.
Jay Casselberry,
Agency Clearance Officer, Energy Information
Administration.
[FR Doc. 05–4343 Filed 3–4–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
[Docket No. CP05–72–000]
Columbia Gas Transmission
Corporation; Notice of Application
February 28, 2005.
Take notice that Columbia Gas
Transmission Corporation (Columbia),
filed on February 16, 2005 an
application under Section 7(b) of the
Natural Gas Act (NGA), as amended,
and part 157 of the Commission’s
regulations for permission and approval
to abandon four storage wells, together
with associated pipeline and
appurtenances, located in Ashland
Guernsey and Holmes Counties, Ohio,
all as more fully set forth in the
application on file with the
Commission.
Any questions regarding this
application should be directed to
counsel for Columbia, Fredric J. George,
Senior Attorney, Columbia Gas
Transmission Corporation, P.O. Box
1273, Charleston, West Virginia 25325–
1273; telephone (304) 357–2359, fax
(304) 357–3206.
Any person desiring to intervene or to
protest this filing must file in
accordance with Rules 211 and 214 of
the Commission’s Rules of Practice and
Procedure (18 CFR 385.211 and
385.214). Protests will be considered by
the Commission in determining the
appropriate action to be taken, but will
not serve to make protestants parties to
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 43 (Monday, March 7, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 10997-11000]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-4343]
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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Energy Information Administration
Agency Information Collection Activities: Proposed Collection;
Comment Request
AGENCY: Energy Information Administration (EIA), Department of Energy
(DOE).
ACTION: Agency information collection activities: proposed collection;
comment request.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The EIA is soliciting comments on the proposed revision and
three-year extension under section 3507(h)(1) of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 of the surveys in the Natural Gas Data Collection
Program Package. The surveys covered by this request include:
Form EIA-176, ``Annual Report of Natural and Supplemental
Gas Supply and Disposition''
EIA-191, ``Monthly and Annual Underground Gas Storage
Report''
EIA-857, ``Monthly Report of Natural Gas Purchases and
Deliveries to Consumers''
EIA-895, ``Monthly and Annual Quantity and Value of
Natural Gas Production Report'' (The EIA proposes to eliminate the
current monthly reporting of Form EIA-895 and only require an annual
report.)
EIA-910, ``Monthly Natural Gas Marketer Survey''
EIA-912, ``Weekly Underground Natural Gas Storage Report''
In addition, EIA is proposing that the following new survey be
approved by OMB.
EIA-913, ``Monthly and Annual Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG)
Storage Report''
DATES: Comments must be filed by May 6, 2005. If you anticipate
difficulty in submitting comments within that period, contact the
person listed below as soon as possible.
ADDRESSES: Send comments to Mr. Stephen Nalley, Natural Gas Division,
Office of Oil and Gas, Energy Information Administration. To ensure
receipt of the comments by the due date, submission by fax (202-586-
4420) or e-mail (stephen.nalley@eia.doe.gov) is recommended. The
mailing address is Mr. Stephen Nalley, Energy Information
Administration, U.S. Department of Energy, 1000 Independence Ave., SW,
EI-44, Washington, DC 20585. Also, Mr. Nalley may be contacted by
telephone at 202-586-0959.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Requests for additional information or
copies of any forms and instructions should be directed to Mr. Nalley
at the address listed above.
Also, the draft forms and instructions are available on the EIA Web
site at https://www.eia.doe.gov/oil_gas/fwd/proposed.html.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
II. Current Actions
III. Request for Comments
I. Background
The Federal Energy Administration Act of 1974 (Pub. L. 93-275, 15
U.S.C. 761 et seq.) and the DOE Organization Act (Pub. L. 95-91, 42
U.S.C. 7101 et seq.) require the EIA to carry out a centralized,
comprehensive, and unified energy information program. This program
collects, evaluates, assembles, analyzes, and disseminates information
on energy resource reserves, production, demand, technology, and
related economic and statistical information. This information is used
to assess the adequacy of energy resources to meet
[[Page 10998]]
both near and longer-term domestic demands.
