Proposed Agency Information Collection, 31016-31017 [E9-15194]
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31016
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 123 / Monday, June 29, 2009 / Notices
Individuals in need of an
accommodation as provided for in the
Americans with Disabilities Act who
wish to attend the informational
meeting, conference session or hearings
should contact the commission
secretary directly at 609–883–9500 ext.
203 or through the Telecommunications
Relay Services (TRS) at 711, to discuss
how the Commission can accommodate
your needs.
Dated: June 24, 2009.
Pamela M. Bush,
Commission Secretary.
[FR Doc. E9–15249 Filed 6–26–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6360–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Proposed Agency Information
Collection
AGENCY:
U.S. Department of Energy
(DOE).
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
ACTION: Notice and Request for the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) Review and Comment.
SUMMARY: DOE has submitted to OMB
for clearance, a proposal for collection
of information under the provisions of
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
The proposed collection will allow
respondents to submit applications for a
National Priority Project Designation
(NPPD) as called for by Section 1405 of
the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPAct
2005).
DATES: Comments regarding this
collection must be received on or before
July 29, 2009. If you anticipate that you
will be submitting comments, but find
it difficult to do so within the period of
time allowed by this notice, please
advise the OMB Desk Officer of your
intention to make a submission as soon
as possible. The Desk Officer may be
telephoned at 202–395–4650.
ADDRESSES: Written comments should
be sent to the:
DOE Desk Officer, Office of Information
and Regulatory Affairs, Office of
Management and Budget, New
Executive Office Building, Room
10102, 735 17th Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20503. And to
Patrick Shipp, Office of Information and
Business Management Systems (EE–
3C), Office of Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy, U.S. Department
of Energy, 1000 Independence Ave.,
SW., Washington, DC 20585.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Requests for additional information or
copies of the information collection
instrument and instructions should be
directed to Patrick Shipp, Office of
Information and Business Management
VerDate Nov<24>2008
20:04 Jun 26, 2009
Jkt 217001
Systems (EE–3C), Office of Energy
Efficiency and Renewable Energy, U.S.
Department of Energy, Washington, DC
20585, (202) 586–7769; Jody Barringer,
Office of Information and Business
Management Systems (EE–3C), Office of
Energy Efficiency and Renewable
Energy, U.S. Department of Energy,
Washington, DC 20585, (202) 586–5404;
or by e-mail at nppd@ee.doe.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
information collection request contains:
(1) OMB No.: New; (2) Information
Collection Request Title: National
Priority Project Designation; (3) Type of
Request: New collection; (4) Purpose:
This collection of information is a form
that DOE will make available
electronically on the internet and which
persons or organizations seeking NPPD
under Section 1405 of EPAct 2005 (Pub.
L. 109–58) must use in applying for
such designation. The draft application
is available at https://
www.eere.energy.gov/office_eere/docs/
npp_application.doc. DOE is publishing
as an attachment to this notice the
guidelines for requesting NPPD. The
purpose of Presidential designation is to
recognize energy projects that have
advanced the field of renewable energy
technology and contributed to North
American energy independence; (5)
Type of Respondents: Public and Private
Sector; (6) Estimated Number of
Respondents: 20; (7) Estimated Number
of Burden Hours: 400 annually.
Statutory Authority: Energy Policy
Act of 2005, Public Law 109–58.
Issued in Washington, DC, on June 16,
2009.
Steven G. Chalk,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary, Energy
Efficiency and Renewable Energy.
Appendix
Department of Energy
Guidelines for National Priority Project
Designation
Presidential National Priority Project
Designation (NPPD) may be earned by
organizations involved in projects that
are leading the way in using energy
efficiency and renewable energy
technologies. This designation,
established by Section 1405 of the
Energy Policy Act of 2005 (Pub. L. 109–
58) provides the President of the United
States and the Secretary of Energy with
a mechanism to recognize projects that
are making the greatest strides in
helping North America reduce its
dependence on fossil fuels and promote
domestic energy security.
Projects that receive NPPD will be
highlighted by the Department of Energy
(DOE) as transformational energy
efficiency and renewable energy leaders.
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
DOE will work with recipients and with
national media sources to spotlight
these projects as models for the rest of
the country and the world.
I. Eligible Projects
A. Categories of Projects
DOE will accept applications for
NPPD in the following project
categories:
(1) Grid-Scale Generation by Wind
and Biomass Energy Projects. To be
eligible for NPPD, a wind or biomass
project must provide electricity to the
national power grid, rather than
electricity designed to serve only
specific end users.
