Request for Expressions of Interest in Hosting a Facility or Facilities for the Long-Term Management and Storage of Elemental Mercury, 11923-11925 [E9-6136]
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 53 / Friday, March 20, 2009 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Environmental Management SiteSpecific Advisory Board, Oak Ridge
Reservation
Department of Energy.
Notice of open meeting.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: This notice announces a
meeting of the Environmental
Management Site-Specific Advisory
Board (EM SSAB), Oak Ridge
Reservation. The Federal Advisory
Committee Act (Pub. L. 92–463, 86 Stat.
770) requires that public notice of this
meeting be announced in the Federal
Register.
DATES:
Wednesday, April 8, 2009, 6
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Pat
Halsey, Federal Coordinator,
Department of Energy Oak Ridge
Operations Office, P.O. Box 2001, EM–
90, Oak Ridge, TN 37831. Phone (865)
576–4025; Fax (865) 576–2347 or e-mail:
halseypj@oro.doe.gov or check the Web
site at https://www.oakridge.doe.gov/em/
ssab.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Purpose of the Board: The purpose of
the Board is to make recommendations
to DOE in the areas of environmental
restoration, waste management, and
related activities.
Tentative Agenda: The main meeting
presentation will be on the DOE
Transuranic (TRU) Waste Processing
Center.
Public Participation: The EM SSAB,
Oak Ridge, welcomes the attendance of
the public at its advisory committee
meetings and will make every effort to
accommodate persons with physical
disabilities or special needs. If you
require special accommodations due to
a disability, please contact Pat Halsey at
least seven days in advance of the
meeting at the phone number listed
above. Written statements may be filed
with the Board either before or after the
meeting. Individuals who wish to make
oral statements pertaining to the agenda
item should contact Pat Halsey at the
address or telephone number listed
above. Requests must be received five
days prior to the meeting and reasonable
provision will be made to include the
presentation in the agenda. The Deputy
Designated Federal Officer is
empowered to conduct the meeting in a
fashion that will facilitate the orderly
conduct of business. Individuals
wishing to make public comment will
Jkt 217001
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
Request for Expressions of Interest in
Hosting a Facility or Facilities for the
Long-Term Management and Storage
of Elemental Mercury
DOE Information Center,
475 Oak Ridge Turnpike, Oak Ridge,
Tennessee.
ADDRESSES:
17:07 Mar 19, 2009
Issued at Washington, DC, on March 16,
2009.
LaTanya Butler,
Acting Deputy Committee Management
Officer.
[FR Doc. E9–6135 Filed 3–19–09; 8:45 am]
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
p.m.
VerDate Nov<24>2008
be provided a maximum of five minutes
to present their comments.
Minutes: Minutes will be available by
writing or calling Pat Halsey at the
address and phone number listed above.
Minutes will also be available at the
following Web site: https://
www.oakridge.doe.gov/em/ssab/
minutes.htm.
Department of Energy.
Notice of request for expressions
of interest.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The U.S. Department of
Energy (DOE) is seeking Expressions of
Interest from Federal agencies and from
the private sector regarding potential
locations for a facility or facilities where
DOE can store and manage elemental
mercury pursuant to the Mercury Export
Ban Act of 2008 (the Act). The Act
directs DOE to designate by January 1,
2010, a facility or facilities of DOE for
the long-term management and storage
of elemental mercury. At least one such
facility must be operational by January
1, 2013.
DOE intends to initiate an
Environmental Impact Statement in
early 2009 and seeks to identify
facilities to consider as potential
alternatives. Accordingly, respondents
to this Request for Expressions of
Interest may have the facilities they
identify considered during the
environmental review scoping process.
This is a request for expressions of
interest. No proposals are allowed.
DATES: Federal agencies and commercial
entities wishing to make an Expression
of Interest should do so in writing no
later than 30 days from the date this
notice is published. Questions may be
submitted in writing by letter or e-mail.
DOE may ask vendors to clarify
information provided in their
Expressions of Interest or submit
additional information.
ADDRESSES: Please submit hard copies
of Expressions of Interest to Mr. David
Levenstein, Mail Stop: EM–11/
Cloverleaf 2128, U.S. Department of
Energy, 1000 Independence Avenue,
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
11923
SW., Washington, DC 20585–2040.
