Notice of Intent To Prepare an Environmental Assessment and To Conduct Public Scoping Meetings and Notice of Floodplain and Wetlands Involvement; Montana Alberta Tie, Ltd., 69962-69964 [05-23002]
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69962
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 222 / Friday, November 18, 2005 / Notices
the Rueter-Hess Reservoir, currently
under construction in Parker, CO to
provide peaking storage of Denver Basin
groundwater for selected South Metro
Denver area water providers and to
assist in sustaining the Denver Basin
Aquifer. The reservoir is located in
Douglas County, CO approximately 12
miles southeast of Denver and 3 miles
southwest of the town of Parker. The
proposal is to enlarge the reservoir from
the 16,670 acre-feet by 54,330 acre-feet
for a total storage capacity of 71,000
acre-feet. The surface area of the
reservoir would increase by
approximately 658 acres, from 468 acres
at the normal pool elevation of 6,145
feet to 1,126 acres (elev. 6,212 feet). The
proposed dam design would change
from 135 feet high to 196 feet high (61foot increase) and from 4,822.5 feet long
to 7,479.8 feet long (2,657.3-foot
increase).
The basic need for the project, as
identified by the Applicant, is to
provide a terminal storage facility
capable of storing Denver Basin
groundwater on a year-round basis for
the projected build-out demands for
PWSD, Castle Rock, Stonegate and
Castle Pines North. New pipelines
would be installed to deliver the water
to and from these new project
participants.
Scoping meetings will be held at two
locations:
1. Tuesday, December 6, 2005 at 6:30
p.m. at the North Water Reclamation
Plant, 18100 E. Woodman Drive, Parker,
CO.
2. Wednesday, December 7, 2005 at
6:30 p.m. at the County Office Building,
Hearing Room, 100 Third Street, Castle
Rock, CO.
These Scoping Meetings will be held
to describe the proposed project,
preliminary alternatives, the NEPA
compliance process, and to solicit input
on the issues and alternatives to be
evaluated and other related matters.
Written comments will also be
requested.
Russell W. Rocheford,
Chief, Regulatory Branch, Operations
Division.
[FR Doc. 05–22808 Filed 11–17–05; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Department of the Navy
Notice of Availability of GovernmentOwned Invention; Available for
Licensing
AGENCY:
Department of the Navy, DoD.
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ACTION:
Notice.
SUMMARY: The invention listed below is
assigned to the United States
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for licensing by the Department of the
Navy. U.S. Patent Application Serial No.
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Navy Case No. 96,365, and any
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thereof.
Requests for copies of the
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Reza
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ADDRESSES:
(Authority: 35 U.S.C. 207, 37 CFR Part 404)
Dated: November 14, 2005.
Eric McDonald,
Lieutenant Commander, Judge Advocate
General’s Corps, U.S. Navy, Federal Register
Liaison Officer.
[FR Doc. 05–22869 Filed 11–17–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3810–FF–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
[OE Docket No. PP–305]
Notice of Intent To Prepare an
Environmental Assessment and To
Conduct Public Scoping Meetings and
Notice of Floodplain and Wetlands
Involvement; Montana Alberta Tie, Ltd.
Department of Energy (DOE).
Notice of intent to prepare an
environmental assessment and to
conduct public scoping meetings.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The Department of Energy
(DOE) announces its intention to
prepare an environmental assessment
(EA) and to conduct public scoping
meetings on an application for a
Presidential permit to construct a new
international transmission line that
crosses the U.S.-Canada international
border in northwest Montana. The EA
will be prepared in compliance with the
National Environmental Policy Act
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Sfmt 4703
(NEPA) and applicable regulations,
including DOE NEPA implementing
regulations at 10 CFR part 1021.
