Notice of Request for Comments To Address Right-of-Way Applications Filed by Private Fuel Storage, LLC, for an Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation on the Reservation of the Skull Valley Band of Goshute Indians and Related Transportation Facility in Tooele County, UT, 6286-6289 [E6-1595]
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 25 / Tuesday, February 7, 2006 / Notices
We are currently considering
applications for two positions from the
Barge and Towing Industry, one
position from the Offshore Industry, one
position from Shippers, and one
position from the General Public. To be
eligible, applicants should have
particular expertise, knowledge, and
experience relative to the position in
towing operations, marine
transportation, or business operations
associated with shallow-draft inland
and coastal waterway navigation and
towing safety. Each member serves for a
term of up to 4 years. A few members
may serve consecutive terms. All
members serve at their own expense and
receive no salary, reimbursement of
travel expenses, or other compensation
from the Federal Government.
When filling in the ‘‘Name of
Committee you are interested in’’ block,
please indicate ‘‘TSAC’’ followed by the
position category for which you are
applying.
If you are selected as a member who
represents the general public, we will
require you to complete a Confidential
Financial Disclosure Report (OGE Form
450). We may not release the report or
the information in it to the public,
except under an order issued by a
Federal court or as otherwise provided
under the Privacy Act (5 U.S.C. 552a).
In support of the policy of the
Department of Homeland Security on
gender and ethnic diversity, we
encourage qualified women and
members of minority groups to apply.
Dated: February 1, 2006.
Howard L. Hime,
Acting Director of Standards Prevention.
[FR Doc. E6–1597 Filed 2–6–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–15–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[5101 ER J206]
Notice of Request for Comments To
Address Right-of-Way Applications
Filed by Private Fuel Storage, LLC, for
an Independent Spent Fuel Storage
Installation on the Reservation of the
Skull Valley Band of Goshute Indians
and Related Transportation Facility in
Tooele County, UT
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of request for comments.
erjones on PROD1PC68 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: Notice is hereby given that
the Bureau of Land Management (BLM)
is requesting comments that will
address right-of-way applications filed
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by Private Fuel Storage (PFS), LLC, for
an independent spent fuel storage
installation on reservation lands of the
Skull Valley Band of Goshute Indians
(Band or Skull Valley Band). The
installation is described in an
environmental impact statement (EIS)
prepared by the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC), entitled Final
Environmental Impact Statement for the
Construction and Operation of an
Independent Spent Fuel Storage
Installation on the Reservation of the
Skull Valley Band of Goshute Indians
and the Related Transportation Facility
in Tooele County, Utah (December
2001). This EIS is available online at
https://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/doccollections/nuregs/staff/sr1714/v1/.
BLM was a cooperating agency in the
preparation of this EIS, as were the
Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), U.S.
Department of the Interior, and the U.S.
Surface Transportation Board. Your
comments are sought pursuant to 40
CFR 1506.6(d).
DATES: The Bureau of Land Management
should receive your comments by May
8, 2006.
ADDRESSES: You should address your
comments to the attention of Pam
Schuller, Bureau of Land Management,
Salt Lake Field Office, 2370 S. 2300 W.,
Salt Lake City, Utah 84119.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Pam
Schuller, Environmental Specialist, Salt
Lake Field Office, 801–977–4356.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
applications filed by PFS seek rights-ofway under Title V of the Federal Land
Policy and Management Act (FLPMA),
43 U.S.C. 1761, to transport spent
nuclear fuel (SNF) across public lands
managed by BLM. As proposed, the fuel
would be transported by rail from an
existing Union Pacific railroad site to a
PFS facility on the Reservation of the
Skull Valley Band of Goshute Indians in
Tooele County, Utah. The fuel would be
stored in aboveground canisters on the
Reservation, awaiting eventual disposal
at a permanent geologic repository
currently proposed for Yucca Mountain,
Nevada, or other, further storage at a
location off the Reservation.
In order for PFS to construct a rail
line and transport SNF to reservation
lands, an amendment to BLM’s Pony
Express Resource Management Plan
(RMP) would be necessary and PFS
would need a right-of-way grant from
BLM. An alternative to this rail line
would involve construction of an
intermodal transfer facility (ITF) on
BLM lands. SNF would be transported
by heavy-haul tractor/trailers to the
reservation site under this alternative.
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Your comments are necessary to assist
BLM in reviewing the applications of
PFS. Regulations recently revised by
BLM at 43 CFR part 2804.26 (70 FR
21067 (April 22, 2005)) call for BLM to
consider a number of factors in deciding
whether to grant or deny an application
for a right-of-way. Among these factors
are (1) the project’s consistency with
BLM(s management of the public lands;
(2) the public interest; (3) the
applicant’s qualifications to hold a
grant; (4) the project’s consistency with
FLPMA, other laws, or regulations; (5)
the applicant’s technical or financial
capability; and (6) the applicant’s
compliance with information requests.
BLM will apply these standards to the
PFS applications in light of the data in
the applications and in the EIS. Certain
recent developments also merit
consideration, including statements by
the Energy Department and PFS
members, and Congressional action.
Public Law 109–163, the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2006, was signed by President
Bush on January 6, 2006. 119 Stat. 3136.
