Woodside Natural Gas Inc. OceanWay Secure Energy Liquefied Natural Gas Deepwater Port License Application, 51488-51489 [E7-17649]
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 173 / Friday, September 7, 2007 / Notices
proposed action and the EIS should be
directed to FHWA at the address
provided.
A proposed schedule for completion
of the environmental review process is
not available at this time; however, will
become accessible for public review at
a futures date.
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
program Number 20.205 Highway Planning
and Construction. The regulations
implementing Executive Order 12372
regarding intergovernmental consultation on
Federal programs and activities apply to this
program.)
Donald Davis,
District Engineer, FHWA texas Division.
[FR Doc. 07–4375 Filed 9–6–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–22–M
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Maritime Administration
[USCG–2006–26844]
Woodside Natural Gas Inc. OceanWay
Secure Energy Liquefied Natural Gas
Deepwater Port License Application
Maritime Administration, DOT.
Notice of application.
AGENCY:
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The Maritime Administration
and the U.S. Coast Guard announce that
they have received an application for
the licensing of a natural gas deepwater
port, and that the application appears to
contain the required information to
proceed. This notice summarizes the
applicant’s plans and the procedures
that will be followed in considering the
application.
DATES: The Deepwater Port Act of 1974,
as amended, requires any public hearing
on this application to be held not later
than 240 days after this notice, and
requires a decision on the application to
be made not later than 90 days after the
final public hearing.
ADDRESSES: The public docket for this
application, USCG–2006–26844, is
maintained by the: Department of
Transportation, Docket Management
Facility, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE.,
West Building, Ground Floor, Room
W12–140, Washington, DC 20590.
Docket contents are available for
public inspection and copying at this
address between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, except Federal
holidays. The Facility’s telephone
number is 202–366–9329 and the fax
number is 202–493–2251. The Web site
for electronic submissions or for
electronic access to docket contents is
https://dms.dot.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Roddy Bachman, U.S. Coast Guard,
VerDate Aug<31>2005
18:34 Sep 06, 2007
Jkt 211001
telephone: 202–372–1752, e-mail:
Roddy.C.Bachman@uscg.mil. If you
have questions on viewing the docket,
call Renee V. Wright, Program Manager,
Docket Operations, telephone: 202–493–
0402.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Receipt of Application
On August 17, 2006, the Coast Guard
and the Maritime Administration
received an application from Woodside
Natural Gas Inc., a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Woodside Petroleum LTD.,
for all Federal authorizations required
for a license to own, construct, and
operate a deepwater port authorized
under the Deepwater Port Act of 1974,
as amended, 33 U.S.C. 1501 et seq. (the
Act). The City of Los Angeles (City) will
be a cooperating agency in processing
this application because Woodside
Natural Gas, Inc. has filed an
application for a lease/franchise of
offshore submerged City lands, an
onshore pipeline franchise for the
subsea pipelines through City waters,
and a pipeline through the City.
Revisions to the application were
received on December 27, 2006; on July
9, 2007; and again on August 20, 2007.
As of the date of this notice, the
Maritime Administration and the Coast
Guard have determined that the
application appears to contain all
information required by the Act to
proceed with the application process.
The application is now available for
viewing on the docket (see ADDRESSES).
Background
According to the Deepwater Port Act,
a deepwater port is a fixed or floating
manmade structure other than a vessel,
or a group of structures, located beyond
State seaward boundaries and used or
intended for use as a port or terminal for
the transportation, storage, and further
handling of oil or natural gas for
transportation to any State.
Deepwater ports require a license
issued by the Maritime Administrator
(by delegated authority from the
Secretary of Transportation, published
on June 18, 2003 (68 FR 36496)).
Statutory and regulatory requirements
for licensing appear in 33 U.S.C. 1501
et seq. and in 33 CFR Part 148. Under
delegations from the Secretary of
Transportation and the Secretary of
Homeland Security, applications are
processed by the Coast Guard and the
Maritime Administration. Each
application is considered on its merits.