Montana Alberta Tie, Ltd., (MATL)
has applied to DOE’s Office of
Electricity Delivery and Energy
Reliability (OE) for a Presidential permit
to construct a 230,000-volt (230–kV)
electric transmission line across the U.S.
border with Canada, and to the State of
Montana Department of Environmental
Quality (DEQ) for a Linear Facilities
construction permit. The proposed
transmission line would originate at a
new substation to be constructed
northeast of Lethbridge, Alberta,
Canada, cross the U.S.-Canada
international border, and terminate
north of Great Falls, Montana, at an
existing 230–kV substation owned by
NorthWestern Energy (NWE). The total
length of the proposed transmission line
would be 203 miles, with approximately
126 miles constructed inside the U.S.
DOE and the State of Montana have
decided to cooperate on the preparation
of an EA that would be used for their
respective planning and decisionmaking
processes.
With this Notice of Intent, DOE and
the Montana DEQ invite public
participation in the EA scoping process
and solicit pubic comments for
consideration in establishing the scope
and content of the EA. Because the
proposed project may involve an action
in a floodplain or wetland, the EA will
include a floodplain and wetlands
assessment and floodplain statement of
findings in accordance with DOE
regulations for compliance with
floodplain and wetlands environmental
review requirements (10 CFR part 1022).
The Montana DEQ must issue a
certification pursuant to section 401 of
the Federal Clean Water Act that any
project-related activities will comply
with water quality standards and issue
permits for any discharges of pollutants
to State waters.
DATES: DOE and the Montana DEQ
invite interested agencies, organizations,
and members of the public to submit
comments or suggestions to assist in
identifying significant environmental
issues and in determining the
appropriate scope of the EA. The public
scoping period starts with the
publication of this Notice in the Federal
Register and will continue until January
3, 2006. In addition, DEQ will publish
a notice on its Web site, in a press
release, and also in Montana
newspapers. Written and oral comments
will be given equal weight, and DOE
and DEQ will consider all comments
received or postmarked by January 3,
2006 in defining the scope of this EA.
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 222 / Friday, November 18, 2005 / Notices
Comments received or postmarked after
that date will be considered to the
extent practicable.
Dates, times and locations for the
public scoping meetings are:
1. December 5, 2005, 3 p.m. to 5 p.m.
and from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., Norley Hall,
208 N. Virginia Street, Conrad,
Montana.
2. December 6, 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. and
from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., Missouri Room,
Great Falls Civic Center, 2 Park Drive
South, Great Falls, Montana.
3. December 7, 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. and
from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., 917 East Railroad
Street, Cut Bank, Montana.
ADDRESSES: Written comments or
suggestions on the scope of the EA
should be addressed to: Mrs. Ellen
Russell, Office of Electricity Delivery
and Energy Reliability (OE–20), U.S.
Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585–0350; phone
202–586–9624, facsimile: 202–586–
5860, or by electronic mail at
Ellen.Russell@hq.doe.gov. Comments
should also be sent to Mr. Tom Ring,
Facility Siting Program, Montana
Department of Environmental Quality,
P.O. Box 200901, Helena, MT 59620–
0901, phone 406–444–6785, facsimile
406–444–1499, or by electronic mail at
tring@mt.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
information on the proposed project or
to receive a copy of the Pre-Approval
EA when it is issued, contact Mrs.
Russell or Tom Ring at the addresses
listed in the ADDRESSES section of this
notice. The MATL Presidential permit
application, including associated maps
and drawings, can be downloaded in its
entirety from the DOE program Web site
(https://www.FE.DOE.GOV; choose
‘‘Electricity Regulation,’’ then ‘‘Pending
Procedures’’). The application before the
Montana DEQ is available from DEQ’s
Web site at https://www.deq.state.mt.us/
MFS/MATL/MFSAintroduction.pdf.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background and Need for Agency
Action
DOE Presidential Permit
Executive Order 10485, as amended
by Executive Order 12038, requires that
a Presidential permit be issued by DOE
before electric transmission facilities
may be constructed, operated,
maintained, or connected at the U.S.
international border. The Executive
Order provides that a Presidential
permit may be issued after a finding that
the proposed project is consistent with
the public interest and after favorable
recommendations from the U.S.
