Agency Information Collection Activities: Proposed Collection; Comment Request, 40290-40292 [E7-14252]
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40290
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 141 / Tuesday, July 24, 2007 / Notices
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2007.’’
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columns, ‘‘Deadline for
Intergovernmental Review: September
10, 2007.’’ is corrected to read
‘‘Deadline for Intergovernmental
Review: September 24, 2007.’’
Rita
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VerDate Aug<31>2005
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Jkt 211001
Dated: July 18, 2007.
Deborah A. Price,
Assistant Deputy Secretary for Safe and DrugFree Schools.
[FR Doc. E7–14328 Filed 7–23–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4000–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Energy Information Administration
Agency Information Collection
Activities: Proposed Collection;
Comment Request
Energy Information
Administration (EIA), Department of
Energy (DOE).
ACTION: Agency information collection
activities: proposed collection; comment
request.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The EIA is soliciting
comments on the proposed revision and
three-year extension to the Coal Program
package. The forms include the EIA–1,
‘‘Weekly Coal Monitoring Report—
General Industries and Blast Furnaces’’
(Standby); EIA–3, ‘‘Quarterly Coal
Consumption and Quality Report—
Manufacturing Plants;’’ EIA–4, ‘‘Weekly
Coal Monitoring Report—Coke Plants’’
(Standby); EIA–5,‘‘Quarterly Coal
Consumption and Quality Report—Coke
Plants;’’ EIA–6Q (Schedule Q),
‘‘Quarterly Coal Report’’ (Standby);
EIA–7A, ‘‘Coal Production Report;’’ and
EIA–20, ‘‘Weekly Telephone Survey of
Coal Burning Utilities’’ (Standby). The
Standby forms are designed to be
utilized under certain emergency
conditions.
Comments must be filed by
September 24, 2007. If you anticipate
difficulty in submitting comments
within that period, contact the person
listed below as soon as possible.
ADDRESSES: Send comments to William
Watson. To ensure receipt of the
comments by the due date, submission
by Fax (202–287–1944) or e-mail
(coal@eia.doe.gov) is recommended.
The mailing address is Coal, Nuclear,
and Renewables Division, EI–52,
Forrestal Building, U.S. Department of
Energy, 1000 Independence Ave., SW.,
Washington, DC 20585.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Requests for additional information or
copies of any forms and instructions
should be directed to William Watson at
the address listed above or
william.watson@eia.doe.gov or (202)
586–1707, or to Frederick Freme,
frederick.freme@eia.doe.gov, (202) 586–
1251.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
DATES:
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
I. Background
II. Current Actions
III. Request for Comments
I. Background
The Federal Energy Administration
Act of 1974 (Pub. L. No. 93–275, 15
U.S.C. 761 et seq.) and the DOE
Organization Act (Pub. L. No. 95–91, 42
U.S.C. 7101 et seq.) require the EIA to
carry out a centralized, comprehensive,
and unified energy information
program. This program collects,
evaluates, assembles, analyzes, and
disseminates information on energy
resource reserves, production, demand,
technology, and related economic and
statistical information. This information
is used to assess the adequacy of energy
resources to meet near and longer term
domestic demands.
The EIA, as part of its effort to comply
with the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 (Pub. L. 104–13, 44 U.S.C. Chapter
35), provides the general public and
other Federal agencies with
opportunities to comment on collections
of energy information conducted by or
in conjunction with the EIA. Any
comments received help the EIA to
prepare data surveys that maximize the
utility of the information collected, and
to assess the impact of collection
requirements on the public. Also, the
EIA will later seek approval by the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) under Section 3507(a) of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
Specific to the U.S. coal sector, EIA
conducts surveys to collect information
on coal reserves, coal production,
distribution, receipts, consumption,
quality, stocks, and prices. This
information is used to support public
policy analyses of the coal industry and
is published in various EIA
publications, including the Annual Coal
Report, the Annual Energy Review, the
Monthly Energy Review, and the
Quarterly Coal Report. Respondents to
the coal surveys include coal producers,
coal distributors, and coal consumers.
Please refer to the proposed forms and
instructions for more information about
the purpose, who must report, when to
report, where to submit, the elements to
be reported, detailed instructions,
provisions for disclosure, and uses
(including possible nonstatistical uses)
of the information. For instructions on
obtaining materials, see the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section.