The EIA, as part of its effort to comply with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-13, 44 U.S.C. Chapter 35), provides
the general public and other Federal agencies with opportunities to
comment on the collection of energy information conducted by or in
conjunction with the EIA. Any comments received help the EIA prepare
data requests that maximize the utility of the information collected,
and assess the impact of collection requirements on the public. As
required by section 3507(h)(1) of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995,
the EIA will later seek approval by the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB).
The natural gas surveys included in the Natural Gas Data Collection
Program Package collect information on natural gas production,
underground storage, transmission, distribution, and consumption by
sector, and wellhead and consumer prices. This information is used to
support public policy analyses of the natural gas industry and
estimates generated from data collected on these surveys are posted to
the EIA Web site (https://www.eia.doe.gov) in various EIA products,
including the Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report (WNGSR), Natural Gas
Monthly (NGM), Natural Gas Annual (NGA), Monthly Energy Review (MER),
Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO), Annual Energy Outlook (AEO), and
Annual Energy Review (AER). Respondents to EIA natural gas surveys
include State agencies, underground storage operators, transporters,
marketers, and distributors. Each form included as part of this package
is discussed in detail below.
EIA-176, ``Annual Report of Natural and Supplemental Gas Supply and
Disposition''
In conjunction with data collected in other EIA surveys, Form EIA-
176 provides EIA with the major elements of information required to
develop annual gas supply and disposition balances and relevant cost,
price, and related information at the State level. It is used for the
following purposes:
(1) To develop and make available to Congress, State government,
and the public an accurate quantified overview of the supply of natural
and supplemental gas available to each of the States from all sources
both internal and external to the State, and the manner in which such
supply was utilized or otherwise disposed of,
(2) To determine the quantity of natural and supplemental gas
consumed within each of the States by market sector, the average sales
prices for such gas, and the changes in consumption and price patterns
over time.
EIA-191, ``Monthly and Annual Underground Gas Storage Report''
Form EIA-191 is comprised of a monthly (EIA-191M) and annual (EIA-
191A) schedule. The EIA-191M currently requests monthly data on the
location and operations of all active underground natural gas storage
fields. The EIA-191A collects data on total field capacity, operation
capability and field type as of December 31 of the reporting year.
Storage data are a critical link in understanding the deliverability of
the natural gas system of the United States and overall system
operations.
The information collected on Form EIA-191 will be used in the
following ways:
(1) To provide State-level data on underground natural gas storage
with respect to injections, withdrawals, inventories, and type of
storage facility, location, and capacity. These data will be made
available through EIA's NGM, NGA, MER, and AER. Monthly data collection
also provides reliable baseline data on storage operations necessary
for analyses, modeling, and comparison with normal industry operations
in cases of severe weather, natural disaster, or other extreme
circumstances,
(2) To provide data on all aspects of underground natural gas
storage to enable EIA and other elements of DOE to identify and assess
the supplies of gas in storage by geographic location.
EIA-857, ``Monthly Report of Natural Gas Purchases and Deliveries to
Consumers''
Monthly State-level data collected on the Form EIA-857 consist of
average price of natural gas purchased by local distribution companies
at their city gates, consumption of natural gas by sector, and average
sales price by sector. These data are necessary to provide timely
information needed to measure the combined impact of government,
industry, and consumer actions; geographic location; climatic
conditions; and other factors on the natural gas industry and natural
gas consumers. The data collected on the Form EIA-857 are used to
develop information for publication in EIA's STEO, NGM, and MER, and to
make the data available to Congress, State governments, industry, and
the public.
EIA-895, ``Monthly and Annual Quantity and Value of Natural Gas
Production Report''
Form EIA-895 is a voluntary survey, which is comprised of monthly
(EIA-895M) and annual (EIA-895A) schedules. The EIA-895M collects
monthly information from the appropriate State agencies concerning
natural gas production. It provides details on gross withdrawals from
gas and oil wells and from coalbed methane wells, volumes vented and
flared, volumes of nonhydrocarbon gases removed, gas used as fuel on
leases, and the amount of natural gas available for market. These data
are routinely collected by States for taxation, conservation, or
statistical purposes. In addition to providing an annual summary of the
monthly collected data, the EIA-895A provides detail on the value of
marketed production.