Section 384 of this Act designated
certain lands as the Cedar Mountain
Wilderness Area and withdrew these
lands ‘‘from all forms of entry,
appropriation, or disposal under the
public land laws, from location, entry,
and patent under the United States
mining laws, and from disposition
under all laws pertaining to mineral and
geothermal leasing, and mineral
materials, and all amendments to such
laws.’’ These lands include the area
described in PFS’s application for a
right-of-way for a rail line, but do not
include the area described in PFS’s
application for a right-of-way for the
ITF. Because a rail line would be
incompatible with wilderness,
designation of the Cedar Mountain
Wilderness Area would appear to
preclude the grant of a right-of-way for
the proposed rail line and shift the focus
of this project to the ITF alternative.
On October 26, 2005, Secretary of
Energy Samuel W. Bodman stated that
the PFS facility initiative is not part of
the Energy Department’s overall strategy
for the management of SNF and highlevel radioactive waste. The Secretary
noted that the Energy Department
would be prohibited by statute from
providing funding or financial
assistance to the initiative because the
PFS facility would be constructed and
operated by the private sector outside
the scope of the Nuclear Waste Policy
Act of 1982 (NWPA). The Energy
Department will continue to work
toward the successful development of
Yucca Mountain as a permanent
geologic repository for the Nation’s
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high-level radioactive waste.
Development of Yucca Mountain would
reduce, if not eliminate, the need for
high-level radioactive waste to go to a
private temporary storage facility in
Utah, the Secretary remarked.
Correspondence dated December 8,
2005, between the Chief Executive
Officer of Xcel Energy and Senator Orrin
Hatch indicates that Xcel Energy, the
majority shareholder and most active
proponent of the PFS project, will hold
in abeyance future investments in the
next phase of the PFS facility as long as
there is progress in various initiatives
toward federally sponsored interim
storage, reuse, and/or disposal of the
nation’s spent nuclear fuel. The
initiatives referred to include the Energy
Department’s examination of multipurpose canister systems for Yucca
Mountain; Congressional passage of the
FY 2006 Energy and Water Development
Act providing funds for grants to
communities interested in hosting
facilities that would accept and
eventually recycle used fuel from
civilian nuclear plants; and
Congressional preparation of legislation
that will promote the movement of
waste early in the next decade.
Correspondence dated December 7,
2005, between the Chief Executive
Officer of Southern Company and
Senator Hatch indicates that Southern
Company, one of eight members of the
PFS consortium, will no longer support
the PFS facility, having concluded that
the PFS facility ‘‘cannot be successfully
developed as a spent fuel repository in
a time frame to meet Southern’s needs.’’
Southern will continue to work toward
ensuring the eventual opening of Yucca
Mountain, to which it is committed as
the nation’s spent fuel repository.
Southern Company was one of six
members of PFS that in July 2002
announced that they would commit no
funds to construction of the PFS facility
past the licensing phase so long as the
Yucca Mountain project is approved by
Congress and repository development
proceeds in a timely fashion.
Correspondence dated September 9,
2005, from the Utah Congressional
delegation to Secretary of the Interior
Gale Norton states that the proximity of
the Goshute reservation to the Utah Test
and Training Range makes it one of the
most dangerous locations for the
aboveground storage of high-level
nuclear waste. The proposed storage site
would sit within miles of the training
range where 7,000 overflights of F–16s
occur every year. Due to heavy
commercial air traffic in the area, a
principal low level approach by these
F–16s passes directly over the proposed
storage site. The aircraft sometimes use
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live ordnance, and 70 crashes of F–16s
have occurred within the past 20 years
at the Utah Test and Training Range, a
number of these well outside the
boundaries of the range.
In this same correspondence, the
Congressional delegation states that
NRC refused to reopen its EIS, dated
December 2001, to consider the threat of
deliberate suicide air attacks, even
though post September 11 studies have
been completed at all other facilities
licensed by NRC. Moreover, the EIS
does not require PFS to have any on-site
means to handle damaged or breached
casks. NRC staff concluded that the risk
of a cask breach is so minimal that this
scenario need not be considered in the
EIS. At the delegation’s urging, the
Department of Homeland Security has
consented to review the location of the
proposed site to consider its national
security implications.
This Congressional correspondence of
September 9, 2005, further states that
‘‘the issuance of a license for a private
away-from-reactor storage site has never
been done and in our view runs counter
to the Nuclear Waste Policy Act, which
limits the NRC to license storage sites
only at federal facilities or onsite at
nuclear power plants.’’
Finally, in correspondence with
Senator Hatch, dated July 8, 2002,
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham
concluded that the NWPA authorizes
DOE to provide funding and financial
assistance only for shipments of spent
fuel to a facility constructed under that
act. The Secretary found that the PFS/
Goshute facility would be constructed
outside the scope of the act, and as a
result DOE would not fund or otherwise
provide financial assistance for PFS.
Nor could DOE monitor the safety
precautions that a private facility may
install. All costs associated with the PFS
plan would have to be covered by the
members of the PFS private consortium,
the Secretary concluded.
The proposed action (Alternative 1)
involves the construction and operation
of the proposed PFS facility at a site
designated as Site A in the northwest
corner of the Skull Valley Indian
Reservation and a new rail line
connecting the existing Union Pacific
railroad to the site. The proposed
facility would be designed to store a
lifetime capacity of up to 40,000 metric
tons of uranium (MTU) (44,000 tons) of
spent nuclear fuel. SNF is the primary
by-product from a nuclear reactor. The
capacity of the proposed facility would
be sufficient to store all SNF from
reactor sites owned by PFS members, as
well as SNF from reactor sites that are
not owned by PFS members.