II. Current Actions
EIA proposes to eliminate the EIA–6A
survey, which currently collects data on
coal distributed by coal producers and
distributors/brokers and data on stocks
held by distributors/brokers. However,
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 141 / Tuesday, July 24, 2007 / Notices
EIA intends to continue providing coal
distribution and distributor/broker stock
data to the public. Therefore, EIA
proposes substituting processes to
obtain some of the data currently
collected on the EIA–6A survey with
other existing EIA surveys and the
remaining data from a new proposed
EIA survey, form EIA–8A ‘‘Coal Stocks
Report—Distributors/Brokers.’’
The EIA–6A data survey—operating
under an existing authorization—
collects information on coal distributed
(by producers and distributors/brokers)
to the electric power sector. On the EIA–
423, FERC–423 and the EIA–860 survey
forms, EIA currently collects data from
electric power plants on the amount of
coal received, including additional coal
data such as State of origin, transport
mode and destination State. EIA has
compared the data currently collected
from producers and distributors/brokers
on the EIA–6A with the similar data
collected from electric power consumers
on the electric surveys and found close
agreement. Accordingly, EIA has
concluded that a practical and efficient
alternative to surveying producers and
distributors/brokers is to develop
information technology systems that
capture and report the relevant coal data
being collected from electric consumers.
EIA has concluded that this alternative
will maintain data quality and
significantly reduce the burden on
current respondents without causing
any change to the burden of the
applicable electric power sector
consumers.
EIA is concurrently proposing to
combine data elements from the EIA–
423, FERC–423, and EIA–860 forms into
a new EIA–923 form. If that proposal is
approved, EIA would then take its
electric power sector data from the
replacement EIA–923 survey for the
alternative procedure described above.
As a replacement for coal distributor
data now collected on the EIA–6A form
from coke plants and other industrial
plants, EIA proposes to obtain
comparable data from the EIA–5 survey
of coke plants and the EIA–3 survey of
manufacturing plants.
Similarly, coal distributor data for the
residential and commercial sector
currently collected on the EIA–6A
survey would be replaced by data
collected on the EIA–3 survey by adding
commercial and institutional coal users
as respondents to the EIA–3 survey. EIA
proposes to rename the residential and
commercial sector as ‘‘commercial and
institutional’’ to more accurately reflect
its makeup.
By shifting to these alternate data
sources, EIA will be able to post
quarterly domestic coal distribution
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17:50 Jul 23, 2007
Jkt 211001
tables rather than the annual tables that
it posts now. The quarterly data tables
will be available approximately 90 days
after the close of the latest quarter,
which will substantially improve the
timeliness of the coal distribution data.
EIA proposes to collect annual data
on distributor/broker coal stocks (now
collected on the EIA–6A survey) on a
new annual survey, which will be
named form EIA–8A and which will be
sent annually to distributors/brokers.
The new EIA–8A form will request data
on coal stock levels at the beginning of
the year, at the end of the year and on
inter-year adjustments. Using data
reflecting producer coal stocks from the
EIA–7A and the new EIA–8A, EIA will
be able to continue to provide annual
data to the public on the quantity of coal
stocks held by producers and
distributors/brokers.
EIA also proposes to change a current
data schedule, S1 on the EIA–3 form,
used to collect data from coal synfuel
plants. The first modification is to add
the transport mode (such as rail, barge,
and so on) used to move the coal or
derivative coal-based product from the
processing plant to the final consumer.
A second modification is to add data
elements to measure the volume and
quality of the coal going into the
processing technology and the volume
and quality of the product and
byproducts produced by the processing
technology.
With the modified S1 schedule, EIA
will be able to report to the public the
amount of coal going by transport mode
from the coal State of origin to the State
where the processing plant is located,
and the amount of processed product
going from the processing plant by
transport mode to the final consumer
and the final consumer’s destination
State. Also, EIA would report to the
public the total coal received,
consumed, and transformed, coal
quality, and volumes and quality for
products and byproducts aggregated to
the State level for all coal processing
operations in a State.
EIA proposes to add questions to
determine the type of surface mining
technology for each of the surface mines
that report on the EIA–7A. EIA will use
the additional data to report to the
public the amount of coal surface-mined
by each type of technology. This will
make EIA’s data on surface-mined coal
consistent with its underground-mined
data.