EIA-910, ``Monthly Natural Gas Marketer Survey''
Form EIA-910 collects monthly information for developing accurate
estimates of State-level prices paid by residential and commercial
consumers of natural gas in states where a choice program exists. Data
from the EIA-910 are combined with data from the EIA-857 to produce
more complete and accurate price estimates.
EIA-912, ``Weekly Underground Natural Gas Storage Report''
The EIA-912 data collection responds to requests to provide weekly
measures of natural gas underground storage operations. Through this
survey instrument, EIA provides a weekly data series on underground
storage of natural gas similar to what was previously published by the
American Gas Association (AGA). AGA discontinued its data collection on
May 1, 2002. EIA first released data from the survey on May 9, 2002.
Data are now published weekly in the WNGSR. EIA uses the data to
prepare analytical products assessing storage operations in the three
AGA regions and their impact on supplies available for the winter
heating season, and in more detailed analyses correlating demand,
heating-degree-days, and prior inventory levels. Such correlations help
EIA to understand the impact of storage operations on natural gas
supply and demand.
EIA-913, ``Monthly and Annual Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) Storage
Report''
In 2003, EIA proposed a survey to monitor the monthly volume of LNG
in storage and annual operational capacities of active LNG storage
[[Page 10999]]
facilities in the United States. However, EIA did not implement this
proposal due to modest public interest and limited budget resources. At
the time of that decision, EIA committed to monitor the LNG market and
reevaluate the usefulness of an LNG storage survey at a later date. EIA
has prepared a revised proposal that has reduced the budget
requirements and has also reduced the survey scope. The current
proposal is discussed further in Section II.
Please refer to the proposed forms and instructions for more
information about the purpose, who must report, when to report, where
to submit, the elements to be reported, detailed instructions,
provisions for confidentiality, and uses (including possible
nonstatistical uses) of the information. For instructions on obtaining
materials, see the For Further Information Contact section.
II. Current Actions
EIA will be requesting a three-year extension of the collection
authority for each of the above-referenced surveys, including the
proposed new EIA-913. In addition, EIA proposes the changes outlined
below that affect the EIA-176, EIA-191, EIA-857, EIA-895, EIA-910, EIA-
912, and EIA-913.
Form EIA-176, ``Annual Report of Natural and Supplemental Gas Supply
and Disposition''
No significant changes are proposed for the EIA-176. Minor changes
will be made to the survey form and instructions in order to provide
simplicity and clarity. Although EIA proposes to continue the
collection of the ``Operation type'' data, EIA is requesting comments
regarding the practical utility of the data. EIA proposes to add a
question about the use of alternative fueled vehicles to assist in the
development of a comprehensive survey frame of respondents for the EIA-
886, ``Annual Survey of Alternative Fueled Vehicles Suppliers and
Users.''
Form EIA-191, ``Monthly and Annual Underground Gas Storage Report''
In addition to several minor changes to the instructions and
monthly and annual schedules of Form EIA-191 for the purpose of
simplicity and clarity, EIA proposes significant revisions to the data
collected under Form EIA-191 as detailed below:
EIA-191A
In an effort to reduce respondent burden and simplify reporting
requirements, EIA proposes to eliminate the ``Pipelines to which this
field is connected,'' as well as to eliminate the check boxes used to
note if data have changed from the previous annual report. EIA proposes
to add the collection of ``Working Gas Capacity'' and the field status
(i.e. active, abandoned, depleting, etc.) as of December 31 of each
year. EIA is proposing that the data collected on the revised Annual
Schedule of the EIA-191 will not be confidential, making individual
company data of the following types available to the public: Storage
Field Names, Reservoir Names, Location, Type of Facility, Total Field
Capacity, Working Gas Capacity, and Maximum Deliverability, for all
natural gas storage fields reporting on the EIA-191A.
