Notice of Intent To Prepare a Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement for the Hawai‘i Interisland Renewable Energy Program: Wind (DOE/EIS-0459), 77859-77861 [2010-31310]
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 239 / Tuesday, December 14, 2010 / Notices
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section of
this notice.
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with NOTICES
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Nelson Hastings, NIST Voting Program,
Information Technology Laboratory,
National Institute of Standards and
Technology, 100 Bureau Drive, Stop
8930, Gaithersburg, MD 20899–8930,
telephone: (301) 975–5237.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Pursuant
to the Federal Advisory Committee Act,
5 U.S.C. App., notice is hereby given
that the TGDC will meet Thursday,
January 13, 2011 from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30
p.m., Eastern time, and Friday, January
14, 2011 from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.,
Eastern time. Topics that will be
discussed at the meeting include
UOCAVA (Uniformed and Overseas
Citizens Absentee Voting Act),
Auditability, and Usability and
Accessibility issues. The full meeting
agenda will be posted in advance at
https://vote.nist.gov. All sessions of this
meeting will be open to the public. A
live Webcast of this meeting will be
available at https://vote.nist.gov.
The TGDC was established pursuant
to 42 U.S.C. 15361, to act in the public
interest to assist the Executive Director
of the Election Assistance Commission
(EAC) in the development of voluntary
voting system guidelines. Details
regarding the TGDC’s activities are
available at https://vote.nist.gov.
All visitors to the National Institute of
Standards and Technology site will
have to pre-register to be admitted.
Anyone wishing to attend this meeting
must register by c.o.b. Thursday,
January 6, 2011, in order to attend.
Please submit your name, time of
arrival, e-mail address and phone
number to Mary Lou Norris or Angela
Ellis, and they will provide you with
instructions for admittance. Non-U.S.
citizens must also submit their country
of citizenship, title, employer/sponsor,
and address. Mary Lou Norris’ e-mail
address is marylou.norris@nist.gov, and
her phone number is (301) 975–2002.
Angela Ellis’ e-mail address is
angela.ellis@nist.gov, and her phone
number is (301) 975–3881.
If you are in need of a disability
accommodation, such as the need for
Sign Language Interpretation, please
contact Nelson Hastings by c.o.b.
Thursday, January 6, 2011.
Members of the public who wish to
speak at this meeting may send a
request to participate to Nelson Hastings
by c.o.b. Thursday, January 6, 2011.
Individuals and representatives of
organizations who would like to offer
comments and suggestions related to the
Committee’s affairs are invited to
request a place on the agenda. On
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:09 Dec 13, 2010
Jkt 223001
January 13, 2011, approximately 30
minutes will be reserved for public
comments at the end of the open
session. Speaking times will be assigned
on a first-come, first-served basis. The
amount of time per speaker will be
determined by the number of requests
received, but is likely to be no more
than 3 to 5 minutes each. Participants
who are chosen will receive
confirmation from the contact listed
above that they were selected by 12 p.m.
Eastern time on Tuesday, January 11,
2011.
The general public, including those
who are not selected to speak, may
submit written comments, which will be
distributed to TGDC members so long as
they are received no later than 12 p.m.
Eastern time on Tuesday, January 11,
2011. All comments will also be posted
on https://vote.nist.gov.
Donetta Davidson,
Chair, U.S. Election Assistance Commission.
[FR Doc. 2010–31476 Filed 12–10–10; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 6820–KF–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Notice of Intent To Prepare a
Programmatic Environmental Impact
Statement for the Hawai‘i Interisland
Renewable Energy Program: Wind
(DOE/EIS–0459)
Department of Energy (DOE).
Notice of intent to prepare a
Programmatic Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS).
AGENCY:
ACTION:
DOE announces its intention
to prepare a Programmatic EIS with the
State of Hawai‘i as joint lead agencies
pursuant to the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA) of 1969 and the
Hawai‘i Environmental Policy Act. The
Hawai‘i Interisland Renewable Energy
Program: Wind Programmatic
Environmental Impact Statement
(hereinafter referred to as the Hawai‘i
Wind EIS or the EIS) will assess the
foreseeable environmental impacts
which may arise from wind energy
development under the Hawai‘i
Interisland Renewable Energy Program
(HIREP). Hawai‘i proposes to facilitate
the development of wind-generated
electric energy and the required
improvements to the existing electric
transmission infrastructure in Hawai‘i.
