Notice of Availability (NOA) To Announce the Release of the Overland Pass Natural Gas Liquids Pipeline Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS), 15154-15155 [E7-5575]
Download as PDF
15154
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 61 / Friday, March 30, 2007 / Notices
Mountain Cooperative Management and
Protection Area as described in Title 1,
Subtitle D of Public Law 106–399. Each
member will be a person who, as a
result of training and experience, has
knowledge or special expertise that
qualifies him or her to provide advice
from among the categories of interest
listed above.
Members of the Steens Mountain
Advisory Council are appointed for a 3year term. Appointment to these four
positions will begin on earlier than
October 2007 and will end October
2010.
Members will serve without monetary
compensation, but will be reimbursed
for travel and per diem expenses at
current rates for Government
employees. The Steens Mountain
Advisory Council shall meet only at the
call of the Designated Federal Official,
but not less than once per year.
Dated: January 10, 2007.
Dana R. Shuford,
Burns District Manager, Bureau of Land
Management, Burns, Oregon.
[FR Doc. 07–1534 Filed 3–29–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–33–M
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[WY–030–07–5101–ER–K087; WYW–166510]
Notice of Availability (NOA) To
Announce the Release of the Overland
Pass Natural Gas Liquids Pipeline
Draft Environmental Impact Statement
(DEIS)
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice.
cprice-sewell on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Bureau of Land
Management (BLM) announces the
availability of the Overland Pass (OP)
Natural Gas Liquids (NGL) Pipeline
DEIS. The DEIS analyzes the
consequences of granting a Right-of-Way
(ROW) to the Overland Pass Pipeline
Company, LLC for locating a 760-mile,
14-inch and 16-inch diameter NGL
pipeline on Federal land.
DATES: The BLM will review all public
comments if they are submitted within
45 days following the date the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
publishes this NOA in the Federal
Register. All public meetings or other
involvement activities for the OP NGL
Pipeline project will be announced to
the public by the BLM at least 15 days
in advance through public notices,
media news releases, Web site
announcements, or mailings. The BLM
VerDate Aug<31>2005
15:49 Mar 29, 2007
Jkt 211001
will not be holding formal public
hearings on this DEIS.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the DEIS have
been sent to affected Federal, State, and
local governments and to interested
parties that previously requested a copy.
The DEIS and supporting documents
will be available electronically on the
following Web site: https://
www.wy.blm.gov/nepa/index.htm.
Copies of the DEIS are available for
public inspection during normal
business hours at the following
locations:
• Bureau of Land Management,
Wyoming State Office, Public Room,
5353 Yellowstone, Cheyenne, Wyoming
82003;
• Bureau of Land Management,
Rawlins Field Office, 1300 North Third
St, Rawlins, Wyoming 82301;
• Bureau of Land Management, Rock
Springs Field Office, 280 Highway 191
N., Rock Springs, Wyoming 82901;
• Bureau of Land Management,
Kemmerer Field Office, 312 Highway
189 N., Kemmerer, Wyoming 83101; and
• U.S. Department of Agriculture,
Pawnee National Grasslands, 660 O
Street, Greeley, Colorado 80631.
Copies of the DEIS will also be
delivered to public libraries in the
following communities:
• Green River, Rock Springs, Rawlins,
Laramie, and Cheyenne, Wyoming;
• Greeley, Fort Collins, Yuma, and
Wray, Colorado; and
• Colby, WaKeeney, Hays, and
McPherson, Kansas.
A limited number of copies of the
document will be available as long as
supplies last. To request a copy, contact
Tom Hurshman, Project Manager, as
described below.
Written comments may be submitted
by the following methods:
• Web site: https://www.blm.gov/rfo/
nepa.htm.
• E-mail:
overland_pipeline_wy@blm.gov.
• Facsimile: (307) 328–4224 Attn:
Tom Hurshman, or
• Mail: Tom Hurshman, Project
Manager, Bureau of Land Management,
Rawlins Field Office, 1300 North Third
St, Rawlins, Wyoming 82301.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tom
Hurshman, Project Manager, Bureau of
Land Management, Uncompahgre Field
Office, 2465 South Townsend Ave.,
Montrose, CO 81401. Mr. Hurshman
may be reached by telephone at (970)
240–5345.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
project would transport up to 150,000
barrels per day of NGL. The proposed
OP Pipeline would originate in Opal,
Wyoming, and terminate at existing
PO 00000
Frm 00060
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
NGL processing facilities in Conway,
Kansas. The OP Pipeline route would
cross approximately 123 miles of
Federal land in Wyoming and Colorado.
