Agency Information Collection Activities: Proposed Collection; Comment Request, 17964-17966 [E8-6801]
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17964
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 64 / Wednesday, April 2, 2008 / Notices
Partnership (GNEP), Next Generation of
Nuclear Power, Nuclear Power 2010,
and Idaho National Laboratory. The
agenda may change to accommodate
committee business. For updates, one is
directed to the NEAC Web site: https://
www.ne.doe.gov/neac/
neNeacOverview.html.
Public Participation: Individuals and
representatives of organizations who
would like to offer comments and
suggestions may do so on the day of the
meeting, Monday, April 21, 2008.
Approximately one-half hour will be
reserved for public comments. Time
allotted per speaker will depend on the
number who wish to speak but is not
expected to exceed 5 minutes. Anyone
who is not able to make the meeting or
has had insufficient time to address the
committee is invited to send a written
statement to Dr. John Boger, 19901
Germantown Rd., Germantown, MD
20874, or e-mail john.boger@hq.doe.gov.
Minutes: The minutes of the meeting
will be available by contacting Dr. John
Boger at the address above or on the
Department of Energy, Office of Nuclear
Energy Web site at https://
www.ne.doe.gov/neac/
neNeacOverview.html.
Issued in Washington, DC on March 28,
2008.
Rachel Samuel,
Deputy Committee Management Officer.
[FR Doc. E8–6802 Filed 4–1–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
• EIA–895, ‘‘Monthly and Annual
Quantity and Value of Natural Gas
Production Report’’
• EIA–910, ‘‘Monthly Natural Gas
Marketer Survey’’
• EIA–912, ‘‘Weekly Underground
Natural Gas Storage Report’’
• EIA–757, ‘‘Natural Gas Processing
Plant Survey’’
DATES: Comments must be filed by June
2, 2008. If you anticipate difficulty in
submitting comments within that
period, contact the person listed below
as soon as possible.
ADDRESSES: Send comments to Ms. Amy
Sweeney, Natural Gas Division, Office
of Oil and Gas, Energy Information
Administration. To ensure receipt of the
comments by the due date, submission
by fax (202–586–4420) or e-mail
(amy.sweeney@eia.doe.gov) is
recommended. The mailing address is
Ms. Amy Sweeney, Energy Information
Administration, U.S. Department of
Energy, 1000 Independence Ave., SW.,
EI–44, Washington, DC 20585. Also, Ms.
Sweeney may be contacted by telephone
at 202–586–2627.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Requests for additional information or
copies of any forms and instructions
should be directed to Ms. Sweeney at
the address listed above. Also, the draft
forms and instructions are available on
the EIA Web site at https://
www.eia.doe.gov/oil_gas/fwd/
proposed.html.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
II. Current Actions
III. Request for Comments
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Energy Information Administration
I. Background
Agency Information Collection
Activities: Proposed Collection;
Comment Request
The Federal Energy Administration
Act of 1974 (Pub. L. 93–275, 15 U.S.C.
761 et seq.) and the DOE Organization
Act (Pub. L. 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
both 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 the
collection of energy information
conducted by or in conjunction with the
EIA. Any comments help the EIA
Energy Information
Administration (EIA), Department of
Energy (DOE).
ACTION: Agency Information Collection
Activities: Proposed Collection;
Comment Request.
rmajette on PROD1PC64 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The EIA is soliciting
comments on the proposed revision and
3-year extension of the surveys in the
Natural Gas Data Collection Program
Package. The surveys covered by this
request include:
• Form EIA–176, ‘‘Annual Report of
Natural and Supplemental Gas Supply
and Disposition’’
• EIA–191, ‘‘Monthly and Annual
Underground Gas Storage Report’’
• EIA–857, ‘‘Monthly Report of
Natural Gas Purchases and Deliveries to
Consumers’’
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15:36 Apr 01, 2008
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prepare data requests that maximize the
utility of the information collected and
assess the impact of collection
requirements on the public. As required
by section 3507(h)(1) of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, the EIA will
later seek approval for this collection by
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB).
The natural gas surveys included in
the Natural Gas Data Collection Program
Package collect information on natural
gas production, underground storage,
supply, processing, transmission,
distribution, consumption by sector,
and wellhead and consumer prices. This
information is used to support public
policy analyses of the natural gas
industry and estimates generated from
data collected on these surveys. The
statistics generated from these surveys
are posted to the EIA Web site (https://
www.eia.doe.gov) in various EIA
products, including the Weekly Natural
Gas Storage Report (WNGSR), Natural
Gas Monthly (NGM), Natural Gas
Annual (NGA), Monthly Energy Review
(MER), Short-Term Energy Outlook
(STEO), Annual Energy Outlook (AEO),
and Annual Energy Review (AER).