This EIS is the first phase of a
programmatic environmental review of
developing and increasing renewable
energy technologies in Hawai‘i.
DATES: The public scoping period starts
with the publication of this Notice in
the Federal Register. Comments on the
SUMMARY:
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77859
scope of the EIS should be submitted by
March 1, 2011. Comments e-mailed or
postmarked after that date will be
considered to the extent practicable.
DOE and Hawai‘i will hold public
scoping meetings in the first quarter of
2011. Dates will be announced in the
Federal Register, on the DOE NEPA
Web site at https://www.nepa.energy.gov,
on the EIS Web site at https://www.hirepwind.com, and in local media at least 15
days before each meeting.
ADDRESSES: DOE and Hawai‘i will
announce locations of scoping meetings
as indicated in DATES. Send comments
on the scope of the Hawai‘i Wind EIS or
a request to be added to the EIS
distribution list:
• By e-mail to comments@hirepwind.com.
• By submitting electronic comments
on the EIS Web page at https://
www.hirep-wind.com.
• By facsimile (fax) to 808–586–2536,
Attention Allen G. Kam.
• By mail to Allen G. Kam, Esq.,
AICP, HIREP EIS Manager, State of
Hawai‘i, Department of Business,
Economic Development and Tourism,
Renewable Energy Branch, State Energy
Office, P.O. Box 2359, Honolulu, HI
96804.
Information on the HIREP: Wind
Phase is available at the EIS Web site at
https://www.hirep-wind.com. This Notice
of Intent, and the draft and final EIS
when issued, also will be posted on the
DOE NEPA Web site at https://
www.nepa.energy.gov. These documents
and additional materials relating to this
EIS will be available at:
• Hawai‘i State Library, 478 South
King Street, Honolulu HI 96813.
¯
• Lana‘i Public and School Library,
¯
555 Fraser Ave, Lana‘i City, HI 96763.
• Wailuku Public Library, 251 High
Street, Wailuku, HI 96793.
• Moloka‘i Public Library, 15
Alamalama, Kaunakakai, HI 96748.
• Edwin H. Mo‘okini Library,
University of Hawai‘i–Hilo, 200 West
¯
Kawili Street, Hilo, HI 96720–4091.
• Kailua-Kona Public Library, 75–138
¯
Hualalai Road, Kailua-Kona, HI 96740–
1704.
¯
• Lıhu‘e Public Library, 4344 Hardy
¯
Street, Lıhu‘e, HI 96766.
• DOE Freedom of Information Act
Public Reading Room, 1000
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
information on DOE’s proposed action,
contact Anthony J. Como, DOE NEPA
Document Manager, Office of Electricity
Delivery and Energy Reliability (OE–20),
U.S. Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Avenue, SW.,
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77860
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 239 / Tuesday, December 14, 2010 / Notices
Washington, DC 20585; or at
anthony.como@hq.doe.gov. For general
information about the DOE NEPA
process, contact Carol Borgstrom,
Director, Office of NEPA Policy and
Compliance (GC–54), U.S. Department
of Energy, 1000 Independence Avenue,
SW., Washington, DC 20585; or at 800–
472–2756 or askNEPA@hq.doe.gov.
For information on the Hawai‘i
Interisland Renewable Energy Program,
contact Mr. Allen G. Kam, Esq., AICP,
HIREP EIS Manager, State of Hawai‘i,
Department of Business, Economic
Development and Tourism, Renewable
Energy Branch, State Energy Office, P.O.
Box 2359, Honolulu, HI 96804; or at
808–587–9023 or
hirep@dbedt.hawaii.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with NOTICES
1. Background
Section 355 of the Energy Policy Act
of 2005 (EPAct) requires the Secretary of
Energy to assess the economic
implications of the dependence of the
State of Hawai‘i on oil as a principal
source of energy, including the
technical and economic feasibility of
increasing the contribution of renewable
energy resources for the generation of
electricity on an island by island basis.