In Wyoming, approximately 98 miles of
the proposed pipeline route would cross
public lands administered by three BLM
Field Offices: Kemmerer, Rock Springs,
and Rawlins.
In addition, the OP Pipeline location
would cross two units of the National
Forest System administered by the
United States Department of
Agriculture, Forest Service. The
proposed pipeline location includes
approximately 2 miles of the Flaming
Gorge National Recreation Area, and
approximately 23 miles of the Pawnee
National Grassland north of Greeley,
Colorado. No Federal land in Kansas
would be affected by this proposal.
In the fall of 2005, Williams Field
Services, doing business as Overland
Pass Pipeline Company LLC (Overland
Pass Company), submitted to the BLM
an application for a ROW grant across
Federal lands to locate a pipeline up to
20 inches in diameter that would be
used to transport NGLs from Opal,
Wyoming, to an existing processing
facility in Conway, Kansas. (NGLs are
naturally occurring heavier hydrocarbon
liquids that are associated with the
production of natural gas such as
methane. NGLs include ethane and are
primarily used to produce plastics,
propane, butanes, and natural gasoline.)
On March 24, 2006, the BLM published
in the Federal Register a Notice of
Intent (NOI ) to prepare an
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS)
under the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA) and as required by 43
Code of Federal Regulations Part 2880.
To allow the public an opportunity to
review the proposal and project
information, the BLM held public
meetings during April 2006 in Rock
Springs and Cheyenne, Wyoming;
Greeley, Colorado; and Hays, Kansas.
Potential impacts to specific resources
such as water quality and quantity,
threatened and endangered and
sensitive species, construction impacts
to vegetation communities and historic
trails, and pipeline route and location
near residential development were
identified during scoping and analyzed
in the DEIS. Overland Pass Company
made a number of minor re-routes to
their original proposal as submitted.
Three actions were analyzed in the
DEIS: No Action Alternative; Proposed
Action Alternative, and the Southern
Energy Corridor. The No Action
Alternative means that the project as
proposed by Overland Pass Company in
its ROW application would be rejected
by the BLM. Under the No Action
E:\FR\FM\30MRN1.SGM
30MRN1
cprice-sewell on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 61 / Friday, March 30, 2007 / Notices
Alternative, the BLM would not issue a
ROW grant for the OP Pipeline. The
project, including the pipeline,
temporary access roads, and temporary
use areas during construction, would
not be approved or authorized as
described in the ROW application. The
BLM’s preferred alternative is the
Proposed Action Alternative. The
Proposed Action Alternative analyzed
in the DEIS reflects minor revisions to
the original route as proposed by
Overland Pass Company. The Southern
Energy Corridor Alternative reflects the
Green River Resource Management
Plan’s preferred locations for future
proposed ROWS. Other alternatives,
including transportation system
alternatives and route variations, were
considered, but not studied in detail.
The DEIS analyzes the potential
environmental consequences of granting
Overland Pass Company a ROW to
construct an approximately 760-mile
pipeline that would transport NGLs
from Opal, Wyoming, to its terminus at
the company’s existing facilities in
Conway, Kansas. The pipeline would be
approximately 14 inches in diameter
between Opal and Echo Springs,
Wyoming, and 16 inches in diameter
from Echo Springs, Wyoming, to
Conway, Kansas.
As part of the proposed action, the OP
Pipeline would be routed across
southern Wyoming from Opal to Echo
Springs along various existing utility or
pipeline ROWs. From Echo Springs, the
pipeline ROW would run in a
southeasterly direction, paralleling the
existing Southern Star Pipeline, and
proceed to the south of Cheyenne,
Wyoming, before entering Colorado. A
major portion of the proposed route in
Wyoming would cross public lands
administered by the BLM.
From the Colorado border, the
pipeline ROW would continue to
parallel Southern Star Pipeline
southeasterly crossing the Pawnee
National Grassland, which is
administered by the USDA Forest
Service, and then into Kansas. From the
Colorado-Kansas state line, the OP
Pipeline would continue to run parallel
to the Southern Star Pipeline to south of
WaKeeney, Kansas. It would then follow
an existing BP Amoco pipeline to
Bushton, Kansas. From this point, the
OP Pipeline would not parallel existing
pipelines until reaching Mitchell,
Kansas, where it would then follow an
existing Williams Pipeline to the
termination point at Conway, Kansas.