A wind energy project is any
installation of technologies that
generates electricity, fuel or other usable
energy by harnessing the power of wind.
A biomass energy project is any
installation of technologies that generate
electricity, fuel or other usable energy
derived from biomass, and may include
co-firing or co-gasification techniques if
biomass is responsible for 51 percent or
more of the energy produced. The term
‘‘biomass’’ means any lignin waste
material that is segregated from other
waste materials and is determined to be
nonhazardous by the Administrator of
the Environmental Protection Agency;
and any solid, nonhazardous, cellulosic
material that is derived from—
(A) Any of the following forest-related
resources: mill residues, pre-commercial
thinnings, slash, brush, or nonmerchantable material;
(B) solid wood waste materials,
including waste pallets, crates, dunnage,
manufacturing and construction wood
wastes (other than pressure-treated,
chemically treated, or painted wood
wastes), and landscape or right-of-way
tree trimmings; but not including
municipal solid waste (garbage), gas
derived from the biodegradation of solid
waste, or paper that is commonly
recycled;
(C) agriculture wastes, including
orchard tree crops, vineyard, grain,
legumes, sugar, and other crop byproducts or residues; and livestock
waste nutrients; or
(D) a plant that is grown exclusively
as a fuel for the production of
electricity.
(2) Distributed Generation by
Photovoltaic and Fuel Cell Energy
Projects. A photovoltaic or fuel cell
project must produce distributed
generation to be eligible for NPPD. DOE
considers distributed generation to be
any power source that is designed to
power an end user within a radius of
one mile from the source.
E:\FR\FM\29JNN1.SGM
29JNN1
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 123 / Monday, June 29, 2009 / Notices
A photovoltaic energy project is any
installation of technologies that converts
light directly into electricity through a
solid-state, semiconductor process.
A fuel cell energy project is any
application of technologies that uses
fuel cells to transport energy. The term
‘‘fuel cell’’ means a device that directly
converts the chemical energy of a fuel
and an oxidant into electricity by
electrochemical processes occurring at
separate electrodes in the device.
(3) Building Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy Projects. This
category of eligible projects consists of
energy-efficient buildings and buildingbased renewable energy projects.
An energy-efficient building project is
one that will retrofit an existing
building or build a new building such
that the building performs all of its
intended roles while using significantly
less energy than conventional building
stock. DOE considers the term ‘‘new
building’’ to mean a building that is
completed to the point of being ready
for occupancy not earlier than two years
before the date of the application for
NPPD.
A renewable energy project is one
using technology that generates
electricity or usable energy in the form
of heat, steam, or fuel from any of the
following sources: solar, wind, biomass,
landfill gas, ocean (including tidal,
wave, current, and thermal), geothermal,
municipal solid waste, or new
hydroelectric generation capacity
achieved from increased efficiency or
additions of new capacity at an existing
hydroelectric project.
(4) First-in-Class Building Energy
Efficiency and Renewable Energy
Projects. DOE considers a first-in-class
project to be one that incorporates a new
energy-related technology or technique
not used before, not used in the same
manner before, or not used on the same
scale before.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
B. Time of Construction
DOE will accept award applications
both for projects that are being planned
(are under construction or will begin
construction within the next two years)
and projects that are complete (were
completed within the past two years).
II. Designation Criteria
To obtain NPPD, a project must:
• Utilize energy-efficient or
renewable energy technologies and fit
into one of the four categories of
projects identified in Section I.A. of
these guidelines;
• Be located within the United States;
and
• Meet the following criteria (for
applicable category):
VerDate Nov<24>2008
19:07 Jun 26, 2009
Jkt 217001
» For wind and biomass—the project
must involve the installation of not less
than 30 megawatts of renewable energy
generation capacity.1
» For PV and fuel cells—the project
must involve the installation of not less
than 3 megawatts of renewable energy
generation capacity.
» For buildings—the project must
have all of the following attributes:
fi Meet guidelines for Leadership in
Energy and Environmental Design
(LEED) certification (any level);
fi Use whole-building integration of
energy efficiency and environmental
performance design and technology,
including advanced building controls;
fi Use renewable energy for at least
50 percent of the energy consumption of
the project;
fi Use ENERGY STAR®-labeled
products wherever possible; and
fi Include at least 5 million square
feet of enclosed space (not necessarily
all in one building or at a single site).
