Grant Program To Assess, Evaluate and Promote Development of Tribal Energy and Mineral Resources, 12883-12889 [E9-6545]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 56 / Wednesday, March 25, 2009 / Notices
12883
TABLE 2—SUMMARY OF 42 SPECIES IN CALIFORNIA AND NEVADA FOR WHICH 5-YEAR REVIEWS WERE COMPLETED IN MID
TO LATE FY 2008.—Continued
Recommendation
Lead fish and wildlife office
Limnanthes floccosa subsp. californica
No status change
Sacramento ..........
California taraxacum ...........................
Taraxacum californicum ......................
No status change
Carlsbad ...............
Colusa grass .......................................
Neostapfia colusana ............................
No status change
Sacramento ..........
Contra Costa goldfields .......................
Lasthenia congugens ..........................
No status change
Sacramento ..........
Contra Costa wallflower ......................
Erysimum capitatum var. angustatum
No status change
Sacramento ..........
Few-flowered navarretia ......................
No status change
Sacramento ..........
Gowen cypress ....................................
Navarretia
leucocephala
subsp.
pauciflora.
Callitropsis goveniana .........................
No status change
Ventura .................
Island barberry ....................................
Berberis pinnata subsp. insularis ........
No status change
Ventura .................
Island phacelia ....................................
Phacelia insularis var. insularis ...........
No status change
Ventura .................
Lane Mountain milk-vetch ...................
Astragalus jaegerianus ........................
Downlist ................
Ventura .................
Lyon’s pentachaeta .............................
Pentachaeta lyonii ...............................
No status change
Ventura .................
Marsh sandwort ...................................
Arenaria paludicola ..............................
No status change
Ventura .................
Menzies’ wallflower .............................
Erysimum menziesii ............................
No status change
Arcata ...................
Monterey gilia ......................................
Gilia tenuiflora subsp. arenaria ...........
No status change
Ventura .................
Morro manzanita .................................
Arctostaphylos morroensis ..................
No status change
Ventura .................
Peirson’s milk-vetch ............................
Astragalus magdalenae var. peirsonii
No status change
Carlsbad ...............
Purple amole .......................................
Chlorogalum purpureum ......................
No status change
Ventura .................
Sacramento Orcutt grass ....................
Orcuttia viscida ....................................
No status change
Sacramento ..........
San Bernardino bluegrass ...................
Poa atropurpurea ................................
No status change
Carlsbad ...............
San Clemente Island larkspur .............
Downlist ................
Carlsbad ...............
San Jacinto Valley crownscale ...........
Delphinium
variegatum
subsp.
kinkiense.
Atriplex coronata var. notatior .............
No status change
Carlsbad ...............
Sebastopol meadowfoam ....................
Limnanthes vinculans ..........................
No status change
Sacramento ..........
Sonoma sunshine ................................
Blennosperma bakeri ..........................
No status change
Sacramento ..........
Southern mountain buckwheat ............
No status change
Carlsbad ...............
Vail Lake ceanothus ............................
Eriogonum
kennedyi
var.
austromontanum.
Ceanothus ophiochilus ........................
No status change
Carlsbad ...............
Willowy monardella .............................
Monardella linoides subsp. viminea ....
No status change
Carlsbad ...............
Common name
Scientific name
Butte County meadowfoam .................
PWALKER on PROD1PC71 with NOTICES
Authority This document is published
under the authority of the Endangered
Species Act of 1973, as amended (16 U.S.C.
1531 et seq. ).
Michael Fris,
Acting Regional Director, Region 8, U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service.
[FR Doc. E9–5520 Filed 3–24–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Indian Affairs
Grant Program To Assess, Evaluate
and Promote Development of Tribal
Energy and Mineral Resources
AGENCY: Bureau of Indian Affairs,
Interior.
ACTION: Solicitation of Proposals.
SUMMARY: The Energy and Mineral
Development Program (EMDP) provides
VerDate Nov<24>2008
01:23 Mar 25, 2009
Jkt 217001
PO 00000
Frm 00050
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Contact
Al Donner;
(916) 414–6600
Jane Hendron;
(760) 431
Al Donner;
(916) 414–6600
Al Donner;
(916) 414–6600
Al Donner;
(916) 414–6600
Al Donner;
(916) 414–6600
Lois Grunwald;
(805) 644
Lois Grunwald;
(805) 644
Lois Grunwald;
(805) 644
Lois Grunwald;
(805) 644
Lois Grunwald;
(805) 644
Lois Grunwald;
(805) 644
Matt Baun;
(530) 842–5763
Lois Grunwald;
(805) 644
Lois Grunwald;
(805) 644
Jane Hendron;
(760) 431–9440
Lois Grunwald;
(805) 644–1766
Al Donner;
(916) 414–6600
Jane Hendron;
(760) 431–9440
Jane Hendron;
(760) 431–9440
Jane Hendron;
(760) 431–9440
Al Donner;
(916) 414–6600
Al Donner;
(916) 414–6600
Jane Hendron;
(760) 431
Jane Hendron;
(760) 431
Jane Hendron;
(760) 431
funding to tribes with the mission goal
of assessing, evaluating, and promoting
energy and mineral resources on Indian
trust lands for the economic benefit of
Indian mineral owners. To achieve these
goals, the Department of the Interior’s
Office of Indian Energy and Economic
Development (IEED), through its
Division of Energy and Mineral
Development (DEMD) office, is
soliciting proposals from tribes. The
Department will use a competitive
E:\FR\FM\25MRN1.SGM
25MRN1
12884
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 56 / Wednesday, March 25, 2009 / Notices
PWALKER on PROD1PC71 with NOTICES
evaluation process to select several
proposed projects to receive an award.
DATES: Submit grant proposals on or
before June 23, 2009. We will not
consider grant proposals received after
this date.
ADDRESSES: Mail or hand-carry to the
Department of the Interior, Division of
Energy and Mineral Development,
Attention: Energy and Mineral
Development Program, 12136 W.
Bayaud Avenue, Suite 300, Lakewood,
CO 80228.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If
you have questions about the EMDP, or
have technical questions about the
commodity you wish to assess or
develop, please contact the appropriate
DEMD persons listed below:
• General Questions about the EMDP
Program and Submission Process:
Robert Anderson, Tel: (720) 407–0602;
E-mail: robert.anderson@bia.gov;
• For Additional Copies of the
Proposal Writing Guidelines Manual:
Tahnee KillsCrow, Tel: (720) 407–0655;
E-mail: tahnee.killscrow@bia.gov;
• Mineral Projects (Precious Metals,
Sand and Gravel): Lynne Carpenter, Tel:
(720) 407–0605, E-mail: lynne.chastaincarpenter@bia.gov, or David Holmes,
Tel: (720) 407–0609, E-mail:
david.holmes@bia.gov;
• Conventional Energy Projects (Oil,
Natural Gas, Coal): Bob Just, Tel: (720)
407–0611, E-mail: robert.just@bia.gov;
• Renewable Energy Projects
(Biomass, Wind, Solar): Winter JojolaTalburt, Tel: (720) 407–0668, E-mail:
winter.jojola-talburt@bia.gov; or
• Geothermal Energy: Roger Knight,
Tel: (720) 407–0613, E-mail:
roger.knight@bia.gov.
See the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section of this notice for information on
requests for technical assistance.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Background
B. Items to Consider Before Preparing an
Application for an Energy and Mineral
Development Grant
C. How to Prepare an Application for Energy
and Mineral Development Funding
D. Submission of Application in Digital
Format
E. Application Evaluation and
Administrative Information
F. When to Submit
G. Where to Submit
H. Transfer of Funds
I. Reporting Requirements for Award
Recipients
J. Requests for Technical Information
energy and mineral development
funded programs.
The Department of the Interior’s
Office of IEED, through the DEMD office
located in Lakewood, Colorado,
administers and manages the EMDP.
The objectives of this solicitation are to
receive proposals for energy and
mineral development projects in the
areas of exploration, assessment,
development, feasibility and market
studies.
Energy includes conventional energy
resources such as oil, gas, coal,
uranium, and coal bed gas, and
renewable energy resources such as
wind, solar, biomass, hydro and
geothermal. Mineral resources include
industrial minerals (e.g., sand, gravel),
precious minerals (e.g., gold, silver,
platinum), base minerals (e.g., lead,
copper, zinc), and ferrous metal
minerals (e.g., iron, tungsten,
chromium).
DEMD’s goal is to assist tribes to
achieve economic benefits from their
energy and mineral resources. The
purpose of the program is to expand the
knowledge base through which tribes,
either by themselves or with industry
partners, can bring new energy and
mineral resources into the marketplace
through a comprehensive understanding
of their undeveloped resource potential.
A strong knowledge base will also
ensure that new resources are produced
in an environmentally acceptable
manner.
