M/V Selendang Ayu Natural Resource Damage Assessment, 15150-15151 [E7-5130]
Download as PDF
15150
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 61 / Friday, March 30, 2007 / Notices
individuals identifying themselves as
representatives of or officials of
organizations or businesses, available
for public inspection in their entirety.
This notice is provided pursuant to
section 10(a) of the Act and Service
regulations for implementing NEPA.
The Service will evaluate the
application, associated documents, and
comments submitted thereon to prepare
a Final Supplemental EIS. A permit
decision will be made no sooner than 30
days after the publication of the Final
Supplemental EIS.
Dated: March 16, 2007.
Ken McDermond,
Deputy Manager, California/Nevada
Operations Office, Sacramento, California.
[FR Doc. E7–5914 Filed 3–29–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
M/V Selendang Ayu Natural Resource
Damage Assessment
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of intent to conduct
restoration planning.
cprice-sewell on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: On December 8, 2004, the
shipping vessel M/V Selendang Ayu ran
aground and broke apart between Skan
Bay and Spray Cape on Unalaska Island,
in Alaska’s Aleutian Islands. The vessel
was carrying approximately 446,280
gallons of Intermediate Fuel Oil 380
(IFO) and 21,058 gallons of Marine
Diesel Oil (MDO). Although a portion of
the oils were eventually removed from
the vessel, 339,538 gallons of the IFO
380 and 14,680 gallons of marine diesel
were discharged into the environment
over time. This Notice of Intent to
Conduct Restoration Planning (Notice),
issued pursuant to 15 CFR 990.44,
pertains to the discharge of oil from the
M/V Selendang Ayu described above
(the Incident). The Unified Command
for the Incident undertook response
activities to clean up the discharged oil.
Under section 1006(b) of the Oil
Pollution Act of 1990 (OPA), 33 U.S.C.
2706(b), the President has designated
the Secretary of the U.S. Department of
the Interior (DOI), represented by the
Regional Director of the Fish & Wildlife
Service (FWS), Alaska Region, and the
Secretary of the U.S. Department of
Commerce (DOC), represented by the
National Oceanic Atmospheric
Administration, as Federal trustees of
natural resources for this Incident. The
Governor of the State of Alaska has
designated the Commissioners of the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
15:49 Mar 29, 2007
Jkt 211001
Alaska Departments of Fish & Game,
Environmental Conservation and
Natural Resources, and the Alaska
Attorney General as State trustees of
natural resources. The Federal and State
trustees for the Incident will be referred
to herein collectively as the Trustees.
The Trustees have determined that
they have jurisdiction to enter into the
restoration planning phase of a Natural
Resource Damage Assessment under
OPA and its implementing regulations
and that it is appropriate to do so. The
purpose of this phase is to prepare a
plan for the restoration, rehabilitation,
replacement or acquisition of the
equivalent of the natural resources and
services injured, destroyed or lost as a
result of the Incident.
ADDRESSES: Alaska Regional Office, U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service, 1011 E.
Tudor Road, Anchorage, AK 99503.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jenifer Kohout, (907) 786–3687 (phone);
Jenifer_Kohout@fws.gov (e-mail).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: One of the
goals of OPA is to make the
environment and the public whole for
injuries to natural resources and
services resulting from an incident
involving a discharge or substantial
threat of a discharge of oil from a vessel
into or upon navigable waters or
adjoining shorelines. This goal is
achieved through the return of the
injured natural resources and services to
baseline and the compensation for
interim losses of such natural resources
and services from the date of the
incident until recovery.
To facilitate achievement of this goal,
the Trustees are responsible for
assessing the damages to natural
resources under their trusteeship that
have resulted from the Incident,
developing a plan for the restoration of
these resources, and pursuing from the
parties responsible for the Incident
(Responsible Parties) funding for the
implementation of this plan or the
implementation of the plan by the
Responsible Parties themselves. The
Trustees are proceeding in accordance
with the regulations for Natural
Resource Damage Assessments at 15
CFR Part 990.
The Responsible Parties include, but
are not necessarily limited to, Ayu
Navigation Sdn, Bhd, and IMC Shipping
Pte, Ltd, which were the owner and the
operator, respectively, of the M/V
Selendang Ayu at the time of the
Incident. The guarantor of financial
responsibility for the liability of these
Responsible Parties is
˚
¨
SverigesAngfartygs Assurans Forening
(The Swedish Club).