Respondents to EIA natural gas surveys
include State agencies, underground
storage operators, transporters,
marketers, and distributors. Each form
included as part of this package is
discussed in detail below.
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 confidentiality, 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 will be requesting a 3-year
extension of the collection authority for
each of the above-referenced surveys
and will have minor changes made to
the forms and instructions to provide
simplicity and clarity. In addition, EIA
proposes the changes outlined below.
Form EIA–176, ‘‘Annual Report of
Natural and Supplemental Gas Supply
and Disposition’’
In Part 6 of the form, EIA proposes to
collect ‘‘Revenue’’ data for deliveries of
natural gas that are transported but not
owned by the delivery company in item
11. This change will create consistency
within the form, as item 10 (deliveries
owned) currently includes ‘‘Revenue’’
among the collected data. By collecting
Revenue for the gas transported but not
owned by the EIA–176 respondents, the
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 64 / Wednesday, April 2, 2008 / Notices
quality of EIA’s natural gas
transportation price information will be
improved. Prices would be derived by
dividing the revenue from delivery of
natural gas not owned by the volume of
natural gas not owned by the delivery
company. The new data would give EIA
an annual benchmark with which to
compare the monthly revenue from the
delivery of gas not owned collected on
Form EIA–857, ‘‘Monthly Report of
Natural Gas Purchases and Deliveries.’’
EIA has learned that having annual
benchmark revenue data with which to
compare monthly data results in better
data quality as the monthly data are
frequently subject to accounting
adjustments that occur due to the
staggered timing of meter readings
during the month.
rmajette on PROD1PC64 with NOTICES
Form EIA–857, ‘‘Monthly Report of
Natural Gas Purchases and Deliveries to
Consumers’’
EIA is proposing to collect ‘‘Revenue’’
data for gas sold and transported to
electric power customers as it does for
residential, commercial, industrial, and
other natural gas customers. EIA also
proposes to collect customer counts, i.e.,
the number of customers, for each enduse sector as it does on the annual form,
EIA–176.
Currently electric revenue data are not
collected, as the data used to determine
published prices for natural gas used for
electric generation come from other EIA
surveys, Form EIA–423, ‘‘Monthly Cost
and Quality of Fuels for Electric Plants
Report,’’ and Form EIA–906, ‘‘Power
Plant Report.’’ However, not allowing
respondents to report revenue for
deliveries to the electric power sector on
Form EIA–857 has caused some
confusion as to where this revenue
should be reported. Consequently, some
revenue has been reported in the wrong
end-use sector. Additionally, having the
data available on a monthly basis will
provide a useful comparison to the
electric power revenue already collected
on Form EIA–176, as comparing
monthly to annual revenue data for the
other end-use sectors frequently reveals
discrepancies between the two series.
EIA also proposes to collect customer
counts, i.e., number of customers, for
each of the end-use sectors for gas sold
and transported to residential,
commercial, industrial, electric power
and other customers. Having this data
will enable EIA to better monitor
fluctuations in monthly volume
reporting which are commonly the
result of changes to the number of
customers being served.
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15:36 Apr 01, 2008
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Form EIA–895, ‘‘Monthly and Annual
Quantity and Value of Natural Gas
Production Report’’
EIA proposes the continuation of
EIA–895, ‘‘Annual Quantity and
Volume of Natural Gas Production
Report’’ in its present form with the
addition of natural gas production gross
withdrawals data from ‘‘Shale’’ sources.
Natural gas produced from this source
has increased in recent years and is
expected to rise in the future; therefore,
EIA finds it necessary to accurately
capture this source of natural gas
production.
EIA has discontinued Form EIA–
895M, ‘‘Monthly Quantity and Volume
of Natural Gas Production Report’’ as
the EIA–914, ‘‘Monthly Natural Gas
Production Report’’ became the new
source of monthly natural gas
production data in January 2007.
Form EIA–910, ‘‘Monthly Natural Gas
Marketer Survey’’
EIA proposes three changes to Form
EIA–910:
A. EIA proposes that respondents
report customer count, volume, and
revenue data for each local distribution
company’s territory in which the
respondent operates instead of at the
State level, as currently reported.