Each year, DEMD usually receives
more energy and mineral development
request applications than can be funded
in that year. The DEMD has discretion
for awarding funds and requires that the
tribes compete for such funds on an
annual basis. The DEMD has established
ranking and paneling procedures with
defined criteria for rating the merits of
proposals to make the award of the
limited funds as fair and equitable as
possible.
The EMDP program is funded under
the non-recurring appropriation of the
Bureau of Indian Affairs’s (BIA) budget.
Congress appropriates funds for EMDP
funding on a year-to-year basis. Thus,
while some projects may extend over
several years, funding for successive
years depends on each fiscal year’s
appropriations.
B. Items To Consider Before Preparing
an Application for an Energy and
Mineral Development Grant
A. Background
1. Trust Land Status
Section 103 of the Indian SelfDetermination Act, Public Law 93–638,
as amended by Public Law 100–472,
contains the contracting mechanism for
The EMDP’s funding can only be
made available to tribes whose lands are
held in trust or restricted fee by the
Federal government. Congress has
VerDate Nov<24>2008
01:23 Mar 25, 2009
Jkt 217001
PO 00000
Frm 00051
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
appropriated these funds for the Federal
development of energy and mineral
resources only on Indian trust or
restricted fee lands.
2. Tribes’ Compliance History
The DEMD will monitor all EMDP
grants for statutory and regulatory
compliance to assure that awarded
funds are correctly applied to approved
projects. Tribes that expend funds on
unapproved functions may forfeit
remaining funds in that proposal year,
and possibly for any future EMDP
funding. Consequently, DEMD may
request a tribe to provide a summary of
any funds it has received in past years
through other projects approved by
DEMD, and DEMD may conduct a
review of prior award expenditures
before making a decision on current
year proposals.
3. BIA Sanction List
Tribes who are currently under BIA
sanction resulting from non-compliance
with the Single Audit Act may be
ineligible from being considered for an
award.
4. Completion of Previous Energy and
Mineral Development Projects
Generally, the DEMD will not support
nor recommend additional funding for a
project until all project functions
scheduled for completion the previous
year have been documented by the tribe
and reviewed by the DEMD.
Under some circumstances, delays
encountered in performing the project
that are beyond the control of the tribe
or its consultant will be taken into
consideration when making decisions
on future year EMDP awards. Such
acceptable delays may include late
delivery of funding awards to the tribal
project, difficulty in finding appropriate
contractors to perform project functions,
permitting issues, and weather delays.
5. Multi-Year Projects
The DEMD cannot award multi-year
funding for a project. Funding available
for the EMDP is subject to annual
appropriations by Congress and
therefore DEMD can only consider
single-year funded projects. Generally,
energy and mineral development
projects are designed to be completed in
one year. It is acceptable that a project
may require more than one year to
complete due to circumstances such as
weather, availability of the consultant,
or scope of project.
The EMDP’s projects requiring
funding beyond one-year intervals
should be grouped into discrete, singleyear units of operation, and then
submitted as individual proposals for
E:\FR\FM\25MRN1.SGM
25MRN1
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 56 / Wednesday, March 25, 2009 / Notices
consideration of EMDP award funding.
Tribes must be aware, however, that
there is no absolute guarantee of EMDP
awards being available for future years
of a multi-year project due to the
discretionary nature of EMDP award
funding.
6. Use of Existing Data
The DEMD maintains a
comprehensive set of tribal data and
information. The DEMD has spent
considerable time and expense in
collecting digital land grids, geographic
information system (GIS) data and
imagery data for many reservations.
Monthly well status and production
data, geophysical data (such as seismic
data), geology and engineering data, etc.,
are all stored at DEMD’s offices. All of
these data sets are available to tribes to
reduce the cost of their investigations.
Budget line items will not be allowed
for data or products that reside at
DEMD. The tribe or the tribe’s
consultant must first check with DEMD
for availability of these data sets on the
reservation they are investigating. If
DEMD does not have a particular data
set, then EMDP funds may be used to
acquire such data.
When a proposal includes the
acquisition of new data, the tribe should
thoroughly search for preexisting data to
ensure there is no duplication. If older
data does exist, it may have
considerable value. It may be updated or
improved upon, either by the DEMD or
by the tribe’s consultant.
PWALKER on PROD1PC71 with NOTICES
7. Using Technical Services at DEMD
The DEMD has many in-house
technical capabilities and services that
the tribes may wish to use. All services
provided by DEMD are without charge
to the tribes. Tribes can obtain
maximum benefit from energy and
mineral development studies by first
using DEMD’s services, or by using
DEMD services in conjunction with
outside consultants. Services available
at DEMD include:
• Technical literature search of
previous investigations and work
performed in and around reservations
using reference materials located
nearby, such as the U.S. Geological
Survey (USGS) library in Denver,
Colorado, or the Colorado School of
Mines library in Golden, Colorado;
• Well production history analysis,
decline curve and economic analysis of
data obtained through DEMD’s in-house
databases;
• Well log interpretation, including
correlation of formation tops,
identification of producing horizons,
and generation of cross-sections;
VerDate Nov<24>2008
01:23 Mar 25, 2009
Jkt 217001
• Technical mapping capabilities,
using data from well log formation tops
and seismic data;
• Contour mapping capabilities,
including isopachs, calculated grids,
color-fill plotting, and posting of surface
features, wells, seismic lines and legal
boundaries;
• Seismic data interpretation and data
processing;
• Three dimensional modeling of
mine plans;
• Economic analysis and modeling
for energy and solid mineral projects;
and
• Marketing studies.
8. What the Energy and Mineral
Development Program Cannot Fund
As stated above, these funds are
specifically for energy and mineral
development project work only.
Examples of elements that cannot be
funded include:
• Establishing or operating a tribal
office, and/or purchase of office
equipment not specific to the
assessment project. Tribal salaries may
be included only if the personnel are
directly involved in the project and only
for the duration of the project;
• Indirect costs and overhead as
defined by the Federal Acquisition
Regulation (FAR);
• Purchase of equipment that is used
to perform the EMDP project, such as
computers, vehicles, field gear, etc.
(however, the leasing of this type of
equipment for the purpose of
performing energy and mineral
development is allowed);
• Purchasing and/or leasing of
equipment for the development of
energy and mineral resources (this
would include such items as well
drilling rigs, backhoes, bulldozers,
cranes, trucks, etc.);
• Drilling of wells for the sale of
hydrocarbons, geothermal resources,
other fluid and solid minerals (however,
funds may be used for the drilling of
exploration holes for testing, sampling,
coring, or temperature surveys);
• Legal fees;
• Application fees associated with
permitting;
• Research and development of
unproved technologies;
• Training;
• Contracted negotiation fees;
• Purchase of data that is available
through DEMD; and
• Any other activities not authorized
by the tribal resolution or by the award
letter.
9. Who Performs Energy and Mineral
Development Studies?
The tribe determines who will
perform the energy and mineral
PO 00000
Frm 00052
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
12885
development work, such as a
consultant, a private company, or other
sources described in the list below. The
tribe may also request the BIA to
perform the work.
A tribe has several choices in
contracting work performed under an
energy and mineral development
project:
• A private company (although that
company must not be competing for
exploration or development rights on
the tribe’s lands);
• An experienced and qualified
scientific consultant; or
• A Federal government agency (such
as USGS or the U.S. Department of
Energy (DOE)) or a State government
agency (such as a State geological
survey).
There are no requirements or
restrictions on how the tribe performs
their contracting function for the
consultant or company. The tribe is free
to issue the contract through a sole
source selection or through competitive
bidding. This determination will
depend on the tribe’s own policies for
contracting procedures.
C. How To Prepare an Application for
Energy and Mineral Development
Funding
The application shall be prepared as
set forth herein to provide a standard
basis for evaluation and to ensure that
each application will be uniform as to
format and sequence. Applications are
expected to be prepared in accordance
with this section. A complete energy
and mineral development request must
contain the following components:
• A current tribal resolution
authorizing the proposed project;
• A proposal describing the planned
activities and deliverable products; and
• A detailed budget estimate.
DEMD will examine every request for
the mandatory components. Energy and
mineral development requests that do
not contain all of the mandatory
components will be considered
incomplete and returned to the tribe,
with an explanation. Tribes will then be
allowed to correct all deficiencies and
resubmit the proposal for consideration
on or before the deadline.
A detailed description of each of the
required components follows.
1. Mandatory Component 1: Tribal
Resolution.
The tribal resolution must be current,
and must be signed. It must authorize
tribal approval for an EMDP proposed
project in the same fiscal year as that of
the energy and mineral development
proposal and must explicitly refer to the
assessment proposal being submitted.
The tribal resolution must also include:
E:\FR\FM\25MRN1.SGM
25MRN1
12886
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 56 / Wednesday, March 25, 2009 / Notices
(a) A description of the commodity or
commodities to be studied;
(b) A statement that the tribe is
willing to consider development of any
potential energy or mineral resource
discovered;
(c) A statement describing how the
tribe prefers to have the energy or
mineral program conducted (i.e.,
through the sole utilization of DEMD inhouse professional staff, in conjunction
with tribal professional staff, private
contractors/consultants, or through
other acceptable means); and
(d) A statement that the tribe will
consider public release of information
obtained from the energy and mineral
development study upon request from
DEMD. (Public release is meant to
include publications, a poster session,
attending a property fair, or giving an
oral presentation at industry or Federal
meetings and conferences.)