‘‘Enclosed’’ means space closed off from
the elements that is heated, cooled, or
both.
• For first-in-class building projects—
the project must represent a first-inclass use of renewable energy or a new
paradigm of building-integrated
renewable energy use or energy
efficiency. Any project establishing a
new paradigm would need to include
techniques that fundamentally change
the assumptions made about energy
systems as they relate to building
science. This category could potentially
include innovative project-financing
approaches. There are no scale
parameters for first-in-class building
projects.
III. DOE Review and Designation
A. Selection Process
After the close of the application
period, DOE will review the
applications and determine which
projects have the potential to receive
NPPD. DOE will ask the applicants of
those projects to have a professional
engineer inspect their project and certify
that the information contained in their
application is correct. The professional
engineer may be an employee of the
applicant organization. Once this is
done, DOE will consider these projects
1 For purposes of the National Priority Project
Designation, the National Renewable Energy
Laboratory has defined the term ‘‘capacity’’ to mean
the maximum amount of energy that can be
generated or stored by a device at any given time.
For example, the capacity for a wind turbine would
be the maximum electricity (Watts) it could
generate given ideal wind speeds. The capacity of
an energy storage device would be the total amount
of energy that can be stored in the device under
ideal conditions.
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
31017
to be ‘‘certified projects.’’ A certified
project is one that is reasonably
expected to meet the selection criteria
set forth in these Guidelines.
DOE technical staff will then conduct
an additional review of all certified
projects. This review may involve
follow-up questions for the applicant
organization. At the conclusion of this
review, the Secretary of Energy will
select a maximum of three projects in
each category to be recommended to the
President for designation as that year’s
National Priority Projects (NPP). While
DOE will accept award applications in
all four project categories, the Secretary
of Energy may not recommend NPPD for
projects in all categories.
Any organization that applies for
NPPD may remove its project from
consideration at any time.
B. Promotion of Designated Projects
Organizations whose projects are
designated by the President as NPP will
receive recognition from DOE in the
form of:
• Receipt of a NPPD medal at a
national event;
• National news releases;
• Prominent recognition on the DOE
Web site; and
• Other suitable forms of publicity
and recognition
C. Additional Information
(1) Applicants may request
confidentiality of information that they
believe is exempt by law from public
disclosure; this information must be
clearly marked on the application by the
applicant. DOE intends to honor
requests for nondisclosure of
information to the extent permitted by
law, and it will make a final
determination with regard to disclosure
or nondisclosure of the information in
accordance with DOE’s Freedom of
Information regulations (10 CFR
1004.11).
(2) Submission of an application for
designation does not create any
obligation on DOE to grant such
designation.
(3) Questions or requests for
additional information about NPPD
should be directed to nppd@ee.doe.gov.
[FR Doc. E9–15194 Filed 6–26–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Notice of Cancellation of the Global
Nuclear Energy Partnership (GNEP)
Programmatic Environmental Impact
Statement (PEIS)
AGENCY: Office of Nuclear Energy, U.S.
Department of Energy.
E:\FR\FM\29JNN1.SGM
29JNN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 123 (Monday, June 29, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 31016-31017]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-15194]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Proposed Agency Information Collection
AGENCY: U.S. Department of Energy (DOE).
ACTION: Notice and Request for the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) Review and Comment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: DOE has submitted to OMB for clearance, a proposal for
collection of information under the provisions of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995. The proposed collection will allow respondents
to submit applications for a National Priority Project Designation
(NPPD) as called for by Section 1405 of the Energy Policy Act of 2005
(EPAct 2005).
DATES: Comments regarding this collection must be received on or before
July 29, 2009. If you anticipate that you will be submitting comments,
but find it difficult to do so within the period of time allowed by
this notice, please advise the OMB Desk Officer of your intention to
make a submission as soon as possible. The Desk Officer may be
telephoned at 202-395-4650.
ADDRESSES: Written comments should be sent to the:
DOE Desk Officer, Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office
of Management and Budget, New Executive Office Building, Room 10102,
735 17th Street, NW., Washington, DC 20503. And to
Patrick Shipp, Office of Information and Business Management Systems
(EE-3C), Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, U.S.
Department of Energy, 1000 Independence Ave., SW., Washington, DC
20585.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Requests for additional information or
copies of the information collection instrument and instructions should
be directed to Patrick Shipp, Office of Information and Business
Management Systems (EE-3C), Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable
Energy, U.S. Department of Energy, Washington, DC 20585, (202) 586-
7769; Jody Barringer, Office of Information and Business Management
Systems (EE-3C), Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, U.S.