Departments of State and Defense. In
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15:21 Nov 17, 2005
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determining consistency with the public
interest, DOE considers the
environmental impacts of the proposed
project under NEPA, determines the
project’s impact on electric reliability
(including whether the proposed project
would adversely affect the operation of
the U.S. electric power supply system
under normal and contingency
conditions), and any other factors that
DOE may also consider relevant to the
public interest. The regulations
implementing the Executive Order have
been codified at 10 CFR 205.320—
205.329. Issuance of a Presidential
permits indicates that there is no
Federal objection to the project, but
does not mandate that the project be
completed.
Montana Department of Environmental
Quality
The Montana Major Facility Siting
Act requires that a Certificate of
Compliance (Certificate) be issued by
DEQ prior to construction of a covered
230–kV transmission line more than 10
miles in length. A Certificate may be
issued after DEQ finds and determines
the basis of the need for the facility, the
nature of the potential environmental
impact, that the facility minimizes
adverse environmental impact, and
considers the state of available
technology and the nature and
economics of the various alternatives.
Additional findings, for cases involving
an electric, gas, or liquid transmission
line or aqueduct are: (i) What part, if
any, of the line or aqueduct will be
located underground; (ii) is the facility
consistent with regional plans for
expansion of the appropriate grid of the
utility systems serving the State and
interconnected utility systems; (iii) will
the facility serve the interests of utility
system economy and reliability; (iv)
does the location of the facility as
proposed conform to applicable State
and local laws and regulations (except
that DEQ may refuse to apply any local
law or regulation if it finds that, as
applied to the proposed facility, the law
or regulation is unreasonably restrictive
in view of the existing technology,
factors of cost or economics, the needs
of consumers, whether located inside or
outside the directly affected government
subdivisions); (v) that the facility will
serve the public interest, convenience,
and necessity; (vi) that the Department
or board has issued any necessary air or
water quality decision, opinion, order,
certificate, or permit; and (vii) that the
use of public lands for location of the
facility was evaluated and public lands
were selected whenever their use is as
economically practicable as the use of
private lands. If a Certificate is issued,
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69963
the transmission line would have to be
constructed within 10 years.
Proposed Actions and Alternatives
The proposed DOE action is to issue
a Presidential permit to MATL and the
proposed DEQ action is to issue MATL
a Certificate of Compliance and any
other required water and air quality
permits. The DOE and MATL actions
are for construction of a single 230–
transmission line that would cross the
U.S. international border directly north
of Cut Bank, Montana, (west of
Sweetgrass) and extend approximately
125 miles into the U.S., terminating
north of Great Falls, Montana, at an
existing 230–kV substation owned by
NWE. Between the U.S.-Canada border
and Great Falls, the transmission line
would also connect to an existing
substation owned by Glacier Electric
Cooperative in Cut Bank, Montana. A
phase-shifting transformer would be
installed at the substation in Lethbridge,
Alberta, to control power flows between
the two regions.
The MATL transmission line project
would connect the Alberta
Interconnected Electrical System and
NWE’s transmission system. MATL has
indicated that it intends to operate the
proposed facilities as a merchant
transmission line and make it available
for third-party use. In addition, MATL
asserts that the proposed transmission
facilities would enable the development
of new wind electric generation projects
because the proposed line route passes
through an area that has the potential
for wind generation development.