PO 00000
Frm 00056
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
The Trustees have performed
preassessment activities in connection
with the Incident, including data
collection and preliminary analysis.
These activities included conducting
shore and skiff-based surveys to collect
information about potential impacts to
birds, marine mammals, fish, intertidal
and subtidal biota, and associated
habitats; aerial coastal and pelagic
surveys and counts to determine species
at risk from the Incident; surveys of
subtidal habitats; surveys of
anadromous fish streams; and collecting
and cataloging marine bird carcasses
found on beaches following the
Incident. To date, the Responsible
Parties have cooperated with the
Trustees in the performance and/or
funding of certain response, cleanup
and data collection activities.
Determination of Jurisdiction
Under 15 CFR 990.41, the Federal and
State natural resource trustees have
determined that they have jurisdiction
to pursue restoration under OPA and its
implementing regulations, finding:
a. The discharge of oil beginning on
or about December 8, 2004 from the
M/V Selendang Ayu into the Bering Sea,
off the coast of Spray Cape on Unalaska
Island, was an ‘‘Incident’’ as defined at
15 CFR 990.30.
(1) The M/V Selendang Ayu, a
‘‘Vessel’’ as defined at 33 U.S.C.
2701(37), discharged the entire quantity
of oil involved in this Incident.
(2) The M/V Selendang Ayu
discharged oil into or upon navigable
waters of the United States and
adjoining shorelines, including federal
and state waters adjacent to Unalaska
Island, Alaska, the shoreline of
Unalaska Island, and anadromous
streams.
b. The Trustees have also determined
that:
(1) This Incident was not permitted
under Federal, State or local law;
(2) The M/V Selendang Ayu is not a
‘‘public vessel’’ as defined at 33 U.S.C.
2701(2), as the vessel was not owned or
bareboat chartered and operated by the
United States or a State or political
subdivision thereof, or by a foreign
nation; and
(3) The discharge of oil did not occur
from an onshore facility subject to the
Trans-Alaska Pipeline Authority Act, 43
U.S.C. 1651, et seq.
c. Based upon information gathered
during the response, cleanup and
preassessment phases, the Trustees have
determined that, due to the amount and
type of oil discharged, the known
toxicity of the oil, the location of the
discharge and the living and non-living
natural resources and services in the
E:\FR\FM\30MRN1.SGM
30MRN1
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 61 / Friday, March 30, 2007 / Notices
cprice-sewell on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
area at the time of the discharge
(including but not limited to resident
and anadromous fish, shellfish, riparian
and upland vegetation, invertebrates,
birds marine mammals and other
wildlife, stream sediments and soils,
water, and public and/or cultural uses),
natural resources and natural resource
services under Federal and State
trusteeship have been or may have been
injured as a result of the Incident.
Determination to Conduct Restoration
Planning
Under 15 CFR 990.42, the Federal and
State natural resource trustees have
determined to conduct restoration
planning under OPA and its
implementing regulations, finding:
a. Based on data collected and
analyzed under 15 CFR 990.43, injuries
to natural resources and services have
resulted or are likely to result from the
Incident, including, but not necessarily
limited to, injuries to waterfowl,
seabirds, intertidal biota, marine
mammals, terrestrial vegetation,
subtidal resources, fish and shellfish
and associated cultural uses.
b. Response actions have not
adequately addressed the injuries
resulting from the Incident. Response
efforts included, but were not limited to,
attempting to boom sensitive fish
streams; removing oil from the wreck;
removing dead bird and sea otter
carcasses; capturing, cleaning and
rehabilitating live oiled birds;
temporarily closing fisheries; sampling
marine waters that might affect ongoing
fisheries; recovering stranded oil on
shorelines; performing manual and
mechanical cleanup operations; and
testing fish and invertebrates used for
commercial and subsistence purposes.
While these actions may have reduced
the number and magnitude of future
injuries, they did not adequately
address the mortality and possible
sublethal effects to natural resources
and services injured from the Incident.
Further, cleanup activities likely caused
additional injuries to certain natural
resources, including, but not necessarily
limited to, terrestrial vegetation and
intertidal biota.
c. Feasible primary and/or
compensatory restoration actions exist
to address injuries from the Incident.
