Notice of Availability of the Final Environmental Impact Statement for the Imperial Valley Solar, LLC Project, California and the Proposed California Desert Conservation Area Plan Amendment, 44278-44279 [2010-18471]
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 144 / Wednesday, July 28, 2010 / Notices
of the region from those impacts in the
NPR–A. Of special note are impacts to
the resources and uses of the area near
Teshekpuk Lake and to the Western
Arctic Caribou Herd. The BLM has
developed the following preliminary
criteria for developing the proposed
actions and alternatives:
• The plan will consider the lands
and waters administered by the BLM
within the NPR–A.
• All decisions in the plan will be
consistent with the Naval Petroleum
Reserve Production Act of 1976,
including the requirements to manage
the NPR–A consistent with the total
energy needs for the Nation and to
protect the environmental, fish and
wildlife, and historical and scenic
values of the NPR–A.
• The existing plans defer oil and gas
leasing in approximately 1.57 million
acres in northwestern NPR–A and
430,000 acres north and east of
Teshekpuk Lake. The lands in
northwestern NPR–A are deferred from
leasing until 2014 and the lands near
Teshekpuk Lake until 2018. The new
plan will make management decisions
for these areas that will become effective
at the expiration of their respective
deferral periods.
• Action alternatives will be
consistent with requirements for
protection of spectacled and Stellar’s
eiders described in the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service’s 2008 Biological
Opinion for the northern NPR–A
planning areas and any new Biological
Opinion received as a part of this
planning effort.
• The plan will address oil and gas
leasing and will use scoping to identify
other management decisions and
resources to be addressed.
• The resource protection measures
applied to oil and gas authorizations
will be as consistent as possible in all
areas covered by the plan, recognizing
the differing values within the NPR–A.
• The BLM will consider subsistence
resources and users and minimize
adverse impacts to subsistence uses in
accordance with Section 810 of the
Alaska National Interest Lands
Conservation Act (ANILCA).
• The plan will protect valid existing
rights.
• The BLM will consider plans and
policies of adjacent land owners/
managers.
Julia Dougan,
Acting State Director.
[FR Doc. 2010–18469 Filed 7–27–10; 8:45 am]
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[CACA 47740, LLCAD07000,
L51030000.FX0000, LVRAB109AA01]
Notice of Availability of the Final
Environmental Impact Statement for
the Imperial Valley Solar, LLC Project,
California and the Proposed California
Desert Conservation Area Plan
Amendment
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
National Environmental Policy Act of
1969, as amended (NEPA), and the
Federal Land Policy and Management
Act of 1976, as amended (FLPMA), the
Bureau of Land Management (BLM) has
prepared a Proposed Resource
Management Plan (RMP) Amendment/
Final Environmental Impact Statement
(EIS) for the Imperial Valley Solar, LLC
(IVS) Project and by this notice is
announcing its availability.
DATES: The BLM planning regulations
state that any person who meets the
conditions described in the regulations
may protest the BLM’s Proposed RMP
Amendment. A person who meets the
conditions must file the protest within
30 days after the date the Environmental
Protection Agency publishes its notice
of availability in the Federal Register.
The BLM will also be accepting
additional public comments on the
RMP/EIS within 30 days after the date
that the Environmental Protection
Agency publishes its Notice of
Availibility in the Federal Register.
Comments can be sent to Jim Stobaugh
at the addresses given below. All
substantive comments will be reviewed
and responded to in the Record of
Decision.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the Proposed RMP
Amendment/Final EIS are available for
public inspection at the El Centro Field
Office, 1661 S. 4th Street, El Centro,
California 92243. Interested persons
may also review the Proposed RMP
Amendment/Final EIS on the following
Web site: https://www.blm.gov/ca/st/en/
fo/elcentro/nepa/stirling.html. All
protests must be in writing and mailed
to one of the following addresses:
SUMMARY:
Regular mail
Overnight mail
BLM Director (210),
Attention: Brenda
Williams, P.O. Box
66538, Washington,
DC 20035.
BLM Director (210),
Attention: Brenda
Williams, 1620 L
Street, NW., Suite
1075, Washington,
DC 20036.
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All comments must be in writing and
sent to Jim Stobaugh, BLM Project
Manager, by mail at Bureau of Land
Management, P.O. Box 12000, Reno,
Nevada 89520; or by e-mail at
Jim_Stobaugh@blm.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jim
Stobaugh, BLM Project Manager, by
telephone at (775) 861–6478; through
mail at Bureau of Land Management,
P.O. Box 12000, Reno, Nevada 89520; or
by e-mail at Jim_Stobaugh@blm.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Stirling
Energy Systems (SES) filed right-of-way
(ROW) application CACA–47740 for the
SES Solar Two Project. Afrter merging
with Tessera Soar the applicant changed
its name to Imperial Valley Solar, LLC.
