Public Input for the Study Regarding the Oversight of Existing and Prospective Carbon Markets, 72816-72818 [2010-29780]
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 227 / Friday, November 26, 2010 / Notices
3. There are no known regulatory
alternatives which would accomplish
the objectives of the Javits-WagnerO’Day Act (41 U.S.C. 46–48c) in
connection with the services proposed
for addition to the Procurement List.
CONTACT PERSON FOR MORE INFORMATION:
[FR Doc. 2010–29902 Filed 11–23–10; 11:15 am]
[FR Doc. 2010–29901 Filed 11–23–10; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 6351–01–P
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING
COMMISSION
Sunshine Act Meetings
SERVICES
Service Type/Location: Custodial Service,
National Weather Service, 728 & 732
Woodlane Rd, Mt. Holly, NJ.
NPA: Occupational Training Center of
Burlington County, Mt. Holly, NJ.
Contracting Activity: Dept of Commerce,
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, Norfolk, VA.
Service Type/Location: Custodial Service,
Joint Base Lewis-McChord, WA.
NPA: Skookum Educational Programs,
Bremerton, WA.
Contracting Activity: Dept of the Army, XR
W6BB ACA Knox, Fort Knox, KY.
Sauntia S. Warfield,
Assistant Secretary of the Commission.
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING
COMMISSION
Accordingly, the following services
are added to the Procurement List:
Sauntia S. Warfield, 202–418–5084.
Sauntia S. Warfield,
Assistant Secretary of the Commission.
BILLING CODE 6351–01–P
End of Certification
Public Input for the Study Regarding
the Oversight of Existing and
Prospective Carbon Markets
11 a.m., Friday
December 10, 2010.
TIME AND DATE:
1155 21st St., NW., Washington,
DC, 9th Floor Commission Conference
Room.
PLACE:
STATUS:
MATTERS TO BE CONSIDERED:
Surveillance
and Enforcement Matters.
CONTACT PERSON FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Sauntia S. Warfield, 202–418–5084.
[FR Doc. 2010–29754 Filed 11–24–10; 8:45 am]
Sauntia S. Warfield,
Assistant Secretary of the Commission.
[FR Doc. 2010–29903 Filed 11–23–10; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 6353–01–P
BILLING CODE 6351–01–P
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING
COMMISSION
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING
COMMISSION
Sunshine Act Meetings
Sunshine Act Meetings
11 a.m., Friday
December 31, 2010.
PLACE: 1155 21st St., NW., Washington,
DC, 9th Floor Commission Conference
Room.
STATUS: Closed.
MATTERS TO BE CONSIDERED: Surveillance
and Enforcement Matters.
CONTACT PERSON FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Sauntia S. Warfield, 202–418–5084.
TIME AND DATE:
11 a.m., Friday
December 3, 2010.
TIME AND DATE:
1155 21st St., NW., Washington,
DC, 9th Floor Commission Conference
Room.
PLACE:
STATUS:
Closed.
MATTERS TO BE CONSIDERED:
Surveillance
and Enforcement Matters.
CONTACT PERSON FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Sauntia S. Warfield, 202–418–5084.
Sauntia S. Warfield,
Assistant Secretary of the Commission.
[FR Doc. 2010–29899 Filed 11–23–10; 11:15 am]
[FR Doc. 2010–29904 Filed 11–23–10; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 6351–01–P
BILLING CODE 6351–01–P
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING
COMMISSION
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING
COMMISSION
Sunshine Act Meetings
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with NOTICES
Sauntia S. Warfield,
Assistant Secretary of the Commission.
Sunshine Act Meetings
11 a.m., Friday
December 17, 2010.
PLACE: 1155 21st St., NW., Washington,
DC, 9th Floor Commission Conference
Room.
STATUS: Closed.
MATTERS TO BE CONSIDERED: Surveillance
and Enforcement Matters.
TIME AND DATE:
TIME AND DATE:
16:32 Nov 24, 2010
Jkt 223001
1155 21st St., NW., Washington,
DC, 9th Floor Commission Conference
Room.
PLACE:
Closed.
MATTERS TO BE CONSIDERED:
Surveillance
and Enforcement Matters.