Feasible restoration actions relevant to
the injuries may include, but are not
limited to:
(1) Waste oil recovery at Dutch
Harbor/Unalaska to restore sea ducks,
marine mammals, intertidal and
subtidal biota, fish and shellfish and
human uses of those resources;
(2) Removal of introduced terrestrial
invasive species, such as rats or fox, that
VerDate Aug<31>2005
15:49 Mar 29, 2007
Jkt 211001
prey on or compete with marine birds
on certain islands of the Alaska
Maritime National Wildlife Refuge to
restore marine birds and their habitat;
(3) Debris removal on Unalaska Island
or elsewhere in the Aleutians to restore
habitat for intertidal biota and marine
mammals;
(4) Habitat protection in the nesting
areas of waterfowl injured by the spill;
(5) Salmon restoration in Unalaska
(sockeye) or Summers Bay (coho) lakes;
and
(6) Education and outreach on
Unalaska Island related to subsistence
and cultural resources.
Data supporting these determinations
are contained in the Administrative
Record established for this case (see
below).
Based upon the foregoing
determinations, the Trustees have
determined to conduct restoration
planning for the Incident.
Opportunity To Comment
Under 15 CFR 990.14(d), the Trustees
will seek public involvement in
restoration planning for this Incident
through, at minimum, public review of
and comment on the Draft Restoration
Plan. When the Draft Restoration Plan is
prepared, the public will be notified of
the opportunity to comment. Questions
regarding this Notice may be directed to:
Jenifer Kohout, (907) 786–3687 (phone);
Jenifer_Kohout@fws.gov (e-mail).
Administrative Record
The Trustees have opened an
Administrative Record (Record) in
compliance with 15 CFR 990.45. The
Record will include documents relied
upon by the Trustees during the natural
resource damage assessment performed
in connection with this Incident. The
Record is on file at the FWS Alaska
Regional Office (see ADDRESSES). To
review the Record, contact Jenifer
Kohout (see FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT). In addition, the index and
other key elements of the Record will be
posted at https://www.r7.fws.gov/
fisheries/contaminants/spill/
sa_record.htm on the FWS Alaska
Region Web site.
Thomas O. Melius,
Regional Director.
[FR Doc. E7–5130 Filed 3–29–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
PO 00000
Frm 00057
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
15151
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Indian Affairs
Submission of Information Collection
to Office of Management and Budget
Bureau of Indian Affairs,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: In compliance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, the
Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) is
submitting this information collection
request to the Office of Management and
Budget for review and renewal. The
collection is: 25 CFR 162 Leases and
Permits, 1076–0155.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before April 30, 2007, to be assured
of consideration.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be sent to
the Desk Officer for the Department of
the Interior at the Office of Management
and Budget. You may submit comments
either by facsimile at (202) 395–6566, or
by e-mail to
OIRA_DOCKET@omb.eop.gov. Please
send a copy to Ben Burshia, Chief,
Division of Real Estate Services, Bureau
of Indian Affairs, 1849 C Street, NW.,
Mail Stop 4639–MIB, Washington, DC
20240.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Interested persons may obtain a copy of
the information collection requests
without charge by contacting Ben
Burshia at (202) 219–1195.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
provides an opportunity for interested
parties to comment on proposed
information collection requests. This
collection covers 25 CFR part 162 as
presently approved. The Bureau of
Indian Affairs, Division of Real Estate
Services, is obtaining a normal
information collection clearance from
OMB. The request contains (1) Type of
review, (2) title, (3) summary of the
collection, (4) respondents, (5)
frequency of collection, (6) reporting
and record keeping requirements and (7)
reason for response.
A Federal Register notice was
published on January 25, 2007 (72 FR
3406) requesting comments on our
proposed submission of renewal to
OMB. No comments were received. The
information collected is used by the
Bureau of Indian Affairs to determine:
(a) Whether or not a lease may be
approved or granted;
(b) The value of each lease;
(c) The appropriate compensation to
landowners; and
(d) Provisions for violations of
trespass.
E:\FR\FM\30MRN1.SGM
30MRN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 61 (Friday, March 30, 2007)]
[Notices]
[Pages 15150-15151]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-5130]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
M/V Selendang Ayu Natural Resource Damage Assessment
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of intent to conduct restoration planning.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: On December 8, 2004, the shipping vessel M/V Selendang Ayu ran
aground and broke apart between Skan Bay and Spray Cape on Unalaska
Island, in Alaska's Aleutian Islands. The vessel was carrying
approximately 446,280 gallons of Intermediate Fuel Oil 380 (IFO) and
21,058 gallons of Marine Diesel Oil (MDO). Although a portion of the
oils were eventually removed from the vessel, 339,538 gallons of the
IFO 380 and 14,680 gallons of marine diesel were discharged into the
environment over time. This Notice of Intent to Conduct Restoration
Planning (Notice), issued pursuant to 15 CFR 990.44, pertains to the
discharge of oil from the M/V Selendang Ayu described above (the
Incident). The Unified Command for the Incident undertook response
activities to clean up the discharged oil.