Electronic versions of Expressions of
Interest may be submitted in portable
document format (pdf) by e-mail to
david.levenstein@em.doe.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The Mercury Export Ban Act of 2008
prohibits the export of elemental
mercury from the United States effective
January 1, 2013. To ensure that
elemental mercury is managed and
stored safely, the Act directs DOE to
take a number of actions. By October 1,
2009, DOE must issue guidance
establishing standards and procedures
for the receipt, management and longterm storage of elemental mercury
generated within the United States at a
facility or facilities of DOE. DOE must
designate such facilities by January 1,
2010, but is prohibited by the Act from
locating such a facility at DOE’s Oak
Ridge Reservation. At least one such
facility must be operational by January
1, 2013. In addition to the standards and
procedures referenced above, elemental
mercury managed and stored at a
designated facility will be subject to the
requirements of the Solid Waste
Disposal Act, as amended (Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act
(RCRA)), 42 U.S.C. 6901 et seq. A
designated facility in existence on or
before January 1, 2013, is authorized to
operate under interim status pursuant to
RCRA section 3005(e), 42 U.S.C.
6925(e), until a final decision on a
permit application is made pursuant to
RCRA section 3005(c), 42 U.S.C.
6925(c). The U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA), or an
authorized State, shall issue a final
decision on the permit application by
January 1, 2015.
Currently elemental mercury in the
United States comes from several
sources, including mercury used in the
chlorine and caustic soda
manufacturing process, mercury
reclaimed from recycling and waste
recovery activities, and mercury
generated as a byproduct of the gold
mining process. In a November 2007
‘‘Mercury Storage Costs Estimates’’
report, EPA assumed the total amount of
excess mercury supply from commercial
sources that would require storage to be
between 7,500 and 10,000 metric tons
over 40 years. The 7,500 metric ton
scenario assumes that approximately
1,200 metric tons would come from
mercury cell chlor-alkali plants,
approximately 2,050 metric tons would
come from product recycling and waste
recovery, and approximately 4,250
metric tons would be a byproduct of
E:\FR\FM\20MRN1.SGM
20MRN1
11924
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 53 / Friday, March 20, 2009 / Notices
gold mining. The 10,000 metric ton
scenario assumes that an additional
2,500 metric tons would result from
imports. There are uncertainties
associated with these estimates, and
DOE anticipates updating these
estimates in conjunction with its
activities to comply with the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA).
In addition, DOE currently stores
approximately 1,200 metric tons of
elemental mercury at its Oak Ridge
Reservation in Tennessee. Also, the
Department of Defense (DOD) stores
approximately 4,400 metric tons at
various locations. At this time, no
decision has been made as to how much
elemental mercury from DOE or DOD
would be stored in the DOE-designated
facilities required by the Act.
As required by Council on
Environmental Quality and DOE NEPA
regulations, DOE’s designation of
facilities for the purpose of long-term
management and storage of elemental
mercury generated in the United States
must include consideration of the range
of reasonable management and storage
alternatives and the environmental
impacts of those alternatives. The
purpose of this Request is to determine
if there is interest on the part of Federal
agencies or commercial entities in
proposing locations for long-term DOE
management and storage facilities.
Identification of such facilities will
enable DOE to consider them for
potential inclusion in its NEPA review.
Consideration of a facility in the
environmental review process is not a
guarantee of its selection. Proposed sites
and facilities will be reviewed against a
series of technical screening criteria to
consider their suitability for a long-term
elemental mercury management and
storage mission. In addition, in
accordance with NEPA implementing
regulations, DOE will conduct public
outreach, such as a scoping meeting or
meetings, for those sites and facilities
considered to be reasonable alternatives,
to allow the public to comment.
Request for Expressions of Interest:
This is a request for expressions of
interest. No proposals are allowed.
DOE intends to consider a range of
reasonable alternatives, including
existing and new DOE facilities, in its
selection process. DOE is in the process
of conducting an inventory of its
national complex to determine potential
alternative facilities. Likewise, DOE is
also seeking by this action expressions
of interest from Federal agencies and
from commercial entities on locations
and facilities for the long-term
management and storage of elemental
mercury. Because the Act states that this
mercury would be stored at a ‘‘facility
VerDate Nov<24>2008
17:07 Mar 19, 2009
Jkt 217001
or facilities of [DOE]’’, DOE would
work, as necessary, with the Federal
agency or commercial entity on
acquiring an appropriate interest in the
facility prior to site designation.