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PFS is a limited liability company
owned by eight U.S. electric power
generating companies. These companies
are: Entergy Corporation; Southern
California Edison Company; Genoa
FuelTech, Inc.; Indiana-Michigan
Company (American Electric Power);
Florida Power and Light Company; GPU
Nuclear Corporation; Xcel Energy Inc.;
and Southern Nuclear Operating
Company.
Construction of the proposed PFS
facility would occur in three phases.
Phase 1 construction, which would
provide an operational facility, is
planned to begin upon issuance of a
license by the NRC and certification by
the Secretary that the conditions under
which a May 1997 lease between PFS
and the Band was approved have been
satisfied. The maximum term of the
lease is 50 years. About one-fourth of
the storage area for the proposed facility
would be constructed during Phase 1,
which would be completed in
approximately 18 months. Another onefourth would be completed during
Phase 2, and the remaining portion
constructed during Phase 3. The
maximum amount of SNF that PFS
could accept at the proposed facility
over the term of the initial license and
the proposed lease is 40,000 MTU. Once
PFS had accepted 40,000 MTU of SNF,
it could not accept any additional
shipments, even if it had begun to ship
the SNF off site.
SNF to be shipped to the proposed
PFS facility would be placed inside
sealed metal canisters at commercial
nuclear power plants. These canisters
would then be placed inside NRCcertified steel shipping casks for
transport by rail to the new rail siding
at Skunk Ridge. Dedicated trains,
stopping only for crew changes,
refueling, and periodic inspections,
would be used to transport SNF from
the existing reactor sites to Skull Valley.
PFS expects that it would receive 1 to
2 trains, each carrying 2 to 4 shipping
casks, per week from the reactor sites.
The number of loaded SNF canisters
(inside shipping casks) is estimated to
be between 100 and 200 annually. Each
canister would contain approximately
10 MTU of SNF.
The nearest main rail line is
approximately 39 km (24 miles) north of
the proposed site. PFS’s preferred
option for transporting SNF from the
existing Union Pacific main line
railroad to the site is to build a new rail
line to the site. The new rail line, and
its associated rail siding, would connect
to the existing Union Pacific main rail
line at Skunk Ridge (near Low, Utah).
The proposed right-of-way for the rail
corridor would be 51 km (32 miles) long
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 25 / Tuesday, February 7, 2006 / Notices
and 60 m (200 ft) wide. It would run to
the proposed PFS facility through
public lands administered by BLM on
the eastern side of the Cedar Mountains.
Because these public lands are outside
a transportation and utility corridor
described in BLM’s Pony Express RMP,
an amendment to this RMP would be
necessary before BLM could issue a
right-of-way. Any amendment to this
RMP would also await compliance by
the Department of Defense with certain
reporting duties under section 2815 of
the National Defense Authorization Act
for FY 2000, Pub. L. 106–65.
As noted above, designation of the
Cedar Mountain Wilderness Area by
Congress in Pub. L. 109–163 appears to
preclude the grant of a right-of-way for
the rail line in Alternative 1.
At the proposed PFS facility, a dry
cask storage technology would be used.
The sealed metal canisters containing
the SNF would be unloaded from the
shipping casks at the proposed PFS
facility, loaded into steel-and-concrete
storage casks, and then placed on
concrete pads for aboveground storage.
The canister-based cask system for
confining the SNF would be certified by
NRC in accordance with NRC
requirements (10 CFR part 72). PFS
proposes to employ the Holtec HISTORM dual-purpose canister-based
cask system for use at the proposed PFS
facility. PFS anticipates storing as many
as 4,000 sealed metal canisters inside
individual storage casks, to store a
maximum of 40,000 MTU of SNF.
The proposed PFS facility would be
licensed by NRC to operate for up to 20
years. The applicant has indicated that
it may seek to renew the license for 20
years (total of 40 years). By the end of
the licensed life of the proposed PFS
facility and prior to the expiration of the
lease, it is expected that the SNF would
have been shipped to a permanent
repository. Service agreements (i.e.,
contracts) between PFS and companies
storing SNF at the proposed PFS facility
will require that the utilities remove all
SNF from the proposed PFS facility by
the time the PFS license has terminated
and PFS has completed its licensing or
regulatory obligations under the NRC
license. The service agreement
requirement to remove the SNF from the
proposed PFS facility is not dependent
upon the availability of a permanent
geological repository. Therefore, if the
PFS license is terminated or revoked
prior to the availability of a permanent
geological repository, the reactor
licensees storing SNF at the PFS facility
would continue to retain responsibility
for the fuel and must remove it from the
proposed PFS facility before license
termination.
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At the end of its useful life (or upon
termination of the lease with the Band
or termination of the NRC license,
whichever comes first), the proposed
PFS facility would be closed. As a
condition of the lease with the Band and
as required by NRC regulations,
decommissioning of the proposed PFS
facility would be required prior to
closure of the facility and termination of
the NRC license. Although the exact
nature of decommissioning cannot be
predicted at this time, the principal
activities involved in decommissioning
would include:
1. Removal of all remaining SNF from
Skull Valley;
2. Removal or disposition of all
storage casks;
3. Removal or disposition of the
storage pads and crushed rock, at the
option of the Band and the BIA; and
4. Removal of the buildings and other
improvements or their transfer to the
Band, at the option of the Band and the
BIA.
The objective of the radiological
decommissioning would be to remove
all materials having levels of
radioactivity above the applicable NRC
limits in order for the site to be released
for unrestricted use. The SNF contained
inside sealed metal canisters would be
transferred to licensed shipping casks
for transportation away from Skull
Valley.