PWALKER on PROD1PC71 with NOTICES
Note: Any information in the possession of
DEMD or submitted to DEMD throughout the
EMDP process, including the final energy
and mineral development study, are
government records and may be subject to
disclosure to third parties under the Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. 552, and
the Department of the Interior’s FOIA
regulations at 43 CFR part 2, unless a FOIA
exemption or exception applies or other
provisions of law protect the information. A
tribe may, but is not required to, designate
information it submits as confidential
commercially or financially sensitive
information, as applicable in any
submissions it makes throughout the EMDP
process. If DEMD receives a FOIA request for
any such information, it will follow the
procedures in 43 CFR part 2.
2. Mandatory Component 2: Energy
and Mineral Development Proposal
A tribe may present their energy and
mineral development proposal in any
form they wish, so long as the proposal
contains a description of planned
activities and deliverable products that
can be accomplished within the fiscal
year for which funding is being
requested. The proposal should be well
organized, contain as much detail as
possible, yet be presented succinctly to
allow a quick and thorough
understanding of the proposal by the
DEMD ranking team.
Many tribes utilize the services of a
staff geoscientist or private consultant to
prepare the technical part of the
proposal. However, some tribes may not
have these resources and, therefore, are
urged to seek DEMD’s technical
assistance in preparing their EMDP
proposal. Tribes who want technical
assistance from DEMD should make this
request in writing to the address
provided in this notice. The request
should be made as early as possible to
VerDate Nov<24>2008
01:23 Mar 25, 2009
Jkt 217001
give DEMD time to perform the
assistance.
The proposal should include the
following sections.
(a) Overview and Technical Summary
of the Project: Prepare a short summary
overview of the proposal that includes
the following:
—Elements of the proposed study;
—Reasons why the proposed study is
needed;
—Total requested funding;
—Responsible parties for technical
execution and administration of the
proposed project; and
—A tribal point of contact for the
project and contact information.
(b) Technical Summary of Project:
Describe in relevant detail the technical
description of the project area, if
sufficient information exists. Give
examples of a typical resource
occurrence to be examined under the
proposal, such as the oil or gas deposit,
etc. If possible, include criteria
applicable to these types of resource
occurrences.
• Multi-Phased Studies: Explain
whether this assessment request will
begin a new study or continue a study,
which has already been partially
completed. Also explain how long the
study will last. [Note: DEMD cannot
guarantee funding for a project from one
fiscal year to the next.]
• Known Energy/Mineral Resource: If
a known energy and/or mineral deposit
exists or produces near the reservation,
discuss the possible extension or trend
of the deposit onto the reservation.
• Existing Information: Acknowledge
any existing mineral exploration
information and provide references. The
proposed new study should not
duplicate previous work.
• Environmental or Cultural Sensitive
Areas: Describe and verify if the
resources are located in an
archeological, environmentally or
culturally sensitive area of the
reservation. The tribe must also assist
DEMD with the review under the
National Environmental Policy Act, 42
U.S.C. 4321 et seq., for the proposed
project.
(c) Project Objective, Goals and Scope
of Work: Describe why the tribe needs
the proposed energy and mineral
development. Examples may include:
• Discussion of the short and long
term benefits to the tribe;
• Initial identification of an energy or
mineral resource for possible
development;
• Additional information regarding
the potential resource required for tribal
decision making commitments on
development proposals;
PO 00000
Frm 00053
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
• Feasibility studies and market
analyses on resource development
potentials;
• Support for environmental studies;
• Support and technical assistance as
part of the contract negotiations process;
• Description of the work proposed,
and the project goals and objectives
expected to be achieved by the proposed
project;
• Description of the location on the
reservation where the work will be done
(include relevant page size maps and
graphs); and
• Description, in relevant detail, of
the scope of work and justification of a
particular method. For example, if a
geochemical sampling survey is
planned, an explanation might include
the quantity samples to be obtained,
what type of sampling will be targeted,
the soil horizons to be tested, general
location of the projected sampling, how
the samples are to be analyzed and why
geochemistry was chosen as an
exploration technique. Furnish similar
types of explanations and details for
geophysics, geologic mapping, core
drilling or any other type of assessment
planned.
(d) Deliverable Products: Describe all
deliverable products that the proposed
assessment project will generate,
including all technical data to be
obtained during the study. Describe the
types of maps to be generated and the
proposed scales. Also, discuss how
these maps and cross-sections will help
define the energy and mineral potential
on the reservation. Discuss any planned
status reports as well as the parameters
of the final report.
(e) Resumes of Key Personnel: If using
consultant services, provide the resumes
of key personnel who will be
performing the project work. The
resumes should provide information on
each individual’s expertise. If
subcontractors are used, these should
also be disclosed.
3. Mandatory Component 3: Detailed
Budget Estimate
A detailed budget estimate is required
for the funding level requested. The
detail not only provides the tribe with
an estimate of costs, but it also provides
DEMD with the means of evaluating the
cost-benefit of each project. This lineby-line budget must fully detail all
projected and anticipated expenditures
under the EMDP proposal. The ranking
committee reviews each budget estimate
to determine whether the budget is
reasonable and can produce the results
outlined under the proposal.
Each proposed project function
should have a separate budget. The
budget should break out contract and
consulting fees, fieldwork, lab and
E:\FR\FM\25MRN1.SGM
25MRN1
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 56 / Wednesday, March 25, 2009 / Notices
PWALKER on PROD1PC71 with NOTICES
testing fees, travel and all other relevant
project expenses. Preparation of the
budget portion of an EMDP proposal
should be considered a top priority.
EMDP proposals that include sound
budget projections will receive a more
favorable ranking over those proposals
that fail to provide appropriate budget
projections.
The budget page(s) should provide a
comprehensive breakdown for those
project line items that involve several
components, or contain numerous subfunctions.
(a) Contracted Personnel Costs. This
includes all contracted personnel and
consultants, their respective positions
and time (man-hour) allocations for the
proposed functions of a project.
• Personnel funded under the Public
Law 93–638 EMDP must have
documented professional qualifications
necessary to perform the work. Position
descriptions or resumes should be
attached to the budget estimate.
• If a consultant is to be hired for a
fixed fee, the consultant’s expenses
should be itemized as part of the project
budget.
• Consultant fees must be
accompanied by documentation that
clearly identifies the qualifications of
the proposed consultants, specifics as to
how the consultant(s) are to be used,
and provides a line item breakdown of
costs associated with each consultant
activity.
(b) Travel Estimates. Estimates should
be itemized by airfare and vehicle
rental, lodging and per diem, based on
the current federal government per diem
schedule.
(c) Data Collection and Analysis
Costs. These costs should be itemized in
sufficient detail for the reviewer to
evaluate the charges. For example, break
down drilling and sampling costs in
relation to mobilization costs, footage
rates, testing and lab analysis costs per
core sample.
(d) Other Expenses. Include computer
rental, report generation, drafting, and
advertising costs for a proposed project.
D. Submission of Application in Digital
Format
Submit the application, including the
budget pages, in digital form. Proposals
that are submitted without the digital
components will be returned.
Acceptable formats are Microsoft (MS)
Word, MS Excel or Adobe PDF on
compact disks (CDs) or floppy disks.
The budget must be submitted in an
Excel spreadsheet.
Each file must be saved with a
filename that clearly identifies the file
being submitted. File name extensions
must clearly indicate the software
VerDate Nov<24>2008
01:23 Mar 25, 2009
Jkt 217001
application used for preparation of the
documents (i.e. , doc, pdf, xls).
Documents that require an original
signature, such as cover letters, tribal
resolutions, and other letters of tribal
authorization can be submitted in hard
copy (paper) form.
If you have any additional questions
concerning the Energy and Mineral
Development proposal submission
process, please contact Robert
Anderson, DEMD’s EMDP Coordinator
at (720) 407–0602.
E. Application Evaluation and
Administrative Information
1. Administrative Review
Upon receipt of an application, DEMD
will determine whether the document
contains the required prescribed
information, includes a tribal resolution,
contains sufficient technical/scientific
information to conduct an evaluation,
and does not duplicate or overlap
previous or current funded EMDP
projects.
The DEMD staff may return an
application which does not include all
information and documentation
required within this notice. During the
review of a proposal, DEMD may
request the submission of additional
information.
2. Ranking Criteria
Proposals will be formally evaluated
by a Review and Ranking Panel using
the six criteria listed below. Each
criteria factor provides a percentage of
the total rating of 100 points maximum.