Department of Energy, Washington, DC 20585, (202) 586-5404; or by e-
mail at nppd@ee.doe.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This information collection request
contains: (1) OMB No.: New; (2) Information Collection Request Title:
National Priority Project Designation; (3) Type of Request: New
collection; (4) Purpose: This collection of information is a form that
DOE will make available electronically on the internet and which
persons or organizations seeking NPPD under Section 1405 of EPAct 2005
(Pub. L. 109-58) must use in applying for such designation. The draft
application is available at https://www.eere.energy.gov/office_eere/docs/npp_application.doc. DOE is publishing as an attachment to this
notice the guidelines for requesting NPPD. The purpose of Presidential
designation is to recognize energy projects that have advanced the
field of renewable energy technology and contributed to North American
energy independence; (5) Type of Respondents: Public and Private
Sector; (6) Estimated Number of Respondents: 20; (7) Estimated Number
of Burden Hours: 400 annually.
Statutory Authority: Energy Policy Act of 2005, Public Law 109-58.
Issued in Washington, DC, on June 16, 2009.
Steven G. Chalk,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary, Energy Efficiency and Renewable
Energy.
Appendix
Department of Energy
Guidelines for National Priority Project Designation
Presidential National Priority Project Designation (NPPD) may be
earned by organizations involved in projects that are leading the way
in using energy efficiency and renewable energy technologies. This
designation, established by Section 1405 of the Energy Policy Act of
2005 (Pub. L. 109-58) provides the President of the United States and
the Secretary of Energy with a mechanism to recognize projects that are
making the greatest strides in helping North America reduce its
dependence on fossil fuels and promote domestic energy security.
Projects that receive NPPD will be highlighted by the Department of
Energy (DOE) as transformational energy efficiency and renewable energy
leaders. DOE will work with recipients and with national media sources
to spotlight these projects as models for the rest of the country and
the world.
I. Eligible Projects
A. Categories of Projects
DOE will accept applications for NPPD in the following project
categories:
(1) Grid-Scale Generation by Wind and Biomass Energy Projects. To
be eligible for NPPD, a wind or biomass project must provide
electricity to the national power grid, rather than electricity
designed to serve only specific end users.
A wind energy project is any installation of technologies that
generates electricity, fuel or other usable energy by harnessing the
power of wind.
A biomass energy project is any installation of technologies that
generate electricity, fuel or other usable energy derived from biomass,
and may include co-firing or co-gasification techniques if biomass is
responsible for 51 percent or more of the energy produced. The term
``biomass'' means any lignin waste material that is segregated from
other waste materials and is determined to be nonhazardous by the
Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency; and any solid,
nonhazardous, cellulosic material that is derived from--
(A) Any of the following forest-related resources: mill residues,
pre-commercial thinnings, slash, brush, or non-merchantable material;
(B) solid wood waste materials, including waste pallets, crates,
dunnage, manufacturing and construction wood wastes (other than
pressure-treated, chemically treated, or painted wood wastes), and
landscape or right-of-way tree trimmings; but not including municipal
solid waste (garbage), gas derived from the biodegradation of solid
waste, or paper that is commonly recycled;
(C) agriculture wastes, including orchard tree crops, vineyard,
grain, legumes, sugar, and other crop by-products or residues; and
livestock waste nutrients; or
(D) a plant that is grown exclusively as a fuel for the production
of electricity.
(2) Distributed Generation by Photovoltaic and Fuel Cell Energy
Projects. A photovoltaic or fuel cell project must produce distributed
generation to be eligible for NPPD. DOE considers distributed
generation to be any power source that is designed to power an end user
within a radius of one mile from the source.
[[Page 31017]]
A photovoltaic energy project is any installation of technologies
that converts light directly into electricity through a solid-state,
semiconductor process.
A fuel cell energy project is any application of technologies that
uses fuel cells to transport energy. The term ``fuel cell'' means a
device that directly converts the chemical energy of a fuel and an
oxidant into electricity by electrochemical processes occurring at
separate electrodes in the device.
(3) Building Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Projects. This
category of eligible projects consists of energy-efficient buildings
and building-based renewable energy projects.
An energy-efficient building project is one that will retrofit an
existing building or build a new building such that the building
performs all of its intended roles while using significantly less
energy than conventional building stock. DOE considers the term ``new
building'' to mean a building that is completed to the point of being
ready for occupancy not earlier than two years before the date of the
application for NPPD.