At the option of the Band, nonradiological decommissioning and
restoration of the facility may include
the removal of structures and reasonably
returning the land to its original
condition. The future of the buildings
and other improvements to be
constructed by PFS on the Reservation
is to be determined by the Band and the
BIA. PFS is obligated to remove the
buildings and other improvements at
the request of the Band. PFS will collect
sufficient advanced funding or provide
other financial assurances to accomplish
any or all of the non-radiological
decommissioning. If the Band chooses
to retain any or all of the buildings and
other improvements once the
radiological decommissioning is
complete, it has the right to receive a
transfer from PFS in an ‘‘intact’’
condition. The future use of any
buildings and other improvements not
removed by PFS, including the soilconcrete mixture below the pads, would
be at the discretion of the Band. Any
impacts associated with such use would
be evaluated by a separate NEPA
review. The proposed lease requires that
the SNF be removed from the
Reservation before the end of the lease
term.
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Alternative 2 involves constructing
the proposed PFS facility at an
alternative location (Site B) on the
Reservation. This site is located about
800 m (0.5 mile) south of the proposed
Site A and is similar in terms of its
environmental characteristics to the
proposed site. Under this alternative, a
new rail line would be constructed
across BLM lands from Skunk Ridge.
The rail corridor through Skull Valley
would be essentially identical to the one
for the proposed action, but it would be
about 1.6 km (1 mile) longer due to the
slightly greater distance of Site B from
the existing main rail line. From BLM’s
perspective, Alternative 2 would require
amendment of the Pony Express RMP
and the authorization of a right-of-way
across public lands for the construction
and operation of a new rail line.
Amendment of the Pony Express RMP
would involve the Defense Department’s
compliance with section 2815(b) of the
National Defense Authorization Act for
FY 2000. Because the rail line is
essentially the same as that involved in
Alternative 1, designation of the Cedar
Mountain Wilderness Area in Pub. L.
109–163 appears to preclude the grant
of a right-of-way for the rail line in
Alternative 2.
Alternative 3 involves constructing
the proposed PFS facility at Site A, but
transportation of SNF from the existing
Union Pacific main rail line to the site
would be accomplished by heavy-haul
tractor/trailers. An ITF and rail siding
would be built on land managed by
BLM at the existing main rail line near
Timpie, Utah, to transfer SNF shipping
casks from rail cars to the heavy-haul
vehicles, which would then transport
the SNF along the existing Skull Valley
Road to the site. No rail line would be
built under this alternative.
The ITF would occupy 9–11 acres of
BLM land approximately 2 miles west of
the intersection of I–80 and Skull Valley
Road and outside of the lands
designated in Pub. L. 109–163 as the
Cedar Mountain Wilderness Area. It
would consist of three rail sidings, a
new access road for heavy-haul
vehicles, and a building with a crane for
transferring SNF shipping casks from
rail cars onto heavy-haul tractor/trailers.
PFS has filed an application for a rightof-way from BLM to use this land. The
ITF would not require an amendment to
the Pony Express RMP. The ITF would
occupy previously disturbed land lying
between the existing Union Pacific
Railroad and Interstate 80. SNF would
arrive at the ITF by rail using the Union
Pacific rail line. The crane would load
the fuel from the rail cars onto heavyhaul tractor/trailers, which would use
the existing Skull Valley road to carry
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the fuel south to the PFS facility on the
Goshute Reservation, a distance of
approximately 26 miles. From BLM’s
perspective, Alternative 3 involves the
authorization of a right-of-way to
occupy public lands for the ITF; no
RMP amendment would be necessary.
Alternative 4 involves constructing
the PFS facility at Site B on reservation
lands and transportation of SNF by
heavy-haul tractor/trailers. As in
alternative 3, PFS would seek a right-ofway to authorize use of an ITF on BLM
lands. No rail corridor would be
constructed under this alternative, and
no amendment of BLM’s RMP would be
necessary.
Under the no action alternative, no
PFS facility or transportation facilities
would be built in Skull Valley. Under
this alternative, NRC would deny the
application for a license for the
proposed PFS facility, and no
certification by the Secretary of lease
conditions would occur. From BLM’s
perspective, the right-of-way
applications filed by PFS would be
denied. The Band would be free to
pursue alternative uses for the land in
the northwest corner of the Reservation.
Jim Hughes,
Deputy Director.
[FR Doc. E6–1595 Filed 2–6–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Meeting of the California Desert
District Advisory Council
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of public meeting.
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: Notice is hereby given, in
accordance with Public Laws 92–463
and 94–579, that the California Desert
District Advisory Council to the Bureau
of Land Management, U.S. Department
of the Interior, will participate in a field
tour of BLM-administered public lands
on Friday, March 31, 2006, from 8 a.m.
to 5 p.m., and meet in formal session on
Saturday, April 1 from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.
in Conference Rooms A, B and C in the
CalWorks Building within the Imperial
County Center II Complex, located at
2895 South 4th Street, in El Centro,
California.
The Council and interested members
of the public will depart for a field tour
of the Imperial Sand Dunes Recreation
Area (ISDRA) at 8 a.m. from the parking
lot of the Best Western John Jay Inn,
located at 2352 South 4th Street in El
Centro. The public is welcome to
participate in the tour, but should plan
on providing their own transportation,
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drinks, and lunch. Tour stops and
presentations/updates will focus on
BLM management of the ISDRA,
including monitoring and fee collection.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: All Desert
District Advisory Council meetings are
open to the public. Public comment for
items not on the agenda is scheduled at
the beginning of the meeting Saturday
morning. Time for public comment may
be made available by the Council
Chairman during the presentation of
various agenda items, and is scheduled
at the end of the meeting.