At Bushton and Conway, Kansas, the
transported NGL would be processed at
existing facilities and distributed
through an existing transportation
infrastructure to consumer markets in
VerDate Aug<31>2005
15:49 Mar 29, 2007
Jkt 211001
the Midwest and Texas Gulf of Mexico
coast. About 82 percent of the proposed
760-mile pipeline would be co-located
within existing pipeline ROW corridors.
In addition to the pipeline, three electric
pump stations would be needed to move
the NGL at a maximum pressure of
1,440 pounds per square inch gauge
(psig) through the pipeline. The pump
stations are proposed to be located near
Echo Springs and Laramie, Wyoming,
and near WaKeeney, Kansas. The
pipeline would have manual or selfactuating shut-off valves at regular
intervals, as well as cleaning facilities
and meter stations.
The OP Pipeline would be
constructed and installed within a 75foot-wide construction area. After
construction and reclamation, the
permanent ROW would be 50 feet wide,
centered on the pipeline. All temporary
workspace areas needed for
construction activities outside the 50
foot wide permanent ROW would
require Temporary Use Permits.
All comment submittals must include
the commenter’s name and street
address. Comments, including the
names and street addresses of
respondent, will be available for public
review at the Rawlins Field Office
during its business hours (7:45 a.m. to
4:30 p.m.), Monday through Friday,
except for Federal holidays. Before
including your address, phone number,
e-mail address, or other personal
identifying information in your
comment, be advised that your entire
comment, including your personal
identifying information may be made
publicly available at any time. While
you can ask us in your comment to
withhold from public review your
personal identifying information, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able to
do so.
Dated: February 21, 2007.
Robert A. Bennett,
State Director.
[FR Doc. E7–5575 Filed 3–29–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[NV–040–07–5110–CF05 1990–EX–1990;
N82888]
Notice of Intent To Prepare an
Environmental Impact Statement for an
Expansion of Mining Operations at
Barrick Gold Corporation’s Bald
Mountain and Money Basin Mines, NV
AGENCY:
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
PO 00000
Frm 00061
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
ACTION:
15155
Notice of Intent.
SUMMARY: In accordance with section
102(2)(c) of the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969 and 43 CFR part
3809, the Bureau of Land Management
(BLM) Ely Field Office, Nevada intends
to prepare an Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS) for a proposed
consolidation and expansion of the
existing Plans of Operation for Barrick
Gold Corporation’s Bald Mountain Mine
and Mooney Basin Mine located in
White Pine County, Nevada. The two
existing mines would be combined into
one new expanded operation which
would be called the North Operations
Area. The EIS will analyze anticipated
impacts of the expansion under this
new consolidated Plan of Operation,
and will incorporate analysis from a
previous EIS and environmental
assessments associate with the existing
disturbance.
DATES: Publication of this notice
initiates the public scoping process.
Scoping meetings will be held in Ely,
Elko, and Eureka, Nevada. All public
meetings will be announced through
local news media, newsletters or flyers,
and will be posted on the BLM Web site,
https://www.nv.blm.gov/ely/
2007_releases.htm at least 15 days prior
to each event.
The minutes and list of attendees for
each meeting will be available to the
public and open for 30 days after the
meeting to any participants who wish to
clarify the views they expressed.
Comments and resource information
should be submitted to the BLM within
30 days of publication of this notice in
the Federal Register.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
by any of the following methods:
• E-mail: lynn_bjorklund@nv.glm.gov.
• Fax: 775–189–1910.
• Mail: Bureau of Land Management,
Ely Field Office, Attention: Lynn
Bjorklund, HC33 Box 33500, Ely,
Nevada, 89301.
Documents pertinent to this proposal
may be examined at the Ely Field Office.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
further information and/or to have your
name added to our mailing list, contact
Lynn Bjorklund, Ely Field Office, at 775
289–1893 or by e-mail to
lynn_bjorklund@nv.blm.gov.