A renewable energy project is one using technology that generates
electricity or usable energy in the form of heat, steam, or fuel from
any of the following sources: solar, wind, biomass, landfill gas, ocean
(including tidal, wave, current, and thermal), geothermal, municipal
solid waste, or new hydroelectric generation capacity achieved from
increased efficiency or additions of new capacity at an existing
hydroelectric project.
(4) First-in-Class Building Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
Projects. DOE considers a first-in-class project to be one that
incorporates a new energy-related technology or technique not used
before, not used in the same manner before, or not used on the same
scale before.
B. Time of Construction
DOE will accept award applications both for projects that are being
planned (are under construction or will begin construction within the
next two years) and projects that are complete (were completed within
the past two years).
II. Designation Criteria
To obtain NPPD, a project must:
Utilize energy-efficient or renewable energy technologies
and fit into one of the four categories of projects identified in
Section I.A. of these guidelines;
Be located within the United States; and
Meet the following criteria (for applicable category):
[ctrcir] For wind and biomass--the project must involve the
installation of not less than 30 megawatts of renewable energy
generation capacity.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ For purposes of the National Priority Project Designation,
the National Renewable Energy Laboratory has defined the term
``capacity'' to mean the maximum amount of energy that can be
generated or stored by a device at any given time. For example, the
capacity for a wind turbine would be the maximum electricity (Watts)
it could generate given ideal wind speeds. The capacity of an energy
storage device would be the total amount of energy that can be
stored in the device under ideal conditions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[ctrcir] For PV and fuel cells--the project must involve the
installation of not less than 3 megawatts of renewable energy
generation capacity.
[ctrcir] For buildings--the project must have all of the following
attributes:
[dec222] Meet guidelines for Leadership in Energy and Environmental
Design (LEED) certification (any level);
[dec222] Use whole-building integration of energy efficiency and
environmental performance design and technology, including advanced
building controls;
[dec222] Use renewable energy for at least 50 percent of the energy
consumption of the project;
[dec222] Use ENERGY STAR[supreg]-labeled products wherever
possible; and
[dec222] Include at least 5 million square feet of enclosed space
(not necessarily all in one building or at a single site). ``Enclosed''
means space closed off from the elements that is heated, cooled, or
both.
For first-in-class building projects--the project must
represent a first-in-class use of renewable energy or a new paradigm of
building-integrated renewable energy use or energy efficiency. Any
project establishing a new paradigm would need to include techniques
that fundamentally change the assumptions made about energy systems as
they relate to building science. This category could potentially
include innovative project-financing approaches. There are no scale
parameters for first-in-class building projects.
III. DOE Review and Designation
A. Selection Process
After the close of the application period, DOE will review the
applications and determine which projects have the potential to receive
NPPD. DOE will ask the applicants of those projects to have a
professional engineer inspect their project and certify that the
information contained in their application is correct. The professional
engineer may be an employee of the applicant organization. Once this is
done, DOE will consider these projects to be ``certified projects.'' A
certified project is one that is reasonably expected to meet the
selection criteria set forth in these Guidelines.
DOE technical staff will then conduct an additional review of all
certified projects. This review may involve follow-up questions for the
applicant organization. At the conclusion of this review, the Secretary
of Energy will select a maximum of three projects in each category to
be recommended to the President for designation as that year's National
Priority Projects (NPP). While DOE will accept award applications in
all four project categories, the Secretary of Energy may not recommend
NPPD for projects in all categories.
Any organization that applies for NPPD may remove its project from
consideration at any time.
B. Promotion of Designated Projects
Organizations whose projects are designated by the President as NPP
will receive recognition from DOE in the form of:
Receipt of a NPPD medal at a national event;
National news releases;
Prominent recognition on the DOE Web site; and
Other suitable forms of publicity and recognition
C. Additional Information
(1) Applicants may request confidentiality of information that they
believe is exempt by law from public disclosure; this information must
be clearly marked on the application by the applicant. DOE intends to
honor requests for nondisclosure of information to the extent permitted
by law, and it will make a final determination with regard to
disclosure or nondisclosure of the information in accordance with DOE's
Freedom of Information regulations (10 CFR 1004.11).
(2) Submission of an application for designation does not create
any obligation on DOE to grant such designation.
(3) Questions or requests for additional information about NPPD
should be directed to nppd@ee.doe.gov.
[FR Doc. E9-15194 Filed 6-26-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P