Three alternative corridors for
constructing the proposed transmission
line inside the U.S. have been
identified: Route A, the MATL preferred
corridor; Route B; and Route C. All three
corridors cross the U.S.-Canada border
approximately 26 miles north of Cut
Bank, Montana, and extend south over
the same route until approximately 2
miles north of Cut Bank where they
converge to skirt the community to the
east and south. At the Glacier Electric
Cooperative substation located
approximately 1 mile west of Cut Bank,
the alternatives diverge traveling over
roughly parallel routes east of the
Blackfoot Indian Reservation in a
southeastward direction. Routes A and
B roughly parallel NWE’s existing 115–
kV line along its entire distance to its
tie-in to NWE’s 230–kV substation north
of Great Falls. Route C traverses to the
east away from Routes A and B at a
location approximately 9 miles
southeast of Brady, Montana, and
approximately 5 miles north of the
Teton River. Route C jogs directly east
and south to take advantage of existing
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69964
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 222 / Friday, November 18, 2005 / Notices
north-south and east-west state highway
and county road rights-of-way enroute
to NWE’s 230–kV substation. Major
river crossings include those of the
Marias approximately 10 miles south of
Cut Bank, and the Teton, approximately
14 miles south of Brady, Montana.
In addition to transmission line routes
within the above proposed corridors,
the EA will consider the environmental
impacts of the ‘‘No Action’’ alternative.
Under the No Action alternative DOE
would not issue a Presidential permit
and DEQ would not issue a Certificate
of Compliance. DOE and DEQ will also
consider any additional reasonable
alternatives that result from comments
received during the scoping period.
However, not issuing the Presidential
permit or Certificate would not
necessarily imply maintenance of the
status quo. MATL indicated its
proposed action is to construct a
merchant transmission line to improve
the reliability of both the Alberta and
Montana power transmission grids and
to enable the development of new
power generation projects in Alberta
and Montana. MATL asserts that the
proposed transmission facilities would
enable the development of new wind
electric generation projects because the
proposed line route passes through an
area that has tremendous wind
generation potential. If the Presidential
permit and Certificate are not issued
and this proposed project is not built,
other transmission facilities may be
constructed in support of future wind
development. The No Action
Alternative will address the
environmental impacts that are
reasonably foreseeable to occur if the
Presidential permit and Certificate are
not issued.
Identification of Environmental Issues
In the EA, DOE and DEQ will examine
public health and safety effects and
environmental impacts in the U.S. from
the proposed transmission facilities.
The EA will be prepared in accordance
with the requirements of the Council on
Environmental Quality NEPA
Implementing Regulation (40 CFR parts
1500–1508) and DOE’s NEPA
Implementing Procedures (10 CFR part
1021). Because the project involves
action in a floodplain, the EA will
include a floodplain assessment and
floodplain statement of findings in
accordance with DOE regulations for
compliance with floodplain and
wetlands environmental review (10 CFR
part 1022). Tribal governments and
Federal, State and local agencies with
special expertise or jurisdiction over the
proposed project are being invited to
become cooperating agencies on the EA.
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15:21 Nov 17, 2005
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This notice is to inform agencies and
the public of the proposed project and
to solicit comments and suggestions for
consideration in the preparation of the
EA. To help the public frame its
comments, this notice contains a
preliminary list of potential
environmental issues in the U.S. that
DOE and MATL have tentatively
identified for analysis. These issues
include:
1. Impact from development of wind
generation resources;
2. Impacts on farming;
3. Impacts on protected, threatened,
endangered, or sensitive species of
animals or plants, or their critical
habitats;
4. Impacts on floodplains and
wetlands;
5. Impacts on cultural or historic
resources;
6. Impacts on human health and
safety;
7. Impacts on air, soil, and water;
8. Visual impacts; and
9. Socioeconomic impacts, and
disproportionately high and adverse
impacts on minority and low-income
populations.
Scoping Process
Interested parties are invited to
participate in the scoping process both
to refine the environmental issues to be
analyzed and to identify the reasonable
range of alternatives. Both oral and
written comments will be considered
and given equal weight by DOE and
DEQ.