On the EIA–7A form, EIA proposes to
include purchaser’s contact name,
telephone number and email address
when coal is reported as sold to
wholesale or retail coal dealers or
brokers. EIA will use this information to
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Sfmt 4703
40291
update the survey frame and respondent
contact information for its new EIA–8A
survey (see above).
On the EIA–5 form, EIA proposes to
collect total revenue for the commercial
sales of coke and breeze. EIA will use
this new data to calculate and report the
average value of coke and breeze ($ per
short ton) to the public in EIA’s
Quarterly Coal Report.
EIA proposes new disclosure
provisions for the EIA–3, EIA–5, EIA–
7A surveys and the new EIA–8A survey
to make all data, except certain
economic data, available to the public.
After EIA completes its quality
assurance process, the data, except for
specific economic data, would be
released for public use through EIA’s
normal web publication system. EIA
proposes to release additional specific
economic data nine months after the
aggregated data are published in EIA
reports (i.e., 2008 1st quarter economic
data published in June 2008) will be
made available to the public in March
2009; 2008 annual economic data
(published in September 2009) will be
made available to the public in June
2010. The data with a delayed release
include: (1) Value of coal receipts
reported on the EIA–3 and EIA–5 forms,
(2) total revenue from commercial sales
of coke and breeze reported on the EIA–
5 form, and (3) recoverable reserves and
total revenue from open and captive
market sales reported on the EIA–7A
form.
EIA proposes the addition of a second
level of respondent contact information
to the EIA–7A form. Currently, only a
single set of contact information is
collected on the EIA–7A. EIA would use
this information to contact firms when
the first level respondent is no longer
available. This information would help
EIA provide data to the public in a
timely manner.
III. Request for Comments
Prospective respondents and other
interested parties should comment on
the actions discussed in Item II. The
following guidelines are provided to
assist in the preparation of comments.
Please indicate to which form(s) your
comments apply.
General Issues
A. Is the proposed collection of
information necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
agency and does the information have
practical utility? Practical utility is
defined as the actual usefulness of
information to or for an agency, taking
into account its accuracy, adequacy,
reliability, timeliness, and the agency’s
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40292
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 141 / Tuesday, July 24, 2007 / Notices
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
ability to process the information it
collects.
B. What enhancements can be made
to the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected?
As a Potential Respondent to the
Request for Information
A. What actions could be taken to
help ensure and maximize the quality,
objectivity, utility, and integrity of the
information to be collected?
B. Are the instructions and definitions
clear and sufficient? If not, which
instructions need clarification?
C. Can the information be submitted
by the due date?
D. Public reporting burden for each of
the coal surveys is shown below as an
average hour(s) per response. The
estimated burden includes the total time
necessary to provide the requested
information. In your opinion, how
accurate is this estimate?
—Form EIA–1, ‘‘Weekly Coal
Monitoring Report—General
Industries and Blast Furnaces’’
(Standby); 1 hour per response (no
change from existing estimate of 1
hour)
—Form EIA–3, ‘‘Quarterly Coal
Consumption and Quality Report—
Manufacturing Plants;’’
1 hour per response, manufacturing
plants (no change from existing estimate
of 1 hour)
1.5 hours per response, coal
processing plants (new schedule for
respondent, existing estimate without
new schedule is 1 hour)
—Form EIA–4, ‘‘Weekly Coal
Monitoring Report—Coke Plants’’
(Standby); 1 hour per response (no
change from existing estimate of 1
hour)
—Form EIA–5, ‘‘Quarterly Coal
Consumption and Quality Report—
Coke Plants;’’ 1.5 hours per response
(no change from existing estimate of
1.5 hours)
—Form EIA–6Q, ‘‘Quarterly Coal
Report’’ (Standby); 1 hour per
response (no change from existing
estimate of 1 hour)
—Form EIA–7A, ‘‘Coal Production
Report;’’
1 hour per response (no change from
existing estimate of 1 hour)
—Form EIA–8A, ‘‘Coal Stocks Report—
Distributors/Brokers;’’ 0.5 hours per
response (new survey)
—Form EIA–20, ‘‘Weekly Telephone
Survey of Coal Burning Utilities’’
(Standby); 1 hour per response (no
change from existing estimate of 1
hour)
Forms EIA–1, 4, 6Q, and 20 are
Standby surveys. The above estimates
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17:50 Jul 23, 2007
Jkt 211001
reflect the anticipated burden per
response in the event these surveys are
implemented.