Such an assessment is to include,
among other factors, siting and facility
configuration, the effects on utility
system reliability, and environmental
considerations. In furtherance of the
provisions of section 355 of EPAct, DOE
and Hawai‘i executed a Memorandum of
Understanding (MOU) in January 2008
that established the Hawai‘i Clean
Energy Initiative (HCEI) and a long-term
partnership between DOE and Hawai‘i
to implement the initiative. HCEI has a
goal of providing 70 percent of the
state’s primary energy from clean energy
sources by 2030 by replacing 40 percent
of fossil fuel use with renewable energy
and reducing energy consumption by 30
percent through energy efficiency
measures. Of the alternative renewable
energy sources available in Hawai‘i—
including wind, geothermal, solar,
biomass, ocean thermal energy
conversion, and wave—wind power has
been identified as the most
commercially available and
economically viable option at the
present time. The island of O‘ahu, with
80 percent of the state’s population, is
the island with the greatest energy
demand; however, the island does not
contain sufficient renewable energy
potential to meet the HCEI’s goals. The
¯
islands of Maui, Lana‘i, and Moloka‘i
have the most abundant and viable
wind resources of those islands closest
to O‘ahu. The analysis provided in the
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:09 Dec 13, 2010
Jkt 223001
O‘ahu Wind Integration and
Transmission Study (November 2010)
(additional information at https://
www.nrel.gov/wind/systemsintegration/
owits.html), prepared by DOE’s National
Renewable Energy Laboratory,
concluded that bringing 400 megawatts
(MW) of wind-generated power to O‘ahu
via undersea cable (i.e., the Hawai‘i
Interisland Wind Program) is
technically feasible and should be
considered an important part in
reaching the HCEI’s goals. Subsequent
environmental reviews may address
non-wind renewable technologies.
2. Environmental Review Process
The Hawai‘i Wind EIS will be
prepared pursuant to NEPA, as
amended, the Council on Environmental
Quality (CEQ) NEPA regulations (40
CFR parts 1500–1508), the DOE NEPA
implementing procedures (10 CFR part
1021), and the Hawai‘i Environmental
Policy Act (Hawai‘i Revised Statutes
(HRS) chapter 343). The EIS will assess
the potential environmental impacts
from the development of wind
generation facilities, the transmission
required to deliver the wind-generated
energy to O‘ahu, and the required
improvements to the existing electric
transmission infrastructure on O‘ahu.
Because the proposed actions and
alternatives may involve activities in
floodplains and wetlands, the draft EIS
may include a floodplain and wetland
assessment prepared in accordance with
10 CFR part 1022, Compliance with
Floodplain and Wetland Environmental
Review Requirements. The proposed
actions and alternatives will involve
undersea transmission cables that will
transect federal Outer Continental Shelf
waters, where the Department of the
Interior’s Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management, Regulation and
Enforcement (BOEMRE) has exclusive
authority over right-of-way grants for
undersea renewable energy transmission
cables.
DOE and Hawai‘i invite agencies,
Native Hawaiian and other
organizations, and members of the
public to participate in developing the
scope of the EIS—that is, the proposed
actions, the range of reasonable
alternatives and environmental impacts
and other issues to be considered—by
submitting written comments and by
participating in public scoping meetings
that DOE and Hawai‘i will conduct
jointly. DOE and Hawai‘i also invite
those agencies with jurisdiction by law
or special expertise to be cooperating
agencies in EIS preparation.
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3. DOE Purpose and Need for Agency
Action and Proposed Action
DOE’s purpose and need for agency
action is to meet its obligations under
section 355 of EPAct and the 2008 MOU
with Hawai‘i to transform the way in
which renewable energy and efficiency
resources are planned and used in the
State. DOE’s proposed action is to work
with and support Hawai‘i in the
implementation of the HCEI.
4. Hawai‘i’s Purpose and Need for State
Action and Proposed Action
Hawai‘i’s purpose and need for action
is to determine how to use its wind
energy resources to meet the 2030 goals
set forth in the HCEI. Hawai‘i’s
proposed action is to facilitate
renewable energy development that will
be required for the State of Hawai‘i to
meet the HCEI renewable energy goals,
including the development of wind
¯
resources on the islands of Maui, Lana‘i,
and/or Moloka‘i and the required
improvements to the existing electric
transmission infrastructure, including
undersea cables to transmit renewable
energy generation to O‘ahu.