PO 00000
Frm 00037
Fmt 4703
Section 750 of the DoddFrank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act (the ‘‘Dodd-Frank Act’’ or
‘‘Act’’) establishes an interagency
working group (‘‘interagency group’’),
headed by the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission (the ‘‘CFTC’’), to
conduct a study on the oversight of
existing and prospective carbon markets
to ensure an efficient, secure, and
transparent carbon market, including
oversight of spot markets and derivative
markets. The members of the
interagency group are the Chairman of
the CFTC, the Secretary of Agriculture,
the Secretary of the Treasury, the
Chairman of the Securities and
Exchange Commission, the
Administrator of the Environmental
Protection Agency, the Chairman of the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission,
the Chairman of the Federal Trade
Commission and the Administrator of
the Energy Information Administration,
or their designees. In conducting the
study, the Dodd-Frank Act directs the
interagency group to consult, as
appropriate, with representatives of
exchanges, clearing houses, selfregulatory bodies, major carbon market
participants, consumers, and the general
public. To assist the interagency group
in conducting the study and formulating
recommendations for the oversight of
existing and prospective carbon
markets, the CFTC is issuing this
request for information through public
comment.
Comments must be received on
or before December 17, 2010.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
by any of the following methods:
• Agency Web site, via its Comments
Online process: https://
comments.cftc.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments
through the Web site.
• Mail: David A. Stawick, Secretary of
the Commission, Commodity Futures
DATES:
11 a.m., Friday
December 24, 2010.
STATUS:
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission.
ACTION: Notice and request for comment.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY:
Closed.
Patricia Briscoe,
Deputy Director, Business Operations.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
CONTACT PERSON FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Sauntia S. Warfield, 202–418–5084.
Sfmt 4703
E:\FR\FM\26NON1.SGM
26NON1
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 227 / Friday, November 26, 2010 / Notices
Trading Commission, Three Lafayette
Centre, 1155 21st Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20581.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: Same as
mail above.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
All comments must be submitted in
English, or if not, accompanied by an
English translation. Comments will be
posted as received to https://
www.cftc.gov. You should submit only
information that you wish to make
available publicly. If you wish the
Commission to consider information
that is exempt from disclosure under the
Freedom of Information Act, a petition
for confidential treatment of the exempt
information may be submitted according
to the procedure established in CFTC
regulation 145.9 (17 CFR 145.9). The
Commission reserves the right, but shall
have no obligation, to review, prescreen, filter, redact, refuse or remove
any or all of your submission from
www.cftc.gov that it may deem to be
inappropriate for publication, such as
obscene language. All submissions that
have been redacted or removed that
contain comments on the substance of
the request for comments will be
retained in the public comment file.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Gregory Kuserk, Chief, Market Analysis
and Strategic Review Branch, Division
of Market Oversight, 202–418–5286,
Irina Leonova, Financial Analyst,
Division of Market Oversight, 202–418–
5646, or Nela Richardson, Research
Economist, Office of the Chief
Economist, 202–418–5592, Commodity
Futures Trading Commission, Three
Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20581.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with NOTICES
I. Background
Recently a number of legislative
proposals have been introduced in
Congress setting out various approaches
to reducing carbon emissions. Some of
the proposals contain a market-based
policy instrument. Various forms of
carbon markets have also been
established internationally as well as
domestically. Some of the examples of
those markets are the European Union
Emission Trading Scheme, the Clean
Development Mechanism, and the
Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative. In
addition, markets exist in the U.S. for
the trading of sulfur dioxide allowances
under the EPA Acid Rain program and
nitrogen oxide under the EPA NOX
Trading program. The CFTC also
oversees the derivative trading of a
number of environmental instruments
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:32 Nov 24, 2010
Jkt 223001
on the Chicago Climate Futures
Exchange and the Green Exchange.1
Under the various bills, different
proposals have been set forth with
respect to the oversight of a carbon
market that would be established in
those bills.
