Notice of Availability of the Draft Environmental Impact Statement and Public Hearing for a Proposed Federal Loan Guarantee To Support Construction and Start-Up of the Topaz Solar Farm, San Luis Obispo County, CA, 17844-17846 [2011-7583]
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 62 / Thursday, March 31, 2011 / Notices
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[FR Doc. 2011–7638 Filed 3–30–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4000–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Notice of Availability of the Draft
Environmental Impact Statement and
Public Hearing for a Proposed Federal
Loan Guarantee To Support
Construction and Start-Up of the Topaz
Solar Farm, San Luis Obispo County,
CA
U.S. Department of Energy.
Notice of Availability of the
Draft Environmental Impact Statement
and Public Hearing.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The U.S. Department of
Energy (DOE) announces the availability
of the Draft Environmental Impact
Statement for the DOE Loan Guarantee
to Royal Bank of Scotland for
Construction and Startup of the Topaz
Solar Farm, San Luis Obispo County,
California (DOE/EIS–0458D) (Draft EIS)
for public review and comment, as well
as the date, location and time for a
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SUMMARY:
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public hearing. The Draft EIS analyzes
the potential environmental impacts of
the DOE’s proposed action of issuing a
Federal loan guarantee to support
construction and startup of the Topaz
Solar Farm Project located in San Luis
Obispo County, California (Proposed
Project). The Royal Bank of Scotland
plc, as Lender-Applicant, with Topaz
Solar Farms, LLC (Topaz) as the
borrower, submitted an application to
DOE under the Federal loan guarantee
program pursuant to the Energy Policy
Act of 2005 (EPAct 2005). Topaz is a
limited liability company that is owned
by First Solar, Inc. The loan guarantee
would support the financing arranged
by the Royal Bank of Scotland for the
construction and start up of the
Proposed Project.
Topaz proposes to develop the Project
on up to 4,100 acres of land. As
proposed, the nominal 550-megawatt
electric generation project would
include the installation of about nine
million photovoltaic (PV) solar modules
within approximately 437 arrays and
associated electric equipment.
Generated electricity would be sold to
Pacific Gas and Electric (PG&E) under a
long-term power purchase agreement.
The Project would be interconnected
into PG&E’s existing Morro Bay-Midway
230-kilovolt (kV) transmission line,
which runs in an east-to-west direction
through the site and portions of Kern
County.
DATES: DOE invites the public to submit
comments on the Draft EIS during the
public comment period, which began on
March 25, 2011 and ends on May 9,
2011. DOE will consider all comments
postmarked or received during the
comment period in preparing the Final
EIS. Comments received or postmarked
after May 9, 2011, will be considered to
the extent practicable. In addition to
receiving comments in writing and by email [See ADDRESSES], DOE will
convene a public hearing at which
government agencies, private-sector
organizations, Native American Tribes
and individuals are invited to present
oral and written comments on the Draft
EIS. The public hearing will be held on
April 13, 2011 at the Carrisa Plains
Heritage Association Community
Center, 10750 Carrisa Highway
(Highway 58), Santa Margarita,
California, 93458; located
approximately one mile east of Soda
Lake Road. Oral comments will be heard
during the formal portion of the public
hearing beginning at 6:30 pm. The
public is also invited to an informal
Question & Answer Open House
beginning at 5:30 pm at the location
above, during which DOE and Topaz
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Sfmt 4703
personnel will be available for
individual discussions with attendees to
answer questions about the project and
DOE’s Proposed Action. Displays and
other forms of information about the
proposed agency action, the EIS process,
and Topaz’s Proposed Project will also
be available for review.
DOE requests that anyone who wishes
to present oral comments at the public
hearing contact Ms. Colamaria by phone
or e-mail [see ADDRESSES]. Individuals
who do not make advance arrangements
to speak may register at the meeting.
Speakers who need more than five
minutes should indicate the length of
time desired in their request. DOE may
need to limit speakers to five minutes
initially, but will provide additional
opportunities as time permits. Written
comments on the Draft EIS can also be
submitted to DOE officials at the public
hearing.
