Development of Technical Guidelines and Scientific Methods for Quantifying GHG Emissions and Carbon Sequestration for Agricultural and Forestry Activities, 9534-9537 [2011-3731]
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Federal Register
Vol. 76, No. 34
Friday, February 18, 2011
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DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Submission for OMB Review;
Comment Request
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February 14, 2011.
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ways to enhance the quality, utility and
clarity of the information to be
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(OMB),
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the collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid OMB control
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Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service
Title: National Management
Information System (Wildlife Service).
OMB Control Number: 0579–0335.
Summary of Collection: The Animal
and Plant Health Inspection Service
(APHIS), Wildlife Services (WS), is a
service program that responds to
requests by persons and agencies
needing help with wildlife damage.
Assistance is available to all citizens
upon request. The primary statutory
authority for the APHIS/WS program is
the Act of March 1931 (7 U.S.C. 426–
426c; 46 Stat. 1468) as amended.
Section 426 of the Act authorizes the
Secretary of Agriculture to conduct a
program of wildlife services with
respect to injurious animal species and
take any action the Secretary considers
necessary in conducting the program.
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WS can prepare to help them. APHIS/
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Description of Respondents: Farms;
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institutions; State, Local, or Tribal
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Number of Respondents: 89,902.
Frequency of Responses: Reporting:
On occasion; Biennially; Annually.
Total Burden Hours: 4,165.
Ruth Brown,
Departmental Information Collection
Clearance Officer.
[FR Doc. 2011–3667 Filed 2–17–11; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Development of Technical Guidelines
and Scientific Methods for Quantifying
GHG Emissions and Carbon
Sequestration for Agricultural and
Forestry Activities
Office of the Chief Economist,
U.S. Department of Agriculture.
ACTION: Notice of project undertaken to
develop technical guidelines and
scientific methods for quantifying
greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and
carbon sequestration at the practice-,
process-, farm- and entity-scales.
AGENCY:
Section 2709 of the Food,
Conservation and Energy Act of 2008
states that: USDA shall prepare
technical guidelines that outline
science-based methods to measure the
carbon benefits from conservation and
land management activities. In
accordance with Section 2709 of the
2008 Farm Bill, USDA is developing
technical guidelines and science-based
methods to quantify greenhouse gas
sources and sinks from the agriculture
and forest sectors at the entity-,
process-, and practice-scale. USDA
intends to develop guidelines and
methods that are verifiable and that
demonstrate scientific rigor,
transparency, scalability, and usability.
USDA anticipates that the methods will
be used by farmers and by USDA to
improve management practices and to
identify actions to reduce greenhouse
gas emissions and increase carbon
sequestration. The guidelines and
methods could be used by farmers,
ranchers, and forest owners to facilitate
their participation in voluntary State
and regional systems. In order to make
the guidelines and methods most useful
to a broad audience, a Web-based, userfriendly tool will be developed
following the drafting of the guidelines
and methods.
In carrying out this project, USDA
will consult with Federal and State
government agencies; farm, ranch, and
forest producers; as well as other
interested parties. At the Federal level,
this consultation will minimize
duplication of efforts and ensure
consistency of the products with other
U.S. Government inventory and
estimation approaches. USDA
anticipates that after they are developed,
reviewed, and published, the Technical
Guidelines, combined with the user-
SUMMARY:
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friendly tool for GHG quantification,
will assist farmers, ranchers, and forest
owners in improving management
practices and identifying actions to
reduce greenhouse gas emissions and
increase carbon sequestration, and
could facilitate their participation in
voluntary State and regional systems.
Comments received under this notice
will be used in determining the scope of
the effort, strengthening the proposed
project approach, ensuring that relevant
information and data are considered,
improving the rigor of the guidelines,
and enhancing the usability of the
methods. USDA is interested in your
comments in response to the numbered
topics, categories and questions shown
in the supplementary information
section of this notice. When submitting
your responses, please categorize your
comments as per the section number
designations noted. Be specific and
concise. All information received will
be included in the public docket
without change and made available
online at https://www.regulations.gov,
including any personal information
provided.
Responses to this notice are not offers
and cannot be accepted by the
Government to form a binding contract
or issue a grant. Information obtained as
a result of this request may be used by
the government for program planning on
a non-attribution basis. Do not include
any information that might be
considered proprietary or confidential.