On July 21, 2010 the Dodd-Frank Act
was enacted.2 Section 750 of the Act
establishes an interagency working
group to study the oversight of existing
and prospective carbon markets. The
interagency group is composed of the
following members or designees: The
Chairman of the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission, who shall serve as
the Chairman of the interagency group,
the Secretary of Agriculture, the
Secretary of the Treasury, the Chairman
of the Securities and Exchange
Commission, the Administrator of the
Environmental Protection Agency, the
Chairman of the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission, the Chairman
of the Federal Trade Commission 3 and
the Administrator of the Energy
Information Administration.
The Dodd-Frank Act directs the
interagency group to ‘‘conduct a study
on the oversight of existing and
prospective carbon markets to ensure an
efficient, secure, and transparent carbon
market, including oversight of spot
markets and derivative markets.’’ In
carrying out this study, the Act also
directs the interagency group to consult
with representatives of exchanges,
clearinghouses, self-regulatory bodies,
major carbon market participants,
consumers and the general public, as
the interagency group determines is
appropriate. Finally, the Act requires
the interagency group to submit to
Congress a report, no later than 180 days
after the date of enactment of the Act,
on the results of the study, including
recommendations regarding such
oversight.
II. Solicitation for Comments on the
Study on Oversight of Carbon Markets
To assist the interagency group in
conducting the study on oversight of a
carbon market, the CFTC seeks public
comment on the following topics and
questions:
1. Section 750 of the Dodd-Frank
indicates that the goals of regulatory
1 The CFTC designated the Green Exchange as a
contract market on July 22, 2010; however, the
exchange is not yet operational.
2 Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act, Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376
(2010).
3 The CFTC notes that the text of Section 750(a)(7)
of the Act references the ‘‘Commissioner of the
Federal Trade Commission’’ as a member of the
interagency group, and the CFTC interprets this text
as a reference to the Chairman of the Federal Trade
Commission.
PO 00000
Frm 00038
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
72817
oversight should be to ensure that
carbon markets are efficient, secure and
transparent. What other regulatory
objectives, if any, should guide the
oversight of such markets?
2. What are the basic economic
features that might be incorporated in a
carbon market that would have an effect
on market oversight provisions—e.g.,
the basic characteristics of allowances,
frequency of allocations and compliance
obligations, banking of allowances,
borrowing of allowances, cost
containment mechanisms, etc.?
3. Do the regulatory objectives differ
with respect to the oversight of spot
market trading of carbon allowances
compared to the oversight of derivatives
market trading in these instruments? If
so, explain further.
4. Are additional statutory provisions
necessary to achieve the desired
regulatory objectives for carbon markets
beyond those provided in the
Commodity Exchange Act, as amended
by the Dodd-Frank Act, or other federal
acts that may be applicable to the
trading of carbon allowances?
5. What regulatory methods or tools
would be appropriate to achieve the
desired regulatory objectives?
6. What types of data or information
should be required of market
participants in order to allow adequate
oversight of a carbon market? Should
reporting requirements differ for
separate types of market participants?
7. To what extent is it desirable or not
desirable to have a unified regulatory
oversight program that would oversee
activity in both the secondary carbon
market and in the derivatives markets?
8. To what extent, if any, and how
should a U.S. regulatory program
interact with the regulatory programs of
carbon markets in foreign jurisdictions?
9. What has been the experience of
state regulators in overseeing trading in
the regional carbon markets and how
would that instruct the design of a
federal oversight program?
10. Based on trading experiences in
SO2 and NOX emission allowances what
regulatory oversight would market
participants and market operators,
respectively, recommend?
11. Who are the primary participants
in the current primary environmental
markets? Who are the primary
participants in the current secondary
allowance and derivatives
environmental markets?
III. Paperwork Reduction Act
Pursuant to the Office of Management
and Budget (‘‘OMB’’) Regulation 5 CFR
1320.3(h)(4), this Notice and request for
comment published in the Federal
Register, which requests general public
E:\FR\FM\26NON1.SGM
26NON1
72818
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 227 / Friday, November 26, 2010 / Notices
comment, does not include a collection
of information that would require OMB
approval. Accordingly, the Paperwork
Reduction Act does not apply.
Issued in Washington, DC, on November
19, 2010 by the Commission.
Sauntia S. Warfield,
Assistant Secretary of the Commission.