Although the Saturday meeting is
tentatively scheduled from 8 a.m. to 1
p.m., the meeting could conclude prior
to 1 p.m. should the Council conclude
its discussions. Therefore, members of
the public interested in a particular
agenda item or discussion should
schedule their arrival accordingly.
Written comments may be filed in
advance of the meeting for the
California Desert District Advisory
Council, c/o Bureau of Land
Management, Public Affairs Office,
22835 Calle San Juan De Los Lagos,
Moreno Valley, California 92553.
Written comments also are accepted at
the time of the meeting and, if copies
are provided to the recorder, will be
incorporated into the minutes.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Doran Sanchez, BLM California Desert
District Public Affairs Specialist, (951)
697–5220.
Dated: January 30, 2006.
Steven J. Borchard,
District Manager.
[FR Doc. E6–1640 Filed 2–6–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–40–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
[WYW153578]
Notice of Proposed Reinstatement of
Terminated Oil and Gas Lease
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: Under the provisions of
Section 371(a) of the Energy Policy Act
of 2005, the lessee, Charles A. Einarsen,
timely filed a petition for reinstatement
of competitive oil and gas lease
WYW153578 in Natrona County,
Wyoming. The lessee paid the required
rental accruing from the date of
termination, September 1, 2002, and
submitted a signed agreement,
specifying future rental and royalty rates
for this lease would be at $10.00 per
acre or fraction of an acre and 162⁄3
percent respectively. In accordance with
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6289
43 CFR 3103.4–1 and 43 CFR 3108.2–
3(f) the lessee petitioned to reduce the
rental and royalty rates for the subject
lease to the rates specified in Sections
1 and 2 of the original lease agreement
and submitted justification and
rationalization for the request. After
thoroughly reviewing the lessee’s
petition and taking into consideration
the information submitted, we have
granted the request to reduce the rental
rates to those in Section 1 of the original
lease agreement but have denied the
request for a reduced royalty rate. The
purpose of granting a reduced royalty
rate is to extend the productive life of
an existing well. Normally it cannot be
determined whether a lease can be
successfully operated at the higher
royalty rate required for reinstated
leases until the lease has been fully
developed. Because the productivity of
the leasehold has not been fully
determined, the request for a reduced
royalty rate is premature.
No leases were issued that affect these
lands. The lessee had paid the required
$500 administrative fee for lease
reinstatement and $166 cost for
publishing this Notice.
The lessee has met all the
requirements for reinstatement of the
lease per Sec. 31(e) of the Mineral
Leasing Act of 1920 (30 U.S.C. 188(e)).
We are proposing to reinstate the lease,
effective the date of termination subject
to:
• The original terms and conditions
of the lease;
• The rental rates specified in Section
1 of the original lease agreement; and
• The increased royalty of 162⁄3
percent or 4 percentages above the
existing competitive royalty rate.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Bureau of Land Management, Pamela J.
Lewis, Chief, Branch of Fluid Minerals
Adjudication, at (307) 775–6176.
Pamela J. Lewis,
Chief, Branch of Fluid Minerals Adjudication.
[FR Doc. E6–1638 Filed 2–6–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–22–P
E:\FR\FM\07FEN1.SGM
07FEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 25 (Tuesday, February 7, 2006)]
[Notices]
[Pages 6286-6289]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E6-1595]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[5101 ER J206]
Notice of Request for Comments To Address Right-of-Way
Applications Filed by Private Fuel Storage, LLC, for an Independent
Spent Fuel Storage Installation on the Reservation of the Skull Valley
Band of Goshute Indians and Related Transportation Facility in Tooele
County, UT
AGENCY: Bureau of Land Management, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of request for comments.
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SUMMARY: Notice is hereby given that the Bureau of Land Management
(BLM) is requesting comments that will address right-of-way
applications filed by Private Fuel Storage (PFS), LLC, for an
independent spent fuel storage installation on reservation lands of the
Skull Valley Band of Goshute Indians (Band or Skull Valley Band). The
installation is described in an environmental impact statement (EIS)
prepared by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), entitled Final
Environmental Impact Statement for the Construction and Operation of an
Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation on the Reservation of the
Skull Valley Band of Goshute Indians and the Related Transportation
Facility in Tooele County, Utah (December 2001). This EIS is available
online at https://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/doc-collections/nuregs/staff/
sr1714/v1/. BLM was a cooperating agency in the preparation of this
EIS, as were the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), U.S. Department of the
Interior, and the U.S. Surface Transportation Board. Your comments are
sought pursuant to 40 CFR 1506.6(d).
DATES: The Bureau of Land Management should receive your comments by
May 8, 2006.
ADDRESSES: You should address your comments to the attention of Pam
Schuller, Bureau of Land Management, Salt Lake Field Office, 2370 S.
2300 W., Salt Lake City, Utah 84119.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Pam Schuller, Environmental
Specialist, Salt Lake Field Office, 801-977-4356.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The applications filed by PFS seek rights-
of-way under Title V of the Federal Land Policy and Management Act
(FLPMA), 43 U.S.C. 1761, to transport spent nuclear fuel (SNF) across
public lands managed by BLM. As proposed, the fuel would be transported
by rail from an existing Union Pacific railroad site to a PFS facility
on the Reservation of the Skull Valley Band of Goshute Indians in
Tooele County, Utah. The fuel would be stored in aboveground canisters
on the Reservation, awaiting eventual disposal at a permanent geologic
repository currently proposed for Yucca Mountain, Nevada, or other,
further storage at a location off the Reservation.