DATES: Responses to this notice should
be submitted by 11:59 pm Eastern Time
on April 19, 2011.
ADDRESSES: Responses to this notice
must be submitted electronically
through the regulations.gov portal at
https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
online instructions for submitting
comments. The https://
www.regulations.gov Web site is an
‘‘anonymous access’’ system, which
means USDA will not know your
identity or contact information unless
you provide it in the body of your
comment. If you are unable to submit
your responses through the Web portal,
then consider these alternative delivery
methods:
• Via e-mail to
techguide@oce.usda.gov;
• Via fax to 202–401–1176; or,
• Via hand or courier delivery to
Marlen Eve, USDA Climate Change
Program Office, 1400 Independence
Ave., SW., Room 4407 South Bldg,
Washington, DC 20250.
Responses submitted through e-mail,
fax or courier will be recorded in full,
including any identity and contact
information.
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Any
questions about the content of this
request should be sent to Marlen Eve,
USDA Climate Change Program Office,
via E-mail techguide@oce.usda.gov,
Telephone 202–401–0979, or Fax 202–
401–1176. Additional information on
this request and the project can be
found at https://www.usda.gov/oce/
climate_change/techguide.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Climate Change Program Office (CCPO)
operates within the Office of the Chief
Economist at USDA and functions as the
Department-wide coordinator of
agriculture, rural and forestry-related
climate change program and policy
issues facing USDA. The CCPO ensures
that USDA is a source of objective,
analytical assessments of the effects of
climate change and proposed response
strategies. This project addresses the
need for a scientifically sound,
Department-wide guideline for
quantifying GHG emissions and carbon
sequestration at the farm- and entityscale. The products developed by this
project will be useful in assessing the
carbon and GHG related environmental
service benefits of various agricultural
and forestry management practices and
technologies. Supplementary
information on the project is included
below.
1. Project scope. USDA is embarking
on an effort to create a ‘‘stand alone’’ set
of GHG inventory guidelines that builds
upon existing inventory efforts such as
the Department of Energy’s Voluntary
Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program
1605(b) Guidelines, with an aim of
providing simple, transparent and
robust inventory and reporting tools. As
much as is possible, the guidelines,
methods, and reporting tools developed
in this project will utilize and extend
data and tools currently available
publically. The guidelines and methods
are not intended as an addition to or
replacement of any current Federal GHG
reporting systems or requirements. The
guidelines will be prepared for direct
greenhouse gas emissions and carbon
sequestration from agricultural and
forestry processes. USDA does not plan
to develop technical guidelines for
indirect greenhouse gas emissions/
sequestration, or address issues related
to crediting reductions such as
additionality or leakage under this
effort. The guidelines being developed
by USDA will be used within the
Department and by farmers, ranchers,
and forest land owners, and will be
made publicly available. To ensure the
project deliverables are of benefit to the
widest possible set of stakeholders
(including USDA, other Federal
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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9535
agencies, private landowners, private
and public GHG registries, NGO’s,
private industry, policy-makers and
others) the process of developing the
guidelines, methods, and reporting tools
will emphasize scientific rigor,
transparency, internal consistency, and
reducing uncertainty. We anticipate that
the guidelines will need to be reviewed
and may need to be amended before
being adopted by other agencies or
public or private registries. Specific
potential uses of the project deliverables
include aiding: (1) USDA in assessing
GHG and carbon sequestration increases
and decreases resulting from current
and future conservation programs and
practices; (2) USDA and others in
evaluating and improving national and
regional GHG inventory efforts; and (3)
landowners, NGOs, and other groups
assessing increases and decreases in
GHG emissions and carbon
sequestration associated with changes in
land management. The project is
planned for completion within the next
three years.
Specifically, USDA requests
comments on:
1.1 How may USDA best improve
upon existing greenhouse gas estimation
guidelines for the agriculture and
forestry sectors, while at the same time
simplifying input requirements and
enhancing the ease of use for
individuals and entities?
1.2 USDA intends to develop a
standard set of methods for practice-,
process-, farm- and entity-scale
inventories which could provide a
technical basis for improved methods
for current voluntary State and regional
systems. Are there specific areas where
a USDA guideline would be most useful
to current State and regional systems?
Are there limitations to using the
proposed quantification tools in the
context of State and regional systems?