5. Alternatives
Alternatives to be analyzed in this EIS
include the proposed action, which
would provide for the implementation
of an oversight program to develop up
to 400 MW of wind energy on the Maui
¯
County islands of Maui, Lana‘i, and/or
Moloka‘i and transmission of that
energy to O‘ahu. A range of wind
development projects could be pursued
under the proposed action, and include
varying power capacities and
configurations among the islands,
undersea cable corridors and routes, and
locational criteria for landing sites (see
www.hirep-wind.com for additional
information including conceptual
maps). The EIS will address scenarios
under the proposed action that consider
a programmatic approach to all wind
energy deriving from a single island in
¯
Maui County (i.e., Maui, Lana‘i, or
Moloka‘i) and all wind energy deriving
from a combination of generation on
two or more islands in Maui County,
along with associated programmatic
approaches to cable corridors and routes
and landing site locations. The EIS will
also analyze a no-action alternative.
6. Preliminary Identification of
Environmental Issues
The EIS will evaluate the full range of
potential environmental, social,
cultural, and economic impacts
associated with a proposed wind energy
program encompassing the islands of
¯
Maui, Lana‘i and Moloka‘i and use areas
on O‘ahu. The EIS also will include a
E:\FR\FM\14DEN1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 239 / Tuesday, December 14, 2010 / Notices
cultural impact assessment prepared in
accordance with Hawai‘i law,
specifically Act 50, SLH 2000.
Impacts will be analyzed across a
number of resource areas, including:
• Air quality (including climate
change and greenhouse gas emissions).
• Water resources and drainage.
• Coastal zone resources.
• Geography, geology, and soils.
• Land and submerged land use.
• Threatened and endangered
species, special status species, and
related sensitive resources such as the
Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale
National Marine Sanctuary.
• Land transportation.
• Marine transportation and
commerce.
• Airspace utilization.
• Public health and safety.
• Noise.
• Natural hazards.
• Hazardous materials.
• Accidents and intentional
destructive acts.
• Cultural and historical resources.
• Recreational resources.
• Visual resources.
• Socioeconomic impacts,
community services and infrastructure.
• Environmental justice
considerations (disproportionately high
and adverse impacts to minority and
low income populations).
• Cumulative impacts (past, present,
and reasonably foreseeable future
actions).
• Irreversible and irretrievable
commitments of resources.
The programmatic analysis will
identify best management practices,
outline regulatory procedures, address
mitigation of environmental impacts
and support the development of general
guidance for major components of an
interisland undersea cable energy grid
for the transmission of wind energy.
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with NOTICES
7. Public Participation: Scoping, EIS
Distribution, Schedule
17:09 Dec 13, 2010
Jkt 223001
Issued in Washington, DC, on December 8,
2010.
Patricia A. Hoffman,
Assistant Secretary, Office of Electricity
Delivery and Energy Reliability.
[FR Doc. 2010–31310 Filed 12–13–10; 8:45 am]
As indicated in the DATES section,
public scoping meetings will be
conducted in early 2011. Each scoping
meeting will be structured in two parts:
first an informal ‘‘workshop’’ discussion
period that will not be recorded, then a
formal commenting session, which will
be transcribed by a court stenographer.
The meetings will provide interested
parties the opportunity to view exhibits
on the HIREP: Wind, ask questions, and
submit comments orally or in writing.
Representatives from DOE, Hawai‘i, and
any cooperating agencies will be
available to answer questions and
provide additional information to
participants. Individuals who submit
comments during the scoping process
VerDate Mar<15>2010
will receive paper or electronic copies
of the draft EIS, according to their
preference. Persons who do not wish to
submit comments or suggestions at this
time, but would like to receive a copy
of the draft EIS when it is issued should
submit a request as provided in the
ADDRESSES section and include their
preference for a paper or electronic
copy.