In order for PFS to construct a rail line and transport SNF to
reservation lands, an amendment to BLM's Pony Express Resource
Management Plan (RMP) would be necessary and PFS would need a right-of-
way grant from BLM. An alternative to this rail line would involve
construction of an intermodal transfer facility (ITF) on BLM lands. SNF
would be transported by heavy-haul tractor/trailers to the reservation
site under this alternative.
Your comments are necessary to assist BLM in reviewing the
applications of PFS. Regulations recently revised by BLM at 43 CFR part
2804.26 (70 FR 21067 (April 22, 2005)) call for BLM to consider a
number of factors in deciding whether to grant or deny an application
for a right-of-way. Among these factors are (1) the project's
consistency with BLM(s management of the public lands; (2) the public
interest; (3) the applicant's qualifications to hold a grant; (4) the
project's consistency with FLPMA, other laws, or regulations; (5) the
applicant's technical or financial capability; and (6) the applicant's
compliance with information requests. BLM will apply these standards to
the PFS applications in light of the data in the applications and in
the EIS. Certain recent developments also merit consideration,
including statements by the Energy Department and PFS members, and
Congressional action.
Public Law 109-163, the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2006, was signed by President Bush on January 6, 2006. 119
Stat. 3136. Section 384 of this Act designated certain lands as the
Cedar Mountain Wilderness Area and withdrew these lands ``from all
forms of entry, appropriation, or disposal under the public land laws,
from location, entry, and patent under the United States mining laws,
and from disposition under all laws pertaining to mineral and
geothermal leasing, and mineral materials, and all amendments to such
laws.'' These lands include the area described in PFS's application for
a right-of-way for a rail line, but do not include the area described
in PFS's application for a right-of-way for the ITF. Because a rail
line would be incompatible with wilderness, designation of the Cedar
Mountain Wilderness Area would appear to preclude the grant of a right-
of-way for the proposed rail line and shift the focus of this project
to the ITF alternative.
On October 26, 2005, Secretary of Energy Samuel W. Bodman stated
that the PFS facility initiative is not part of the Energy Department's
overall strategy for the management of SNF and high-level radioactive
waste. The Secretary noted that the Energy Department would be
prohibited by statute from providing funding or financial assistance to
the initiative because the PFS facility would be constructed and
operated by the private sector outside the scope of the Nuclear Waste
Policy Act of 1982 (NWPA). The Energy Department will continue to work
toward the successful development of Yucca Mountain as a permanent
geologic repository for the Nation's
[[Page 6287]]
high-level radioactive waste. Development of Yucca Mountain would
reduce, if not eliminate, the need for high-level radioactive waste to
go to a private temporary storage facility in Utah, the Secretary
remarked.
Correspondence dated December 8, 2005, between the Chief Executive
Officer of Xcel Energy and Senator Orrin Hatch indicates that Xcel
Energy, the majority shareholder and most active proponent of the PFS
project, will hold in abeyance future investments in the next phase of
the PFS facility as long as there is progress in various initiatives
toward federally sponsored interim storage, reuse, and/or disposal of
the nation's spent nuclear fuel. The initiatives referred to include
the Energy Department's examination of multi-purpose canister systems
for Yucca Mountain; Congressional passage of the FY 2006 Energy and
Water Development Act providing funds for grants to communities
interested in hosting facilities that would accept and eventually
recycle used fuel from civilian nuclear plants; and Congressional
preparation of legislation that will promote the movement of waste
early in the next decade.
Correspondence dated December 7, 2005, between the Chief Executive
Officer of Southern Company and Senator Hatch indicates that Southern
Company, one of eight members of the PFS consortium, will no longer
support the PFS facility, having concluded that the PFS facility
``cannot be successfully developed as a spent fuel repository in a time
frame to meet Southern's needs.'' Southern will continue to work toward
ensuring the eventual opening of Yucca Mountain, to which it is
committed as the nation's spent fuel repository. Southern Company was
one of six members of PFS that in July 2002 announced that they would
commit no funds to construction of the PFS facility past the licensing
phase so long as the Yucca Mountain project is approved by Congress and
repository development proceeds in a timely fashion.
Correspondence dated September 9, 2005, from the Utah Congressional
delegation to Secretary of the Interior Gale Norton states that the
proximity of the Goshute reservation to the Utah Test and Training
Range makes it one of the most dangerous locations for the aboveground
storage of high-level nuclear waste. The proposed storage site would
sit within miles of the training range where 7,000 overflights of F-16s
occur every year. Due to heavy commercial air traffic in the area, a
principal low level approach by these F-16s passes directly over the
proposed storage site. The aircraft sometimes use live ordnance, and 70
crashes of F-16s have occurred within the past 20 years at the Utah
Test and Training Range, a number of these well outside the boundaries
of the range.
In this same correspondence, the Congressional delegation states
that NRC refused to reopen its EIS, dated December 2001, to consider
the threat of deliberate suicide air attacks, even though post
September 11 studies have been completed at all other facilities
licensed by NRC. Moreover, the EIS does not require PFS to have any on-
site means to handle damaged or breached casks. NRC staff concluded
that the risk of a cask breach is so minimal that this scenario need
not be considered in the EIS. At the delegation's urging, the
Department of Homeland Security has consented to review the location of
the proposed site to consider its national security implications.