2. Objectives. The guidelines will
result in a methodology for an
integrated emissions inventory at the
entity scale for all agricultural (crop and
livestock) and forest management
activities, including (but not limited to)
those listed below:
2.1
Cropland Agriculture
2.1.1 Crop, residue and soil
management practices and technologies
to increase carbon sequestration and
reduce nitrous oxide emissions on
mineral and cultivated wetland soils,
including tillage systems, crop rotations,
nutrient management, fertilizer
technologies, liming, water
management, cover crops, agroforestry,
wetland restoration, residue removal
and alternatives to biomass burning.
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2.1.2 Rice cultivation practices and
technologies to reduce methane
emissions, including improved water
table management, cultivation and
fertilizer management.
2.1.3 Are there specialty crops
where specific changes in management
can greatly reduce GHG emissions or
increase carbon sequestration that
should be considered to enhance
completeness and comprehensiveness of
the guidelines, estimation and reporting
tools?
2.1.4 Are there additional cropland
activities, management practices or
technologies to be accounted for to
enhance completeness and
comprehensiveness of the guidelines,
estimation and reporting tools?
2.2
Animal Agriculture
2.2.1 Management practices and
technologies to reduce methane
emissions from enteric fermentation,
including dietary modification,
additives, feeding management, and
reproductive management (genetic
selection, gender differences, etc.).
2.2.2 Grazing land management
practices and technologies to increase
carbon sequestration and reduce nitrous
oxide emissions, including rotational
grazing and improved forage
management.
2.2.3 Manure management practices
and technologies to reduce methane and
nitrous oxide emissions, including
digesters, lagoon management, land
application practices, and composting.
2.2.4 Are there additional grazing
land and animal agriculture activities,
management practices or technologies to
be accounted for to enhance
completeness and comprehensiveness of
the guidelines, estimation and reporting
tools?
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2.3
Forests and Afforestation
2.3.1 Afforestation practices and
technologies to increase carbon
sequestration.
2.3.2 Forest management practices
and technologies to reduce GHG
emissions or increase carbon
sequestration, including stand thinning,
restoration, fertilization, and species
selection.
2.3.3 Agroforestry practices and
technologies to increase carbon
sequestration through windbreaks,
riparian buffers and silvopasture.
2.3.4 Forest preservation to reduce
the risk of GHG emissions from fire,
pests and disease.
2.3.5 Wood products management to
reduce waste, increase product
longevity and reduce the risk of GHG
emissions from fire or decay.
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2.3.6 Are there additional forest
activities, management practices,
equipment or technologies to be
considered to enhance completeness
and comprehensiveness of the
guidelines, estimation and reporting
tools?
The methods and tools will quantify
all significant emissions and sinks
associated with the management
activities, thereby creating a
standardized way to document changes
in emissions and carbon sequestration
resulting from conservation efforts and
changing land and forest management
practices. We envision the methods and
tools being especially useful to USDA in
evaluating the GHG-related
environmental services benefits of
conservation and renewable energy
programs.
2.4 Are there sources of information
relevant to the objectives of this project
which can be made available to the
author teams? If so, please provide this
information or the name and contact
details for the correspondent.
2.5 Are there opportunities to
reduce GHG emissions and increase
carbon sequestration in the agriculture
and forestry sectors that should be
reflected in the methods?
2.6 USDA intends to rely on
engineering calculations, models, and
observations as primary methodological
approaches. How can USDA balance
rigor while maintaining broad
applicability, national consistency, and
user friendliness?
2.7 What models and tools currently
exist for farm- or entity- scale GHG
inventory and reporting, and how might
they be useful to the current project
objectives? For each model noted,
provide a source citation for information
on the model.
3. Criteria. There are several key
criteria that USDA will rely on in
preparing the GHG guidelines,
including the following:
3.1 Transparency means that the
assumptions and methodologies used
for an inventory should be clearly
explained to facilitate replication and
assessment of the inventory by users of
the reported information. The
transparency of inventories is
fundamental to the success of the
process for the communication and
consideration of information.
3.2 Consistency means that the
methods used to generate inventory
estimates should be internally
consistent in all its elements and the
estimates should be consistent with
other years. An inventory is consistent
if the same methodologies are used for
the base and all subsequent years and if
consistent data sets are used to estimate
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emissions or removals from sources or
sinks. Consistency is an important
consideration in merging differing
estimation techniques from diverse
technologies and management practices.