The project name, SES Solar Two, has
also been changed to the Imperial Valley
Solar, LLC project. The proposed IVS
Project is a concentrated solar electrical
generating facility capable of generating
709 megawatts (MW) of renewable
power. The entire project encompasses
approximately 6,144 acres of BLMmanaged lands. The project site is in
Imperial County, California,
approximately 4 miles east of Ocotillo
and 14 miles west of El Centro.
Generally, the site is bounded on the
north by the San Diego Metropolitan
Transit System/San Diego and Arizona
Eastern Railway and on the south by
Interstate Highway 8. The eastern
boundary is approximately 1.5 miles
west of Dunaway Road and the western
boundary is the westerly section line in
Section 22 in Township 16 South,
Range 12 East. An additional 110-acre
laydown construction area is proposed
east of Dunaway Road.
IVS proposes to use SunCatcher
technology on the site. A SunCatcher is
a 25-kilowatt solar dish designed to
automatically track the sun and collect
and focus solar energy onto a power
conversion unit (PCU), which generates
electricity. The system consists of a 38foot high by 40-foot wide solar
concentrator in a dish structure that
supports an array of curved glass mirror
facets. These mirrors concentrate solar
energy onto the solar receiver of the
PCU.
The project also includes an electrical
transmission line, water supply
pipeline, and access road. A new 230kilovolt (kV) substation would be
constructed in approximately the center
of the project site near a main services
complex that is also part of the
proposal. The substation would be
connected to the existing San Diego Gas
and Electric Imperial Valley Substation
by a 10.3-mile long, double-circuit 230kV transmission line. Approximately 7.6
miles of this new line would be outside
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the project area, but is included in the
analysis. The transmission line would
occupy approximately 92 acres.
The BLM has entered into a MOU
with the California Energy Commission
(CEC) to conduct a joint environmental
review of solar thermal projects that are
proposed on Federal land managed by
the BLM, with the CEC as the lead
agency preparing the environmental
documents. The BLM and CEC have
agreed through the MOU to conduct the
review of the IVS Project in a single
combined NEPA/California
Environmental Quality Act process and
document.
The Notice of Intent to Prepare an
EIS/Staff Assessment and Proposed
Land Use Plan Amendment for the
Proposed Imperial Valley Solar Project
in Imperial County, California was
published on October 17, 2008 (see 73
FR 61902). The BLM held two public
scoping meetings in El Centro,
California, on November 24 and
December 18, 2008. The formal scoping
period ended January 2, 2010. The BLM
invited the National Park Service to
enter a Memorandum of Understanding
(MOU), as a cooperating agency in the
EIS, for its special expertise concerning
the Juan Batista de Anza National
Historic Trail.
In addition, the BLM and the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers (Corps)
entered into an MOU to formalize the
Corps as a Federal cooperating agency
in developing the Final EIS. The Corps’
requirements under the Clean Water Act
(CWA), Section 404(b)(1) Guidelines are
to identify and authorize only the Least
Environmentally Damaging Practicable
Alternative which maximizes avoidance
and minimizes impacts to aquatic
resources of the United States. The
Corps and the applicant are working
with the BLM and CEC to identify the
project proposal that would reasonably
comply with the Corps’ requirements
under the CWA and 404(b)(1)
Guidelines.
The Notice of Availability of the Draft
Environmental Impact Statement/Staff
Assessment for the Stirling Energy
Systems Solar Two Project and Possible
California Desert Conservation Area
Plan Amendment was published in the
Federal Register on February 22, 2010
(see 75 FR 7624). Comments on the
Draft RMP Amendment/Draft EIS/Staff
Assessment received from the public
and internal BLM review were
considered and incorporated, as
appropriate, into the proposed plan
amendment.
Public comments resulted in the
addition of clarifying text, but did not
significantly change the proposed land
use plan decision.
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The BLM’s purpose and need for the
Solar Two project EIS/SA is to respond
to IVS LLC’s application under Title V
of FLPMA (43 U.S.C. 1761) for a ROW
grant to construct, operate, and
decommission a solar thermal facility
on public lands in compliance with
FLPMA, the BLM ROW regulations, and
other applicable Federal laws.