DOE plans to review each submission
to determine if it should be included as
a reasonable alternative in DOE’s NEPA
analysis, which will assess the
environmental impacts of each
alternative, including existing and new
DOE facilities, as they relate to the longterm storage and management of
elemental mercury.
The size requirements for long-term
storage and management facilities will
depend on a number of factors,
including the amount of elemental
mercury ultimately received and the
storage configuration of the elemental
mercury containers. Based on currently
available information, for planning
purposes DOE is looking for locations
with one or more existing facilities with
a total of approximately 20,000 to
100,000 square feet of storage space, or
locations where such facilities could be
constructed. DOE anticipates refining
the estimate of required storage space
during the environmental review
process. DOE also requires that the
facilities be in compliance with all
current building codes and construction
standards, be located in a geologically
stable area (e.g., not in a flood plain or
seismically-active zone), and be
operated and maintained with
appropriate security measures in place.
In addition, the Act requires that the
facilities obtain and operate in
accordance with a RCRA hazardous
waste facility permit.
Content of Expressions of Interest:
DOE requires the following information
for each potential storage location and
facility:
1. Name of the Federal agency or
private company making the Expression
of Interest, including a contact person’s
name, telephone number, and e-mail
address;
2. Agency or company address;
3. If a private company, company size
(please specify as either Large, Small,
Small Disadvantaged, Woman Owned
Small Business, Veteran Owned Small
Business, Service-Disabled Veteran
Owned Small Business, 8(a), Hubzone
Small Business or other);
4. Name of the city and state in which
each potential facility is or would be
located;
5. A site map showing the location of
the potential storage building or
buildings on the site, as well as nearby
(within 10 miles) political (e.g., city,
county) boundaries, communities
(especially minority, low income or
Native American), roads, railroads,
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
airports, and water bodies, wetlands,
floodplains, parkland, known fault
lines, or other environmentally sensitive
areas;
6. A description of the potential site,
including ownership, current activities,
access control system, hazardous
materials handling experience, mercury
handling experience, current tenants,
existing permits, previous regulatory
compliance problems, and existing
environmental contamination; and
7. A description of the potential
storage building, if pre-existing,
including date and type of construction,
floor condition, any special features that
provide protection against leaks and
external environmental hazards, fire
suppression system, heating, ventilation
and air-conditioning system, access
control system, current activities and
materials in storage, current tenants,
and existing environmental
contamination.
If available, Expressions of Interest
should also identify equipment,
materials, and labor required to upgrade
or construct the potential facility to
accept elemental mercury for long-term
management and storage, as well as any
environmental, health and safety
approvals that will be required by
Federal, State or local law.
Expression of Interest Format: The
length of the Expression of Interest
should be no more than 20 pages using
12-point font. Although each
respondent may determine how best to
organize the Expression of Interest, DOE
recommends the following format:
Section 1—Summary; and Section 2—
Description of Location with specific
reference to the items requested by DOE
above.
DOE reserves the right to use any and
all information submitted by, or
obtained from, an interested party in
any manner DOE determines is
appropriate. An interested party should
avoid including any business
confidential and/or proprietary
information in its Expression of Interest.
However, if an interested party must
submit such information, the
information must be clearly marked
accordingly, and the interested party
must provide sufficient justification as
to why such information is business
confidential and/or proprietary. DOE
will review said information and handle
it in accordance with the Freedom of
Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552) and all
applicable Federal law.
This Request for Expressions of
Interest is not a formal solicitation
requesting proposals and does not
represent a commitment by DOE to
award a contract. This Request for
Expressions of Interest does not confer
E:\FR\FM\20MRN1.SGM
20MRN1
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 53 / Friday, March 20, 2009 / Notices
any commitment or obligation from
DOE. Under no circumstances does this
Request for Expressions of Interest seek
to award a contract for services under
the Federal Acquisition Regulations or a
financial assistance agreement under
Part 600 of Title 10 of the Code of
Federal Regulations.
DOE does not intend to formally
respond to information submitted in
response to this Request for Expressions
of Interest.
The cost for the preparation and
submittal of a response to the Request
for Expressions of Interest is the sole
responsibility of the interested party.
Issued in Washington, DC, on March 11,
2009.
Inos R. Triay,
Acting Assistant Secretary for Environmental
Management.