3.3 Comparability requires that the
estimates of emissions and sequestration
being reported by one entity are
comparable to the estimates being
reported by others. For this purpose,
entities should use common
methodologies and formats for
estimating and reporting inventories.
Comparability is an important
consideration in determining whether
the guidelines specifies one method (for
any technology or management practice)
or allows users to select from a menu of
methods.
3.4 Completeness means that an
inventory covers all sources and sinks,
as well as all greenhouse gases.
Completeness also means full coverage
of sources and sinks under the control
of the entity. Completeness is an
important consideration to be balanced
with ease of use in reporting
appropriately for an entity that may
have a minor activity or an activity with
severely limited data availability.
3.5 Accuracy is a relative measure of
the exactness of an emission or removal
estimate. Estimates should be accurate
in the sense that they are systematically
neither over nor under true emissions or
removals, as far as can be judged, and
that uncertainties are reduced as far as
practicable.
3.6 Cost effectiveness is a measure of
the relative costs and benefits of
additional efforts to improve inventory
estimates or reduce uncertainty.
3.7 Ease of use is a measure of the
complexity of the user interface and
underlying data requirements.
3.8 Are these appropriate criteria by
which to formulate GHG estimation and
reporting guidelines, methods and
tools? Are there other criteria that
should also be considered?
3.9 To the extent that there are
tradeoffs, which criteria are more
important than others in ensuring the
usefulness of the project products for
entity-scale estimation and reporting?
4. Expected outcomes and products.
The project is expected to yield the
following products.
4.1 A review of techniques currently
in use for estimating carbon stocks and
fluxes and GHG emissions from
agricultural and forestry activities;
4.2 A technical guidelines document
outlining the approach or approaches to
conducting a farm-, ranch-, or forestscale GHG estimation;
4.3 Specific methods for each
source/sink category that are designed
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to be reliable and consistent with
national inventory efforts;
4.4 A quantification where possible
of uncertainties in estimation at the
entity scale; and
4.5 A user-friendly tool that
integrates multiple sources of entityscale data to facilitate farm-, ranch-, and
forest-scale quantification of greenhouse
gas emissions and sequestration in a
manner consistent with the methods
and technical guidelines.
Timeline. The project is planned for
completion over the next three years.
Implementation of the project will
include development of the draft
guidelines and methods, technical and
peer review, development of estimation
and reporting tools and associated
documentation, beta testing, solicitation
of public comment, and publication of
the final guidelines document as well as
the estimation and reporting tools.
USDA prohibits discrimination on the
basis of race, color, national origin,
gender, religion, age, sexual orientation,
or disability. Additionally,
discrimination on the basis of political
beliefs and marital or family status is
also prohibited by statutes enforced by
USDA (not all prohibited bases apply to
all programs). Persons with disabilities
who require alternate means for
communication of program information
(braille, large print, audio tape, etc.)
should contact the USDA’s Target
Center at (202) 720–2000 (voice and
TDD). USDA is an equal opportunity
provider and employer.
Joseph Glauber,
Chief Economist.
[FR Doc. 2011–3731 Filed 2–17–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–38–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service
[Docket No. APHIS–2010–0125]
Secretary’s Advisory Committee on
Animal Health; Meetings
Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service, USDA.
ACTION: Notice of public meetings.
AGENCY:
This is a notice to inform the
public of three upcoming meetings of
the Secretary’s Advisory Committee on
Animal Health. The meetings are being
organized by the Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service to discuss
matters of animal health, including the
pending proposed rule implementing
USDA’s traceability framework and
establishing an aquaculture
subcommittee.
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SUMMARY:
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The meetings will be held March
4, 2011, May 13, 2011, and July 15, 2011
from noon to 5 p.m. (eastern time) each
day.
ADDRESSES: Each meeting will be
conducted as a teleconference.
Opportunities for public participation
are described in the Supplementary
Information section of this notice.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Michael R. Doerrer, Chief Operating
Officer, Veterinary Services, APHIS,
USDA, 4700 River Road, Unit 37,
Riverdale, MD 20737; e-mail:
SACAH.Management@aphis.usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Secretary’s Advisory Committee on
Animal Health (the Committee) advises
the Secretary of Agriculture on means to
prevent, conduct surveillance on,
monitor, control, or eradicate animal
diseases of national importance. In
doing so, the Committee will consider
public health, conservation of natural
resources, and the stability of livestock
economies. Among the key animal
health issues the Committee will help
the Secretary evaluate will be animal
disease traceability.