[FR Doc. 2010–29780 Filed 11–24–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Office of the Secretary
[Docket ID DoD–2010–OS–0148]
Proposed Collection; Comment
Request
Business Transformation
Agency, DoD.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
In compliance with Section
3506(c)(2)(A) of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, the Business
Transformation Agency announces a
proposed new public information
collection and seeks public comment on
the provisions thereof. Comments are
invited on: (a) Whether the proposed
collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of the agency, including
whether the information shall have
practical utility; (b) the accuracy of the
agency’s estimate of the burden of the
proposed information collection; (c)
ways to enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and (d) ways to minimize the
burden of the information collection on
respondents, including through the use
of automated collection techniques or
other forms of information technology.
DATES: Consideration will be given to all
comments received by January 25, 2011.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by docket number and title,
by any of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Mail: Federal Docket Management
System Office, 1160 Defense Pentagon,
Washington, DC 20301–1160.
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the agency name, docket
number and title for this Federal
Register document. The general policy
for comments and other submissions
from members of the public is to make
these submissions available for public
viewing on the Internet at https://
www.regulations.gov as they are
received without change, including any
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:32 Nov 24, 2010
Jkt 223001
personal identifiers or contact
information.
Frequency: On occasion.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
To
request more information on this
proposed information collection or to
obtain a copy of the proposal and
associated collection instruments,
please write to the Business
Transformation Agency, Attn: Wide
Area Workflow Program Management
Office, 1851 S. Bell Street, Arlington,
VA 22240–5291.
Title; Associated Form; and OMB
Number: Wide Area Work Flow
(WAWF); OMB Control Number 0704–
TBD.
Needs and Uses: Wide Area Workflow
(WAWF) is a DoD enterprise, web-based
system that allows secure electronic
submission, acceptance and procession
of invoices and receiving reports in a
real-time, paperless environment,
resulting in complete transaction
visibility, fewer interest penalties and
reduced processing time. WAWF
provides the Department and its
suppliers the single point of entry to
generate, capture and process invoice,
acceptance and payments-related
documentation and data to support the
DoD asset visibility, tracking and
payment processes. WAWF also
provides the department with a single
point of entry to generate, capture and
process vouchers for miscellaneous
payment claims. Information in
identifiable form must be collected to
verify the identity and banking
information of claimants in order to
ensure that benefits are paid to the
correct individual. WAWF is not a
forms based application but it accepts
any supporting documentation as
attachments, including the following
forms in PDF format: DD1375 Request
for Payment of Funeral and/or
Internment Expenses (0704–0030);
SF182 Authorization, Agreement and
Certification of Training; SF270 Request
for Advance or Reimbursement (0348–
0004); SF1157 Claims for Witness
Attendance Fees, Travel and
Miscellaneous Expenses. The complete
list of miscellaneous payment categories
processed through WAWF is available
in appendix A of the DoD Guidebook for
Miscellaneous Payments.
Affected Public: DoD military
personnel, civilian employees,
dependents, members of the general
public to include Foreign Nationals, and
vendors providing goods or services to
the DoD.
Annual Burden Hours: 653,230 hours.
Number of Respondents: 59,683.
Responses per Respondent: Average
65.67.
Average Burden per Response: 10
minutes.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
PO 00000
Frm 00039
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Summary of Information Collection
The purpose of information collection
is to monitor the status of and
electronically process invoices,
receiving reports and individual claims
for payment through the review and
validation and approval phases for
submission to the Defense Finance and
Accounting Service for payment.
Dated: November 12, 2010.
Patricia L. Toppings,
OSD Federal Register Liaison Officer,
Department of Defense.
[FR Doc. 2010–29762 Filed 11–24–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 5001–06–P
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Notice of Submission for OMB Review
Department of Education.
Comment request.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Director, Information
Collection Clearance Division,
Regulatory Information Management
Services, Office of Management invites
comments on the submission for OMB
review as required by the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–13).
DATES: Interested persons are invited to
submit comments on or before
December 27, 2010.