EIA-191M
In an effort to reduce respondent burden, EIA proposes to eliminate
the request for ``Peak day'' and ``Peak day withdrawals'' from the EIA-
191M. The addition of a check box to signal capacity change for the
field will be added.
Form EIA-857, ``Monthly Report of Natural Gas Purchases and Deliveries
to Consumers''
No significant changes are proposed for the Form EIA-857. The
instructions will include minor changes to provide simplicity and
clarity. Although EIA proposes to continue the collection of the
``Purchased City-Gate'' data, EIA is requesting comment regarding the
practical utility of the data.
Form EIA-895, ``Annual and Monthly Quantity and Value of Natural Gas
Production Report''
In addition to several minor changes to the instructions of Form
EIA-895, EIA proposes significant revisions to the data collected under
Form EIA-895 as detailed below:
EIA-895A
EIA proposes to continue collecting the annual data with no
significant change.
EIA-895M
EIA proposes to eliminate the current monthly schedule for Form
EIA-895 as a source of production and disposition of natural gas
components and used to calculate monthly marketed production estimates.
Estimates based on the EIA-914, ``Monthly Natural Gas Production
Report,'' will replace this monthly data source. Thus, there will be no
monthly reporting with Form EIA-895.
Form EIA-910, ``Monthly Natural Gas Marketer Survey''
No significant changes are proposed for the EIA-910. Minor changes
will be made to the survey form and instructions.
Form EIA-912, ``Weekly Underground Natural Gas Storage Report''
No significant changes are proposed for the EIA-912. Minor changes
will be made to the survey form and instructions.
Form EIA-913, ``Monthly (September-March) and Annual Liquefied Natural
Gas (LNG) Storage Report''
In 2003, EIA proposed to collect monthly and annual LNG storage
information, but decided not to implement that proposal at that time.
EIA promised to continue to monitor the LNG market and reconsider the
proposed survey at a future time. LNG has an increasingly important
role as a source of natural gas supply, especially during periods of
peak demand. Therefore, EIA is proposing to conduct LNG storage
surveys, subject to funds being provided in the FY2007 budget. If
funding is made available, the survey would most likely not begin until
calendar year 2007.
The current LNG survey proposal is different from the 2003 LNG
Storage Report proposal. The current proposal would have the survey
operate seasonally and monitor monthly storage levels during September
through March only, whereas the 2003 proposal would have monitored
monthly storage levels throughout the entire year. The current proposal
also requires that respondents report only one monthly data item; i.e.,
the amount of LNG in storage as of the report date. The 2003 proposal
required respondents to report the amount of LNG in storage, LNG
additions, LNG withdrawals, LNG peak day and LNG peak day withdrawals.
Additionally, unlike the 2003 proposed survey, the 2005 proposed
monthly survey would be administered via the telephone in order to
increase timeliness of product dissemination and reduce respondent
burden. The proposed annual survey form is similar to the one included
in the 2003 proposal. Respondents will be required to report: Storage
facility name, state location of the storage facility, storage facility
design capacity, maximum liquefaction design capacity, maximum
vaporization design capacity, trailer loading/unloading ability and
number of bays, and whether the capacity had changed from what was
previously reported.
All operators of facilities that store LNG for baseload, seasonal,
and peak demand delivery in the United States, or for delivery to
United States customers for these purposes would be required to
complete the mandatory report. This
[[Page 11000]]
will include operators with LNG inventories such as distribution
companies, pipeline companies, liquefaction facilities, LNG
wholesalers, and marine terminals providing peaking storage services.
The survey coverage will not include LNG inventories held by any
industrial, residential, commercial, or power generation operations for
ultimate consumption.
Respondents would be required to complete the EIA-913 Annual
Schedule at the start of the survey and subsequently once a year in
September thereafter and whenever a new facility begins operation or a
change in storage operator or storage capacity occurs. The EIA would
contact the respondents on the first Monday of the month or the first
business day after the first Monday of the month in the event of a
holiday.