In preparing the draft EIS, DOE and
Hawai‘i will consider comments
received during the scoping period. The
agencies plan to issue the draft EIS by
October 2011. After the agencies issue
the draft EIS, the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency will publish a notice
of availability of the draft EIS in the
Federal Register, which will begin a
minimum 45-day public comment
period. In addition to and concurrent
with this NOI publication in the Federal
Register, the State of Hawai‘i is
preparing a state-level environmental
review notice. That notice along with
this NOI will be published in the State
of Hawai‘i Environmental Notice
consistent with all state requirements.
The agencies will announce how to
comment on the draft EIS and will hold
public hearings during the public
comment period, but no sooner than 15
days after the notice of availability is
published. In preparing the final EIS,
the agencies will respond to comments
received on the draft EIS. The agencies
plan to issue the final EIS by April 2012.
No sooner than 60 days after the
Environmental Protection Agency
publishes a Notice of Availability of the
final EIS, DOE and Hawai‘i will each
issue its Record of Decision regarding
their actions considered in the EIS.
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
[Docket No. CP11–42–000]
Dominion Transmission, Inc; Notice of
Application
December 7, 2010.
Take notice that on November 23,
2010, Dominion Transmission, Inc.
(DTI), 120 Tredegar Street, Richmond,
Virginia 23219, filed in Docket No.
CP11–42–000 an application pursuant
to section 7(b) of the Natural Gas Act
PO 00000
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77861
and Part 157 the Commission’s Rules
and Regulations for all the necessary
authorizations required to
refunctionalize its existing Line No. TL–
404, a 26-mile, 24- and 30-inch pipeline
which extends from DTI’s Hastings
Extraction Plant in Wetzel County, WV
to its terminus in Monroe County, OH,
from a transmission function to a
gathering function. The details of the
request are more fully set forth in the
application, which is on file with the
Commission and open to public
inspection. This filing may also be
viewed on the web at https://
www.ferc.gov using the ‘‘eLibrary’’ link.
Enter the docket number excluding the
last three digits in the docket number
field to access the document. For
assistance, contact FERC at
FERCOnlineSupport@ferc.gov or call
toll-free, (886) 208–3676 or TYY, (202)
502–8659.
Any questions regarding this
application should be directed to Brad
A. Knisley, Regulatory and Certificates
Analyst III, Dominion Transmission,
Inc., 701 East Cary Street, Richmond,
VA 23219, or telephone (804) 777–4412,
or facsimile (804) 771–4804 or e-mail
Brad.A.Knisley@dom.com.
There are two ways to become
involved in the Commission’s review of
this project. First, any person wishing to
obtain legal status by becoming a party
to the proceedings for this project
should, on or before the comment date
stated below, file with the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission, 888
First Street, NE., Washington, DC 20426,
a motion to intervene in accordance
with the requirements of the
Commission’s Rules of Practice and
Procedure (18 CFR 385.214 or 385.211)
and the Regulations under the NGA (18
CFR 157.10). A person obtaining party
status will be placed on the service list
maintained by the Secretary of the
Commission and will receive copies of
all documents filed by the applicant and
by all other parties. A party must submit
14 copies of filings made with the
Commission and must mail a copy to
the applicant and to every other party in
the proceeding. Only parties to the
proceeding can ask for court review of
Commission orders in the proceeding.
However, a person does not have to
intervene in order to have comments
considered. The second way to
participate is by filing with the
Secretary of the Commission, as soon as
possible, an original and two copies of
comments in support of or in opposition
to this project. The Commission will
consider these comments in
determining the appropriate action to be
taken, but the filing of a comment alone
will not serve to make the filer a party
E:\FR\FM\14DEN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 239 (Tuesday, December 14, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 77859-77861]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-31310]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Notice of Intent To Prepare a Programmatic Environmental Impact
Statement for the Hawai`i Interisland Renewable Energy Program: Wind
(DOE/EIS-0459)
AGENCY: Department of Energy (DOE).