(a) Resource Potential; 10 points. If
the resource does not exist, then the
project will be rejected. The panel will
base their scoring on both the
information provided by the tribe and
databases maintained by DEMD. It is
critical that the tribe attempt to provide
all pertinent information in their
proposal in order to ensure that an
accurate review of the proposal is
accomplished. The reviewers are aware
that many tribes have little energy or
mineral resource data on reservation
lands, and in some cases, resource data
does not exist. However, geologic and
historical mineral development data
exist throughout most of the continental
U.S. on lands surrounding Indian
reservations.
Many times a producing energy or
mineral deposit exists outside but near
the reservation boundary. The geologic
setting containing the resource may
extend onto the reservation, regardless
of the size of the reservation. This
would suggest potential of finding
similar resources on the reservation. In
some cases, available data on adjacent
PO 00000
Frm 00054
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
12887
lands may allow for a scientifically
acceptable projection of favorable trends
for energy or mineral occurrences on
those Indian lands in question.
For renewable energy proposals, this
factor would apply to conditions
favorable for the economic development
of the particular renewable energy
source being studied.
(b) Marketability of the Resource; 20
points. Reviewers will base their scoring
on both the short and long-term market
conditions of the resources. Reviewers
are aware that the marketability of an
energy or mineral commodity is timedependent on existing and emerging
market conditions. Industrial minerals
such as aggregates, sand/gravel and
gypsum are dependent on local/regional
economic conditions. Precious and base
metal minerals such as gold, silver, lead,
copper and zinc are usually more
dependent on international market
conditions. Natural gas and coal bed
methane production is economically
dependent on having relatively close
access to a transmission pipeline, as is
renewable energy to an electric
transmission grid. Coal and crude oil
production, on the other hand, carry
built-in transportation costs, making
those resources more dependent on
current and projected energy
commodity rates. At any time, some
commodities may have a strong
sustained market while others
experience a weak market environment,
or even a market surge that may be only
temporary.
Reviewers are aware of pitfalls
surrounding long term market forecasts
of energy and mineral resources, so the
proposal should address this element
fully. Also, short-term forecasts may
indicate an oversupply from both
national and internationally developed
properties, and therefore additional
production may not be accommodated.
Certain commodities such as electricity
may be in high demand in some
regional sectors, but the current state of
the transmission infrastructure does not
allow for additional kilowatts to be
handled, thereby hindering a market
opportunity.
On the other hand, the potential for
improving markets may be suggested by
market indicators. Examples of market
indicators include price history, prices
from the futures markets, rig count for
oil and gas, and fundamental factors like
supply shortages, political unrest in
foreign markets, and changes in
technology.
(c) Economic Benefits Produced by
the Project; 20 points. This proposed
study should make the tribe’s land more
attractive to industry for exploration
and development or provide for the
E:\FR\FM\25MRN1.SGM
25MRN1
12888
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 56 / Wednesday, March 25, 2009 / Notices
tribe’s own economic development.
Whatever the commodity being studied,
the ultimate goal is to collect useful data
and information that generates interest
within the development industry, attract
potential developers to the Indian lands,
and acquire data and information at a
minimal cost to the tribe.
(d) Tribes’ Willingness to Develop; 20
points. The tribe’s willingness to
consider developing any potential
resource must be clearly stated in the
proposal and the tribal resolution. Note
that this is not a statement for
mandatory development of any
potential resource, but just that the tribe
is willing to develop. The decision as to
whether or not to develop will always
lie with the tribe. The willingness to
development statement should provide
sufficient explanation of how the tribe
intends to accomplish this task. The
willingness to develop will also be
evaluated by the tribe’s willingness to
release energy or mineral data to
potential developers.
(e) Tribal Commitment to the Project;
25 points.
• The tribe should appoint a
designated lead and contact person (e.g.,
someone with direct contact to the
council) to be committed to the
successful completion of the project.
• If the tribe has a strategic plan for
development, does the EMDP proposal
fit within that strategic plan? A strategic
plan outlines objectives, goals, and
methodology for sustainable tribal
economic development.
• The tribe’s business environment
must be conducive to development.
(f) Additional Funding or
Participation From Other Entities; 5
points.
Additional point consideration will
be given if other government agencies
(Bureau of Land Management, DOE,
etc.) and/or private companies are
involved and contribute to the project.
PWALKER on PROD1PC71 with NOTICES
3. Ranking of Proposals and Award
Letters
The EMDP review committee will
rank the energy and mineral
development proposals using the
selection criteria outlined in this
manual under Section 6. The DEMD
will then forward the rated requests to
the Director of the IEED (Director) for
approval. Once approved, the Director
will submit all proposals to the
Assistant Secretary—Indian Affairs for
concurrence and announcement of
awards to those selected tribes, via
written notice. Those tribes not
receiving an award will also be notified
immediately in writing.
VerDate Nov<24>2008
01:23 Mar 25, 2009
Jkt 217001
F. When to Submit
The DEMD will accept applications at
any time before the deadline stated in
the DATES section of this notice, and will
send a notification of receipt to the
return address on the application
package, along with a determination of
whether or not the application is
complete. The DEMD will not consider
grant proposals after this date. A datestamped receipt of submission by the
BIA Regional or Agency-level office on
or before the announced deadline will
also be acceptable.
G. Where To Submit
Applicants must submit the Energy
and Mineral Development proposals to
DEMD at the address listed in the
ADDRESSES section of this notice.
Applicants should also, as a matter of
courtesy, forward a copy of their
proposal to their own BIA Agency and
Regional offices.
A tribe may fax the cover letter and
resolution for the proposal prior to the
deadline, which will guarantee that the
proposal will be considered as being
received on time. However, DEMD asks
that tribes or consultants do not send
the entire proposal via the fax method,
as this severely overloads the fax system
due to the relatively large number of
proposals that DEMD receives each year.
The cover letter should also state that
the proposal is being sent via FedEx or
mail. An original signature copy must
be received in DEMD’s office within ten
(10) working days after the deadline,
including all signed tribal resolutions
and/or letters of tribal authorization.
BIA Regional or Agency level offices
receiving a tribe’s submitted EMDP
proposal do not have to forward it on to
DEMD. It is meant to inform them of a
tribe’s intent to perform energy or
mineral studies using EMDP funding.
The BIA Regional or Agency offices are
free to comment on the tribe’s proposal,
or to ask DEMD for other information.
H. Transfer of Funds
IEED will transfer a tribe’s EMDP
award funds to the BIA Regional Office
that serves that tribe, via a sub-allotment
funding document coded for the tribe’s
EMDP project. The tribe should be
anticipating the transfer of funds and be
in contact with their budget personnel
contacts at the Regional and Agency
office levels. Tribes receiving EMDP
awards must establish a new 638
contract to complete the transfer
process, or use an existing 638 contract,
as applicable.
PO 00000
Frm 00055
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
I. Reporting Requirements for Award
Recipients
1. Quarterly Reporting Requirements
During the life of the EMDP project,
quarterly written reports are to be
submitted to the DEMD project monitor
for the project. The beginning and
ending quarter periods are to be based
on the actual start date of the EMDP
project. This date can be determined
between DEMD’s project monitor and
the tribe.
The quarterly report can be a one to
two page summary of events,
accomplishments, problems and/or
results that took place during the
quarter. Quarterly reports are due two
weeks after the end of a project’s fiscal
quarter.
2. Final Reporting Requirements
• Delivery Schedules. The tribe must
deliver all products and data generated
by the proposed assessment project to
DEMD’s office within two weeks after
completion of the project.
• Mandatory Requirement to Provide
Reports and Data in Digital Form. The
DEMD maintains a repository for all
energy and mineral data on Indian
lands, much of it derived from these
energy and mineral development
reports. As EMDP projects produce
reports with large amounts of raw and
processed data, analyses and assays,
DEMD requires that deliverable
products be provided in digital format,
along with printed hard copies.
Reports can be provided in either MS
Word or Adobe PDF format.
WordPerfect format will be accepted but
is not preferred. Spreadsheet data can be
provided in MS Excel, MS Access, or
Adobe PDF formats. All vector figures
should be converted to PDF format, as
that has become a common format for
such files. Faster images can be
provided in PDF, JPEG, TIFF, or any of
the Windows metafile formats.
• Number of Copies. When a tribe
prepares a contract for energy and
mineral development, they must
describe the deliverable products and
include a requirement that the products
be prepared in standard format (see
format description above). Each energy
and mineral development contract will
provide funding for a total of six (6)
printed and six (6) digital copies to be
distributed as follows:
(a) The tribe will receive two printed
and two digital copies of the EMDP
report.
(b) The DEMD requires four printed
copies and four digital copies of the
EMDP report. DEMD will transmit one
of these copies to the tribe’s BIA
Regional Office, and one copy to the
E:\FR\FM\25MRN1.SGM
25MRN1
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 56 / Wednesday, March 25, 2009 / Notices
tribe’s BIA Agency office. Two printed
and two digital copies will then reside
with DEMD. These copies should be
forwarded to the DEMD offices in
Lakewood, Colorado, to the attention of
the Energy and Mineral Development
Program.