E. The agency estimates that the only
cost to a respondent is for the time it
will take to complete the collection.
Will a respondent incur any start-up
costs for reporting, or any recurring
annual costs for operation, maintenance,
and purchase of services associated with
the information collection?
F. What additional actions could be
taken to minimize the burden of this
collection of information? Such actions
may involve the use of automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology.
G. Does any other Federal, State, or
local agency collect similar information?
If so, specify the agency, the data
element(s), and the methods of
collection.
As a Potential User of the Information
To Be Collected
A. What actions could be taken to
help ensure and maximize the quality,
objectivity, utility, and integrity of the
information disseminated?
B. Is the information useful at the
levels of detail to be collected?
C. For what purpose(s) would the
information be used? Be specific.
D. Are there alternate sources for the
information and are they useful? If so,
what are their weaknesses and/or
strengths?
Comments submitted in response to
this notice will be summarized and/or
included in the request for OMB
approval of the form. They also will
become a matter of public record.
Statutory Authority: Section 3507(h)(1) of
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (Pub.
L. No. 104–13, 44 U.S.C. Chapter 35).
Issued in Washington, DC, July 18, 2007.
Jay H. Casselberry,
Agency Clearance Officer, Energy Information
Administration.
[FR Doc. E7–14252 Filed 7–23–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[FRL–8444–5]
Agency Information Collection
Activities OMB Responses
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This document announces the
Office of Management and Budget’s
(OMB) responses to Agency Clearance
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
requests, in compliance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C.
3501 et seq.). An agency may not
conduct or sponsor, and a person is not
required to respond to, a collection of
information unless it displays a
currently valid OMB control number.
The OMB control numbers for EPA’s
regulations are listed in 40 CFR part 9
and 48 CFR chapter 15.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Susan Auby (202) 566–1672, or e-mail at
auby.susan@epa.gov and please refer to
the appropriate EPA Information
Collection Request (ICR) Number.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
OMB Responses to Agency Clearance
Requests
OMB Approvals
EPA ICR No. 1666.07; NESHAP for
Commercial Ethylene Oxide
Sterilization and Fumigation
Operations (Renewal); in 40 CFR part
63, subpart O; was approved 07/03/
2007; OMB Number 2060–0283;
expires 07/31/2010
EPA ICR No. 2226.02; Revisions to
Standards of Performance for New
Stationary Sources and National
Emission Standards for Hazardous Air
Pollutants, and NESHAP for Source
Categories (Final Rule); was approved
07/02/2007; OMB Number 2060–
0599; expires 06/30/2010
EPA ICR No. 1783.04; NESHAP for
Flexible Polyurethane Foam Product
(Renewal); in 40 CFR part 63, subpart
III; was approved 06/22/2007; OMB
Number 2060–0357; expires 06/30/
2010
EPA ICR No. 1652.06; NESHAP for
Halogenated Solvent Cleaners/
Halogenated Hazardous Air Pollutants
(Renewal); in 40 CFR part 63, subpart
T; was approved 06/14/2007; OMB
Number 2060–0273; expires 06/30/
2010
EPA ICR No. 1064.15; NSPS for
Automobile and Light Duty Truck
Surface Coating Operations
(Renewal); in 40 CFR part 60, subpart
MM; was approved 06/14/2007; OMB
Number 2060–0034; expires 06/30/
2010
EPA ICR No. 2115.02; NESHAP for
Miscellaneous Coating Manufacturing
(Renewal); in 40 CFR part 63, subpart
HHHHH; was approved 06/14/2007;
OMB Number 2060–0535 expires 06/
30/2010
EPA ICR No. 1963.03; NESHAP for
Organic Liquids Distribution (NonGasoline) Facilities (Renewal); in 40
CFR part 63, subpart EEEE; was
approved 07/11/2007; OMB Number
2060–0539; expires 07/31/2010
E:\FR\FM\24JYN1.SGM
24JYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 141 (Tuesday, July 24, 2007)]
[Notices]
[Pages 40290-40292]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-14252]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Energy Information Administration
Agency Information Collection Activities: Proposed Collection;
Comment Request
AGENCY: Energy Information Administration (EIA), Department of Energy
(DOE).