[FR Doc. E9–6136 Filed 3–19–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6540–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
[Project No. 13–023]
Green Island Power Authority; Notice
of Application Tendered for Filing With
the Commission and Establishing
Procedural Schedule for Licensing and
Deadline for Submission of Final
Amendments
March 12, 2009.
Take notice that the following
hydroelectric application has been filed
with the Commission and is available
for public inspection.
a. Type of Application: New major
license.
b. Project No.: 13–023.
c. Date Filed: March 2, 2009.
d. Applicant: Green Island Power
Authority.
e. Name of Project: Green Island
Hydroelectric Project.
f. Location: The existing project is
located on the Hudson River in Albany
County, New York. The project would
occupy Federal land managed by the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
g. Filed Pursuant to: Federal Power
Act 16 U.S.C. 791(a)–825(r).
h. Agent Contact: James A. Besha,
President, Albany Engineering
Corporation, 5 Washington Square,
Albany, NY 12205; (518) 456–7712.
i. FERC Contact: Tom Dean, (202)
502–6041.
j. This application is not ready for
environmental analysis at this time.
k. Project Description: The existing
Green Island Project utilizes the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers (Corps) Green
Island-Troy lock and dam that consists
of: (1) A dam with a main spillway with
a fixed crest elevation of 14.33 feet
mean sea level (msl); and (2) an
auxiliary spillway with a crest elevation
of 16.33 feet msl.
The Green Island Project consists of:
(1) 2-foot-high pneumatic flashboards
along the top of the main spillway with
a crest elevation of 16.33 feet msl; (2) a
700-acre impoundment with a normal
water surface elevation of 16.33 feet
msl; (3) a bulkhead and forebay
structure located downstream and at the
west end of the Corps dam; (4) a
powerhouse containing four 1.5
megawatt (MW) generating units with a
total installed capacity of 6.0 MW; (5) a
34.5 kilovolt underground transmission
cable; and (6) appurtenant facilities.
Green Island Power Authority
proposes to: (1) Lower the existing main
11925
spillway to a crest elevation of 12.5 feet
msl, and install new hydraulically
operated crest gates with a maximum
crest gate elevation of 18.5 feet msl; (2)
install a new trash boom extending
across and upstream of the forebay; (3)
construct a new bulkhead structure
equipped with a new 300-foot-wide,
300-foot-long fish protection system
screen; and (4) expand the existing
powerhouse to the east and west and
install four new 6.0 MW generating
units, and replace the four existing
generating units with four new 6.0 MW
generating units with a total installed
capacity of 48 MW.
l. Locations of the Application: A
copy of the application 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.
m. 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.
n. Procedural Schedule: The
application will be processed according
to the following Hydro Licensing
Schedule. Revisions to the schedule
may be made as appropriate.
Milestone
Target date
Notice of Acceptance and Ready for Environmental Analysis ..................................................................................................
Filing interventions, comments, recommendations, preliminary terms and conditions, and fishway prescriptions ..................
Notice of availability of the EA ...................................................................................................................................................
Filing comments on EA ..............................................................................................................................................................
Filing modified terms and conditions .........................................................................................................................................
May 1, 2009.
June 30, 2009.
October 28, 2009.
November 27, 2009.
January 26, 2010.
o. Final amendments to the
application must be filed with the
Commission no later than 30 days from
the issuance date of the notice of ready
for environmental analysis.
Kimberly D. Bose,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E9–6071 Filed 3–19–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE
VerDate Nov<24>2008
18:32 Mar 19, 2009
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E:\FR\FM\20MRN1.SGM
20MRN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 53 (Friday, March 20, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 11923-11925]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-6136]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Request for Expressions of Interest in Hosting a Facility or
Facilities for the Long-Term Management and Storage of Elemental
Mercury
AGENCY: Department of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of request for expressions of interest.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) is seeking Expressions of
Interest from Federal agencies and from the private sector regarding
potential locations for a facility or facilities where DOE can store
and manage elemental mercury pursuant to the Mercury Export Ban Act of
2008 (the Act). The Act directs DOE to designate by January 1, 2010, a
facility or facilities of DOE for the long-term management and storage
of elemental mercury. At least one such facility must be operational by
January 1, 2013.
DOE intends to initiate an Environmental Impact Statement in early
2009 and seeks to identify facilities to consider as potential
alternatives. Accordingly, respondents to this Request for Expressions
of Interest may have the facilities they identify considered during the
environmental review scoping process. This is a request for expressions
of interest. No proposals are allowed.