Having such information would enable
EIA to more closely compare marketer
volumes against volumes transported on
the account of marketers on Form EIA–
857, ‘‘Monthly Report of Natural Gas
Purchases and Deliveries to
Consumers,’’ and resolve discrepancies
between the two sources.
B. In states where EIA collects data
from natural gas marketers on Form
EIA–910, natural gas marketers sell
significant amounts of natural gas to
residential and commercial end users.
The data collected have shown that the
prices from the sales by natural gas
marketers have differed from prices of
natural gas sold by local distribution
companies, in many cases by more than
ten percent. Therefore, EIA has
determined that states should be
considered for collection on the Form
EIA–910 that meet one of the following
criteria: (1) More than 40 percent of
natural gas in a particular state in the
residential and/or commercial sector is
sold by natural gas marketers, or (2) the
amount of natural gas sold by marketers
in a state and sector comprises at least
2 percent of natural gas sales in the
residential or commercial sector at the
U.S. level. Based on these criteria, the
states of Alaska, California, Maine,
Oklahoma, and Wyoming are proposed
for collection on Form EIA–910 while
the states of Massachusetts and
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17965
Michigan are proposed to be removed
from the Form EIA–910 survey frame.
Currently none of the proposed states
for inclusion on Form EIA–910 have
market penetration of natural gas
marketers at significant levels in the
residential sector. However, EIA also
proposes to collect data from natural gas
marketers serving residential customers,
if any, in those states in order to
monitor the market and provide data for
EIA’s annual update of the status of
residential choice in the natural gas
market. EIA proposes that the collection
of forms from Alaska, California, Maine,
Oklahoma, and/or Wyoming begin in
July 2009, and that Massachusetts and
Michigan no longer be collected
beginning in January 2009.
C. EIA proposes that natural gas
volume data on Form EIA–910, ‘‘Natural
Gas Marketer Report,’’ be collected only
in Mcf (thousand cubic feet) rather than
Btu (heat content) or Mcf.
Form EIA–757, ‘‘Natural Gas Processing
Plant Survey’’
EIA proposes adding this new
approved form as part of the EIA natural
gas collection so that it will be on the
same clearance cycle with all EIA
natural gas survey forms. No changes
are proposed to the Form EIA–757.
III. Request for Comments
Prospective respondents and other
interested parties should comment on
the actions discussed in items II and III.
The following guidelines are provided
to assist in the preparation of comments.
Please indicate to which forms 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
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?
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 64 / Wednesday, April 2, 2008 / Notices
rmajette on PROD1PC64 with NOTICES
C. Can the information be submitted
by the due date?
D. Public reporting burden for the
surveys included in the Natural Gas
Data Collection Program Package 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 are these
estimates for the proposed forms?
(1) Form EIA–176, ‘‘Annual Report of
Natural and Supplemental Gas Supply
and Disposition,’’ 12 hours per
response.
(2) Form EIA–191A, ‘‘Annual
Underground Gas Storage Report,’’ 1
hour per response.
(3) Form EIA–191M, ‘‘Monthly
Underground Gas Storage Report,’’ 2.5
hours per response.
(4) Form EIA–857, ‘‘Monthly Report
of Natural Gas Purchases and Deliveries
to Consumers,’’ 3.5 hours per response.
(5) Form EIA–895, ‘‘Annual Quantity
and Value of Natural Gas Production
Report,’’ .5 hours per response.
(6) Form EIA–910, ‘‘Monthly Natural
Gas Marketer Survey,’’ 2 hours per
response.
(7) Form EIA–912, ‘‘Weekly
Underground Natural Gas Storage
Report,’’ 0.5 hours per response.
(8) Form EIA–757, ‘‘Natural Gas
Processing Plant Survey,’’ Schedule A,
0.5 hours per response; Schedule B, 1.5
hours per response.
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,
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15:36 Apr 01, 2008
Jkt 214001
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.),
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.).
Issued in Washington, DC, March 27, 2008.
Jay Casselberry,
Agency Clearance Officer, Energy Information
Administration.
[FR Doc. E8–6801 Filed 4–1–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
[Project No. 12615–001]
Alaska Power & Telephone Company;
Notice of Request to Use Alternative
Procedures In Preparing a License
Application
March 26, 2008.