Public scoping meetings will be held
at the locations, dates, and times
indicated above under the DATES and
ADDRESSES sections. The scoping
meetings will be structured as informal
open houses. They will provide
interested parties the opportunity to
view proposed project exhibits, ask
questions, and make comments. DOE,
DEQ, and any cooperating agency
representatives will be available to
answer questions and provide
additional information to attendees.
DOE and DEQ invite those entities
with jurisdiction by law or special
expertise with respect to environmental
issues to be cooperating agencies on the
EA, as defined at 40 CFR 1501.6.
Cooperating agencies have certain
responsibilities to support the NEPA
process, as specified at 40 CFR
1501.6(b).
Persons submitting comments during
the scoping process will receive copies
of the Pre-Approval EA. Persons who do
not wish to submit comments or
suggestions at this time but who would
like to receive a copy of the document
for review and comment when it is
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
issued should notify Mrs. Ellen Russell
and also Tom Ring at the addresses
provided above.
Pre-Approval EA Schedule and
Availability
The Pre-Approval EA is scheduled to
be issued in the spring, 2006, at which
time its availability will be announced
in the Federal Register and public
comments again will be solicited.
Issued in Washington, DC, on November
16, 2005.
Anthony J. Como,
Director, Permitting and Siting, Office of
Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability.
[FR Doc. 05–23002 Filed 11–17–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Office of Science; Biological and
Environmental Research Advisory
Committee
Department of Energy.
Notice of open meeting.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: This notice announces a
meeting of the Biological and
Environmental Research Advisory
Committee. Federal Advisory
Committee Act (Pub. L. 92–463, 86 Stat.
770) requires that public notice of these
meetings be announced in the Federal
Register.
DATES: Monday, December 5, 2005, 8:30
a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday, December 6,
2005, 8:30 a.m. to 12 p.m.
ADDRESSES: American Geophysical
Union, 2000 Florida Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC 20009.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dr.
David Thomassen (301–903–9817;
david.thomassen@science.doe.gov)
Designated Federal Officer, Biological
and Environmental Research Advisory
Committee, U.S. Department of Energy,
Office of Science, Office of Biological
and Environmental Research, SC–23/
Germantown Building, 1000
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585–1290. The most
current information concerning this
meeting can be found on the Web site:
https://www.science.doe.gov/ober/berac/
announce.html.
Purpose of
the Meeting: To provide advice on a
continuing basis to the Director, Office
of Science of the Department of Energy,
on the many complex scientific and
technical issues that arise in the
development and implementation of the
Biological and Environmental Research
Program.
Tentative Agenda:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 222 (Friday, November 18, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 69962-69964]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-23002]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
[OE Docket No. PP-305]
Notice of Intent To Prepare an Environmental Assessment and To
Conduct Public Scoping Meetings and Notice of Floodplain and Wetlands
Involvement; Montana Alberta Tie, Ltd.
AGENCY: Department of Energy (DOE).
ACTION: Notice of intent to prepare an environmental assessment and to
conduct public scoping meetings.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Energy (DOE) announces its intention to
prepare an environmental assessment (EA) and to conduct public scoping
meetings on an application for a Presidential permit to construct a new
international transmission line that crosses the U.S.-Canada
international border in northwest Montana. The EA will be prepared in
compliance with the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and
applicable regulations, including DOE NEPA implementing regulations at
10 CFR part 1021.
Montana Alberta Tie, Ltd., (MATL) has applied to DOE's Office of
Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability (OE) for a Presidential
permit to construct a 230,000-volt (230-kV) electric transmission line
across the U.S. border with Canada, and to the State of Montana
Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) for a Linear Facilities
construction permit. The proposed transmission line would originate at
a new substation to be constructed northeast of Lethbridge, Alberta,
Canada, cross the U.S.-Canada international border, and terminate north
of Great Falls, Montana, at an existing 230-kV substation owned by
NorthWestern Energy (NWE). The total length of the proposed
transmission line would be 203 miles, with approximately 126 miles
constructed inside the U.S. DOE and the State of Montana have decided
to cooperate on the preparation of an EA that would be used for their
respective planning and decisionmaking processes.