Under section 1006(b) of the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 (OPA), 33
U.S.C. 2706(b), the President has designated the Secretary of the U.S.
Department of the Interior (DOI), represented by the Regional Director
of the Fish & Wildlife Service (FWS), Alaska Region, and the Secretary
of the U.S. Department of Commerce (DOC), represented by the National
Oceanic Atmospheric Administration, as Federal trustees of natural
resources for this Incident. The Governor of the State of Alaska has
designated the Commissioners of the Alaska Departments of Fish & Game,
Environmental Conservation and Natural Resources, and the Alaska
Attorney General as State trustees of natural resources. The Federal
and State trustees for the Incident will be referred to herein
collectively as the Trustees.
The Trustees have determined that they have jurisdiction to enter
into the restoration planning phase of a Natural Resource Damage
Assessment under OPA and its implementing regulations and that it is
appropriate to do so. The purpose of this phase is to prepare a plan
for the restoration, rehabilitation, replacement or acquisition of the
equivalent of the natural resources and services injured, destroyed or
lost as a result of the Incident.
ADDRESSES: Alaska Regional Office, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 1011
E. Tudor Road, Anchorage, AK 99503.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jenifer Kohout, (907) 786-3687
(phone); Jenifer--Kohout@fws.gov (e-mail).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: One of the goals of OPA is to make the
environment and the public whole for injuries to natural resources and
services resulting from an incident involving a discharge or
substantial threat of a discharge of oil from a vessel into or upon
navigable waters or adjoining shorelines. This goal is achieved through
the return of the injured natural resources and services to baseline
and the compensation for interim losses of such natural resources and
services from the date of the incident until recovery.
To facilitate achievement of this goal, the Trustees are
responsible for assessing the damages to natural resources under their
trusteeship that have resulted from the Incident, developing a plan for
the restoration of these resources, and pursuing from the parties
responsible for the Incident (Responsible Parties) funding for the
implementation of this plan or the implementation of the plan by the
Responsible Parties themselves. The Trustees are proceeding in
accordance with the regulations for Natural Resource Damage Assessments
at 15 CFR Part 990.
The Responsible Parties include, but are not necessarily limited
to, Ayu Navigation Sdn, Bhd, and IMC Shipping Pte, Ltd, which were the
owner and the operator, respectively, of the M/V Selendang Ayu at the
time of the Incident. The guarantor of financial responsibility for the
liability of these Responsible Parties is Sveriges[Aring]ngfartygs
Assurans F[ouml]rening (The Swedish Club).
The Trustees have performed preassessment activities in connection
with the Incident, including data collection and preliminary analysis.
These activities included conducting shore and skiff-based surveys to
collect information about potential impacts to birds, marine mammals,
fish, intertidal and subtidal biota, and associated habitats; aerial
coastal and pelagic surveys and counts to determine species at risk
from the Incident; surveys of subtidal habitats; surveys of anadromous
fish streams; and collecting and cataloging marine bird carcasses found
on beaches following the Incident. To date, the Responsible Parties
have cooperated with the Trustees in the performance and/or funding of
certain response, cleanup and data collection activities.
Determination of Jurisdiction
Under 15 CFR 990.41, the Federal and State natural resource
trustees have determined that they have jurisdiction to pursue
restoration under OPA and its implementing regulations, finding:
a. The discharge of oil beginning on or about December 8, 2004 from
the M/V Selendang Ayu into the Bering Sea, off the coast of Spray Cape
on Unalaska Island, was an ``Incident'' as defined at 15 CFR 990.30.
(1) The M/V Selendang Ayu, a ``Vessel'' as defined at 33 U.S.C.
2701(37), discharged the entire quantity of oil involved in this
Incident.