The BLM will decide whether to
approve, approve with modification, or
deny a ROW grant to IVS, LLC for the
proposed IVS project. The BLM will
also consider amending the California
Desert Conservation Area (CDCA) Plan
(1980, as amended) through this
analysis. The CDCA Plan, while
recognizing the potential compatibility
of solar generation facilities on public
lands, requires that all sites associated
with power generation or transmission
not identified in that plan be considered
through the BLM’s land use plan
amendment process. If the BLM decides
to grant a ROW, the BLM would also
amend the CDCA Plan.
In the Final EIS analysis, the BLM’s
proposed action is to authorize the IVS
Project and approve a CDCA Plan
amendment in response to the
application received from IVS. In
addition to analyzing the proposed
action, the BLM has analyzed the
following alternatives: Authorize a
smaller 300 MW alternative and amend
the CDCA Plan; authorize the project as
described in the Drainage Avoidance #1
alternative that may reduce impacts to
primary water drainages of the United
States and amend the CDCA Plan; and
authorize the project as described in the
more restrictive Drainage Avoidance #2
alternative that may substantially
reduce impacts in eastern and western
high flow water drainages of the United
States and amend the CDCA Plan. As
required under the California
Environmental Quality Act and NEPA,
the EIS analyzes a No Action alternative
that would not require a CDCA Plan
amendment. The BLM has also analyzed
a No Project alternative to deny the
project, but amend the CDCA Plan to
potentially allow other solar energy
power generation projects on the project
site. The BLM additionally has analyzed
a No Project alternative to deny the
project and amend the CDCA Plan to
prohibit solar energy power generation
projects on the project site. The BLM
has taken into consideration the
provisions of the Energy Policy Act of
2005 and Secretarial Orders 3283
Enhancing Renewable Energy
Development on the Public Lands and
3285A1 Renewable Energy Development
by the Department of the Interior in
responding to the IVS application.
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44279
The BLM evaluated the potential
impacts of the proposed IVS Project in
this EIS on air quality, biological
resources, cultural resources, water
resources, geological resources and
hazards, land use, noise, paleontological
resources, public health,
socioeconomics, soils, traffic and
transportation, visual resources, and
other resources.
Instructions for filing a protest with
the Director of the BLM regarding the
Proposed RMP Amendment may be
found in the Final EIS ‘‘Dear Reader’’
Letter and at 43 CFR 1610.5–2. Protests
must be received by the Director by the
close of the protest period to be
accepted as valid. Protests that are
postmarked by the close of the protest
period, but received by the Director after
the close of the protest period will only
be accepted as valid if the protesting
party also provides a faxed or e-mailed
advance copy before the close of the
protest period.
E-mailed and faxed protests will not
be accepted as valid protests unless the
protesting party also provides the
original letter by either regular or
overnight mail by the close of the
protest period. Under these conditions,
the BLM will consider the e-mailed or
faxed protest as an advance copy that
will receive full consideration. If you
wish to provide the BLM with such
advance notification, please direct faxed
protests to the attention of the BLM
protest coordinator at (202) 912–7212,
and e-mails to Brenda_HudgensWilliams@blm.gov.
All protests, including the follow-up
letter to e-mails or faxes, must be in
writing and mailed to the appropriate
address, as set forth in the ADDRESSES
section above.
Before including your phone number,
e-mail address, or other personal
identifying information in your protest,
you should be aware that your entire
protest—including your personal
identifying information—may be made
publicly available at any time. While
you can ask us in your protest to
withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able to
do so.
Thomas Pogacnik,
Deputy State Director, Natural Resources.
Authority: 40 CFR 1506.6, 1506.10 and 43
CFR 1610.2, 1610.5.
[FR Doc. 2010–18471 Filed 7–27–10; 8:45 am]
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 144 (Wednesday, July 28, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 44278-44279]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-18471]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[CACA 47740, LLCAD07000, L51030000.FX0000, LVRAB109AA01]
Notice of Availability of the Final Environmental Impact
Statement for the Imperial Valley Solar, LLC Project, California and
the Proposed California Desert Conservation Area Plan Amendment
AGENCY: Bureau of Land Management, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In accordance with the National Environmental Policy Act of
1969, as amended (NEPA), and the Federal Land Policy and Management Act
of 1976, as amended (FLPMA), the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) has
prepared a Proposed Resource Management Plan (RMP) Amendment/Final
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the Imperial Valley Solar, LLC
(IVS) Project and by this notice is announcing its availability.