With this Notice of Intent, DOE and the Montana DEQ invite public
participation in the EA scoping process and solicit pubic comments for
consideration in establishing the scope and content of the EA. Because
the proposed project may involve an action in a floodplain or wetland,
the EA will include a floodplain and wetlands assessment and floodplain
statement of findings in accordance with DOE regulations for compliance
with floodplain and wetlands environmental review requirements (10 CFR
part 1022). The Montana DEQ must issue a certification pursuant to
section 401 of the Federal Clean Water Act that any project-related
activities will comply with water quality standards and issue permits
for any discharges of pollutants to State waters.
DATES: DOE and the Montana DEQ invite interested agencies,
organizations, and members of the public to submit comments or
suggestions to assist in identifying significant environmental issues
and in determining the appropriate scope of the EA. The public scoping
period starts with the publication of this Notice in the Federal
Register and will continue until January 3, 2006. In addition, DEQ will
publish a notice on its Web site, in a press release, and also in
Montana newspapers. Written and oral comments will be given equal
weight, and DOE and DEQ will consider all comments received or
postmarked by January 3, 2006 in defining the scope of this EA.
[[Page 69963]]
Comments received or postmarked after that date will be considered to
the extent practicable.
Dates, times and locations for the public scoping meetings are:
1. December 5, 2005, 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. and from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.,
Norley Hall, 208 N. Virginia Street, Conrad, Montana.
2. December 6, 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. and from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., Missouri
Room, Great Falls Civic Center, 2 Park Drive South, Great Falls,
Montana.
3. December 7, 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. and from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., 917 East
Railroad Street, Cut Bank, Montana.
ADDRESSES: Written comments or suggestions on the scope of the EA
should be addressed to: Mrs. Ellen Russell, Office of Electricity
Delivery and Energy Reliability (OE-20), U.S. Department of Energy,
1000 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20585-0350; phone 202-
586-9624, facsimile: 202-586-5860, or by electronic mail at
Ellen.Russell@hq.doe.gov. Comments should also be sent to Mr. Tom Ring,
Facility Siting Program, Montana Department of Environmental Quality,
P.O. Box 200901, Helena, MT 59620-0901, phone 406-444-6785, facsimile
406-444-1499, or by electronic mail at tring@mt.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For information on the proposed
project or to receive a copy of the Pre-Approval EA when it is issued,
contact Mrs. Russell or Tom Ring at the addresses listed in the
ADDRESSES section of this notice. The MATL Presidential permit
application, including associated maps and drawings, can be downloaded
in its entirety from the DOE program Web site (https://www.FE.DOE.GOV;
choose ``Electricity Regulation,'' then ``Pending Procedures''). The
application before the Montana DEQ is available from DEQ's Web site at
https://www.deq.state.mt.us/MFS/MATL/MFSAintroduction.pdf.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background and Need for Agency Action
DOE Presidential Permit
Executive Order 10485, as amended by Executive Order 12038,
requires that a Presidential permit be issued by DOE before electric
transmission facilities may be constructed, operated, maintained, or
connected at the U.S. international border. The Executive Order
provides that a Presidential permit may be issued after a finding that
the proposed project is consistent with the public interest and after
favorable recommendations from the U.S. Departments of State and
Defense. In determining consistency with the public interest, DOE
considers the environmental impacts of the proposed project under NEPA,
determines the project's impact on electric reliability (including
whether the proposed project would adversely affect the operation of
the U.S. electric power supply system under normal and contingency
conditions), and any other factors that DOE may also consider relevant
to the public interest. The regulations implementing the Executive
Order have been codified at 10 CFR 205.320--205.329. Issuance of a
Presidential permits indicates that there is no Federal objection to
the project, but does not mandate that the project be completed.