(2) The M/V Selendang Ayu discharged oil into or upon navigable
waters of the United States and adjoining shorelines, including federal
and state waters adjacent to Unalaska Island, Alaska, the shoreline of
Unalaska Island, and anadromous streams.
b. The Trustees have also determined that:
(1) This Incident was not permitted under Federal, State or local
law;
(2) The M/V Selendang Ayu is not a ``public vessel'' as defined at
33 U.S.C. 2701(2), as the vessel was not owned or bareboat chartered
and operated by the United States or a State or political subdivision
thereof, or by a foreign nation; and
(3) The discharge of oil did not occur from an onshore facility
subject to the Trans-Alaska Pipeline Authority Act, 43 U.S.C. 1651, et
seq.
c. Based upon information gathered during the response, cleanup and
preassessment phases, the Trustees have determined that, due to the
amount and type of oil discharged, the known toxicity of the oil, the
location of the discharge and the living and non-living natural
resources and services in the
[[Page 15151]]
area at the time of the discharge (including but not limited to
resident and anadromous fish, shellfish, riparian and upland
vegetation, invertebrates, birds marine mammals and other wildlife,
stream sediments and soils, water, and public and/or cultural uses),
natural resources and natural resource services under Federal and State
trusteeship have been or may have been injured as a result of the
Incident.
Determination to Conduct Restoration Planning
Under 15 CFR 990.42, the Federal and State natural resource
trustees have determined to conduct restoration planning under OPA and
its implementing regulations, finding:
a. Based on data collected and analyzed under 15 CFR 990.43,
injuries to natural resources and services have resulted or are likely
to result from the Incident, including, but not necessarily limited to,
injuries to waterfowl, seabirds, intertidal biota, marine mammals,
terrestrial vegetation, subtidal resources, fish and shellfish and
associated cultural uses.
b. Response actions have not adequately addressed the injuries
resulting from the Incident. Response efforts included, but were not
limited to, attempting to boom sensitive fish streams; removing oil
from the wreck; removing dead bird and sea otter carcasses; capturing,
cleaning and rehabilitating live oiled birds; temporarily closing
fisheries; sampling marine waters that might affect ongoing fisheries;
recovering stranded oil on shorelines; performing manual and mechanical
cleanup operations; and testing fish and invertebrates used for
commercial and subsistence purposes. While these actions may have
reduced the number and magnitude of future injuries, they did not
adequately address the mortality and possible sublethal effects to
natural resources and services injured from the Incident. Further,
cleanup activities likely caused additional injuries to certain natural
resources, including, but not necessarily limited to, terrestrial
vegetation and intertidal biota.
c. Feasible primary and/or compensatory restoration actions exist
to address injuries from the Incident. Feasible restoration actions
relevant to the injuries may include, but are not limited to:
(1) Waste oil recovery at Dutch Harbor/Unalaska to restore sea
ducks, marine mammals, intertidal and subtidal biota, fish and
shellfish and human uses of those resources;
(2) Removal of introduced terrestrial invasive species, such as
rats or fox, that prey on or compete with marine birds on certain
islands of the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge to restore
marine birds and their habitat;
(3) Debris removal on Unalaska Island or elsewhere in the Aleutians
to restore habitat for intertidal biota and marine mammals;
(4) Habitat protection in the nesting areas of waterfowl injured by
the spill;
(5) Salmon restoration in Unalaska (sockeye) or Summers Bay (coho)
lakes; and
(6) Education and outreach on Unalaska Island related to
subsistence and cultural resources.
Data supporting these determinations are contained in the
Administrative Record established for this case (see below).
Based upon the foregoing determinations, the Trustees have
determined to conduct restoration planning for the Incident.
Opportunity To Comment
Under 15 CFR 990.14(d), the Trustees will seek public involvement
in restoration planning for this Incident through, at minimum, public
review of and comment on the Draft Restoration Plan. When the Draft
Restoration Plan is prepared, the public will be notified of the
opportunity to comment. Questions regarding this Notice may be directed
to: Jenifer Kohout, (907) 786-3687 (phone); Jenifer--Kohout@fws.gov (e-
mail).
Administrative Record
The Trustees have opened an Administrative Record (Record) in
compliance with 15 CFR 990.45. The Record will include documents relied
upon by the Trustees during the natural resource damage assessment
performed in connection with this Incident. The Record is on file at
the FWS Alaska Regional Office (see ADDRESSES). To review the Record,
contact Jenifer Kohout (see FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT). In
addition, the index and other key elements of the Record will be posted
at https://www.r7.fws.gov/fisheries/contaminants/spill/sa_record.htm on
the FWS Alaska Region Web site.
Thomas O. Melius,
Regional Director.
[FR Doc. E7-5130 Filed 3-29-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-P