The Act provides deadlines for
processing applications. After
determining that an application
contains the required information,
public hearings on the application must
PO 00000
Frm 00085
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
be held within 240 days, and the
Maritime Administrator must render a
decision on the application within 330
days. Additional Federal Register
notices will be published throughout
the application review process to
provide notice of public hearings and
other procedural milestones. The
Maritime Administrator’s decision, and
other key documents, will be filed in the
public docket.
At least one public hearing will take
place in each adjacent coastal State. For
purposes of the Act, California is the
adjacent coastal State for this
application. Other States can apply for
adjacent coastal State status in
accordance with 33 U.S.C. 1508(a)(2).
Summary of the Application/Proposed
Action/Project
Woodside Natural Gas proposes to
construct, own, and operate a deepwater
port with associated ship-to-ship
transfer (STS) location(s) and single
point mooring (SPM) buoys for the
receiving of regasification liquefied
natural gas carriers (RLNGCs), offshore
and onshore natural gas pipelines, and
a receiving and custody transfer facility
(RCTS) to deliver natural gas with an
annualized rate of 0.4 billion cubic feet
per day (bcf/d) and a peak of 1.1 bcf/d
into the Southern California market on
initial development and an annualized
rate of 1.0 bcf/d and a peak of up to 1.6
bcf/d at full project development.
The deepwater port would be located
in the Federal waters of the Santa
Monica Basin, 21 miles from the nearest
point on the mainland of Southern
California and 18 miles from the
western end of Santa Catalina Island,
approximately 27 miles southwest of
Los Angeles International Airport
(LAX), in a water depth of
approximately 3,000 feet. It would
consist of two single point mooring
(SPM) buoys that serve as cargo
discharge system connections for
RLNGCs, a mooring/anchoring array,
four flexible risers that connect the
SPMs to four seafloor riser end
manifolds, two pipeline end manifolds
(PLEMs) and two parallel 24-inch
pipelines beginning on the seafloor at
the PLEMs beneath the SPM buoys and
continuing to shore. The SPMs would
be located approximately 5 nautical
miles (5.75 miles) outside established
shipping lanes (SPM NE: Latitude:
33°41′52″ N, Longitude: 118°48′33″ W
and SPM SW: Latitude: 33°39′58″ N,
Longitude: 118°49′15″ W).
Woodside has proposed three ship-toship transfer locations ranging from
approximately 35 to 90 nautical miles
(40 to 104 miles) from shore and 55 to
111 nautical miles (63 to 128 miles)
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07SEN1
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 173 / Friday, September 7, 2007 / Notices
from the port where each RLNGC is
expected to receive LNG cargo at sea
from conventional LNG carriers. STS1
Santa Rosa (Latitude 33°39′ N,
Longitude 119°56′30″ W), STS2 Inshore
San Clemente (Latitude 33°05′ N,
Longitude 118°10′ W) and STS3
Skaugen Offshore (Latitude 32°15′ N,
Longitude 120°0′ W). Only one transfer
location would be used at a time. The
RLNGCs, with storage capacity of
224,000 m3 of LNG would be capable of
receiving conventional LNG carriers
(LNGCs) with storage capacities of up to
216,000 m3 of LNG.
As proposed, LNG would be delivered
from overseas by LNGCs and transferred
to a Woodside RLNGC at one of the
three STS locations. The RLNGC would
then be sailed and moored to a SPM,
where the LNG would be regasified into
natural gas and delivered to shore via
two new parallel 24-inch pipelines. The
RLNGC would then return to a STS
location.
The RLNGCs would use a turret
system with the SPMs to allow the
RLNGC to weathervane (rotate) around
the buoy. Onboard utilities and systems
associated with RLNCG operations
would include electric power generation
and distribution, instrumentation and
controls, and fire and safety systems.