Animal disease traceability will be the
primary discussion topic at the meeting
on March 4, 2011. APHIS has spent
much of the past year developing a
framework for animal disease
traceability in the United States.
Through the framework, APHIS will
implement a flexible yet coordinated
approach to animal disease traceability
that embraces the strengths and
expertise of States, Tribes, and
producers and empowers them to find
and use the traceability approaches that
work best for them.
APHIS has conducted extensive
outreach on the traceability framework
and continues to seek input by using the
Committee. We are developing the
proposed rule and the traceability
performance standards collaboratively
and transparently. This helps us ensure
that practical animal disease traceability
options evolve.
Additional details regarding each
meeting, including the preliminary and
final agendas, will be posted on the
Committee’s Web site at https://
www.aphis.usda.gov/animal_health/
acah/ in advance of each meeting.
Copies of agendas may also be obtained
from the person listed under FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT at the
beginning of this notice.
DATES:
Public Participation
All meetings will be open to the
public, although public participants will
be joined to the call in ‘‘observation’’ or
‘‘listen only’’ mode. Members of the
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9537
public who wish to participate in a
teleconference must notify the
Committee by sending an e-mail
through an access portal on the
Committee’s Web site or by e-mailing
the Committee directly at
SACAH.Management@aphis.usda.gov.
In your e-mail, please provide your
name and organizational affiliation (if
any) and identify the meeting(s) you
wish to join. The Committee will reply
with a telephone number and
participant pass code that will allow
you to join the meeting.
Questions and written statements for
the first meeting on March 4, 2011, may
be submitted by or before March 1,
2011, for the Committee’s consideration.
For the meetings to be held in May and
July, questions and written statements
may be submitted up to 5 days before
those meetings. Questions and written
statements may be sent via e-mail to
SACAH.Management@aphis.usda.gov or
mailed to the person listed under FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT at the
beginning of this notice. Statements may
also be filed with the Committee after
the meeting by sending them to
SACAH.Management@aphis.usda.gov.
This notice of meeting is given
pursuant to section 10 of the Federal
Advisory Committee Act (5 U.S.C. App.
2).
Done in Washington, DC this 15th day of
February 2011.
Gregory Parham,
Acting Administrator, Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service.
[FR Doc. 2011–3728 Filed 2–17–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–34–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service
Sequoia National Forest; California;
Piute Mountains Travel Management
Plan
Forest Service, USDA.
Notice of intent to prepare an
environmental impact statement.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Sequoia National Forest
proposes to develop a travel
management plan for the Piute
Mountains, located in northeast Kern
County, California. The Piute
Mountains, with a mixed conifer and
pine forest, are included in the eastside
Sierra Nevada ecosystem. The project
area for this analysis includes 77,679
acres of National Forest System land in
the Piute Mountains part of the Sequoia
National Forest. There are an additional
7,170 acres of private land within the
Piute Mountains. The Piute fire burned
SUMMARY:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 34 (Friday, February 18, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 9534-9537]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-3731]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Development of Technical Guidelines and Scientific Methods for
Quantifying GHG Emissions and Carbon Sequestration for Agricultural and
Forestry Activities
AGENCY: Office of the Chief Economist, U.S. Department of Agriculture.
ACTION: Notice of project undertaken to develop technical guidelines
and scientific methods for quantifying greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions
and carbon sequestration at the practice-, process-, farm- and entity-
scales.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Section 2709 of the Food, Conservation and Energy Act of 2008
states that: USDA shall prepare technical guidelines that outline
science-based methods to measure the carbon benefits from conservation
and land management activities. In accordance with Section 2709 of the
2008 Farm Bill, USDA is developing technical guidelines and science-
based methods to quantify greenhouse gas sources and sinks from the
agriculture and forest sectors at the entity-, process-, and practice-
scale. USDA intends to develop guidelines and methods that are
verifiable and that demonstrate scientific rigor, transparency,
scalability, and usability. USDA anticipates that the methods will be
used by farmers and by USDA to improve management practices and to
identify actions to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and increase carbon
sequestration. The guidelines and methods could be used by farmers,
ranchers, and forest owners to facilitate their participation in
voluntary State and regional systems. In order to make the guidelines
and methods most useful to a broad audience, a Web-based, user-friendly
tool will be developed following the drafting of the guidelines and
methods.