ACTION: Notice of intent to prepare a Programmatic Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: DOE announces its intention to prepare a Programmatic EIS with
the State of Hawai`i as joint lead agencies pursuant to the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) of 1969 and the Hawai`i Environmental
Policy Act. The Hawai`i Interisland Renewable Energy Program: Wind
Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement (hereinafter referred to as
the Hawai`i Wind EIS or the EIS) will assess the foreseeable
environmental impacts which may arise from wind energy development
under the Hawai`i Interisland Renewable Energy Program (HIREP). Hawai`i
proposes to facilitate the development of wind-generated electric
energy and the required improvements to the existing electric
transmission infrastructure in Hawai`i. This EIS is the first phase of
a programmatic environmental review of developing and increasing
renewable energy technologies in Hawai`i.
DATES: The public scoping period starts with the publication of this
Notice in the Federal Register. Comments on the scope of the EIS should
be submitted by March 1, 2011. Comments e-mailed or postmarked after
that date will be considered to the extent practicable. DOE and Hawai`i
will hold public scoping meetings in the first quarter of 2011. Dates
will be announced in the Federal Register, on the DOE NEPA Web site at
https://www.nepa.energy.gov, on the EIS Web site at wind.com">https://www.hirep-wind.com, and in local media at least 15 days before each meeting.
ADDRESSES: DOE and Hawai`i will announce locations of scoping meetings
as indicated in DATES. Send comments on the scope of the Hawai`i Wind
EIS or a request to be added to the EIS distribution list:
By e-mail to wind.com">comments@hirep-wind.com.
By submitting electronic comments on the EIS Web page at
wind.com">https://www.hirep-wind.com.
By facsimile (fax) to 808-586-2536, Attention Allen G.
Kam.
By mail to Allen G. Kam, Esq., AICP, HIREP EIS Manager,
State of Hawai`i, Department of Business, Economic Development and
Tourism, Renewable Energy Branch, State Energy Office, P.O. Box 2359,
Honolulu, HI 96804.
Information on the HIREP: Wind Phase is available at the EIS Web
site at wind.com">https://www.hirep-wind.com. This Notice of Intent, and the draft
and final EIS when issued, also will be posted on the DOE NEPA Web site
at https://www.nepa.energy.gov. These documents and additional materials
relating to this EIS will be available at:
Hawai`i State Library, 478 South King Street, Honolulu HI
96813.
L[amacr]na`i Public and School Library, 555 Fraser Ave,
L[amacr]na`i City, HI 96763.
Wailuku Public Library, 251 High Street, Wailuku, HI
96793.
Moloka`i Public Library, 15 Alamalama, Kaunakakai, HI
96748.
Edwin H. Mo`okini Library, University of Hawai`i-Hilo, 200
West K[amacr]wili Street, Hilo, HI 96720-4091.
Kailua-Kona Public Library, 75-138 Hual[amacr]lai Road,
Kailua-Kona, HI 96740-1704.
L[imacr]hu`e Public Library, 4344 Hardy Street,
L[imacr]hu`e, HI 96766.
DOE Freedom of Information Act Public Reading Room, 1000
Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20585.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For information on DOE's proposed
action, contact Anthony J. Como, DOE NEPA Document Manager, Office of
Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability (OE-20), U.S. Department of
Energy, 1000 Independence Avenue, SW.,
[[Page 77860]]
Washington, DC 20585; or at anthony.como@hq.doe.gov. For general
information about the DOE NEPA process, contact Carol Borgstrom,
Director, Office of NEPA Policy and Compliance (GC-54), U.S. Department
of Energy, 1000 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20585; or at
800-472-2756 or askNEPA@hq.doe.gov.