The RLNGC would include all marine
systems, communications, navigation
aids and equipment necessary to safely
conduct RLNGC carrier operations,
receive and vaporize product.
The RLNGCs would use a forced draft
ambient air LNG vaporization system
using a combination of intermediate
fluid and direct ambient air with heat
provided by ambient air called the
Woodside Hybrid Air Vaporization
(WHAV) concept.
Natural gas would be delivered
onshore via two 24-inch parallel
pipelines, approximately 35 miles in
length. These pipelines would come
onshore on the north end of LAX at
Dockweiler Beach. It is proposed that
horizontal directional drilling be used to
install the pipelines beneath land and
seabed in offshore City waters and
underneath the beach and adjacent
dunes from a point about 1000 feet
inland from the high tide mark just east
of Vista del Mar on LAX property.
Woodside would lease/franchise from
the City a 300 foot wide corridor on
submerged City lands out to the 3
nautical mile (3.45 mile) offshore limit
of the City boundary. On-shore
pipelines would be constructed on Cityowned land from the high tide line to
Pershing Drive, passing under the beach
and the El Segundo Dunes, and
underground through City streets. The
route would include Westchester
VerDate Aug<31>2005
18:34 Sep 06, 2007
Jkt 211001
Parkway/Arbor Vitae Street, then south
on Bellanca Avenue to the receiving and
custody transfer station (RCTS) and
adjacent Inert Gas Injection Facility
(IGIF) located at 5651 96th Street, Los
Angeles, about 4 miles inland. A single
36-inch pipeline would run
approximately a quarter of a mile back
north on Bellanca Avenue to Arbor
Vitae, then to the existing Southern
California Gas natural gas pipeline
infrastructure with Tie-in #1 at the
intersection of Aviation Boulevard and
Arbor Vitae Street. A second stage, with
development depending on demand,
may include additional pipelines and
tie-ins that are an approximate 11-mile
single 24-inch line from Tie-In #1 along
Arbor Vitae, Prairie, Manchester,
Firestone, and California to Tie-In #3 at
Santa Ana Street and Otis Avenue in
Huntington Park and an approximate 1
mile single 24-inch line from
Manchester Street to Central Ave to TieIn #2 at the intersection of S. Central
Avenue and E. Century Boulevard.
These pipeline routes include running
through the cities of Los Angeles,
Inglewood, South Gate and Huntington
Park. At full development, Southern
California Gas would own and operate
the system downstream of the RCTS.
The application also includes an
alternative DWP location in the Gulf of
Santa Catalina approximately 30 miles
from Huntington Beach at latitude
117°56′28.53″ west, longitude
33°13′24.88″ north with a 30 mile
pipeline running north to a shore
crossing at the AES power plant in
Huntington Beach. It would cross
through the cities of Huntington Beach,
Fountain Valley, Westminster, Garden
Grove, Santa Anna, and Orange. The
pipeline would be trenched through city
streets traveling north along Newland
Street towards Bolsa Avenue; turn east
at Bolsa Ave. (1st Street); turn north at
the OCTA Metrolink Right of Way and
join Lincoln Ave; east on Fairhaven
Ave.; north at Cambridge Street; and
finally west on Palm Ave. where the
pipeline would connect to the SCG tiein in Orange.
(Authority: 49 CFR 1.66)
By Order of the Maritime Administrator.
Dated: August 31, 2007.
Daron T. Threet,
Secretary, Maritime Administration.
[FR Doc. E7–17649 Filed 9–6–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–81–P
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51489
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Pipeline and Hazardous Materials
Safety Administration
[Docket No. PHMSA–2003–15864]
Request for Public Comment and
Office of Management and Budget
Approval for a New Information
Collection
Pipeline and Hazardous
Materials Safety Administration
(PHMSA), U.S. Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice and request for
comments.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: In compliance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA), this notice announces that
PHMSA has forwarded an Information
Collection Request to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for a
new information collection. This
information collection is a survey of
hazardous liquid operators to obtain
information on unregulated low-stress
hazardous liquid pipeline
characteristics. The purpose of this
notice is to invite the public to submit
comments on the request to OMB.