Montana Department of Environmental Quality
The Montana Major Facility Siting Act requires that a Certificate
of Compliance (Certificate) be issued by DEQ prior to construction of a
covered 230-kV transmission line more than 10 miles in length. A
Certificate may be issued after DEQ finds and determines the basis of
the need for the facility, the nature of the potential environmental
impact, that the facility minimizes adverse environmental impact, and
considers the state of available technology and the nature and
economics of the various alternatives. Additional findings, for cases
involving an electric, gas, or liquid transmission line or aqueduct
are: (i) What part, if any, of the line or aqueduct will be located
underground; (ii) is the facility consistent with regional plans for
expansion of the appropriate grid of the utility systems serving the
State and interconnected utility systems; (iii) will the facility serve
the interests of utility system economy and reliability; (iv) does the
location of the facility as proposed conform to applicable State and
local laws and regulations (except that DEQ may refuse to apply any
local law or regulation if it finds that, as applied to the proposed
facility, the law or regulation is unreasonably restrictive in view of
the existing technology, factors of cost or economics, the needs of
consumers, whether located inside or outside the directly affected
government subdivisions); (v) that the facility will serve the public
interest, convenience, and necessity; (vi) that the Department or board
has issued any necessary air or water quality decision, opinion, order,
certificate, or permit; and (vii) that the use of public lands for
location of the facility was evaluated and public lands were selected
whenever their use is as economically practicable as the use of private
lands. If a Certificate is issued, the transmission line would have to
be constructed within 10 years.
Proposed Actions and Alternatives
The proposed DOE action is to issue a Presidential permit to MATL
and the proposed DEQ action is to issue MATL a Certificate of
Compliance and any other required water and air quality permits. The
DOE and MATL actions are for construction of a single 230-transmission
line that would cross the U.S. international border directly north of
Cut Bank, Montana, (west of Sweetgrass) and extend approximately 125
miles into the U.S., terminating north of Great Falls, Montana, at an
existing 230-kV substation owned by NWE. Between the U.S.-Canada border
and Great Falls, the transmission line would also connect to an
existing substation owned by Glacier Electric Cooperative in Cut Bank,
Montana. A phase-shifting transformer would be installed at the
substation in Lethbridge, Alberta, to control power flows between the
two regions.
The MATL transmission line project would connect the Alberta
Interconnected Electrical System and NWE's transmission system. MATL
has indicated that it intends to operate the proposed facilities as a
merchant transmission line and make it available for third-party use.
In addition, MATL asserts that the proposed transmission facilities
would enable the development of new wind electric generation projects
because the proposed line route passes through an area that has the
potential for wind generation development.
Three alternative corridors for constructing the proposed
transmission line inside the U.S. have been identified: Route A, the
MATL preferred corridor; Route B; and Route C. All three corridors
cross the U.S.-Canada border approximately 26 miles north of Cut Bank,
Montana, and extend south over the same route until approximately 2
miles north of Cut Bank where they converge to skirt the community to
the east and south. At the Glacier Electric Cooperative substation
located approximately 1 mile west of Cut Bank, the alternatives diverge
traveling over roughly parallel routes east of the Blackfoot Indian
Reservation in a southeastward direction. Routes A and B roughly
parallel NWE's existing 115-kV line along its entire distance to its
tie-in to NWE's 230-kV substation north of Great Falls. Route C
traverses to the east away from Routes A and B at a location
approximately 9 miles southeast of Brady, Montana, and approximately 5
miles north of the Teton River. Route C jogs directly east and south to
take advantage of existing
[[Page 69964]]
north-south and east-west state highway and county road rights-of-way
enroute to NWE's 230-kV substation. Major river crossings include those
of the Marias approximately 10 miles south of Cut Bank, and the Teton,
approximately 14 miles south of Brady, Montana.