The public hearing and Question &
Answer Open House will be accessible
to people with disabilities. In addition,
any individual needing specific
assistance, such as a sign language
interpreter or translator, should contact
Ms. Colamaria [see ADDRESSES] at least
48 hours in advance of the hearing so
that arrangements can be made.
Public comments can be
submitted electronically or by U.S. Mail.
Written comments on the proposed EIS
scope should be signed and addressed
to the NEPA Document Manager for this
project: Ms. Angela Colamaria, Loan
Guarantee Program (LP–10), U.S.
Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585. Electronic
submission of comments is encouraged
due to processing time required for
regular mail. Comments can be
submitted electronically by sending an
e-mail to: Topaz-EIS@hq.doe.gov. All
electronic and written comments should
reference the following document
number: DOE/EIS–0458.
ADDRESSES:
To
obtain additional information about this
EIS, the public hearing, or to receive a
copy of the Draft EIS, contact Angela
Colamaria by telephone: 202–287–5387;
toll-free number: 800–832–0885 ext.
75387; or electronic mail:
Angela.Colamaria@hq.doe.gov. For
general information on the DOE NEPA
process, please contact: Ms. Carol M.
Borgstrom, Director, Office of NEPA
Policy and Compliance (GC–54), U.S.
Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585; telephone: 202–
586–4600; facsimile: 202–586–7031;
electronic mail: askNEPA@hq.doe.gov;
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 62 / Thursday, March 31, 2011 / Notices
or leave a toll-free message at 800–472–
2756.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Title XVII
of EPAct 2005 established a Federal
loan guarantee program for eligible
energy projects, and was amended by
the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009 to create
Section 1705 of Title XVII (42 U.S.C.
16516), authorizing a new program for
rapid deployment of renewable energy
projects and related manufacturing
facilities, electric power transmission
projects, and leading edge biofuels
projects. The Section 1705 Program is
designed to address the current
economic conditions of the nation, in
part, through financing such projects.
The Royal Bank of Scotland plc, as
Lender-Applicant, with Topaz as the
borrower, applied to DOE for a federal
loan guarantee under the Solicitation
entitled, ‘‘Federal Loan Guarantees for
Commercial Technology Renewable
Energy Generation Projects under the
Financial Institution Partnership
Program’’ (Solicitation No. DE–FOA–
0000166), issued on October 7, 2009.
The purpose and need for action by
DOE is to comply with its mandate
under EPAct 2005 by selecting eligible
projects that meet the goals of Section
1705 Program, as summarized above.
The EIS will inform DOE’s decision on
whether to issue a loan guarantee to
Topaz to support the Proposed Project.
DOE’s proposed action is to issue a loan
guarantee to Topaz to support
construction and start-up of the Topaz
Solar Farm. The Proposed Project would
be located in an unincorporated portion
of eastern San Luis Obispo County,
California, adjacent to Highway 58 and
east of Bitterwater Road. Topaz has
options to purchase approximately
10,000 acres of land in the Project area.
The Proposed Project would be
developed on up to 4,100 acres of land
within one of two overlapping study
areas.
The Proposed Project would consist
of: a solar field of approximately nine
million ground-mounted PV modules
that collect solar radiation to produce
electricity; an electrical collection
system that converts generated power
from direct current (DC) to alternating
current (AC) and delivers it to a new
Project substation which collects and
converts the generated power from 34.5
kV to 230 kV for delivery via a new
PG&E switching station to PG&E’s
existing Morro Bay-Midway 230-kV
transmission line; and the
aforementioned PG&E switching station
that interconnects the Proposed Project
to PG&E’s existing transmission line.
After construction, PG&E would own
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11:23 Mar 31, 2011
Jkt 223001
and operate the switching station. As
part of the Proposed Project, Topaz
would also construct and operate a
Monitoring and Maintenance Facility
and a Solar Energy Learning Center
within the Proposed Project’s site
boundary. The Proposed Project would
also include up to 22 miles of on-site
access roads as well as leach field and
septic systems for the two facilities
listed above.
Topaz has interconnection agreements
in place for the first 400 MW of Project
capacity. The California Independent
System Operator has determined that
network upgrades would be required to
accommodate the Proposed Project’s
remaining 150 MW, as well as other
generation projects in the region.