DATES: Submit comments on or before
October 9, 2007.
ADDRESSES: Send comments directly to
the Office of Management and Budget,
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Attn: Desk Officer for the
Department of Transportation, 725 17th
Street, NW., Washington, DC 20503.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Lane Miller at (405) 954–4969, or by email at Lane.Miller@dot.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Pipeline Inspection, Protection,
Enforcement, and Safety Act of 2006
(PIPES Act) enacted into law on
December 29, 2006, reauthorizes
PHMSA-administered pipeline safety
programs for fiscal years 2007 through
2010. Section 4 of the PIPES Act
requires that PHMSA issue regulations
by December 31, 2007, subjecting all
low-stress hazardous liquid pipelines to
the same standards and regulations as
other hazardous liquid pipelines.
PHMSA currently exempts low stress
pipelines from regulations except for
those in populated areas and crossing
navigable waterways. On May 18, 2007,
PHMSA published a supplementary
notice of proposed rulemaking
proposing to apply all Federal
Hazardous liquid pipeline safety
regulations to a specific set of these
remaining low rural low-stress lines (72
FR 28008).
E:\FR\FM\07SEN1.SGM
07SEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 173 (Friday, September 7, 2007)]
[Notices]
[Pages 51488-51489]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-17649]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Maritime Administration
[USCG-2006-26844]
Woodside Natural Gas Inc. OceanWay Secure Energy Liquefied
Natural Gas Deepwater Port License Application
AGENCY: Maritime Administration, DOT.
ACTION: Notice of application.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Maritime Administration and the U.S. Coast Guard announce
that they have received an application for the licensing of a natural
gas deepwater port, and that the application appears to contain the
required information to proceed. This notice summarizes the applicant's
plans and the procedures that will be followed in considering the
application.
DATES: The Deepwater Port Act of 1974, as amended, requires any public
hearing on this application to be held not later than 240 days after
this notice, and requires a decision on the application to be made not
later than 90 days after the final public hearing.
ADDRESSES: The public docket for this application, USCG-2006-26844, is
maintained by the: Department of Transportation, Docket Management
Facility, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE., West Building, Ground Floor,
Room W12-140, Washington, DC 20590.
Docket contents are available for public inspection and copying at
this address between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, except
Federal holidays. The Facility's telephone number is 202-366-9329 and
the fax number is 202-493-2251. The Web site for electronic submissions
or for electronic access to docket contents is https://dms.dot.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Roddy Bachman, U.S. Coast Guard,
telephone: 202-372-1752, e-mail: Roddy.C.Bachman@uscg.mil. If you have
questions on viewing the docket, call Renee V. Wright, Program Manager,
Docket Operations, telephone: 202-493-0402.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Receipt of Application
On August 17, 2006, the Coast Guard and the Maritime Administration
received an application from Woodside Natural Gas Inc., a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Woodside Petroleum LTD., for all Federal authorizations
required for a license to own, construct, and operate a deepwater port
authorized under the Deepwater Port Act of 1974, as amended, 33 U.S.C.
1501 et seq. (the Act). The City of Los Angeles (City) will be a
cooperating agency in processing this application because Woodside
Natural Gas, Inc. has filed an application for a lease/franchise of
offshore submerged City lands, an onshore pipeline franchise for the
subsea pipelines through City waters, and a pipeline through the City.
Revisions to the application were received on December 27, 2006; on
July 9, 2007; and again on August 20, 2007. As of the date of this
notice, the Maritime Administration and the Coast Guard have determined
that the application appears to contain all information required by the
Act to proceed with the application process. The application is now
available for viewing on the docket (see ADDRESSES).