DATES: Federal agencies and commercial entities wishing to make an
Expression of Interest should do so in writing no later than 30 days
from the date this notice is published. Questions may be submitted in
writing by letter or e-mail. DOE may ask vendors to clarify information
provided in their Expressions of Interest or submit additional
information.
ADDRESSES: Please submit hard copies of Expressions of Interest to Mr.
David Levenstein, Mail Stop: EM-11/Cloverleaf 2128, U.S. Department of
Energy, 1000 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20585-2040.
Electronic versions of Expressions of Interest may be submitted in
portable document format (pdf) by e-mail to
david.levenstein@em.doe.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The Mercury Export Ban Act of 2008 prohibits the export of
elemental mercury from the United States effective January 1, 2013. To
ensure that elemental mercury is managed and stored safely, the Act
directs DOE to take a number of actions. By October 1, 2009, DOE must
issue guidance establishing standards and procedures for the receipt,
management and long-term storage of elemental mercury generated within
the United States at a facility or facilities of DOE. DOE must
designate such facilities by January 1, 2010, but is prohibited by the
Act from locating such a facility at DOE's Oak Ridge Reservation. At
least one such facility must be operational by January 1, 2013. In
addition to the standards and procedures referenced above, elemental
mercury managed and stored at a designated facility will be subject to
the requirements of the Solid Waste Disposal Act, as amended (Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA)), 42 U.S.C. 6901 et seq. A
designated facility in existence on or before January 1, 2013, is
authorized to operate under interim status pursuant to RCRA section
3005(e), 42 U.S.C. 6925(e), until a final decision on a permit
application is made pursuant to RCRA section 3005(c), 42 U.S.C.
6925(c). The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), or an
authorized State, shall issue a final decision on the permit
application by January 1, 2015.
Currently elemental mercury in the United States comes from several
sources, including mercury used in the chlorine and caustic soda
manufacturing process, mercury reclaimed from recycling and waste
recovery activities, and mercury generated as a byproduct of the gold
mining process. In a November 2007 ``Mercury Storage Costs Estimates''
report, EPA assumed the total amount of excess mercury supply from
commercial sources that would require storage to be between 7,500 and
10,000 metric tons over 40 years. The 7,500 metric ton scenario assumes
that approximately 1,200 metric tons would come from mercury cell
chlor-alkali plants, approximately 2,050 metric tons would come from
product recycling and waste recovery, and approximately 4,250 metric
tons would be a byproduct of
[[Page 11924]]
gold mining. The 10,000 metric ton scenario assumes that an additional
2,500 metric tons would result from imports. There are uncertainties
associated with these estimates, and DOE anticipates updating these
estimates in conjunction with its activities to comply with the
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA).
In addition, DOE currently stores approximately 1,200 metric tons
of elemental mercury at its Oak Ridge Reservation in Tennessee. Also,
the Department of Defense (DOD) stores approximately 4,400 metric tons
at various locations. At this time, no decision has been made as to how
much elemental mercury from DOE or DOD would be stored in the DOE-
designated facilities required by the Act.
As required by Council on Environmental Quality and DOE NEPA
regulations, DOE's designation of facilities for the purpose of long-
term management and storage of elemental mercury generated in the
United States must include consideration of the range of reasonable
management and storage alternatives and the environmental impacts of
those alternatives. The purpose of this Request is to determine if
there is interest on the part of Federal agencies or commercial
entities in proposing locations for long-term DOE management and
storage facilities. Identification of such facilities will enable DOE
to consider them for potential inclusion in its NEPA review.
Consideration of a facility in the environmental review process is
not a guarantee of its selection. Proposed sites and facilities will be
reviewed against a series of technical screening criteria to consider
their suitability for a long-term elemental mercury management and
storage mission. In addition, in accordance with NEPA implementing
regulations, DOE will conduct public outreach, such as a scoping
meeting or meetings, for those sites and facilities considered to be
reasonable alternatives, to allow the public to comment.
Request for Expressions of Interest: This is a request for
expressions of interest. No proposals are allowed.
DOE intends to consider a range of reasonable alternatives,
including existing and new DOE facilities, in its selection process.