All products generated by EMDP
studies may be subject to release under
FOIA, as noted above. Products include
all reports and technical data obtained
during the study such as geophysical
data, geochemical analyses, core data,
lithologic logs, assay data of samples
tested, results of special tests, maps and
cross sections, status reports and the
final report.
J. Requests for Technical Assistance
The DEMD staff may provide
technical consultation (i.e., work
directly with tribal staff on a proposed
project), provide support documentation
and data, provide written language on
specialized sections of the proposal and
suggest ways a tribe may obtain other
assistance, such as from a company or
consultant specializing in a particular
area of expertise. However, the tribe is
responsible for preparing the executive
summary, justification and scope of
work for their proposal.
The tribe must notify DEMD in
writing that they require assistance, and
DEMD will then appoint staff to provide
the requested assistance. The tribe’s
request must clearly specify the type of
technical assistance desired.
Requests for technical assistance
should be submitted by the deadline
stated in the DATES section for such
requests to allow DEMD time to provide
the appropriate assistance. Tribes not
seeking technical assistance should
attempt to submit their EMDP proposals
well in advance of the deadline to allow
DEMD time to review the proposals for
possible deficiencies and allow ample
time to contact the tribe with requests
for revisions to the initial submission.
Dated: March 10, 2009.
George T. Skibine,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy and
Economic Development.
[FR Doc. E9–6545 Filed 3–24–09; 8:45 am]
[LLWO35000.L14300000.ER0000.24–1A;
OMB Control Number 1004–0153]
Information Collection; Conveyance of
Federally-owned Mineral Interests
AGENCY: Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: 30-Day Notice and Request for
Comments.
Bureau of Indian Affairs
PWALKER on PROD1PC71 with NOTICES
BILLING CODE 4310–4N–P
Bureau of Land Management
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Indian Gaming
AGENCY: Bureau of Indian Affairs,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of Approved Tribal-State
Class III Gaming Amendments.
01:23 Mar 25, 2009
Dated: March 6, 2009.
George T. Skibine,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy and
Economic Development.
[FR Doc. E9–6585 Filed 3–24–09; 8:45 am]
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
BILLING CODE 4310–4M–P
VerDate Nov<24>2008
SUMMARY: This notice publishes
approval of amendments to 13 Class III
Tribal-State Gaming Compacts
(Amendments). The 13 Class III Gaming
Compacts are between the State of
Arizona and each of the following
Indian tribes, respectively: Ak-Chin
Indian Community, Colorado River
Indian Tribes, Cocopah Indian Tribe,
Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation, Fort
Mojave Indian Tribe, Havasupai Indian
Tribe, Hualapai Indian Tribe, KaibabPaiute Indian Tribe, Navajo Nation,
Tohono O’odham Nation, White
Mountain Apache Tribe, YavapaiApache Tribe, and Zuni Tribe.
DATES: Effective Date: March 25, 2009.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Paula L. Hart, Acting Director, Office of
Indian Gaming, Office of the Deputy
Assistant Secretary—Policy and
Economic Development, Washington,
DC 20240. Telephone: (202) 219–4066.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Under
section 11 of the Indian Gaming
Regulatory Act of 1988 (IGRA), Public
Law 100–497, 25 U.S.C. 2710, the
Secretary of the Interior shall publish in
the Federal Register notice of approved
Tribal-State compacts for the purpose of
engaging in Class III gaming activities
on Indian lands. The approved
Amendments are substantially identical.
Generally, the Amendments consist of
clarifications and minor changes to
various sections of each tribe’s current
compact (which are also substantially
identical). The Amendments change the
destination and frequency of the tribes’
payments from quarterly to yearly,
based upon the individual gaming
facility’s fiscal year.
Jkt 217001
SUMMARY: The Bureau of Land
Management (BLM) has submitted an
information collection request to the
Office of Management and Budget
PO 00000
Frm 00056
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
12889
(OMB) for a 3-year extension of OMB
Control Number 1004–0153 under the
Paperwork Reduction Act. The Bureau
of Land Management (BLM) needs to
collect the information in order to
determine if surface-estate owners are
eligible to receive title to the Federallyowned minerals lying beneath their
land.
DATES: The OMB is required to respond
to this information collection request
within 60 days but may respond after 30
days. Therefore, written comments
should be received on or before April
24, 2009.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
directly to the Desk Officer for the
Department of the Interior (OMB #
1004–0153), Office of Management and
Budget, Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs, by fax 202–395–
7245, or by electronic mail at
oira_docket@omb.eop.gov.
In addition, please mail or hand-carry
a copy of your comments to BLM
Information Collection Clearance Officer
(WO–630), Department of the Interior,
1849 C Street, NW., Mail Stop 401
LSWashington, DC 20240; or send a
copy of your comments by electronic
mail to jean_sonneman@blm.gov, ‘‘Attn:
1004–0153’’.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Alzata Ransom, Division of Lands,
Realty and Cadastral Survey, at 202–
452–7772 (Commercial or FTS).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
60-Day Notice: On September 23,
2008, the BLM published a 60-day
notice (73 FR 54849) requesting
comments on the proposed information
collection. The comment period ended
November 24, 2008. No comments were
received.
Title: Conveyance of Federally-owned
Mineral Interests (43 CFR Part 2720).
OMB Number: 1004–0153.
Form Numbers: Nonform information.
Abstract: The information that is
supplied allows the BLM to determine
if private surface estate owners are
eligible to receive title to the Federallyowned minerals lying beneath their
land.
Current Action: This proposal is being
submitted to extend the expiration date
of March 31, 2009.
Type of Review: 3-year extension.
Affected Public: Surface-estate owners
who apply for title to Federally-owned
minerals lying beneath their land.
Obligation to Respond: Required to
obtain or retain benefits.
Application Fee per Response: $50.
Estimated Number of Annual
Responses: 21.
Estimated Time per Response: 10
hours.
E:\FR\FM\25MRN1.SGM
25MRN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 56 (Wednesday, March 25, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 12883-12889]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-6545]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Indian Affairs
Grant Program To Assess, Evaluate and Promote Development of
Tribal Energy and Mineral Resources
AGENCY: Bureau of Indian Affairs, Interior.
ACTION: Solicitation of Proposals.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Energy and Mineral Development Program (EMDP) provides
funding to tribes with the mission goal of assessing, evaluating, and
promoting energy and mineral resources on Indian trust lands for the
economic benefit of Indian mineral owners. To achieve these goals, the
Department of the Interior's Office of Indian Energy and Economic
Development (IEED), through its Division of Energy and Mineral
Development (DEMD) office, is soliciting proposals from tribes. The
Department will use a competitive
[[Page 12884]]
evaluation process to select several proposed projects to receive an
award.
DATES: Submit grant proposals on or before June 23, 2009. We will not
consider grant proposals received after this date.
ADDRESSES: Mail or hand-carry to the Department of the Interior,
Division of Energy and Mineral Development, Attention: Energy and
Mineral Development Program, 12136 W. Bayaud Avenue, Suite 300,
Lakewood, CO 80228.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If you have questions about the EMDP,
or have technical questions about the commodity you wish to assess or
develop, please contact the appropriate DEMD persons listed below:
General Questions about the EMDP Program and Submission
Process: Robert Anderson, Tel: (720) 407-0602; E-mail:
robert.anderson@bia.gov;
For Additional Copies of the Proposal Writing Guidelines
Manual: Tahnee KillsCrow, Tel: (720) 407-0655; E-mail:
tahnee.killscrow@bia.gov;
Mineral Projects (Precious Metals, Sand and Gravel): Lynne
Carpenter, Tel: (720) 407-0605, E-mail: lynne.chastain-carpenter@bia.gov, or David Holmes, Tel: (720) 407-0609, E-mail:
david.holmes@bia.gov;
Conventional Energy Projects (Oil, Natural Gas, Coal): Bob
Just, Tel: (720) 407-0611, E-mail: robert.just@bia.gov;
Renewable Energy Projects (Biomass, Wind, Solar): Winter
Jojola-Talburt, Tel: (720) 407-0668, E-mail: winter.jojola-talburt@bia.gov; or
Geothermal Energy: Roger Knight, Tel: (720) 407-0613, E-
mail: roger.knight@bia.gov.
See the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of this notice for
information on requests for technical assistance.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Background
B. Items to Consider Before Preparing an Application for an Energy
and Mineral Development Grant
C. How to Prepare an Application for Energy and Mineral Development
Funding
D. Submission of Application in Digital Format
E. Application Evaluation and Administrative Information
F. When to Submit
G. Where to Submit
H. Transfer of Funds
I. Reporting Requirements for Award Recipients
J. Requests for Technical Information
A. Background
Section 103 of the Indian Self-Determination Act, Public Law 93-
638, as amended by Public Law 100-472, contains the contracting
mechanism for energy and mineral development funded programs.