Background
According to the Deepwater Port Act, a deepwater port is a fixed or
floating manmade structure other than a vessel, or a group of
structures, located beyond State seaward boundaries and used or
intended for use as a port or terminal for the transportation, storage,
and further handling of oil or natural gas for transportation to any
State.
Deepwater ports require a license issued by the Maritime
Administrator (by delegated authority from the Secretary of
Transportation, published on June 18, 2003 (68 FR 36496)). Statutory
and regulatory requirements for licensing appear in 33 U.S.C. 1501 et
seq. and in 33 CFR Part 148. Under delegations from the Secretary of
Transportation and the Secretary of Homeland Security, applications are
processed by the Coast Guard and the Maritime Administration. Each
application is considered on its merits.
The Act provides deadlines for processing applications. After
determining that an application contains the required information,
public hearings on the application must be held within 240 days, and
the Maritime Administrator must render a decision on the application
within 330 days. Additional Federal Register notices will be published
throughout the application review process to provide notice of public
hearings and other procedural milestones. The Maritime Administrator's
decision, and other key documents, will be filed in the public docket.
At least one public hearing will take place in each adjacent
coastal State. For purposes of the Act, California is the adjacent
coastal State for this application. Other States can apply for adjacent
coastal State status in accordance with 33 U.S.C. 1508(a)(2).
Summary of the Application/Proposed Action/Project
Woodside Natural Gas proposes to construct, own, and operate a
deepwater port with associated ship-to-ship transfer (STS) location(s)
and single point mooring (SPM) buoys for the receiving of
regasification liquefied natural gas carriers (RLNGCs), offshore and
onshore natural gas pipelines, and a receiving and custody transfer
facility (RCTS) to deliver natural gas with an annualized rate of 0.4
billion cubic feet per day (bcf/d) and a peak of 1.1 bcf/d into the
Southern California market on initial development and an annualized
rate of 1.0 bcf/d and a peak of up to 1.6 bcf/d at full project
development.
The deepwater port would be located in the Federal waters of the
Santa Monica Basin, 21 miles from the nearest point on the mainland of
Southern California and 18 miles from the western end of Santa Catalina
Island, approximately 27 miles southwest of Los Angeles International
Airport (LAX), in a water depth of approximately 3,000 feet. It would
consist of two single point mooring (SPM) buoys that serve as cargo
discharge system connections for RLNGCs, a mooring/anchoring array,
four flexible risers that connect the SPMs to four seafloor riser end
manifolds, two pipeline end manifolds (PLEMs) and two parallel 24-inch
pipelines beginning on the seafloor at the PLEMs beneath the SPM buoys
and continuing to shore. The SPMs would be located approximately 5
nautical miles (5.75 miles) outside established shipping lanes (SPM NE:
Latitude: 33[deg]41[min]52[sec] N, Longitude: 118[deg]48[min]33[sec] W
and SPM SW: Latitude: 33[deg]39[min]58[sec] N, Longitude:
118[deg]49[min]15[sec] W).
Woodside has proposed three ship-to-ship transfer locations ranging
from approximately 35 to 90 nautical miles (40 to 104 miles) from shore
and 55 to 111 nautical miles (63 to 128 miles)
[[Page 51489]]
from the port where each RLNGC is expected to receive LNG cargo at sea
from conventional LNG carriers. STS1 Santa Rosa (Latitude
33[deg]39[min] N, Longitude 119[deg]56[min]30[sec] W), STS2 Inshore San
Clemente (Latitude 33[deg]05[min] N, Longitude 118[deg]10[min] W) and
STS3 Skaugen Offshore (Latitude 32[deg]15[min] N, Longitude
120[deg]0[min] W). Only one transfer location would be used at a time.
The RLNGCs, with storage capacity of 224,000 m\3\ of LNG would be
capable of receiving conventional LNG carriers (LNGCs) with storage
capacities of up to 216,000 m\3\ of LNG.