DATES: The BLM planning regulations state that any person who meets the
conditions described in the regulations may protest the BLM's Proposed
RMP Amendment. A person who meets the conditions must file the protest
within 30 days after the date the Environmental Protection Agency
publishes its notice of availability in the Federal Register. The BLM
will also be accepting additional public comments on the RMP/EIS within
30 days after the date that the Environmental Protection Agency
publishes its Notice of Availibility in the Federal Register. Comments
can be sent to Jim Stobaugh at the addresses given below. All
substantive comments will be reviewed and responded to in the Record of
Decision.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the Proposed RMP Amendment/Final EIS are available
for public inspection at the El Centro Field Office, 1661 S. 4th
Street, El Centro, California 92243. Interested persons may also review
the Proposed RMP Amendment/Final EIS on the following Web site: https://www.blm.gov/ca/st/en/fo/elcentro/nepa/stirling.html. All protests must
be in writing and mailed to one of the following addresses:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regular mail Overnight mail
------------------------------------------------------------------------
BLM Director (210), Attention: Brenda BLM Director (210),
Williams, P.O. Box 66538, Washington, DC Attention: Brenda Williams,
20035. 1620 L Street, NW., Suite
1075, Washington, DC 20036.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
All comments must be in writing and sent to Jim Stobaugh, BLM
Project Manager, by mail at Bureau of Land Management, P.O. Box 12000,
Reno, Nevada 89520; or by e-mail at Jim_Stobaugh@blm.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jim Stobaugh, BLM Project Manager, by
telephone at (775) 861-6478; through mail at Bureau of Land Management,
P.O. Box 12000, Reno, Nevada 89520; or by e-mail at Jim_Stobaugh@blm.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Stirling Energy Systems (SES) filed right-
of-way (ROW) application CACA-47740 for the SES Solar Two Project.
Afrter merging with Tessera Soar the applicant changed its name to
Imperial Valley Solar, LLC. The project name, SES Solar Two, has also
been changed to the Imperial Valley Solar, LLC project. The proposed
IVS Project is a concentrated solar electrical generating facility
capable of generating 709 megawatts (MW) of renewable power. The entire
project encompasses approximately 6,144 acres of BLM-managed lands. The
project site is in Imperial County, California, approximately 4 miles
east of Ocotillo and 14 miles west of El Centro. Generally, the site is
bounded on the north by the San Diego Metropolitan Transit System/San
Diego and Arizona Eastern Railway and on the south by Interstate
Highway 8. The eastern boundary is approximately 1.5 miles west of
Dunaway Road and the western boundary is the westerly section line in
Section 22 in Township 16 South, Range 12 East. An additional 110-acre
laydown construction area is proposed east of Dunaway Road.
IVS proposes to use SunCatcher technology on the site. A SunCatcher
is a 25-kilowatt solar dish designed to automatically track the sun and
collect and focus solar energy onto a power conversion unit (PCU),
which generates electricity. The system consists of a 38-foot high by
40-foot wide solar concentrator in a dish structure that supports an
array of curved glass mirror facets. These mirrors concentrate solar
energy onto the solar receiver of the PCU.
The project also includes an electrical transmission line, water
supply pipeline, and access road. A new 230-kilovolt (kV) substation
would be constructed in approximately the center of the project site
near a main services complex that is also part of the proposal. The
substation would be connected to the existing San Diego Gas and
Electric Imperial Valley Substation by a 10.3-mile long, double-circuit
230-kV transmission line. Approximately 7.6 miles of this new line
would be outside
[[Page 44279]]
the project area, but is included in the analysis. The transmission
line would occupy approximately 92 acres.
The BLM has entered into a MOU with the California Energy
Commission (CEC) to conduct a joint environmental review of solar
thermal projects that are proposed on Federal land managed by the BLM,
with the CEC as the lead agency preparing the environmental documents.
The BLM and CEC have agreed through the MOU to conduct the review of
the IVS Project in a single combined NEPA/California Environmental
Quality Act process and document.
The Notice of Intent to Prepare an EIS/Staff Assessment and
Proposed Land Use Plan Amendment for the Proposed Imperial Valley Solar
Project in Imperial County, California was published on October 17,
2008 (see 73 FR 61902). The BLM held two public scoping meetings in El
Centro, California, on November 24 and December 18, 2008. The formal
scoping period ended January 2, 2010. The BLM invited the National Park
Service to enter a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU), as a cooperating
agency in the EIS, for its special expertise concerning the Juan
Batista de Anza National Historic Trail.
In addition, the BLM and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Corps)
entered into an MOU to formalize the Corps as a Federal cooperating
agency in developing the Final EIS. The Corps' requirements under the
Clean Water Act (CWA), Section 404(b)(1) Guidelines are to identify and
authorize only the Least Environmentally Damaging Practicable
Alternative which maximizes avoidance and minimizes impacts to aquatic
resources of the United States. The Corps and the applicant are working
with the BLM and CEC to identify the project proposal that would
reasonably comply with the Corps' requirements under the CWA and
404(b)(1) Guidelines.