The Department of the Interior's Office of IEED, through the DEMD
office located in Lakewood, Colorado, administers and manages the EMDP.
The objectives of this solicitation are to receive proposals for energy
and mineral development projects in the areas of exploration,
assessment, development, feasibility and market studies.
Energy includes conventional energy resources such as oil, gas,
coal, uranium, and coal bed gas, and renewable energy resources such as
wind, solar, biomass, hydro and geothermal. Mineral resources include
industrial minerals (e.g., sand, gravel), precious minerals (e.g.,
gold, silver, platinum), base minerals (e.g., lead, copper, zinc), and
ferrous metal minerals (e.g., iron, tungsten, chromium).
DEMD's goal is to assist tribes to achieve economic benefits from
their energy and mineral resources. The purpose of the program is to
expand the knowledge base through which tribes, either by themselves or
with industry partners, can bring new energy and mineral resources into
the marketplace through a comprehensive understanding of their
undeveloped resource potential. A strong knowledge base will also
ensure that new resources are produced in an environmentally acceptable
manner.
Each year, DEMD usually receives more energy and mineral
development request applications than can be funded in that year. The
DEMD has discretion for awarding funds and requires that the tribes
compete for such funds on an annual basis. The DEMD has established
ranking and paneling procedures with defined criteria for rating the
merits of proposals to make the award of the limited funds as fair and
equitable as possible.
The EMDP program is funded under the non-recurring appropriation of
the Bureau of Indian Affairs's (BIA) budget. Congress appropriates
funds for EMDP funding on a year-to-year basis. Thus, while some
projects may extend over several years, funding for successive years
depends on each fiscal year's appropriations.
B. Items To Consider Before Preparing an Application for an Energy and
Mineral Development Grant
1. Trust Land Status
The EMDP's funding can only be made available to tribes whose lands
are held in trust or restricted fee by the Federal government. Congress
has appropriated these funds for the Federal development of energy and
mineral resources only on Indian trust or restricted fee lands.
2. Tribes' Compliance History
The DEMD will monitor all EMDP grants for statutory and regulatory
compliance to assure that awarded funds are correctly applied to
approved projects. Tribes that expend funds on unapproved functions may
forfeit remaining funds in that proposal year, and possibly for any
future EMDP funding. Consequently, DEMD may request a tribe to provide
a summary of any funds it has received in past years through other
projects approved by DEMD, and DEMD may conduct a review of prior award
expenditures before making a decision on current year proposals.
3. BIA Sanction List
Tribes who are currently under BIA sanction resulting from non-
compliance with the Single Audit Act may be ineligible from being
considered for an award.
4. Completion of Previous Energy and Mineral Development Projects
Generally, the DEMD will not support nor recommend additional
funding for a project until all project functions scheduled for
completion the previous year have been documented by the tribe and
reviewed by the DEMD.
Under some circumstances, delays encountered in performing the
project that are beyond the control of the tribe or its consultant will
be taken into consideration when making decisions on future year EMDP
awards. Such acceptable delays may include late delivery of funding
awards to the tribal project, difficulty in finding appropriate
contractors to perform project functions, permitting issues, and
weather delays.
5. Multi-Year Projects
The DEMD cannot award multi-year funding for a project. Funding
available for the EMDP is subject to annual appropriations by Congress
and therefore DEMD can only consider single-year funded projects.
Generally, energy and mineral development projects are designed to be
completed in one year. It is acceptable that a project may require more
than one year to complete due to circumstances such as weather,
availability of the consultant, or scope of project.
The EMDP's projects requiring funding beyond one-year intervals
should be grouped into discrete, single-year units of operation, and
then submitted as individual proposals for
[[Page 12885]]
consideration of EMDP award funding. Tribes must be aware, however,
that there is no absolute guarantee of EMDP awards being available for
future years of a multi-year project due to the discretionary nature of
EMDP award funding.
6. Use of Existing Data
The DEMD maintains a comprehensive set of tribal data and
information. The DEMD has spent considerable time and expense in
collecting digital land grids, geographic information system (GIS) data
and imagery data for many reservations. Monthly well status and
production data, geophysical data (such as seismic data), geology and
engineering data, etc., are all stored at DEMD's offices. All of these
data sets are available to tribes to reduce the cost of their
investigations.
Budget line items will not be allowed for data or products that
reside at DEMD. The tribe or the tribe's consultant must first check
with DEMD for availability of these data sets on the reservation they
are investigating. If DEMD does not have a particular data set, then
EMDP funds may be used to acquire such data.
When a proposal includes the acquisition of new data, the tribe
should thoroughly search for preexisting data to ensure there is no
duplication. If older data does exist, it may have considerable value.
It may be updated or improved upon, either by the DEMD or by the
tribe's consultant.
7. Using Technical Services at DEMD
The DEMD has many in-house technical capabilities and services that
the tribes may wish to use. All services provided by DEMD are without
charge to the tribes. Tribes can obtain maximum benefit from energy and
mineral development studies by first using DEMD's services, or by using
DEMD services in conjunction with outside consultants. Services
available at DEMD include:
Technical literature search of previous investigations and
work performed in and around reservations using reference materials
located nearby, such as the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) library in
Denver, Colorado, or the Colorado School of Mines library in Golden,
Colorado;
Well production history analysis, decline curve and
economic analysis of data obtained through DEMD's in-house databases;
Well log interpretation, including correlation of
formation tops, identification of producing horizons, and generation of
cross-sections;
Technical mapping capabilities, using data from well log
formation tops and seismic data;
Contour mapping capabilities, including isopachs,
calculated grids, color-fill plotting, and posting of surface features,
wells, seismic lines and legal boundaries;
Seismic data interpretation and data processing;
Three dimensional modeling of mine plans;
Economic analysis and modeling for energy and solid
mineral projects; and
Marketing studies.
8. What the Energy and Mineral Development Program Cannot Fund
As stated above, these funds are specifically for energy and
mineral development project work only. Examples of elements that cannot
be funded include:
Establishing or operating a tribal office, and/or purchase
of office equipment not specific to the assessment project. Tribal
salaries may be included only if the personnel are directly involved in
the project and only for the duration of the project;
Indirect costs and overhead as defined by the Federal
Acquisition Regulation (FAR);
Purchase of equipment that is used to perform the EMDP
project, such as computers, vehicles, field gear, etc. (however, the
leasing of this type of equipment for the purpose of performing energy
and mineral development is allowed);
Purchasing and/or leasing of equipment for the development
of energy and mineral resources (this would include such items as well
drilling rigs, backhoes, bulldozers, cranes, trucks, etc.);
Drilling of wells for the sale of hydrocarbons, geothermal
resources, other fluid and solid minerals (however, funds may be used
for the drilling of exploration holes for testing, sampling, coring, or
temperature surveys);
Legal fees;
Application fees associated with permitting;
Research and development of unproved technologies;
Training;
Contracted negotiation fees;
Purchase of data that is available through DEMD; and
Any other activities not authorized by the tribal
resolution or by the award letter.
9. Who Performs Energy and Mineral Development Studies?
The tribe determines who will perform the energy and mineral
development work, such as a consultant, a private company, or other
sources described in the list below. The tribe may also request the BIA
to perform the work.
A tribe has several choices in contracting work performed under an
energy and mineral development project:
A private company (although that company must not be
competing for exploration or development rights on the tribe's lands);
An experienced and qualified scientific consultant; or
A Federal government agency (such as USGS or the U.S.
Department of Energy (DOE)) or a State government agency (such as a
State geological survey).
There are no requirements or restrictions on how the tribe performs
their contracting function for the consultant or company. The tribe is
free to issue the contract through a sole source selection or through
competitive bidding. This determination will depend on the tribe's own
policies for contracting procedures.
C. How To Prepare an Application for Energy and Mineral Development
Funding
The application shall be prepared as set forth herein to provide a
standard basis for evaluation and to ensure that each application will
be uniform as to format and sequence. Applications are expected to be
prepared in accordance with this section. A complete energy and mineral
development request must contain the following components:
A current tribal resolution authorizing the proposed
project;
A proposal describing the planned activities and
deliverable products; and
A detailed budget estimate.
DEMD will examine every request for the mandatory components.
Energy and mineral development requests that do not contain all of the
mandatory components will be considered incomplete and returned to the
tribe, with an explanation. Tribes will then be allowed to correct all
deficiencies and resubmit the proposal for consideration on or before
the deadline.
A detailed description of each of the required components follows.