In carrying out this project, USDA will consult with Federal and
State government agencies; farm, ranch, and forest producers; as well
as other interested parties. At the Federal level, this consultation
will minimize duplication of efforts and ensure consistency of the
products with other U.S. Government inventory and estimation
approaches. USDA anticipates that after they are developed, reviewed,
and published, the Technical Guidelines, combined with the user-
[[Page 9535]]
friendly tool for GHG quantification, will assist farmers, ranchers,
and forest owners in improving management practices and identifying
actions to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and increase carbon
sequestration, and could facilitate their participation in voluntary
State and regional systems.
Comments received under this notice will be used in determining the
scope of the effort, strengthening the proposed project approach,
ensuring that relevant information and data are considered, improving
the rigor of the guidelines, and enhancing the usability of the
methods. USDA is interested in your comments in response to the
numbered topics, categories and questions shown in the supplementary
information section of this notice. When submitting your responses,
please categorize your comments as per the section number designations
noted. Be specific and concise. All information received will be
included in the public docket without change and made available online
at https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal information
provided.
Responses to this notice are not offers and cannot be accepted by
the Government to form a binding contract or issue a grant. Information
obtained as a result of this request may be used by the government for
program planning on a non-attribution basis. Do not include any
information that might be considered proprietary or confidential.
DATES: Responses to this notice should be submitted by 11:59 pm Eastern
Time on April 19, 2011.
ADDRESSES: Responses to this notice must be submitted electronically
through the regulations.gov portal at https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the online instructions for submitting comments. The https://www.regulations.gov Web site is an ``anonymous access'' system, which
means USDA will not know your identity or contact information unless
you provide it in the body of your comment. If you are unable to submit
your responses through the Web portal, then consider these alternative
delivery methods:
Via e-mail to techguide@oce.usda.gov;
Via fax to 202-401-1176; or,
Via hand or courier delivery to Marlen Eve, USDA Climate
Change Program Office, 1400 Independence Ave., SW., Room 4407 South
Bldg, Washington, DC 20250.
Responses submitted through e-mail, fax or courier will be recorded
in full, including any identity and contact information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Any questions about the content of
this request should be sent to Marlen Eve, USDA Climate Change Program
Office, via E-mail techguide@oce.usda.gov, Telephone 202-401-0979, or
Fax 202-401-1176. Additional information on this request and the
project can be found at https://www.usda.gov/oce/climate_change/techguide.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Climate Change Program Office (CCPO)
operates within the Office of the Chief Economist at USDA and functions
as the Department-wide coordinator of agriculture, rural and forestry-
related climate change program and policy issues facing USDA. The CCPO
ensures that USDA is a source of objective, analytical assessments of
the effects of climate change and proposed response strategies. This
project addresses the need for a scientifically sound, Department-wide
guideline for quantifying GHG emissions and carbon sequestration at the
farm- and entity-scale. The products developed by this project will be
useful in assessing the carbon and GHG related environmental service
benefits of various agricultural and forestry management practices and
technologies. Supplementary information on the project is included
below.
1. Project scope. USDA is embarking on an effort to create a
``stand alone'' set of GHG inventory guidelines that builds upon
existing inventory efforts such as the Department of Energy's Voluntary
Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program 1605(b) Guidelines, with an aim of
providing simple, transparent and robust inventory and reporting tools.
As much as is possible, the guidelines, methods, and reporting tools
developed in this project will utilize and extend data and tools
currently available publically. The guidelines and methods are not
intended as an addition to or replacement of any current Federal GHG
reporting systems or requirements. The guidelines will be prepared for
direct greenhouse gas emissions and carbon sequestration from
agricultural and forestry processes. USDA does not plan to develop
technical guidelines for indirect greenhouse gas emissions/
sequestration, or address issues related to crediting reductions such
as additionality or leakage under this effort. The guidelines being
developed by USDA will be used within the Department and by farmers,
ranchers, and forest land owners, and will be made publicly available.