Network upgrades could include the
reconductoring of 35 miles of the 230kV transmission lines between the new
PG&E switching station and the Midway
Substation. Such upgrades would
extend the height of every other existing
tower by 20 feet, but would not
introduce a new structure.
Alternatives
In determining the range of reasonable
alternatives to be considered in the EIS
for the Proposed Project, DOE identified
the reasonable alternatives that would
satisfy the underlying purpose and need
for agency action. Rather than being
directly responsible for the siting,
construction, and operation of
respective projects selected in response
to solicitations under EPAct 2005,
DOE’s actions are limited to
guaranteeing the debt obligation for the
project. Therefore, DOE’s overall
decision will be to either provide a loan
guarantee for the Proposed Project or to
decline to provide a loan guarantee (i.e.,
the No Action alternative, as discussed
below). The potential environmental
impacts of a No Action alternative, as
well as two Project-Specific alternatives,
are analyzed in the EIS.
The Project-Specific alternatives
include alternate configurations for the
solar arrays. Within the Proposed
Project site, Topaz identified two Study
Areas (Study Area A and Study Area B)
that would be suitable for the Proposed
Project, although construction of the
Proposed Project would take place on
only one Study Area if the Proposed
Project is approved. DOE analyzed both
Study Areas available to Topaz as
project-specific alternatives (ProjectSpecific Alternative A and ProjectSpecific Alternative B).
Under the No Action alternative, DOE
would not provide the loan guarantee to
Topaz. In this case, Topaz may have
greater difficulty obtaining financing for
the Project, which may result in a delay
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17845
in the start of construction, construction
in smaller phases over a longer time
period, potentially increased project
cost, or could possibly result in the
Proposed Project not being built.
Although Topaz may still pursue the
Project without the loan guarantee, as
defined above, for purposes of the Draft
EIS analysis, it is assumed that the No
Action alternative would result in no
Project or in a no build scenario. DOE
does not have a preferred alternative at
this time, and will identify its preferred
alternative in the Final EIS.
Floodplain Assessment
In the October 22, 2010 Notice of
Intent to Prepare an Environmental
Impact Statement (75 FR 65306), DOE
provided notice of a proposed DOE
action in a floodplain pursuant to DOE
Floodplain and Wetland Environmental
Review Requirements (10 CFR Part
1022). Overhead electrical lines would
need to cross 100-year floodplains
(unnamed drainages within the Carrizo
Plain, northwest of Soda Lake). Since
some of the floodplains on the project
site are greater than 200 feet wide and
posts are needed every 200 feet to
support overhead lines, the installation
of posts within the floodplain is
anticipated. DOE has prepared a
floodplain assessment as required by
DOE regulations. Interested parties may
comment on the floodplain assessment,
which has been incorporated into the
Draft EIS.
Scope of Draft EIS and Environmental
Review Process
The DOE prepared this Draft EIS
pursuant to the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969, as amended (NEPA),
the Council on Environmental Quality
(CEQ) NEPA regulations, and the DOE
NEPA implementing procedures. The
Draft EIS analyzes the environmental
consequences that may result from the
Proposed Action, including the
alternative layout options, and the No
Action Alternative. Potential impacts
identified during the scoping process
and analyzed in the Draft EIS related to
the following: Air quality; greenhouse
gas emissions and climate change;
energy use and production; water
resources, including groundwater and
surface waters; wetlands and
floodplains; geological resources;
ecological resources, including species
of special concern and threatened and
endangered species such as the San
Joaquin kit fox, longhorn fairy shrimp
and vernal pool fairy shrimp; cultural
resources, including historic structures
and properties, sites of religious and
cultural significance to Tribes, and
archaeological resources; land use;
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 62 / Thursday, March 31, 2011 / Notices
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visual resources and aesthetics;
transportation and traffic; noise and
vibration; hazardous materials and solid
waste management; human health and
safety; accidents and terrorism;
socioeconomics, including impacts to
community services; environmental
justice; and cumulative impacts.
Because the Proposed Project may affect
listed species under the Endangered
Species Act (ESA), DOE has also
initiated consultation regarding the
project with the U.S. Department of the
Interior’s Fish and Wildlife Service
under Section 7 of the ESA.