For information on the Hawai`i Interisland Renewable Energy
Program, contact Mr. Allen G. Kam, Esq., AICP, HIREP EIS Manager, State
of Hawai`i, Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism,
Renewable Energy Branch, State Energy Office, P.O. Box 2359, Honolulu,
HI 96804; or at 808-587-9023 or hirep@dbedt.hawaii.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
1. Background
Section 355 of the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPAct) requires the
Secretary of Energy to assess the economic implications of the
dependence of the State of Hawai`i on oil as a principal source of
energy, including the technical and economic feasibility of increasing
the contribution of renewable energy resources for the generation of
electricity on an island by island basis. Such an assessment is to
include, among other factors, siting and facility configuration, the
effects on utility system reliability, and environmental
considerations. In furtherance of the provisions of section 355 of
EPAct, DOE and Hawai`i executed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) in
January 2008 that established the Hawai`i Clean Energy Initiative
(HCEI) and a long-term partnership between DOE and Hawai`i to implement
the initiative. HCEI has a goal of providing 70 percent of the state's
primary energy from clean energy sources by 2030 by replacing 40
percent of fossil fuel use with renewable energy and reducing energy
consumption by 30 percent through energy efficiency measures. Of the
alternative renewable energy sources available in Hawai`i--including
wind, geothermal, solar, biomass, ocean thermal energy conversion, and
wave--wind power has been identified as the most commercially available
and economically viable option at the present time. The island of
O`ahu, with 80 percent of the state's population, is the island with
the greatest energy demand; however, the island does not contain
sufficient renewable energy potential to meet the HCEI's goals. The
islands of Maui, L[amacr]na`i, and Moloka`i have the most abundant and
viable wind resources of those islands closest to O`ahu. The analysis
provided in the O`ahu Wind Integration and Transmission Study (November
2010) (additional information at https://www.nrel.gov/wind/systemsintegration/owits.html), prepared by DOE's National Renewable
Energy Laboratory, concluded that bringing 400 megawatts (MW) of wind-
generated power to O`ahu via undersea cable (i.e., the Hawai`i
Interisland Wind Program) is technically feasible and should be
considered an important part in reaching the HCEI's goals. Subsequent
environmental reviews may address non-wind renewable technologies.
2. Environmental Review Process
The Hawai`i Wind EIS will be prepared pursuant to NEPA, as amended,
the Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) NEPA regulations (40 CFR
parts 1500-1508), the DOE NEPA implementing procedures (10 CFR part
1021), and the Hawai`i Environmental Policy Act (Hawai`i Revised
Statutes (HRS) chapter 343). The EIS will assess the potential
environmental impacts from the development of wind generation
facilities, the transmission required to deliver the wind-generated
energy to O`ahu, and the required improvements to the existing electric
transmission infrastructure on O`ahu. Because the proposed actions and
alternatives may involve activities in floodplains and wetlands, the
draft EIS may include a floodplain and wetland assessment prepared in
accordance with 10 CFR part 1022, Compliance with Floodplain and
Wetland Environmental Review Requirements. The proposed actions and
alternatives will involve undersea transmission cables that will
transect federal Outer Continental Shelf waters, where the Department
of the Interior's Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and
Enforcement (BOEMRE) has exclusive authority over right-of-way grants
for undersea renewable energy transmission cables.
DOE and Hawai`i invite agencies, Native Hawaiian and other
organizations, and members of the public to participate in developing
the scope of the EIS--that is, the proposed actions, the range of
reasonable alternatives and environmental impacts and other issues to
be considered--by submitting written comments and by participating in
public scoping meetings that DOE and Hawai`i will conduct jointly. DOE
and Hawai`i also invite those agencies with jurisdiction by law or
special expertise to be cooperating agencies in EIS preparation.
3. DOE Purpose and Need for Agency Action and Proposed Action
DOE's purpose and need for agency action is to meet its obligations
under section 355 of EPAct and the 2008 MOU with Hawai`i to transform
the way in which renewable energy and efficiency resources are planned
and used in the State. DOE's proposed action is to work with and
support Hawai`i in the implementation of the HCEI.
4. Hawai`i's Purpose and Need for State Action and Proposed Action
Hawai`i's purpose and need for action is to determine how to use
its wind energy resources to meet the 2030 goals set forth in the HCEI.
Hawai`i's proposed action is to facilitate renewable energy development
that will be required for the State of Hawai`i to meet the HCEI
renewable energy goals, including the development of wind resources on
the islands of Maui, L[amacr]na`i, and/or Moloka`i and the required
improvements to the existing electric transmission infrastructure,
including undersea cables to transmit renewable energy generation to
O`ahu.