ACTION: Agency information collection activities: proposed collection;
comment request.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The EIA is soliciting comments on the proposed revision and
three-year extension to the Coal Program package. The forms include the
EIA-1, ``Weekly Coal Monitoring Report--General Industries and Blast
Furnaces'' (Standby); EIA-3, ``Quarterly Coal Consumption and Quality
Report--Manufacturing Plants;'' EIA-4, ``Weekly Coal Monitoring
Report--Coke Plants'' (Standby); EIA-5,``Quarterly Coal Consumption and
Quality Report--Coke Plants;'' EIA-6Q (Schedule Q), ``Quarterly Coal
Report'' (Standby); EIA-7A, ``Coal Production Report;'' and EIA-20,
``Weekly Telephone Survey of Coal Burning Utilities'' (Standby). The
Standby forms are designed to be utilized under certain emergency
conditions.
DATES: Comments must be filed by September 24, 2007. If you anticipate
difficulty in submitting comments within that period, contact the
person listed below as soon as possible.
ADDRESSES: Send comments to William Watson. To ensure receipt of the
comments by the due date, submission by Fax (202-287-1944) or e-mail
(coal@eia.doe.gov) is recommended. The mailing address is Coal,
Nuclear, and Renewables Division, EI-52, Forrestal Building, U.S.
Department of Energy, 1000 Independence Ave., SW., Washington, DC
20585.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Requests for additional information or
copies of any forms and instructions should be directed to William
Watson at the address listed above or william.watson@eia.doe.gov or
(202) 586-1707, or to Frederick Freme, frederick.freme@eia.doe.gov,
(202) 586-1251.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
II. Current Actions
III. Request for Comments
I. Background
The Federal Energy Administration Act of 1974 (Pub. L. No. 93-275,
15 U.S.C. 761 et seq.) and the DOE Organization Act (Pub. L. No. 95-91,
42 U.S.C. 7101 et seq.) require the EIA to carry out a centralized,
comprehensive, and unified energy information program. This program
collects, evaluates, assembles, analyzes, and disseminates information
on energy resource reserves, production, demand, technology, and
related economic and statistical information. This information is used
to assess the adequacy of energy resources to meet near and longer term
domestic demands.
The EIA, as part of its effort to comply with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-13, 44 U.S.C. Chapter 35), provides
the general public and other Federal agencies with opportunities to
comment on collections of energy information conducted by or in
conjunction with the EIA. Any comments received help the EIA to prepare
data surveys that maximize the utility of the information collected,
and to assess the impact of collection requirements on the public.
Also, the EIA will later seek approval by the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) under Section 3507(a) of the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995.
Specific to the U.S. coal sector, EIA conducts surveys to collect
information on coal reserves, coal production, distribution, receipts,
consumption, quality, stocks, and prices. This information is used to
support public policy analyses of the coal industry and is published in
various EIA publications, including the Annual Coal Report, the Annual
Energy Review, the Monthly Energy Review, and the Quarterly Coal
Report. Respondents to the coal surveys include coal producers, coal
distributors, and coal consumers.
Please refer to the proposed forms and instructions for more
information about the purpose, who must report, when to report, where
to submit, the elements to be reported, detailed instructions,
provisions for disclosure, and uses (including possible nonstatistical
uses) of the information. For instructions on obtaining materials, see
the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
II. Current Actions
EIA proposes to eliminate the EIA-6A survey, which currently
collects data on coal distributed by coal producers and distributors/
brokers and data on stocks held by distributors/brokers. However,
[[Page 40291]]
EIA intends to continue providing coal distribution and distributor/
broker stock data to the public. Therefore, EIA proposes substituting
processes to obtain some of the data currently collected on the EIA-6A
survey with other existing EIA surveys and the remaining data from a
new proposed EIA survey, form EIA-8A ``Coal Stocks Report--
Distributors/Brokers.''
The EIA-6A data survey--operating under an existing authorization--
collects information on coal distributed (by producers and
distributors/brokers) to the electric power sector. On the EIA-423,
FERC-423 and the EIA-860 survey forms, EIA currently collects data from
electric power plants on the amount of coal received, including
additional coal data such as State of origin, transport mode and
destination State. EIA has compared the data currently collected from
producers and distributors/brokers on the EIA-6A with the similar data
collected from electric power consumers on the electric surveys and
found close agreement. Accordingly, EIA has concluded that a practical
and efficient alternative to surveying producers and distributors/
brokers is to develop information technology systems that capture and
report the relevant coal data being collected from electric consumers.