1. Mandatory Component 1: Tribal Resolution.
The tribal resolution must be current, and must be signed. It must
authorize tribal approval for an EMDP proposed project in the same
fiscal year as that of the energy and mineral development proposal and
must explicitly refer to the assessment proposal being submitted. The
tribal resolution must also include:
[[Page 12886]]
(a) A description of the commodity or commodities to be studied;
(b) A statement that the tribe is willing to consider development
of any potential energy or mineral resource discovered;
(c) A statement describing how the tribe prefers to have the energy
or mineral program conducted (i.e., through the sole utilization of
DEMD in-house professional staff, in conjunction with tribal
professional staff, private contractors/consultants, or through other
acceptable means); and
(d) A statement that the tribe will consider public release of
information obtained from the energy and mineral development study upon
request from DEMD. (Public release is meant to include publications, a
poster session, attending a property fair, or giving an oral
presentation at industry or Federal meetings and conferences.)
Note: Any information in the possession of DEMD or submitted to
DEMD throughout the EMDP process, including the final energy and
mineral development study, are government records and may be subject
to disclosure to third parties under the Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA), 5 U.S.C. 552, and the Department of the Interior's FOIA
regulations at 43 CFR part 2, unless a FOIA exemption or exception
applies or other provisions of law protect the information. A tribe
may, but is not required to, designate information it submits as
confidential commercially or financially sensitive information, as
applicable in any submissions it makes throughout the EMDP process.
If DEMD receives a FOIA request for any such information, it will
follow the procedures in 43 CFR part 2.
2. Mandatory Component 2: Energy and Mineral Development Proposal
A tribe may present their energy and mineral development proposal
in any form they wish, so long as the proposal contains a description
of planned activities and deliverable products that can be accomplished
within the fiscal year for which funding is being requested. The
proposal should be well organized, contain as much detail as possible,
yet be presented succinctly to allow a quick and thorough understanding
of the proposal by the DEMD ranking team.
Many tribes utilize the services of a staff geoscientist or private
consultant to prepare the technical part of the proposal. However, some
tribes may not have these resources and, therefore, are urged to seek
DEMD's technical assistance in preparing their EMDP proposal. Tribes
who want technical assistance from DEMD should make this request in
writing to the address provided in this notice. The request should be
made as early as possible to give DEMD time to perform the assistance.
The proposal should include the following sections.
(a) Overview and Technical Summary of the Project: Prepare a short
summary overview of the proposal that includes the following:
--Elements of the proposed study;
--Reasons why the proposed study is needed;
--Total requested funding;
--Responsible parties for technical execution and administration of the
proposed project; and
--A tribal point of contact for the project and contact information.
(b) Technical Summary of Project: Describe in relevant detail the
technical description of the project area, if sufficient information
exists. Give examples of a typical resource occurrence to be examined
under the proposal, such as the oil or gas deposit, etc. If possible,
include criteria applicable to these types of resource occurrences.
Multi-Phased Studies: Explain whether this assessment
request will begin a new study or continue a study, which has already
been partially completed. Also explain how long the study will last.
[Note: DEMD cannot guarantee funding for a project from one fiscal year
to the next.]
Known Energy/Mineral Resource: If a known energy and/or
mineral deposit exists or produces near the reservation, discuss the
possible extension or trend of the deposit onto the reservation.
Existing Information: Acknowledge any existing mineral
exploration information and provide references. The proposed new study
should not duplicate previous work.
Environmental or Cultural Sensitive Areas: Describe and
verify if the resources are located in an archeological,
environmentally or culturally sensitive area of the reservation. The
tribe must also assist DEMD with the review under the National
Environmental Policy Act, 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq., for the proposed
project.
(c) Project Objective, Goals and Scope of Work: Describe why the
tribe needs the proposed energy and mineral development. Examples may
include:
Discussion of the short and long term benefits to the
tribe;
Initial identification of an energy or mineral resource
for possible development;
Additional information regarding the potential resource
required for tribal decision making commitments on development
proposals;
Feasibility studies and market analyses on resource
development potentials;
Support for environmental studies;
Support and technical assistance as part of the contract
negotiations process;
Description of the work proposed, and the project goals
and objectives expected to be achieved by the proposed project;
Description of the location on the reservation where the
work will be done (include relevant page size maps and graphs); and
Description, in relevant detail, of the scope of work and
justification of a particular method. For example, if a geochemical
sampling survey is planned, an explanation might include the quantity
samples to be obtained, what type of sampling will be targeted, the
soil horizons to be tested, general location of the projected sampling,
how the samples are to be analyzed and why geochemistry was chosen as
an exploration technique. Furnish similar types of explanations and
details for geophysics, geologic mapping, core drilling or any other
type of assessment planned.
(d) Deliverable Products: Describe all deliverable products that
the proposed assessment project will generate, including all technical
data to be obtained during the study. Describe the types of maps to be
generated and the proposed scales. Also, discuss how these maps and
cross-sections will help define the energy and mineral potential on the
reservation. Discuss any planned status reports as well as the
parameters of the final report.
(e) Resumes of Key Personnel: If using consultant services, provide
the resumes of key personnel who will be performing the project work.
The resumes should provide information on each individual's expertise.
If subcontractors are used, these should also be disclosed.
3. Mandatory Component 3: Detailed Budget Estimate
A detailed budget estimate is required for the funding level
requested. The detail not only provides the tribe with an estimate of
costs, but it also provides DEMD with the means of evaluating the cost-
benefit of each project. This line-by-line budget must fully detail all
projected and anticipated expenditures under the EMDP proposal. The
ranking committee reviews each budget estimate to determine whether the
budget is reasonable and can produce the results outlined under the
proposal.
Each proposed project function should have a separate budget. The
budget should break out contract and consulting fees, fieldwork, lab
and
[[Page 12887]]
testing fees, travel and all other relevant project expenses.
Preparation of the budget portion of an EMDP proposal should be
considered a top priority. EMDP proposals that include sound budget
projections will receive a more favorable ranking over those proposals
that fail to provide appropriate budget projections.
The budget page(s) should provide a comprehensive breakdown for
those project line items that involve several components, or contain
numerous sub-functions.
(a) Contracted Personnel Costs. This includes all contracted
personnel and consultants, their respective positions and time (man-
hour) allocations for the proposed functions of a project.
Personnel funded under the Public Law 93-638 EMDP must
have documented professional qualifications necessary to perform the
work. Position descriptions or resumes should be attached to the budget
estimate.
If a consultant is to be hired for a fixed fee, the
consultant's expenses should be itemized as part of the project budget.
Consultant fees must be accompanied by documentation that
clearly identifies the qualifications of the proposed consultants,
specifics as to how the consultant(s) are to be used, and provides a
line item breakdown of costs associated with each consultant activity.
(b) Travel Estimates. Estimates should be itemized by airfare and
vehicle rental, lodging and per diem, based on the current federal
government per diem schedule.
(c) Data Collection and Analysis Costs. These costs should be
itemized in sufficient detail for the reviewer to evaluate the charges.
For example, break down drilling and sampling costs in relation to
mobilization costs, footage rates, testing and lab analysis costs per
core sample.
(d) Other Expenses. Include computer rental, report generation,
drafting, and advertising costs for a proposed project.
D. Submission of Application in Digital Format
Submit the application, including the budget pages, in digital
form. Proposals that are submitted without the digital components will
be returned.
Acceptable formats are Microsoft (MS) Word, MS Excel or Adobe PDF
on compact disks (CDs) or floppy disks. The budget must be submitted in
an Excel spreadsheet.
Each file must be saved with a filename that clearly identifies the
file being submitted. File name extensions must clearly indicate the
software application used for preparation of the documents (i.e. , doc,
pdf, xls).
Documents that require an original signature, such as cover
letters, tribal resolutions, and other letters of tribal authorization
can be submitted in hard copy (paper) form.
If you have any additional questions concerning the Energy and
Mineral Development proposal submission process, please contact Robert
Anderson, DEMD's EMDP Coordinator at (720) 407-0602.
E. Application Evaluation and Administrative Information
1. Administrative Review
Upon receipt of an application, DEMD will determine whether the
document contains the required prescribed information, includes a
tribal resolution, contains sufficient technical/scientific information
to conduct an evaluation, and does not duplicate or overlap previous or
current funded EMDP projects.
The DEMD staff may return an application which does not include all
information and documentation required within this notice. During the
review of a proposal, DEMD may request the submission of additional
information.
2. Ranking Criteria
Proposals will be formally evaluated by a Review and Ranking Panel
using the six criteria listed below. Each criteria factor provides a
percentage of the total rating of 100 points maximum.
(a) Resource Potential; 10 points. If the resource does not exist,
then the project will be rejected. The panel will base their scoring on
both the information provided by the tribe and databases maintained by
DEMD. It is critical that the tribe attempt to provide all pertinent
information in their proposal in order to ensure that an accurate
review of the proposal is accomplished. The reviewers are aware that
many tribes have little energy or mineral resource data on reservation
lands, and in some cases, resource data does not exist. However,
geologic and historical mineral development data exist throughout most
of the continental U.S. on lands surrounding Indian reservations.
Many times a producing energy or mineral deposit exists outside but
near the reservation boundary. The geologic setting containing the
resource may extend onto the reservation, regardless of the size of the
reservation. This would suggest potential of finding similar resources
on the reservation. In some cases, available data on adjacent lands may
allow for a scientifically acceptable projection of favorable trends
for energy or mineral occurrences on those Indian lands in question.