The aggregate data collected on the Form EIA-913 for the United
States and several multi-state regions would be used to develop
national and regional level estimates for publication in the NGM, MER,
and NGA; no State level data would be published. EIA proposes that
monthly respondent data would be treated as sensitive, proprietary
information while respondent data from the annual schedule would not be
confidential.
III. Request for Comments
Prospective respondents and other interested parties should comment
on the actions discussed in items II and III. The following guidelines
are provided to assist in the preparation of comments. Please indicate
to which form(s) your comments apply.
General Issues
A. Is the proposed collection of information necessary for the
proper performance of the functions of the agency and does the
information have practical utility? Practical utility is defined as the
actual usefulness of information to or for an agency, taking into
account its accuracy, adequacy, reliability, timeliness, and the
agency's ability to process the information it collects.
B. What enhancements can be made to the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be collected?
As a Potential Respondent to the Request for Information
A. Would burden be reduced if applicable data were collected in Btu
(heat content) rather than Mcf basis (volumetric, as it is on some
surveys)?
B. Would burden be increased if EIA adopted a standard mandatory
revision rule for its natural gas surveys requiring resubmission of
data for revisions greater than 4 percent?
C. Are the instructions and definitions clear and sufficient? If
not, which instructions need clarification?
D. Can the information be submitted by the due date?
E. Public reporting burden for the surveys included in the Natural
Gas Data Collection Program Package is shown below as an average
hour(s) per response. The estimated burden includes the total time
necessary to provide the requested information. In your opinion, how
accurate is this estimate for the proposed forms?
(1) Form EIA-176, ``Annual Report of Natural and Supplemental Gas
Supply and Disposition''; 12 hours per response.
(2) Form EIA-191A, ``Annual Underground Gas Storage Report''; 1
hour per response.
(3) Form EIA-191M, ``Monthly Underground Gas Storage Report''; 2.5
hours per response.
(4) Form EIA-857, ``Monthly Report of Natural Gas Purchases and
Deliveries to Consumers''; 3.5 hours per response.
(5) Form EIA-895, ``Annual Quantity and Value of Natural Gas
Production Report''; .5 hours per response.
(6) Form EIA-910, ``Monthly Natural Gas Marketer Survey''; 2 hours
per response.
(7) Form EIA-912, ``Weekly Underground Natural Gas Storage
Report''; 0.5 hour per response.
(8) Form EIA-913A, ``Annual Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) Storage
Report''; 1 hour per response.
(9) Form EIA-913M, ``Monthly (September-March) Liquefied Natural
Gas (LNG) Storage Report''; 0.5 hour per response.
F. The agency estimates that the only cost to a respondent is for
the time it will take to complete the collection. Will a respondent
incur any start-up costs for reporting, or any recurring annual costs
for operation, maintenance, and purchase of services associated with
the information collection?
G. What additional actions could be taken to minimize the burden of
this collection of information? Such actions may involve the use of
automated, electronic, mechanical, or other technological collection
techniques or other forms of information technology.
I. Does any other Federal, State, or local agency collect similar
information? If so, specify the agency, the data element(s), and the
methods of collection.
As a Potential User of the Information To Be Collected
A. Is the information useful at the levels of detail to be
collected?
B. For what purpose(s) would the information be used? Be specific.
C. Are there alternate sources for the information and are they
useful? If so, what are their weaknesses and/or strengths?
D. Would the information be more useful if published uniformly in
Btu rather than volumetrically? Which is the perceived industry
standard?
Comments submitted in response to this notice will be summarized
and/or included in the request for OMB approval of the form. They also
will become a matter of public record.
Authority: Sec. 3507(h)(1) of the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 (Pub. L. 104-13, 44 U.S.C. Chapter 35).
Issued in Washington, DC, on March 1, 2005.
Jay Casselberry,
Agency Clearance Officer, Energy Information Administration.
[FR Doc. 05-4343 Filed 3-4-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P