Take notice that the following request
to use alternative procedures to prepare
a license application has been filed with
the Commission.
a. Type of Application: Request to use
alternative procedures to prepare an
original license application.
b. Project No.: 12615–001.
c. Date filed: March 10, 2008.
d. Applicant: Alaska Power &
Telephone Company.
e. Name of Project: Soule River
Hydroelectric Project.
f. Location: On the Soule River,
tributary to Portland Canal,
approximately 9 miles south of the
community of Hyder, Alaska. The
project would occupy approximately
1,112 acres of federal lands within the
Tongass National Forest, administered
by the U.S. Forest Service.
g. Filed Pursuant to: Federal Power
Act, 16 U.S.C. 791(a)–825(r).
h. Applicant Contact: Glen Martin,
Project Manager, Alaska Power &
Telephone Company, 193 Otto Street,
P.O. Box 3222, Port Townsend,
Washington 98368, (360) 385–1733 X
122, glen.m@aptalaska.com.
i. FERC Contact: Matt Cutlip, phone at
(503) 552–2762; e-mail at
matt.cutlip@ferc.gov.
j. Deadline for Comments: 30 days
from the date of this notice.
All documents (original and eight
copies) should be filed with: Kimberly
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Frm 00019
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
D. Bose, Secretary, Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission, 888 First
Street, NE., Washington, DC 20426.
Comments may be filed electronically
via the Internet in lieu of paper. The
Commission strongly encourages
electronic filings. See 18 CFR
385.2001(a)(1)(iii) and the instructions
on the Commission’s Web site (https://
www.ferc.gov) under the ‘‘e-Filing’’ link.
k. The project would consist of a 160foot-high concrete-faced, rock-fill dam;
an impoundment with a 950-acre
surface area at a full pool elevation of
550 feet mean sea level; a 2.5-mile-long,
14-foot-wide access road with a 100foot-long bridge across the Soule River;
marine access facilities along the
Portland Canal at the mouth of the
Soule River; an 18-foot-diameter 11,100foot-long power tunnel; a 50-foot by
120-foot powerhouse containing two
Francis-type generating units, having a
total installed capacity of 75,000
kilowatts; a 9.72-mile-long, 138 kilovolt
submarine cable that would
interconnect in Stewart, British
Columbia with British Columbia
Transmission Corporation’s existing
electrical transmission system;1 and
appurtenant facilities.
l. A copy of the request to use
alternative procedures is available for
review at the Commission in the Public
Reference Room or may be viewed on
the Commission’s Web site at https://
www.ferc.gov using the ‘‘eLibrary’’ link.
Enter the docket number excluding the
last three digits in the docket number
field to access the document. For
assistance, contact FERC Online
Support at
FERCOnlineSupport@ferc.gov or tollfree at 1–866–208–3676, or for TTY,
(202) 502–8659. A copy is also available
for inspection and reproduction at the
address in item h above.
You may also register online at
https://www.ferc.gov/docs-filing/
esubscription.asp to be notified via email of new filings and issuances
related to this or other pending projects.
For assistance, contact FERC Online
Support.
m. Alaska Power & Telephone
Company has demonstrated that it has
made an effort to contact all federal and
state resources agencies, nongovernmental organizations (NGO), and
others affected by the project. Alaska
Power & Telephone Company has also
demonstrated that a consensus exists
that the use of alternative procedures is
appropriate in this case. Alaska Power
& Telephone Company has submitted a
1 Only the portion of the transmission line that
would be located in the United States is under the
Commission’s jurisdiction.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 64 (Wednesday, April 2, 2008)]
[Notices]
[Pages 17964-17966]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-6801]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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 3-
year extension of the surveys in the Natural Gas Data Collection
Program Package. The surveys covered by this request include:
Form EIA-176, ``Annual Report of Natural and Supplemental
Gas Supply and Disposition''
EIA-191, ``Monthly and Annual Underground Gas Storage
Report''
EIA-857, ``Monthly Report of Natural Gas Purchases and
Deliveries to Consumers''
EIA-895, ``Monthly and Annual Quantity and Value of
Natural Gas Production Report''
EIA-910, ``Monthly Natural Gas Marketer Survey''
EIA-912, ``Weekly Underground Natural Gas Storage Report''
EIA-757, ``Natural Gas Processing Plant Survey''
DATES: Comments must be filed by June 2, 2008. If you anticipate
difficulty in submitting comments within that period, contact the
person listed below as soon as possible.
ADDRESSES: Send comments to Ms. Amy Sweeney, Natural Gas Division,
Office of Oil and Gas, Energy Information Administration. To ensure
receipt of the comments by the due date, submission by fax (202-586-
4420) or e-mail (amy.sweeney@eia.doe.gov) is recommended. The mailing
address is Ms. Amy Sweeney, Energy Information Administration, U.S.