This Congressional correspondence of September 9, 2005, further
states that ``the issuance of a license for a private away-from-reactor
storage site has never been done and in our view runs counter to the
Nuclear Waste Policy Act, which limits the NRC to license storage sites
only at federal facilities or onsite at nuclear power plants.''
Finally, in correspondence with Senator Hatch, dated July 8, 2002,
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham concluded that the NWPA authorizes
DOE to provide funding and financial assistance only for shipments of
spent fuel to a facility constructed under that act. The Secretary
found that the PFS/Goshute facility would be constructed outside the
scope of the act, and as a result DOE would not fund or otherwise
provide financial assistance for PFS. Nor could DOE monitor the safety
precautions that a private facility may install. All costs associated
with the PFS plan would have to be covered by the members of the PFS
private consortium, the Secretary concluded.
The proposed action (Alternative 1) involves the construction and
operation of the proposed PFS facility at a site designated as Site A
in the northwest corner of the Skull Valley Indian Reservation and a
new rail line connecting the existing Union Pacific railroad to the
site. The proposed facility would be designed to store a lifetime
capacity of up to 40,000 metric tons of uranium (MTU) (44,000 tons) of
spent nuclear fuel. SNF is the primary by-product from a nuclear
reactor. The capacity of the proposed facility would be sufficient to
store all SNF from reactor sites owned by PFS members, as well as SNF
from reactor sites that are not owned by PFS members.
PFS is a limited liability company owned by eight U.S. electric
power generating companies. These companies are: Entergy Corporation;
Southern California Edison Company; Genoa FuelTech, Inc.; Indiana-
Michigan Company (American Electric Power); Florida Power and Light
Company; GPU Nuclear Corporation; Xcel Energy Inc.; and Southern
Nuclear Operating Company.
Construction of the proposed PFS facility would occur in three
phases. Phase 1 construction, which would provide an operational
facility, is planned to begin upon issuance of a license by the NRC and
certification by the Secretary that the conditions under which a May
1997 lease between PFS and the Band was approved have been satisfied.
The maximum term of the lease is 50 years. About one-fourth of the
storage area for the proposed facility would be constructed during
Phase 1, which would be completed in approximately 18 months. Another
one-fourth would be completed during Phase 2, and the remaining portion
constructed during Phase 3. The maximum amount of SNF that PFS could
accept at the proposed facility over the term of the initial license
and the proposed lease is 40,000 MTU. Once PFS had accepted 40,000 MTU
of SNF, it could not accept any additional shipments, even if it had
begun to ship the SNF off site.
SNF to be shipped to the proposed PFS facility would be placed
inside sealed metal canisters at commercial nuclear power plants. These
canisters would then be placed inside NRC-certified steel shipping
casks for transport by rail to the new rail siding at Skunk Ridge.
Dedicated trains, stopping only for crew changes, refueling, and
periodic inspections, would be used to transport SNF from the existing
reactor sites to Skull Valley. PFS expects that it would receive 1 to 2
trains, each carrying 2 to 4 shipping casks, per week from the reactor
sites. The number of loaded SNF canisters (inside shipping casks) is
estimated to be between 100 and 200 annually. Each canister would
contain approximately 10 MTU of SNF.
The nearest main rail line is approximately 39 km (24 miles) north
of the proposed site. PFS's preferred option for transporting SNF from
the existing Union Pacific main line railroad to the site is to build a
new rail line to the site. The new rail line, and its associated rail
siding, would connect to the existing Union Pacific main rail line at
Skunk Ridge (near Low, Utah). The proposed right-of-way for the rail
corridor would be 51 km (32 miles) long
[[Page 6288]]
and 60 m (200 ft) wide. It would run to the proposed PFS facility
through public lands administered by BLM on the eastern side of the
Cedar Mountains. Because these public lands are outside a
transportation and utility corridor described in BLM's Pony Express
RMP, an amendment to this RMP would be necessary before BLM could issue
a right-of-way. Any amendment to this RMP would also await compliance
by the Department of Defense with certain reporting duties under
section 2815 of the National Defense Authorization Act for FY 2000,
Pub. L. 106-65.
As noted above, designation of the Cedar Mountain Wilderness Area
by Congress in Pub. L. 109-163 appears to preclude the grant of a
right-of-way for the rail line in Alternative 1.
At the proposed PFS facility, a dry cask storage technology would
be used. The sealed metal canisters containing the SNF would be
unloaded from the shipping casks at the proposed PFS facility, loaded
into steel-and-concrete storage casks, and then placed on concrete pads
for aboveground storage. The canister-based cask system for confining
the SNF would be certified by NRC in accordance with NRC requirements
(10 CFR part 72). PFS proposes to employ the Holtec HI-STORM dual-
purpose canister-based cask system for use at the proposed PFS
facility. PFS anticipates storing as many as 4,000 sealed metal
canisters inside individual storage casks, to store a maximum of 40,000
MTU of SNF.
The proposed PFS facility would be licensed by NRC to operate for
up to 20 years. The applicant has indicated that it may seek to renew
the license for 20 years (total of 40 years). By the end of the
licensed life of the proposed PFS facility and prior to the expiration
of the lease, it is expected that the SNF would have been shipped to a
permanent repository. Service agreements (i.e., contracts) between PFS
and companies storing SNF at the proposed PFS facility will require
that the utilities remove all SNF from the proposed PFS facility by the
time the PFS license has terminated and PFS has completed its licensing
or regulatory obligations under the NRC license. The service agreement
requirement to remove the SNF from the proposed PFS facility is not
dependent upon the availability of a permanent geological repository.