ADDRESSES: Written comments should
be addressed to the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Attention: Education Desk Officer,
Office of Management and Budget, 725
17th Street, NW., Room 10222, New
Executive Office Building, Washington,
DC 20503, be faxed to (202) 395–5806 or
e-mailed to
oira_submission@omb.eop.gov with a
cc: to ICDocketMgr@ed.gov. Please note
that written comments received in
response to this notice will be
considered public records.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Section
3506 of the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 (44 U.S.C. Chapter 35) requires
that the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) provide interested
Federal agencies and the public an early
opportunity to comment on information
collection requests. The OMB is
particularly interested in comments
which: (1) Evaluate whether the
proposed collection of information is
necessary for the proper performance of
the functions of the agency, including
whether the information will have
practical utility; (2) Evaluate the
accuracy of the agency’s estimate of the
burden of the proposed collection of
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\26NON1.SGM
26NON1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 227 (Friday, November 26, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 72816-72818]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-29780]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
Public Input for the Study Regarding the Oversight of Existing
and Prospective Carbon Markets
AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
ACTION: Notice and request for comment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Section 750 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act (the ``Dodd-Frank Act'' or ``Act'') establishes an
interagency working group (``interagency group''), headed by the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (the ``CFTC''), to conduct a study
on the oversight of existing and prospective carbon markets to ensure
an efficient, secure, and transparent carbon market, including
oversight of spot markets and derivative markets. The members of the
interagency group are the Chairman of the CFTC, the Secretary of
Agriculture, the Secretary of the Treasury, the Chairman of the
Securities and Exchange Commission, the Administrator of the
Environmental Protection Agency, the Chairman of the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission, the Chairman of the Federal Trade Commission and
the Administrator of the Energy Information Administration, or their
designees. In conducting the study, the Dodd-Frank Act directs the
interagency group to consult, as appropriate, with representatives of
exchanges, clearing houses, self-regulatory bodies, major carbon market
participants, consumers, and the general public. To assist the
interagency group in conducting the study and formulating
recommendations for the oversight of existing and prospective carbon
markets, the CFTC is issuing this request for information through
public comment.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before December 17, 2010.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments by any of the following methods:
Agency Web site, via its Comments Online process: https://comments.cftc.gov. Follow the instructions for submitting comments
through the Web site.
Mail: David A. Stawick, Secretary of the Commission,
Commodity Futures
[[Page 72817]]
Trading Commission, Three Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20581.
Hand Delivery/Courier: Same as mail above.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
All comments must be submitted in English, or if not, accompanied
by an English translation. Comments will be posted as received to
https://www.cftc.gov. You should submit only information that you wish
to make available publicly. If you wish the Commission to consider
information that is exempt from disclosure under the Freedom of
Information Act, a petition for confidential treatment of the exempt
information may be submitted according to the procedure established in
CFTC regulation 145.9 (17 CFR 145.9). The Commission reserves the
right, but shall have no obligation, to review, pre-screen, filter,
redact, refuse or remove any or all of your submission from
www.cftc.gov that it may deem to be inappropriate for publication, such
as obscene language. All submissions that have been redacted or removed
that contain comments on the substance of the request for comments will
be retained in the public comment file.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Gregory Kuserk, Chief, Market Analysis
and Strategic Review Branch, Division of Market Oversight, 202-418-
5286, Irina Leonova, Financial Analyst, Division of Market Oversight,
202-418-5646, or Nela Richardson, Research Economist, Office of the
Chief Economist, 202-418-5592, Commodity Futures Trading Commission,
Three Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st Street, NW., Washington, DC 20581.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Recently a number of legislative proposals have been introduced in
Congress setting out various approaches to reducing carbon emissions.