Department of Energy, 1000 Independence Ave., SW., EI-44, Washington,
DC 20585. Also, Ms. Sweeney may be contacted by telephone at 202-586-
2627.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Requests for additional information or
copies of any forms and instructions should be directed to Ms. Sweeney
at the address listed above. Also, the draft forms and instructions are
available on the EIA Web site at https://www.eia.doe.gov/oil_gas/fwd/
proposed.html.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
II. Current Actions
III. Request for Comments
I. Background
The Federal Energy Administration Act of 1974 (Pub. L. 93-275, 15
U.S.C. 761 et seq.) and the DOE Organization Act (Pub. L. 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 both 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 the collection of energy information conducted by or in
conjunction with the EIA. Any comments help the EIA prepare data
requests that maximize the utility of the information collected and
assess the impact of collection requirements on the public. As required
by section 3507(h)(1) of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, the EIA
will later seek approval for this collection by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB).
The natural gas surveys included in the Natural Gas Data Collection
Program Package collect information on natural gas production,
underground storage, supply, processing, transmission, distribution,
consumption by sector, and wellhead and consumer prices. This
information is used to support public policy analyses of the natural
gas industry and estimates generated from data collected on these
surveys. The statistics generated from these surveys are posted to the
EIA Web site (https://www.eia.doe.gov) in various EIA products,
including the Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report (WNGSR), Natural Gas
Monthly (NGM), Natural Gas Annual (NGA), Monthly Energy Review (MER),
Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO), Annual Energy Outlook (AEO), and
Annual Energy Review (AER). Respondents to EIA natural gas surveys
include State agencies, underground storage operators, transporters,
marketers, and distributors. Each form included as part of this package
is discussed in detail below.
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 confidentiality, 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 will be requesting a 3-year extension of the collection
authority for each of the above-referenced surveys and will have minor
changes made to the forms and instructions to provide simplicity and
clarity. In addition, EIA proposes the changes outlined below.
Form EIA-176, ``Annual Report of Natural and Supplemental Gas Supply
and Disposition''
In Part 6 of the form, EIA proposes to collect ``Revenue'' data for
deliveries of natural gas that are transported but not owned by the
delivery company in item 11. This change will create consistency within
the form, as item 10 (deliveries owned) currently includes ``Revenue''
among the collected data. By collecting Revenue for the gas transported
but not owned by the EIA-176 respondents, the
[[Page 17965]]
quality of EIA's natural gas transportation price information will be
improved. Prices would be derived by dividing the revenue from delivery
of natural gas not owned by the volume of natural gas not owned by the
delivery company. The new data would give EIA an annual benchmark with
which to compare the monthly revenue from the delivery of gas not owned
collected on Form EIA-857, ``Monthly Report of Natural Gas Purchases
and Deliveries.'' EIA has learned that having annual benchmark revenue
data with which to compare monthly data results in better data quality
as the monthly data are frequently subject to accounting adjustments
that occur due to the staggered timing of meter readings during the
month.
Form EIA-857, ``Monthly Report of Natural Gas Purchases and Deliveries
to Consumers''
EIA is proposing to collect ``Revenue'' data for gas sold and
transported to electric power customers as it does for residential,
commercial, industrial, and other natural gas customers. EIA also
proposes to collect customer counts, i.e., the number of customers, for
each end-use sector as it does on the annual form, EIA-176.
Currently electric revenue data are not collected, as the data used
to determine published prices for natural gas used for electric
generation come from other EIA surveys, Form EIA-423, ``Monthly Cost
and Quality of Fuels for Electric Plants Report,'' and Form EIA-906,
``Power Plant Report.'' However, not allowing respondents to report
revenue for deliveries to the electric power sector on Form EIA-857 has
caused some confusion as to where this revenue should be reported.
Consequently, some revenue has been reported in the wrong end-use
sector. Additionally, having the data available on a monthly basis will
provide a useful comparison to the electric power revenue already
collected on Form EIA-176, as comparing monthly to annual revenue data
for the other end-use sectors frequently reveals discrepancies between
the two series.
EIA also proposes to collect customer counts, i.e., number of
customers, for each of the end-use sectors for gas sold and transported
to residential, commercial, industrial, electric power and other
customers. Having this data will enable EIA to better monitor
fluctuations in monthly volume reporting which are commonly the result
of changes to the number of customers being served.