EIA has concluded that this alternative will maintain data quality and
significantly reduce the burden on current respondents without causing
any change to the burden of the applicable electric power sector
consumers.
EIA is concurrently proposing to combine data elements from the
EIA-423, FERC-423, and EIA-860 forms into a new EIA-923 form. If that
proposal is approved, EIA would then take its electric power sector
data from the replacement EIA-923 survey for the alternative procedure
described above.
As a replacement for coal distributor data now collected on the
EIA-6A form from coke plants and other industrial plants, EIA proposes
to obtain comparable data from the EIA-5 survey of coke plants and the
EIA-3 survey of manufacturing plants.
Similarly, coal distributor data for the residential and commercial
sector currently collected on the EIA-6A survey would be replaced by
data collected on the EIA-3 survey by adding commercial and
institutional coal users as respondents to the EIA-3 survey. EIA
proposes to rename the residential and commercial sector as
``commercial and institutional'' to more accurately reflect its makeup.
By shifting to these alternate data sources, EIA will be able to
post quarterly domestic coal distribution tables rather than the annual
tables that it posts now. The quarterly data tables will be available
approximately 90 days after the close of the latest quarter, which will
substantially improve the timeliness of the coal distribution data.
EIA proposes to collect annual data on distributor/broker coal
stocks (now collected on the EIA-6A survey) on a new annual survey,
which will be named form EIA-8A and which will be sent annually to
distributors/brokers. The new EIA-8A form will request data on coal
stock levels at the beginning of the year, at the end of the year and
on inter-year adjustments. Using data reflecting producer coal stocks
from the EIA-7A and the new EIA-8A, EIA will be able to continue to
provide annual data to the public on the quantity of coal stocks held
by producers and distributors/brokers.
EIA also proposes to change a current data schedule, S1 on the EIA-
3 form, used to collect data from coal synfuel plants. The first
modification is to add the transport mode (such as rail, barge, and so
on) used to move the coal or derivative coal-based product from the
processing plant to the final consumer. A second modification is to add
data elements to measure the volume and quality of the coal going into
the processing technology and the volume and quality of the product and
byproducts produced by the processing technology.
With the modified S1 schedule, EIA will be able to report to the
public the amount of coal going by transport mode from the coal State
of origin to the State where the processing plant is located, and the
amount of processed product going from the processing plant by
transport mode to the final consumer and the final consumer's
destination State. Also, EIA would report to the public the total coal
received, consumed, and transformed, coal quality, and volumes and
quality for products and byproducts aggregated to the State level for
all coal processing operations in a State.
EIA proposes to add questions to determine the type of surface
mining technology for each of the surface mines that report on the EIA-
7A. EIA will use the additional data to report to the public the amount
of coal surface-mined by each type of technology. This will make EIA's
data on surface-mined coal consistent with its underground-mined data.
On the EIA-7A form, EIA proposes to include purchaser's contact
name, telephone number and email address when coal is reported as sold
to wholesale or retail coal dealers or brokers. EIA will use this
information to update the survey frame and respondent contact
information for its new EIA-8A survey (see above).
On the EIA-5 form, EIA proposes to collect total revenue for the
commercial sales of coke and breeze. EIA will use this new data to
calculate and report the average value of coke and breeze ($ per short
ton) to the public in EIA's Quarterly Coal Report.
EIA proposes new disclosure provisions for the EIA-3, EIA-5, EIA-7A
surveys and the new EIA-8A survey to make all data, except certain
economic data, available to the public. After EIA completes its quality
assurance process, the data, except for specific economic data, would
be released for public use through EIA's normal web publication system.
EIA proposes to release additional specific economic data nine months
after the aggregated data are published in EIA reports (i.e., 2008 1st
quarter economic data published in June 2008) will be made available to
the public in March 2009; 2008 annual economic data (published in
September 2009) will be made available to the public in June 2010. The
data with a delayed release include: (1) Value of coal receipts
reported on the EIA-3 and EIA-5 forms, (2) total revenue from
commercial sales of coke and breeze reported on the EIA-5 form, and (3)
recoverable reserves and total revenue from open and captive market
sales reported on the EIA-7A form.