Therefore, if the PFS license is terminated or revoked prior to the
availability of a permanent geological repository, the reactor
licensees storing SNF at the PFS facility would continue to retain
responsibility for the fuel and must remove it from the proposed PFS
facility before license termination.
At the end of its useful life (or upon termination of the lease
with the Band or termination of the NRC license, whichever comes
first), the proposed PFS facility would be closed. As a condition of
the lease with the Band and as required by NRC regulations,
decommissioning of the proposed PFS facility would be required prior to
closure of the facility and termination of the NRC license. Although
the exact nature of decommissioning cannot be predicted at this time,
the principal activities involved in decommissioning would include:
1. Removal of all remaining SNF from Skull Valley;
2. Removal or disposition of all storage casks;
3. Removal or disposition of the storage pads and crushed rock, at
the option of the Band and the BIA; and
4. Removal of the buildings and other improvements or their
transfer to the Band, at the option of the Band and the BIA.
The objective of the radiological decommissioning would be to
remove all materials having levels of radioactivity above the
applicable NRC limits in order for the site to be released for
unrestricted use. The SNF contained inside sealed metal canisters would
be transferred to licensed shipping casks for transportation away from
Skull Valley.
At the option of the Band, non-radiological decommissioning and
restoration of the facility may include the removal of structures and
reasonably returning the land to its original condition. The future of
the buildings and other improvements to be constructed by PFS on the
Reservation is to be determined by the Band and the BIA. PFS is
obligated to remove the buildings and other improvements at the request
of the Band. PFS will collect sufficient advanced funding or provide
other financial assurances to accomplish any or all of the non-
radiological decommissioning. If the Band chooses to retain any or all
of the buildings and other improvements once the radiological
decommissioning is complete, it has the right to receive a transfer
from PFS in an ``intact'' condition. The future use of any buildings
and other improvements not removed by PFS, including the soil-concrete
mixture below the pads, would be at the discretion of the Band. Any
impacts associated with such use would be evaluated by a separate NEPA
review. The proposed lease requires that the SNF be removed from the
Reservation before the end of the lease term.
Alternative 2 involves constructing the proposed PFS facility at an
alternative location (Site B) on the Reservation. This site is located
about 800 m (0.5 mile) south of the proposed Site A and is similar in
terms of its environmental characteristics to the proposed site. Under
this alternative, a new rail line would be constructed across BLM lands
from Skunk Ridge. The rail corridor through Skull Valley would be
essentially identical to the one for the proposed action, but it would
be about 1.6 km (1 mile) longer due to the slightly greater distance of
Site B from the existing main rail line. From BLM's perspective,
Alternative 2 would require amendment of the Pony Express RMP and the
authorization of a right-of-way across public lands for the
construction and operation of a new rail line. Amendment of the Pony
Express RMP would involve the Defense Department's compliance with
section 2815(b) of the National Defense Authorization Act for FY 2000.
Because the rail line is essentially the same as that involved in
Alternative 1, designation of the Cedar Mountain Wilderness Area in
Pub. L. 109-163 appears to preclude the grant of a right-of-way for the
rail line in Alternative 2.
Alternative 3 involves constructing the proposed PFS facility at
Site A, but transportation of SNF from the existing Union Pacific main
rail line to the site would be accomplished by heavy-haul tractor/
trailers. An ITF and rail siding would be built on land managed by BLM
at the existing main rail line near Timpie, Utah, to transfer SNF
shipping casks from rail cars to the heavy-haul vehicles, which would
then transport the SNF along the existing Skull Valley Road to the
site. No rail line would be built under this alternative.
The ITF would occupy 9-11 acres of BLM land approximately 2 miles
west of the intersection of I-80 and Skull Valley Road and outside of
the lands designated in Pub. L. 109-163 as the Cedar Mountain
Wilderness Area. It would consist of three rail sidings, a new access
road for heavy-haul vehicles, and a building with a crane for
transferring SNF shipping casks from rail cars onto heavy-haul tractor/
trailers. PFS has filed an application for a right-of-way from BLM to
use this land. The ITF would not require an amendment to the Pony
Express RMP. The ITF would occupy previously disturbed land lying
between the existing Union Pacific Railroad and Interstate 80. SNF
would arrive at the ITF by rail using the Union Pacific rail line. The
crane would load the fuel from the rail cars onto heavy-haul tractor/
trailers, which would use the existing Skull Valley road to carry
[[Page 6289]]
the fuel south to the PFS facility on the Goshute Reservation, a
distance of approximately 26 miles. From BLM's perspective, Alternative
3 involves the authorization of a right-of-way to occupy public lands
for the ITF; no RMP amendment would be necessary.
Alternative 4 involves constructing the PFS facility at Site B on
reservation lands and transportation of SNF by heavy-haul tractor/
trailers. As in alternative 3, PFS would seek a right-of-way to
authorize use of an ITF on BLM lands. No rail corridor would be
constructed under this alternative, and no amendment of BLM's RMP would
be necessary.
Under the no action alternative, no PFS facility or transportation
facilities would be built in Skull Valley. Under this alternative, NRC
would deny the application for a license for the proposed PFS facility,
and no certification by the Secretary of lease conditions would occur.
From BLM's perspective, the right-of-way applications filed by PFS
would be denied. The Band would be free to pursue alternative uses for
the land in the northwest corner of the Reservation.
Jim Hughes,
Deputy Director.
[FR Doc. E6-1595 Filed 2-6-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-22-P