Form EIA-895, ``Monthly and Annual Quantity and Value of Natural Gas
Production Report''
EIA proposes the continuation of EIA-895, ``Annual Quantity and
Volume of Natural Gas Production Report'' in its present form with the
addition of natural gas production gross withdrawals data from
``Shale'' sources. Natural gas produced from this source has increased
in recent years and is expected to rise in the future; therefore, EIA
finds it necessary to accurately capture this source of natural gas
production.
EIA has discontinued Form EIA-895M, ``Monthly Quantity and Volume
of Natural Gas Production Report'' as the EIA-914, ``Monthly Natural
Gas Production Report'' became the new source of monthly natural gas
production data in January 2007.
Form EIA-910, ``Monthly Natural Gas Marketer Survey''
EIA proposes three changes to Form EIA-910:
A. EIA proposes that respondents report customer count, volume, and
revenue data for each local distribution company's territory in which
the respondent operates instead of at the State level, as currently
reported. Having such information would enable EIA to more closely
compare marketer volumes against volumes transported on the account of
marketers on Form EIA-857, ``Monthly Report of Natural Gas Purchases
and Deliveries to Consumers,'' and resolve discrepancies between the
two sources.
B. In states where EIA collects data from natural gas marketers on
Form EIA-910, natural gas marketers sell significant amounts of natural
gas to residential and commercial end users. The data collected have
shown that the prices from the sales by natural gas marketers have
differed from prices of natural gas sold by local distribution
companies, in many cases by more than ten percent. Therefore, EIA has
determined that states should be considered for collection on the Form
EIA-910 that meet one of the following criteria: (1) More than 40
percent of natural gas in a particular state in the residential and/or
commercial sector is sold by natural gas marketers, or (2) the amount
of natural gas sold by marketers in a state and sector comprises at
least 2 percent of natural gas sales in the residential or commercial
sector at the U.S. level. Based on these criteria, the states of
Alaska, California, Maine, Oklahoma, and Wyoming are proposed for
collection on Form EIA-910 while the states of Massachusetts and
Michigan are proposed to be removed from the Form EIA-910 survey frame.
Currently none of the proposed states for inclusion on Form EIA-910
have market penetration of natural gas marketers at significant levels
in the residential sector. However, EIA also proposes to collect data
from natural gas marketers serving residential customers, if any, in
those states in order to monitor the market and provide data for EIA's
annual update of the status of residential choice in the natural gas
market. EIA proposes that the collection of forms from Alaska,
California, Maine, Oklahoma, and/or Wyoming begin in July 2009, and
that Massachusetts and Michigan no longer be collected beginning in
January 2009.
C. EIA proposes that natural gas volume data on Form EIA-910,
``Natural Gas Marketer Report,'' be collected only in Mcf (thousand
cubic feet) rather than Btu (heat content) or Mcf.
Form EIA-757, ``Natural Gas Processing Plant Survey''
EIA proposes adding this new approved form as part of the EIA
natural gas collection so that it will be on the same clearance cycle
with all EIA natural gas survey forms. No changes are proposed to the
Form EIA-757.
III. Request for Comments
Prospective respondents and other interested parties should comment
on the actions discussed in items II and III. The following guidelines
are provided to assist in the preparation of comments. Please indicate
to which forms 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 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?
[[Page 17966]]
C. Can the information be submitted by the due date?
D. Public reporting burden for the surveys included in the Natural
Gas Data Collection Program Package 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 are these estimates for the proposed forms?
(1) Form EIA-176, ``Annual Report of Natural and Supplemental Gas
Supply and Disposition,'' 12 hours per response.
(2) Form EIA-191A, ``Annual Underground Gas Storage Report,'' 1
hour per response.
(3) Form EIA-191M, ``Monthly Underground Gas Storage Report,'' 2.5
hours per response.
(4) Form EIA-857, ``Monthly Report of Natural Gas Purchases and
Deliveries to Consumers,'' 3.5 hours per response.
(5) Form EIA-895, ``Annual Quantity and Value of Natural Gas
Production Report,'' .5 hours per response.
(6) Form EIA-910, ``Monthly Natural Gas Marketer Survey,'' 2 hours
per response.
(7) Form EIA-912, ``Weekly Underground Natural Gas Storage
Report,'' 0.5 hours per response.
(8) Form EIA-757, ``Natural Gas Processing Plant Survey,'' Schedule
A, 0.5 hours per response; Schedule B, 1.5 hours per response.
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.),
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.).
Issued in Washington, DC, March 27, 2008.
Jay Casselberry,
Agency Clearance Officer, Energy Information Administration.
[FR Doc. E8-6801 Filed 4-1-08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P