EIA proposes the addition of a second level of respondent contact
information to the EIA-7A form. Currently, only a single set of contact
information is collected on the EIA-7A. EIA would use this information
to contact firms when the first level respondent is no longer
available. This information would help EIA provide data to the public
in a timely manner.
III. Request for Comments
Prospective respondents and other interested parties should comment
on the actions discussed in Item II. The following guidelines are
provided to assist in the preparation of comments. Please indicate to
which form(s) your comments apply.
General Issues
A. Is the proposed collection of information necessary for the
proper performance of the functions of the agency and does the
information have practical utility? Practical utility is defined as the
actual usefulness of information to or for an agency, taking into
account its accuracy, adequacy, reliability, timeliness, and the
agency's
[[Page 40292]]
ability to process the information it collects.
B. What enhancements can be made to the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be collected?
As a Potential Respondent to the Request for Information
A. What actions could be taken to help ensure and maximize the
quality, objectivity, utility, and integrity of the information to be
collected?
B. Are the instructions and definitions clear and sufficient? If
not, which instructions need clarification?
C. Can the information be submitted by the due date?
D. Public reporting burden for each of the coal surveys is shown
below as an average hour(s) per response. The estimated burden includes
the total time necessary to provide the requested information. In your
opinion, how accurate is this estimate?
--Form EIA-1, ``Weekly Coal Monitoring Report--General Industries and
Blast Furnaces'' (Standby); 1 hour per response (no change from
existing estimate of 1 hour)
--Form EIA-3, ``Quarterly Coal Consumption and Quality Report--
Manufacturing Plants;''
1 hour per response, manufacturing plants (no change from existing
estimate of 1 hour)
1.5 hours per response, coal processing plants (new schedule for
respondent, existing estimate without new schedule is 1 hour)
--Form EIA-4, ``Weekly Coal Monitoring Report--Coke Plants'' (Standby);
1 hour per response (no change from existing estimate of 1 hour)
--Form EIA-5, ``Quarterly Coal Consumption and Quality Report--Coke
Plants;'' 1.5 hours per response (no change from existing estimate of
1.5 hours)
--Form EIA-6Q, ``Quarterly Coal Report'' (Standby); 1 hour per response
(no change from existing estimate of 1 hour)
--Form EIA-7A, ``Coal Production Report;''
1 hour per response (no change from existing estimate of 1 hour)
--Form EIA-8A, ``Coal Stocks Report--Distributors/Brokers;'' 0.5 hours
per response (new survey)
--Form EIA-20, ``Weekly Telephone Survey of Coal Burning Utilities''
(Standby); 1 hour per response (no change from existing estimate of 1
hour)
Forms EIA-1, 4, 6Q, and 20 are Standby surveys. The above estimates
reflect the anticipated burden per response in the event these surveys
are implemented.
E. The agency estimates that the only cost to a respondent is for
the time it will take to complete the collection. Will a respondent
incur any start-up costs for reporting, or any recurring annual costs
for operation, maintenance, and purchase of services associated with
the information collection?
F. What additional actions could be taken to minimize the burden of
this collection of information? Such actions may involve the use of
automated, electronic, mechanical, or other technological collection
techniques or other forms of information technology.
G. Does any other Federal, State, or local agency collect similar
information? If so, specify the agency, the data element(s), and the
methods of collection.
As a Potential User of the Information To Be Collected
A. What actions could be taken to help ensure and maximize the
quality, objectivity, utility, and integrity of the information
disseminated?
B. Is the information useful at the levels of detail to be
collected?
C. For what purpose(s) would the information be used? Be specific.
D. Are there alternate sources for the information and are they
useful? If so, what are their weaknesses and/or strengths?
Comments submitted in response to this notice will be summarized
and/or included in the request for OMB approval of the form. They also
will become a matter of public record.
Statutory Authority: Section 3507(h)(1) of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (Pub. L. No. 104-13, 44 U.S.C. Chapter 35).
Issued in Washington, DC, July 18, 2007.
Jay H. Casselberry,
Agency Clearance Officer, Energy Information Administration.
[FR Doc. E7-14252 Filed 7-23-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P