For renewable energy proposals, this factor would apply to
conditions favorable for the economic development of the particular
renewable energy source being studied.
(b) Marketability of the Resource; 20 points. Reviewers will base
their scoring on both the short and long-term market conditions of the
resources. Reviewers are aware that the marketability of an energy or
mineral commodity is time-dependent on existing and emerging market
conditions. Industrial minerals such as aggregates, sand/gravel and
gypsum are dependent on local/regional economic conditions. Precious
and base metal minerals such as gold, silver, lead, copper and zinc are
usually more dependent on international market conditions. Natural gas
and coal bed methane production is economically dependent on having
relatively close access to a transmission pipeline, as is renewable
energy to an electric transmission grid. Coal and crude oil production,
on the other hand, carry built-in transportation costs, making those
resources more dependent on current and projected energy commodity
rates. At any time, some commodities may have a strong sustained market
while others experience a weak market environment, or even a market
surge that may be only temporary.
Reviewers are aware of pitfalls surrounding long term market
forecasts of energy and mineral resources, so the proposal should
address this element fully. Also, short-term forecasts may indicate an
oversupply from both national and internationally developed properties,
and therefore additional production may not be accommodated. Certain
commodities such as electricity may be in high demand in some regional
sectors, but the current state of the transmission infrastructure does
not allow for additional kilowatts to be handled, thereby hindering a
market opportunity.
On the other hand, the potential for improving markets may be
suggested by market indicators. Examples of market indicators include
price history, prices from the futures markets, rig count for oil and
gas, and fundamental factors like supply shortages, political unrest in
foreign markets, and changes in technology.
(c) Economic Benefits Produced by the Project; 20 points. This
proposed study should make the tribe's land more attractive to industry
for exploration and development or provide for the
[[Page 12888]]
tribe's own economic development. Whatever the commodity being studied,
the ultimate goal is to collect useful data and information that
generates interest within the development industry, attract potential
developers to the Indian lands, and acquire data and information at a
minimal cost to the tribe.
(d) Tribes' Willingness to Develop; 20 points. The tribe's
willingness to consider developing any potential resource must be
clearly stated in the proposal and the tribal resolution. Note that
this is not a statement for mandatory development of any potential
resource, but just that the tribe is willing to develop. The decision
as to whether or not to develop will always lie with the tribe. The
willingness to development statement should provide sufficient
explanation of how the tribe intends to accomplish this task. The
willingness to develop will also be evaluated by the tribe's
willingness to release energy or mineral data to potential developers.
(e) Tribal Commitment to the Project; 25 points.
The tribe should appoint a designated lead and contact
person (e.g., someone with direct contact to the council) to be
committed to the successful completion of the project.
If the tribe has a strategic plan for development, does
the EMDP proposal fit within that strategic plan? A strategic plan
outlines objectives, goals, and methodology for sustainable tribal
economic development.
The tribe's business environment must be conducive to
development.
(f) Additional Funding or Participation From Other Entities; 5
points.
Additional point consideration will be given if other government
agencies (Bureau of Land Management, DOE, etc.) and/or private
companies are involved and contribute to the project.
3. Ranking of Proposals and Award Letters
The EMDP review committee will rank the energy and mineral
development proposals using the selection criteria outlined in this
manual under Section 6. The DEMD will then forward the rated requests
to the Director of the IEED (Director) for approval. Once approved, the
Director will submit all proposals to the Assistant Secretary--Indian
Affairs for concurrence and announcement of awards to those selected
tribes, via written notice. Those tribes not receiving an award will
also be notified immediately in writing.
F. When to Submit
The DEMD will accept applications at any time before the deadline
stated in the DATES section of this notice, and will send a
notification of receipt to the return address on the application
package, along with a determination of whether or not the application
is complete. The DEMD will not consider grant proposals after this
date. A date-stamped receipt of submission by the BIA Regional or
Agency-level office on or before the announced deadline will also be
acceptable.
G. Where To Submit
Applicants must submit the Energy and Mineral Development proposals
to DEMD at the address listed in the ADDRESSES section of this notice.
Applicants should also, as a matter of courtesy, forward a copy of
their proposal to their own BIA Agency and Regional offices.
A tribe may fax the cover letter and resolution for the proposal
prior to the deadline, which will guarantee that the proposal will be
considered as being received on time. However, DEMD asks that tribes or
consultants do not send the entire proposal via the fax method, as this
severely overloads the fax system due to the relatively large number of
proposals that DEMD receives each year.
The cover letter should also state that the proposal is being sent
via FedEx or mail. An original signature copy must be received in
DEMD's office within ten (10) working days after the deadline,
including all signed tribal resolutions and/or letters of tribal
authorization.
BIA Regional or Agency level offices receiving a tribe's submitted
EMDP proposal do not have to forward it on to DEMD. It is meant to
inform them of a tribe's intent to perform energy or mineral studies
using EMDP funding. The BIA Regional or Agency offices are free to
comment on the tribe's proposal, or to ask DEMD for other information.
H. Transfer of Funds
IEED will transfer a tribe's EMDP award funds to the BIA Regional
Office that serves that tribe, via a sub-allotment funding document
coded for the tribe's EMDP project. The tribe should be anticipating
the transfer of funds and be in contact with their budget personnel
contacts at the Regional and Agency office levels. Tribes receiving
EMDP awards must establish a new 638 contract to complete the transfer
process, or use an existing 638 contract, as applicable.
I. Reporting Requirements for Award Recipients
1. Quarterly Reporting Requirements
During the life of the EMDP project, quarterly written reports are
to be submitted to the DEMD project monitor for the project. The
beginning and ending quarter periods are to be based on the actual
start date of the EMDP project. This date can be determined between
DEMD's project monitor and the tribe.
The quarterly report can be a one to two page summary of events,
accomplishments, problems and/or results that took place during the
quarter. Quarterly reports are due two weeks after the end of a
project's fiscal quarter.
2. Final Reporting Requirements
Delivery Schedules. The tribe must deliver all products
and data generated by the proposed assessment project to DEMD's office
within two weeks after completion of the project.
Mandatory Requirement to Provide Reports and Data in
Digital Form. The DEMD maintains a repository for all energy and
mineral data on Indian lands, much of it derived from these energy and
mineral development reports. As EMDP projects produce reports with
large amounts of raw and processed data, analyses and assays, DEMD
requires that deliverable products be provided in digital format, along
with printed hard copies.
Reports can be provided in either MS Word or Adobe PDF format.
WordPerfect format will be accepted but is not preferred. Spreadsheet
data can be provided in MS Excel, MS Access, or Adobe PDF formats. All
vector figures should be converted to PDF format, as that has become a
common format for such files. Faster images can be provided in PDF,
JPEG, TIFF, or any of the Windows metafile formats.
Number of Copies. When a tribe prepares a contract for
energy and mineral development, they must describe the deliverable
products and include a requirement that the products be prepared in
standard format (see format description above). Each energy and mineral
development contract will provide funding for a total of six (6)
printed and six (6) digital copies to be distributed as follows:
(a) The tribe will receive two printed and two digital copies of
the EMDP report.
(b) The DEMD requires four printed copies and four digital copies
of the EMDP report. DEMD will transmit one of these copies to the
tribe's BIA Regional Office, and one copy to the
[[Page 12889]]
tribe's BIA Agency office. Two printed and two digital copies will then
reside with DEMD. These copies should be forwarded to the DEMD offices
in Lakewood, Colorado, to the attention of the Energy and Mineral
Development Program.
All products generated by EMDP studies may be subject to release
under FOIA, as noted above. Products include all reports and technical
data obtained during the study such as geophysical data, geochemical
analyses, core data, lithologic logs, assay data of samples tested,
results of special tests, maps and cross sections, status reports and
the final report.
J. Requests for Technical Assistance
The DEMD staff may provide technical consultation (i.e., work
directly with tribal staff on a proposed project), provide support
documentation and data, provide written language on specialized
sections of the proposal and suggest ways a tribe may obtain other
assistance, such as from a company or consultant specializing in a
particular area of expertise. However, the tribe is responsible for
preparing the executive summary, justification and scope of work for
their proposal.
The tribe must notify DEMD in writing that they require assistance,
and DEMD will then appoint staff to provide the requested assistance.
The tribe's request must clearly specify the type of technical
assistance desired.
Requests for technical assistance should be submitted by the
deadline stated in the DATES section for such requests to allow DEMD
time to provide the appropriate assistance. Tribes not seeking
technical assistance should attempt to submit their EMDP proposals well
in advance of the deadline to allow DEMD time to review the proposals
for possible deficiencies and allow ample time to contact the tribe
with requests for revisions to the initial submission.
Dated: March 10, 2009.
George T. Skibine,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy and Economic Development.
[FR Doc. E9-6545 Filed 3-24-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-4M-P