To ensure the project deliverables are of benefit to the widest
possible set of stakeholders (including USDA, other Federal agencies,
private landowners, private and public GHG registries, NGO's, private
industry, policy-makers and others) the process of developing the
guidelines, methods, and reporting tools will emphasize scientific
rigor, transparency, internal consistency, and reducing uncertainty. We
anticipate that the guidelines will need to be reviewed and may need to
be amended before being adopted by other agencies or public or private
registries. Specific potential uses of the project deliverables include
aiding: (1) USDA in assessing GHG and carbon sequestration increases
and decreases resulting from current and future conservation programs
and practices; (2) USDA and others in evaluating and improving national
and regional GHG inventory efforts; and (3) landowners, NGOs, and other
groups assessing increases and decreases in GHG emissions and carbon
sequestration associated with changes in land management. The project
is planned for completion within the next three years.
Specifically, USDA requests comments on:
1.1 How may USDA best improve upon existing greenhouse gas
estimation guidelines for the agriculture and forestry sectors, while
at the same time simplifying input requirements and enhancing the ease
of use for individuals and entities?
1.2 USDA intends to develop a standard set of methods for practice-
, process-, farm- and entity-scale inventories which could provide a
technical basis for improved methods for current voluntary State and
regional systems. Are there specific areas where a USDA guideline would
be most useful to current State and regional systems? Are there
limitations to using the proposed quantification tools in the context
of State and regional systems?
2. Objectives. The guidelines will result in a methodology for an
integrated emissions inventory at the entity scale for all agricultural
(crop and livestock) and forest management activities, including (but
not limited to) those listed below:
2.1 Cropland Agriculture
2.1.1 Crop, residue and soil management practices and technologies
to increase carbon sequestration and reduce nitrous oxide emissions on
mineral and cultivated wetland soils, including tillage systems, crop
rotations, nutrient management, fertilizer technologies, liming, water
management, cover crops, agroforestry, wetland restoration, residue
removal and alternatives to biomass burning.
[[Page 9536]]
2.1.2 Rice cultivation practices and technologies to reduce methane
emissions, including improved water table management, cultivation and
fertilizer management.
2.1.3 Are there specialty crops where specific changes in
management can greatly reduce GHG emissions or increase carbon
sequestration that should be considered to enhance completeness and
comprehensiveness of the guidelines, estimation and reporting tools?
2.1.4 Are there additional cropland activities, management
practices or technologies to be accounted for to enhance completeness
and comprehensiveness of the guidelines, estimation and reporting
tools?
2.2 Animal Agriculture
2.2.1 Management practices and technologies to reduce methane
emissions from enteric fermentation, including dietary modification,
additives, feeding management, and reproductive management (genetic
selection, gender differences, etc.).
2.2.2 Grazing land management practices and technologies to
increase carbon sequestration and reduce nitrous oxide emissions,
including rotational grazing and improved forage management.
2.2.3 Manure management practices and technologies to reduce
methane and nitrous oxide emissions, including digesters, lagoon
management, land application practices, and composting.
2.2.4 Are there additional grazing land and animal agriculture
activities, management practices or technologies to be accounted for to
enhance completeness and comprehensiveness of the guidelines,
estimation and reporting tools?
2.3 Forests and Afforestation
2.3.1 Afforestation practices and technologies to increase carbon
sequestration.
2.3.2 Forest management practices and technologies to reduce GHG
emissions or increase carbon sequestration, including stand thinning,
restoration, fertilization, and species selection.
2.3.3 Agroforestry practices and technologies to increase carbon
sequestration through windbreaks, riparian buffers and silvopasture.
2.3.4 Forest preservation to reduce the risk of GHG emissions from
fire, pests and disease.
2.3.5 Wood products management to reduce waste, increase product
longevity and reduce the risk of GHG emissions from fire or decay.
2.3.6 Are there additional forest activities, management practices,
equipment or technologies to be considered to enhance completeness and
comprehensiveness of the guidelines, estimation and reporting tools?
The methods and tools will quantify all significant emissions and
sinks associated with the management activities, thereby creating a
standardized way to document changes in emissions and carbon
sequestration resulting from conservation efforts and changing land and
forest management practices. We envision the methods and tools being
especially useful to USDA in evaluating the GHG-related environmental
services benefits of conservation and renewable energy programs.