As proposed, LNG would be delivered from overseas by LNGCs and
transferred to a Woodside RLNGC at one of the three STS locations. The
RLNGC would then be sailed and moored to a SPM, where the LNG would be
regasified into natural gas and delivered to shore via two new parallel
24-inch pipelines. The RLNGC would then return to a STS location.
The RLNGCs would use a turret system with the SPMs to allow the
RLNGC to weathervane (rotate) around the buoy. Onboard utilities and
systems associated with RLNCG operations would include electric power
generation and distribution, instrumentation and controls, and fire and
safety systems. The RLNGC would include all marine systems,
communications, navigation aids and equipment necessary to safely
conduct RLNGC carrier operations, receive and vaporize product.
The RLNGCs would use a forced draft ambient air LNG vaporization
system using a combination of intermediate fluid and direct ambient air
with heat provided by ambient air called the Woodside Hybrid Air
Vaporization (WHAV) concept.
Natural gas would be delivered onshore via two 24-inch parallel
pipelines, approximately 35 miles in length. These pipelines would come
onshore on the north end of LAX at Dockweiler Beach. It is proposed
that horizontal directional drilling be used to install the pipelines
beneath land and seabed in offshore City waters and underneath the
beach and adjacent dunes from a point about 1000 feet inland from the
high tide mark just east of Vista del Mar on LAX property.
Woodside would lease/franchise from the City a 300 foot wide
corridor on submerged City lands out to the 3 nautical mile (3.45 mile)
offshore limit of the City boundary. On-shore pipelines would be
constructed on City-owned land from the high tide line to Pershing
Drive, passing under the beach and the El Segundo Dunes, and
underground through City streets. The route would include Westchester
Parkway/Arbor Vitae Street, then south on Bellanca Avenue to the
receiving and custody transfer station (RCTS) and adjacent Inert Gas
Injection Facility (IGIF) located at 5651 96th Street, Los Angeles,
about 4 miles inland. A single 36-inch pipeline would run approximately
a quarter of a mile back north on Bellanca Avenue to Arbor Vitae, then
to the existing Southern California Gas natural gas pipeline
infrastructure with Tie-in 1 at the intersection of Aviation
Boulevard and Arbor Vitae Street. A second stage, with development
depending on demand, may include additional pipelines and tie-ins that
are an approximate 11-mile single 24-inch line from Tie-In 1
along Arbor Vitae, Prairie, Manchester, Firestone, and California to
Tie-In 3 at Santa Ana Street and Otis Avenue in Huntington
Park and an approximate 1 mile single 24-inch line from Manchester
Street to Central Ave to Tie-In 2 at the intersection of S.
Central Avenue and E. Century Boulevard. These pipeline routes include
running through the cities of Los Angeles, Inglewood, South Gate and
Huntington Park. At full development, Southern California Gas would own
and operate the system downstream of the RCTS.
The application also includes an alternative DWP location in the
Gulf of Santa Catalina approximately 30 miles from Huntington Beach at
latitude 117[deg]56[min]28.53[sec] west, longitude
33[deg]13[min]24.88[sec] north with a 30 mile pipeline running north to
a shore crossing at the AES power plant in Huntington Beach. It would
cross through the cities of Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley,
Westminster, Garden Grove, Santa Anna, and Orange. The pipeline would
be trenched through city streets traveling north along Newland Street
towards Bolsa Avenue; turn east at Bolsa Ave. (1st Street); turn north
at the OCTA Metrolink Right of Way and join Lincoln Ave; east on
Fairhaven Ave.; north at Cambridge Street; and finally west on Palm
Ave. where the pipeline would connect to the SCG tie-in in Orange.
(Authority: 49 CFR 1.66)
By Order of the Maritime Administrator.
Dated: August 31, 2007.
Daron T. Threet,
Secretary, Maritime Administration.
[FR Doc. E7-17649 Filed 9-6-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-81-P