In addition to transmission line routes within the above proposed
corridors, the EA will consider the environmental impacts of the ``No
Action'' alternative. Under the No Action alternative DOE would not
issue a Presidential permit and DEQ would not issue a Certificate of
Compliance. DOE and DEQ will also consider any additional reasonable
alternatives that result from comments received during the scoping
period.
However, not issuing the Presidential permit or Certificate would
not necessarily imply maintenance of the status quo. MATL indicated its
proposed action is to construct a merchant transmission line to improve
the reliability of both the Alberta and Montana power transmission
grids and to enable the development of new power generation projects in
Alberta and Montana. MATL asserts that the proposed transmission
facilities would enable the development of new wind electric generation
projects because the proposed line route passes through an area that
has tremendous wind generation potential. If the Presidential permit
and Certificate are not issued and this proposed project is not built,
other transmission facilities may be constructed in support of future
wind development. The No Action Alternative will address the
environmental impacts that are reasonably foreseeable to occur if the
Presidential permit and Certificate are not issued.
Identification of Environmental Issues
In the EA, DOE and DEQ will examine public health and safety
effects and environmental impacts in the U.S. from the proposed
transmission facilities. The EA will be prepared in accordance with the
requirements of the Council on Environmental Quality NEPA Implementing
Regulation (40 CFR parts 1500-1508) and DOE's NEPA Implementing
Procedures (10 CFR part 1021). Because the project involves action in a
floodplain, the EA will include a floodplain assessment and floodplain
statement of findings in accordance with DOE regulations for compliance
with floodplain and wetlands environmental review (10 CFR part 1022).
Tribal governments and Federal, State and local agencies with special
expertise or jurisdiction over the proposed project are being invited
to become cooperating agencies on the EA.
This notice is to inform agencies and the public of the proposed
project and to solicit comments and suggestions for consideration in
the preparation of the EA. To help the public frame its comments, this
notice contains a preliminary list of potential environmental issues in
the U.S. that DOE and MATL have tentatively identified for analysis.
These issues include:
1. Impact from development of wind generation resources;
2. Impacts on farming;
3. Impacts on protected, threatened, endangered, or sensitive
species of animals or plants, or their critical habitats;
4. Impacts on floodplains and wetlands;
5. Impacts on cultural or historic resources;
6. Impacts on human health and safety;
7. Impacts on air, soil, and water;
8. Visual impacts; and
9. Socioeconomic impacts, and disproportionately high and adverse
impacts on minority and low-income populations.
Scoping Process
Interested parties are invited to participate in the scoping
process both to refine the environmental issues to be analyzed and to
identify the reasonable range of alternatives. Both oral and written
comments will be considered and given equal weight by DOE and DEQ.
Public scoping meetings will be held at the locations, dates, and
times indicated above under the DATES and ADDRESSES sections. The
scoping meetings will be structured as informal open houses. They will
provide interested parties the opportunity to view proposed project
exhibits, ask questions, and make comments. DOE, DEQ, and any
cooperating agency representatives will be available to answer
questions and provide additional information to attendees.
DOE and DEQ invite those entities with jurisdiction by law or
special expertise with respect to environmental issues to be
cooperating agencies on the EA, as defined at 40 CFR 1501.6.
Cooperating agencies have certain responsibilities to support the NEPA
process, as specified at 40 CFR 1501.6(b).
Persons submitting comments during the scoping process will receive
copies of the Pre-Approval EA. Persons who do not wish to submit
comments or suggestions at this time but who would like to receive a
copy of the document for review and comment when it is issued should
notify Mrs. Ellen Russell and also Tom Ring at the addresses provided
above.
Pre-Approval EA Schedule and Availability
The Pre-Approval EA is scheduled to be issued in the spring, 2006,
at which time its availability will be announced in the Federal
Register and public comments again will be solicited.
Issued in Washington, DC, on November 16, 2005.
Anthony J. Como,
Director, Permitting and Siting, Office of Electricity Delivery and
Energy Reliability.
[FR Doc. 05-23002 Filed 11-17-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P