Some of the proposals contain a market-based policy instrument. Various
forms of carbon markets have also been established internationally as
well as domestically. Some of the examples of those markets are the
European Union Emission Trading Scheme, the Clean Development
Mechanism, and the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative. In addition,
markets exist in the U.S. for the trading of sulfur dioxide allowances
under the EPA Acid Rain program and nitrogen oxide under the EPA
NOX Trading program. The CFTC also oversees the derivative
trading of a number of environmental instruments on the Chicago Climate
Futures Exchange and the Green Exchange.\1\ Under the various bills,
different proposals have been set forth with respect to the oversight
of a carbon market that would be established in those bills.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The CFTC designated the Green Exchange as a contract market
on July 22, 2010; however, the exchange is not yet operational.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On July 21, 2010 the Dodd-Frank Act was enacted.\2\ Section 750 of
the Act establishes an interagency working group to study the oversight
of existing and prospective carbon markets. The interagency group is
composed of the following members or designees: The Chairman of the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission, who shall serve as the Chairman
of the interagency group, the Secretary of Agriculture, the Secretary
of the Treasury, the Chairman of the Securities and Exchange
Commission, the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency,
the Chairman of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, the Chairman
of the Federal Trade Commission \3\ and the Administrator of the Energy
Information Administration.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act,
Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010).
\3\ The CFTC notes that the text of Section 750(a)(7) of the Act
references the ``Commissioner of the Federal Trade Commission'' as a
member of the interagency group, and the CFTC interprets this text
as a reference to the Chairman of the Federal Trade Commission.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Dodd-Frank Act directs the interagency group to ``conduct a
study on the oversight of existing and prospective carbon markets to
ensure an efficient, secure, and transparent carbon market, including
oversight of spot markets and derivative markets.'' In carrying out
this study, the Act also directs the interagency group to consult with
representatives of exchanges, clearinghouses, self-regulatory bodies,
major carbon market participants, consumers and the general public, as
the interagency group determines is appropriate. Finally, the Act
requires the interagency group to submit to Congress a report, no later
than 180 days after the date of enactment of the Act, on the results of
the study, including recommendations regarding such oversight.
II. Solicitation for Comments on the Study on Oversight of Carbon
Markets
To assist the interagency group in conducting the study on
oversight of a carbon market, the CFTC seeks public comment on the
following topics and questions:
1. Section 750 of the Dodd-Frank indicates that the goals of
regulatory oversight should be to ensure that carbon markets are
efficient, secure and transparent. What other regulatory objectives, if
any, should guide the oversight of such markets?
2. What are the basic economic features that might be incorporated
in a carbon market that would have an effect on market oversight
provisions--e.g., the basic characteristics of allowances, frequency of
allocations and compliance obligations, banking of allowances,
borrowing of allowances, cost containment mechanisms, etc.?
3. Do the regulatory objectives differ with respect to the
oversight of spot market trading of carbon allowances compared to the
oversight of derivatives market trading in these instruments? If so,
explain further.
4. Are additional statutory provisions necessary to achieve the
desired regulatory objectives for carbon markets beyond those provided
in the Commodity Exchange Act, as amended by the Dodd-Frank Act, or
other federal acts that may be applicable to the trading of carbon
allowances?
5. What regulatory methods or tools would be appropriate to achieve
the desired regulatory objectives?
6. What types of data or information should be required of market
participants in order to allow adequate oversight of a carbon market?
Should reporting requirements differ for separate types of market
participants?
7. To what extent is it desirable or not desirable to have a
unified regulatory oversight program that would oversee activity in
both the secondary carbon market and in the derivatives markets?
8. To what extent, if any, and how should a U.S. regulatory program
interact with the regulatory programs of carbon markets in foreign
jurisdictions?
9. What has been the experience of state regulators in overseeing
trading in the regional carbon markets and how would that instruct the
design of a federal oversight program?
10. Based on trading experiences in SO2 and
NOX emission allowances what regulatory oversight would
market participants and market operators, respectively, recommend?
11. Who are the primary participants in the current primary
environmental markets? Who are the primary participants in the current
secondary allowance and derivatives environmental markets?
III. Paperwork Reduction Act
Pursuant to the Office of Management and Budget (``OMB'')
Regulation 5 CFR 1320.3(h)(4), this Notice and request for comment
published in the Federal Register, which requests general public
[[Page 72818]]
comment, does not include a collection of information that would
require OMB approval. Accordingly, the Paperwork Reduction Act does not
apply.
Issued in Washington, DC, on November 19, 2010 by the
Commission.
Sauntia S. Warfield,
Assistant Secretary of the Commission.
[FR Doc. 2010-29780 Filed 11-24-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P