DOE is in the process of conducting an inventory of its national
complex to determine potential alternative facilities. Likewise, DOE is
also seeking by this action expressions of interest from Federal
agencies and from commercial entities on locations and facilities for
the long-term management and storage of elemental mercury. Because the
Act states that this mercury would be stored at a ``facility or
facilities of [DOE]'', DOE would work, as necessary, with the Federal
agency or commercial entity on acquiring an appropriate interest in the
facility prior to site designation.
DOE plans to review each submission to determine if it should be
included as a reasonable alternative in DOE's NEPA analysis, which will
assess the environmental impacts of each alternative, including
existing and new DOE facilities, as they relate to the long-term
storage and management of elemental mercury.
The size requirements for long-term storage and management
facilities will depend on a number of factors, including the amount of
elemental mercury ultimately received and the storage configuration of
the elemental mercury containers. Based on currently available
information, for planning purposes DOE is looking for locations with
one or more existing facilities with a total of approximately 20,000 to
100,000 square feet of storage space, or locations where such
facilities could be constructed. DOE anticipates refining the estimate
of required storage space during the environmental review process. DOE
also requires that the facilities be in compliance with all current
building codes and construction standards, be located in a geologically
stable area (e.g., not in a flood plain or seismically-active zone),
and be operated and maintained with appropriate security measures in
place. In addition, the Act requires that the facilities obtain and
operate in accordance with a RCRA hazardous waste facility permit.
Content of Expressions of Interest: DOE requires the following
information for each potential storage location and facility:
1. Name of the Federal agency or private company making the
Expression of Interest, including a contact person's name, telephone
number, and e-mail address;
2. Agency or company address;
3. If a private company, company size (please specify as either
Large, Small, Small Disadvantaged, Woman Owned Small Business, Veteran
Owned Small Business, Service-Disabled Veteran Owned Small Business,
8(a), Hubzone Small Business or other);
4. Name of the city and state in which each potential facility is
or would be located;
5. A site map showing the location of the potential storage
building or buildings on the site, as well as nearby (within 10 miles)
political (e.g., city, county) boundaries, communities (especially
minority, low income or Native American), roads, railroads, airports,
and water bodies, wetlands, floodplains, parkland, known fault lines,
or other environmentally sensitive areas;
6. A description of the potential site, including ownership,
current activities, access control system, hazardous materials handling
experience, mercury handling experience, current tenants, existing
permits, previous regulatory compliance problems, and existing
environmental contamination; and
7. A description of the potential storage building, if pre-
existing, including date and type of construction, floor condition, any
special features that provide protection against leaks and external
environmental hazards, fire suppression system, heating, ventilation
and air-conditioning system, access control system, current activities
and materials in storage, current tenants, and existing environmental
contamination.
If available, Expressions of Interest should also identify
equipment, materials, and labor required to upgrade or construct the
potential facility to accept elemental mercury for long-term management
and storage, as well as any environmental, health and safety approvals
that will be required by Federal, State or local law.
Expression of Interest Format: The length of the Expression of
Interest should be no more than 20 pages using 12-point font. Although
each respondent may determine how best to organize the Expression of
Interest, DOE recommends the following format: Section 1--Summary; and
Section 2--Description of Location with specific reference to the items
requested by DOE above.
DOE reserves the right to use any and all information submitted by,
or obtained from, an interested party in any manner DOE determines is
appropriate. An interested party should avoid including any business
confidential and/or proprietary information in its Expression of
Interest. However, if an interested party must submit such information,
the information must be clearly marked accordingly, and the interested
party must provide sufficient justification as to why such information
is business confidential and/or proprietary. DOE will review said
information and handle it in accordance with the Freedom of Information
Act (5 U.S.C. 552) and all applicable Federal law.
This Request for Expressions of Interest is not a formal
solicitation requesting proposals and does not represent a commitment
by DOE to award a contract. This Request for Expressions of Interest
does not confer
[[Page 11925]]
any commitment or obligation from DOE. Under no circumstances does this
Request for Expressions of Interest seek to award a contract for
services under the Federal Acquisition Regulations or a financial
assistance agreement under Part 600 of Title 10 of the Code of Federal
Regulations.
DOE does not intend to formally respond to information submitted in
response to this Request for Expressions of Interest.
The cost for the preparation and submittal of a response to the
Request for Expressions of Interest is the sole responsibility of the
interested party.
Issued in Washington, DC, on March 11, 2009.
Inos R. Triay,
Acting Assistant Secretary for Environmental Management.
[FR Doc. E9-6136 Filed 3-19-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6540-01-P