Barrick
Gold Corporation has submitted a
proposal to expand and consolidate
their existing Bald Mountain and
Mooney Basin Mines, which are located
approximately 65 air miles northwest of
the town of Ely, Nevada. The project
(consolidating the existing Bald
Mountain Mine N–68193 and Mooney
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
E:\FR\FM\30MRN1.SGM
30MRN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 61 (Friday, March 30, 2007)]
[Notices]
[Pages 15154-15155]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-5575]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[WY-030-07-5101-ER-K087; WYW-166510]
Notice of Availability (NOA) To Announce the Release of the
Overland Pass Natural Gas Liquids Pipeline Draft Environmental Impact
Statement (DEIS)
AGENCY: Bureau of Land Management, Interior.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) announces the availability
of the Overland Pass (OP) Natural Gas Liquids (NGL) Pipeline DEIS. The
DEIS analyzes the consequences of granting a Right-of-Way (ROW) to the
Overland Pass Pipeline Company, LLC for locating a 760-mile, 14-inch
and 16-inch diameter NGL pipeline on Federal land.
DATES: The BLM will review all public comments if they are submitted
within 45 days following the date the Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) publishes this NOA in the Federal Register. All public meetings
or other involvement activities for the OP NGL Pipeline project will be
announced to the public by the BLM at least 15 days in advance through
public notices, media news releases, Web site announcements, or
mailings. The BLM will not be holding formal public hearings on this
DEIS.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the DEIS have been sent to affected Federal,
State, and local governments and to interested parties that previously
requested a copy. The DEIS and supporting documents will be available
electronically on the following Web site: https://www.wy.blm.gov/nepa/
index.htm.
Copies of the DEIS are available for public inspection during
normal business hours at the following locations:
Bureau of Land Management, Wyoming State Office, Public
Room, 5353 Yellowstone, Cheyenne, Wyoming 82003;
Bureau of Land Management, Rawlins Field Office, 1300
North Third St, Rawlins, Wyoming 82301;
Bureau of Land Management, Rock Springs Field Office, 280
Highway 191 N., Rock Springs, Wyoming 82901;
Bureau of Land Management, Kemmerer Field Office, 312
Highway 189 N., Kemmerer, Wyoming 83101; and
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Pawnee National
Grasslands, 660 O Street, Greeley, Colorado 80631.
Copies of the DEIS will also be delivered to public libraries in
the following communities:
Green River, Rock Springs, Rawlins, Laramie, and Cheyenne,
Wyoming;
Greeley, Fort Collins, Yuma, and Wray, Colorado; and
Colby, WaKeeney, Hays, and McPherson, Kansas.
A limited number of copies of the document will be available as
long as supplies last. To request a copy, contact Tom Hurshman, Project
Manager, as described below.
Written comments may be submitted by the following methods:
Web site: https://www.blm.gov/rfo/nepa.htm.
E-mail: overland_pipeline_wy@blm.gov.
Facsimile: (307) 328-4224 Attn: Tom Hurshman, or
Mail: Tom Hurshman, Project Manager, Bureau of Land
Management, Rawlins Field Office, 1300 North Third St, Rawlins, Wyoming
82301.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tom Hurshman, Project Manager, Bureau
of Land Management, Uncompahgre Field Office, 2465 South Townsend Ave.,
Montrose, CO 81401. Mr. Hurshman may be reached by telephone at (970)
240-5345.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The project would transport up to 150,000
barrels per day of NGL. The proposed OP Pipeline would originate in
Opal, Wyoming, and terminate at existing NGL processing facilities in
Conway, Kansas. The OP Pipeline route would cross approximately 123
miles of Federal land in Wyoming and Colorado. In Wyoming,
approximately 98 miles of the proposed pipeline route would cross
public lands administered by three BLM Field Offices: Kemmerer, Rock
Springs, and Rawlins.
In addition, the OP Pipeline location would cross two units of the
National Forest System administered by the United States Department of
Agriculture, Forest Service. The proposed pipeline location includes
approximately 2 miles of the Flaming Gorge National Recreation Area,
and approximately 23 miles of the Pawnee National Grassland north of
Greeley, Colorado. No Federal land in Kansas would be affected by this
proposal.
In the fall of 2005, Williams Field Services, doing business as
Overland Pass Pipeline Company LLC (Overland Pass Company), submitted
to the BLM an application for a ROW grant across Federal lands to
locate a pipeline up to 20 inches in diameter that would be used to
transport NGLs from Opal, Wyoming, to an existing processing facility
in Conway, Kansas. (NGLs are naturally occurring heavier hydrocarbon
liquids that are associated with the production of natural gas such as
methane. NGLs include ethane and are primarily used to produce
plastics, propane, butanes, and natural gasoline.) On March 24, 2006,
the BLM published in the Federal Register a Notice of Intent (NOI ) to
prepare an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) under the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and as required by 43 Code of Federal
Regulations Part 2880. To allow the public an opportunity to review the
proposal and project information, the BLM held public meetings during
April 2006 in Rock Springs and Cheyenne, Wyoming; Greeley, Colorado;
and Hays, Kansas. Potential impacts to specific resources such as water
quality and quantity, threatened and endangered and sensitive species,
construction impacts to vegetation communities and historic trails, and
pipeline route and location near residential development were
identified during scoping and analyzed in the DEIS. Overland Pass
Company made a number of minor re-routes to their original proposal as
submitted.