The Notice of Availability of the Draft Environmental Impact
Statement/Staff Assessment for the Stirling Energy Systems Solar Two
Project and Possible California Desert Conservation Area Plan Amendment
was published in the Federal Register on February 22, 2010 (see 75 FR
7624). Comments on the Draft RMP Amendment/Draft EIS/Staff Assessment
received from the public and internal BLM review were considered and
incorporated, as appropriate, into the proposed plan amendment.
Public comments resulted in the addition of clarifying text, but
did not significantly change the proposed land use plan decision.
The BLM's purpose and need for the Solar Two project EIS/SA is to
respond to IVS LLC's application under Title V of FLPMA (43 U.S.C.
1761) for a ROW grant to construct, operate, and decommission a solar
thermal facility on public lands in compliance with FLPMA, the BLM ROW
regulations, and other applicable Federal laws.
The BLM will decide whether to approve, approve with modification,
or deny a ROW grant to IVS, LLC for the proposed IVS project. The BLM
will also consider amending the California Desert Conservation Area
(CDCA) Plan (1980, as amended) through this analysis. The CDCA Plan,
while recognizing the potential compatibility of solar generation
facilities on public lands, requires that all sites associated with
power generation or transmission not identified in that plan be
considered through the BLM's land use plan amendment process. If the
BLM decides to grant a ROW, the BLM would also amend the CDCA Plan.
In the Final EIS analysis, the BLM's proposed action is to
authorize the IVS Project and approve a CDCA Plan amendment in response
to the application received from IVS. In addition to analyzing the
proposed action, the BLM has analyzed the following alternatives:
Authorize a smaller 300 MW alternative and amend the CDCA Plan;
authorize the project as described in the Drainage Avoidance 1
alternative that may reduce impacts to primary water drainages of the
United States and amend the CDCA Plan; and authorize the project as
described in the more restrictive Drainage Avoidance 2
alternative that may substantially reduce impacts in eastern and
western high flow water drainages of the United States and amend the
CDCA Plan. As required under the California Environmental Quality Act
and NEPA, the EIS analyzes a No Action alternative that would not
require a CDCA Plan amendment. The BLM has also analyzed a No Project
alternative to deny the project, but amend the CDCA Plan to potentially
allow other solar energy power generation projects on the project site.
The BLM additionally has analyzed a No Project alternative to deny the
project and amend the CDCA Plan to prohibit solar energy power
generation projects on the project site. The BLM has taken into
consideration the provisions of the Energy Policy Act of 2005 and
Secretarial Orders 3283 Enhancing Renewable Energy Development on the
Public Lands and 3285A1 Renewable Energy Development by the Department
of the Interior in responding to the IVS application.
The BLM evaluated the potential impacts of the proposed IVS Project
in this EIS on air quality, biological resources, cultural resources,
water resources, geological resources and hazards, land use, noise,
paleontological resources, public health, socioeconomics, soils,
traffic and transportation, visual resources, and other resources.
Instructions for filing a protest with the Director of the BLM
regarding the Proposed RMP Amendment may be found in the Final EIS
``Dear Reader'' Letter and at 43 CFR 1610.5-2. Protests must be
received by the Director by the close of the protest period to be
accepted as valid. Protests that are postmarked by the close of the
protest period, but received by the Director after the close of the
protest period will only be accepted as valid if the protesting party
also provides a faxed or e-mailed advance copy before the close of the
protest period.
E-mailed and faxed protests will not be accepted as valid protests
unless the protesting party also provides the original letter by either
regular or overnight mail by the close of the protest period. Under
these conditions, the BLM will consider the e-mailed or faxed protest
as an advance copy that will receive full consideration. If you wish to
provide the BLM with such advance notification, please direct faxed
protests to the attention of the BLM protest coordinator at (202) 912-
7212, and e-mails to Brenda_Hudgens-Williams@blm.gov.
All protests, including the follow-up letter to e-mails or faxes,
must be in writing and mailed to the appropriate address, as set forth
in the ADDRESSES section above.
Before including your phone number, e-mail address, or other
personal identifying information in your protest, you should be aware
that your entire protest--including your personal identifying
information--may be made publicly available at any time. While you can
ask us in your protest to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we cannot guarantee that we will be
able to do so.
Thomas Pogacnik,
Deputy State Director, Natural Resources.
Authority: 40 CFR 1506.6, 1506.10 and 43 CFR 1610.2, 1610.5.
[FR Doc. 2010-18471 Filed 7-27-10; 8:45 am]
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