5. Alternatives
Alternatives to be analyzed in this EIS include the proposed
action, which would provide for the implementation of an oversight
program to develop up to 400 MW of wind energy on the Maui County
islands of Maui, L[amacr]na`i, and/or Moloka`i and transmission of that
energy to O`ahu. A range of wind development projects could be pursued
under the proposed action, and include varying power capacities and
configurations among the islands, undersea cable corridors and routes,
and locational criteria for landing sites (see www.hirep-wind.com for
additional information including conceptual maps). The EIS will address
scenarios under the proposed action that consider a programmatic
approach to all wind energy deriving from a single island in Maui
County (i.e., Maui, L[amacr]na`i, or Moloka`i) and all wind energy
deriving from a combination of generation on two or more islands in
Maui County, along with associated programmatic approaches to cable
corridors and routes and landing site locations. The EIS will also
analyze a no-action alternative.
6. Preliminary Identification of Environmental Issues
The EIS will evaluate the full range of potential environmental,
social, cultural, and economic impacts associated with a proposed wind
energy program encompassing the islands of Maui, L[amacr]na`i and
Moloka`i and use areas on O`ahu. The EIS also will include a
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cultural impact assessment prepared in accordance with Hawai`i law,
specifically Act 50, SLH 2000.
Impacts will be analyzed across a number of resource areas,
including:
Air quality (including climate change and greenhouse gas
emissions).
Water resources and drainage.
Coastal zone resources.
Geography, geology, and soils.
Land and submerged land use.
Threatened and endangered species, special status species,
and related sensitive resources such as the Hawaiian Islands Humpback
Whale National Marine Sanctuary.
Land transportation.
Marine transportation and commerce.
Airspace utilization.
Public health and safety.
Noise.
Natural hazards.
Hazardous materials.
Accidents and intentional destructive acts.
Cultural and historical resources.
Recreational resources.
Visual resources.
Socioeconomic impacts, community services and
infrastructure.
Environmental justice considerations (disproportionately
high and adverse impacts to minority and low income populations).
Cumulative impacts (past, present, and reasonably
foreseeable future actions).
Irreversible and irretrievable commitments of resources.
The programmatic analysis will identify best management practices,
outline regulatory procedures, address mitigation of environmental
impacts and support the development of general guidance for major
components of an interisland undersea cable energy grid for the
transmission of wind energy.
7. Public Participation: Scoping, EIS Distribution, Schedule
As indicated in the DATES section, public scoping meetings will be
conducted in early 2011. Each scoping meeting will be structured in two
parts: first an informal ``workshop'' discussion period that will not
be recorded, then a formal commenting session, which will be
transcribed by a court stenographer. The meetings will provide
interested parties the opportunity to view exhibits on the HIREP: Wind,
ask questions, and submit comments orally or in writing.
Representatives from DOE, Hawai`i, and any cooperating agencies will be
available to answer questions and provide additional information to
participants. Individuals who submit comments during the scoping
process will receive paper or electronic copies of the draft EIS,
according to their preference. Persons who do not wish to submit
comments or suggestions at this time, but would like to receive a copy
of the draft EIS when it is issued should submit a request as provided
in the ADDRESSES section and include their preference for a paper or
electronic copy.
In preparing the draft EIS, DOE and Hawai`i will consider comments
received during the scoping period. The agencies plan to issue the
draft EIS by October 2011. After the agencies issue the draft EIS, the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency will publish a notice of
availability of the draft EIS in the Federal Register, which will begin
a minimum 45-day public comment period. In addition to and concurrent
with this NOI publication in the Federal Register, the State of Hawai`i
is preparing a state-level environmental review notice. That notice
along with this NOI will be published in the State of Hawai`i
Environmental Notice consistent with all state requirements.
The agencies will announce how to comment on the draft EIS and will
hold public hearings during the public comment period, but no sooner
than 15 days after the notice of availability is published. In
preparing the final EIS, the agencies will respond to comments received
on the draft EIS. The agencies plan to issue the final EIS by April
2012. No sooner than 60 days after the Environmental Protection Agency
publishes a Notice of Availability of the final EIS, DOE and Hawai`i
will each issue its Record of Decision regarding their actions
considered in the EIS.
Issued in Washington, DC, on December 8, 2010.
Patricia A. Hoffman,
Assistant Secretary, Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy
Reliability.
[FR Doc. 2010-31310 Filed 12-13-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P