Three actions were analyzed in the DEIS: No Action Alternative;
Proposed Action Alternative, and the Southern Energy Corridor. The No
Action Alternative means that the project as proposed by Overland Pass
Company in its ROW application would be rejected by the BLM. Under the
No Action
[[Page 15155]]
Alternative, the BLM would not issue a ROW grant for the OP Pipeline.
The project, including the pipeline, temporary access roads, and
temporary use areas during construction, would not be approved or
authorized as described in the ROW application. The BLM's preferred
alternative is the Proposed Action Alternative. The Proposed Action
Alternative analyzed in the DEIS reflects minor revisions to the
original route as proposed by Overland Pass Company. The Southern
Energy Corridor Alternative reflects the Green River Resource
Management Plan's preferred locations for future proposed ROWS. Other
alternatives, including transportation system alternatives and route
variations, were considered, but not studied in detail.
The DEIS analyzes the potential environmental consequences of
granting Overland Pass Company a ROW to construct an approximately 760-
mile pipeline that would transport NGLs from Opal, Wyoming, to its
terminus at the company's existing facilities in Conway, Kansas. The
pipeline would be approximately 14 inches in diameter between Opal and
Echo Springs, Wyoming, and 16 inches in diameter from Echo Springs,
Wyoming, to Conway, Kansas.
As part of the proposed action, the OP Pipeline would be routed
across southern Wyoming from Opal to Echo Springs along various
existing utility or pipeline ROWs. From Echo Springs, the pipeline ROW
would run in a southeasterly direction, paralleling the existing
Southern Star Pipeline, and proceed to the south of Cheyenne, Wyoming,
before entering Colorado. A major portion of the proposed route in
Wyoming would cross public lands administered by the BLM.
From the Colorado border, the pipeline ROW would continue to
parallel Southern Star Pipeline southeasterly crossing the Pawnee
National Grassland, which is administered by the USDA Forest Service,
and then into Kansas. From the Colorado-Kansas state line, the OP
Pipeline would continue to run parallel to the Southern Star Pipeline
to south of WaKeeney, Kansas. It would then follow an existing BP Amoco
pipeline to Bushton, Kansas. From this point, the OP Pipeline would not
parallel existing pipelines until reaching Mitchell, Kansas, where it
would then follow an existing Williams Pipeline to the termination
point at Conway, Kansas.
At Bushton and Conway, Kansas, the transported NGL would be
processed at existing facilities and distributed through an existing
transportation infrastructure to consumer markets in the Midwest and
Texas Gulf of Mexico coast. About 82 percent of the proposed 760-mile
pipeline would be co-located within existing pipeline ROW corridors. In
addition to the pipeline, three electric pump stations would be needed
to move the NGL at a maximum pressure of 1,440 pounds per square inch
gauge (psig) through the pipeline. The pump stations are proposed to be
located near Echo Springs and Laramie, Wyoming, and near WaKeeney,
Kansas. The pipeline would have manual or self-actuating shut-off
valves at regular intervals, as well as cleaning facilities and meter
stations.
The OP Pipeline would be constructed and installed within a 75-
foot-wide construction area. After construction and reclamation, the
permanent ROW would be 50 feet wide, centered on the pipeline. All
temporary workspace areas needed for construction activities outside
the 50 foot wide permanent ROW would require Temporary Use Permits.
All comment submittals must include the commenter's name and street
address. Comments, including the names and street addresses of
respondent, will be available for public review at the Rawlins Field
Office during its business hours (7:45 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.), Monday
through Friday, except for Federal holidays. Before including your
address, phone number, e-mail address, or other personal identifying
information in your comment, be advised that your entire comment,
including your personal identifying information may be made publicly
available at any time. While you can ask us in your comment to withhold
from public review your personal identifying information, we cannot
guarantee that we will be able to do so.
Dated: February 21, 2007.
Robert A. Bennett,
State Director.
[FR Doc. E7-5575 Filed 3-29-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-22-P