2.4 Are there sources of information relevant to the objectives of
this project which can be made available to the author teams? If so,
please provide this information or the name and contact details for the
correspondent.
2.5 Are there opportunities to reduce GHG emissions and increase
carbon sequestration in the agriculture and forestry sectors that
should be reflected in the methods?
2.6 USDA intends to rely on engineering calculations, models, and
observations as primary methodological approaches. How can USDA balance
rigor while maintaining broad applicability, national consistency, and
user friendliness?
2.7 What models and tools currently exist for farm- or entity-
scale GHG inventory and reporting, and how might they be useful to the
current project objectives? For each model noted, provide a source
citation for information on the model.
3. Criteria. There are several key criteria that USDA will rely on
in preparing the GHG guidelines, including the following:
3.1 Transparency means that the assumptions and methodologies used
for an inventory should be clearly explained to facilitate replication
and assessment of the inventory by users of the reported information.
The transparency of inventories is fundamental to the success of the
process for the communication and consideration of information.
3.2 Consistency means that the methods used to generate inventory
estimates should be internally consistent in all its elements and the
estimates should be consistent with other years. An inventory is
consistent if the same methodologies are used for the base and all
subsequent years and if consistent data sets are used to estimate
emissions or removals from sources or sinks. Consistency is an
important consideration in merging differing estimation techniques from
diverse technologies and management practices.
3.3 Comparability requires that the estimates of emissions and
sequestration being reported by one entity are comparable to the
estimates being reported by others. For this purpose, entities should
use common methodologies and formats for estimating and reporting
inventories. Comparability is an important consideration in determining
whether the guidelines specifies one method (for any technology or
management practice) or allows users to select from a menu of methods.
3.4 Completeness means that an inventory covers all sources and
sinks, as well as all greenhouse gases. Completeness also means full
coverage of sources and sinks under the control of the entity.
Completeness is an important consideration to be balanced with ease of
use in reporting appropriately for an entity that may have a minor
activity or an activity with severely limited data availability.
3.5 Accuracy is a relative measure of the exactness of an emission
or removal estimate. Estimates should be accurate in the sense that
they are systematically neither over nor under true emissions or
removals, as far as can be judged, and that uncertainties are reduced
as far as practicable.
3.6 Cost effectiveness is a measure of the relative costs and
benefits of additional efforts to improve inventory estimates or reduce
uncertainty.
3.7 Ease of use is a measure of the complexity of the user
interface and underlying data requirements.
3.8 Are these appropriate criteria by which to formulate GHG
estimation and reporting guidelines, methods and tools? Are there other
criteria that should also be considered?
3.9 To the extent that there are tradeoffs, which criteria are more
important than others in ensuring the usefulness of the project
products for entity-scale estimation and reporting?
4. Expected outcomes and products. The project is expected to yield
the following products.
4.1 A review of techniques currently in use for estimating carbon
stocks and fluxes and GHG emissions from agricultural and forestry
activities;
4.2 A technical guidelines document outlining the approach or
approaches to conducting a farm-, ranch-, or forest-scale GHG
estimation;
4.3 Specific methods for each source/sink category that are
designed
[[Page 9537]]
to be reliable and consistent with national inventory efforts;
4.4 A quantification where possible of uncertainties in estimation
at the entity scale; and
4.5 A user-friendly tool that integrates multiple sources of
entity-scale data to facilitate farm-, ranch-, and forest-scale
quantification of greenhouse gas emissions and sequestration in a
manner consistent with the methods and technical guidelines.
Timeline. The project is planned for completion over the next three
years. Implementation of the project will include development of the
draft guidelines and methods, technical and peer review, development of
estimation and reporting tools and associated documentation, beta
testing, solicitation of public comment, and publication of the final
guidelines document as well as the estimation and reporting tools.
USDA prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, national
origin, gender, religion, age, sexual orientation, or disability.
Additionally, discrimination on the basis of political beliefs and
marital or family status is also prohibited by statutes enforced by
USDA (not all prohibited bases apply to all programs). Persons with
disabilities who require alternate means for communication of program
information (braille, large print, audio tape, etc.) should contact the
USDA's Target Center at (202) 720-2000 (voice and TDD). USDA is an
equal opportunity provider and employer.
Joseph Glauber,
Chief Economist.
[FR Doc. 2011-3731 Filed 2-17-11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-38-P