The Topaz Proposed Project site is
expected to impact waters subject to the
jurisdiction of the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers (USACE); therefore the
Proposed Project will require a Clean
Water Act (CWA) Section 404 Permit.
As a result, USACE has participated as
a cooperating agency in the preparation
of this Draft EIS and will use this EIS
(in part) to determine whether to issue
a Section 404 permit. USACE will issue
a separate decision document on the
CWA Section 404 permit for the
Proposed Project that will incorporate
the environmental analyses from this
EIS.
The DOE will use and coordinate the
NEPA public comment process to satisfy
the public involvement requirements of
Section 106 of the National Historic
Preservation Act (16 U.S.C. 470f) as
provided for in 36 CFR 800.2(d)(3). DOE
has invited Federally-recognized
American Indian Tribes that have
historic interests in the area to also
participate in government-togovernment consultation regarding the
Proposed Project. In addition to these
Federally-recognized tribes, the
California Native American Heritage
Commission provided DOE with a
Native American contacts list in the
project area. DOE contacted parties on
the list to solicit concerns or comments
on the Proposed Project.
Availability of the Draft EIS
Copies of the Draft EIS have been
distributed to: Members of Congress;
Native American Tribal governments,
Federal, State, and local officials; and
agencies, organizations and individuals
who may be interested or affected. The
Draft EIS is on the Department of
Energy’s NEPA Web site at https://
www.nepa.energy.gov under ‘‘DOE
NEPA Documents’’ and on the Loan
Program Office’s Web site at https://
www.lgprogram.energy.gov/
NEPA_EIS.html.
Copies of the Draft EIS are also
available for review at the Simmler
Public Library/California Valley
Community Service District; 13080 Soda
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11:23 Mar 31, 2011
Jkt 223001
Lake Road; California Valley, CA 93453
and the San Luis Obispo County
Department of Planning and Building;
976 Osos St. Room 300; San Luis
Obispo, CA 93408.
Issued in Washington, DC, on March 25,
2011.
Jonathan M. Silver,
Executive Director, Loan Programs Office.
[FR Doc. 2011–7583 Filed 3–30–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Office of Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy
Objective Merit Review of
Discretionary Financial Assistance and
Other Transaction Authority
Applications
Office of Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy, Department of
Energy.
ACTION: Notice of Objective Merit
Review Procedure.
AGENCY:
This Notice establishes the
procedure for program offices operating
under the authority of the Assistant
Secretary for Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy in conducting the
objective merit review of discretionary
financial assistance and Other
Transaction Authority funding
applications. The effective date for the
Objective Merit Review Procedure
contained in this notice is March 18,
2011.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: U.S.
Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585–0121, 1–877–
337–3463.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
II. Applicability of Notice
III. Objective Merit Review Procedure
IV. Merit Review Advisory Report
V. Application of Program Policy Factors
VI. Selection
VII. Deviations
I. Introduction—The Department of
Energy (DOE), Office of Energy
Efficiency and Renewable Energy
(EERE) hereby gives notice of the
procedure for the objective merit review
of projects seeking discretionary
financial assistance. The procedures
described in this notice implement the
objective merit review provisions of the
DOE Financial Assistance Rules at 10
CFR 600.13. Specifically, this notice
covers the procedure for applications
received competitively and non-
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competitively. This notice also provides
procedures for establishing peer and
merit review panels, naming a Federal
Merit Review Manager, conducting
merit reviews, and preparing a Merit
Review Advisory Report for the
Selection Official.
DOE provides financial assistance, in
the form of grants cooperative
agreements and technology investment
agreements. The principal purpose of
these transactions is the transfer of a
thing of value, usually money but
occasionally property or other items of
value, to a recipient to accomplish a
public purpose identified. DOE funds
only those programs authorized by
Federal statute. Financial assistance
may be either discretionary or
mandatory. Discretionary financial
assistance means DOE provides funding
to a recipient of DOE’s choosing; DOE
has the discretion to select a recipient
as well as the size of the award.
Mandatory financial assistance means
DOE must provide the assistance to the
entities named and the amounts stated
by statute.
These procedures do not cover
acquisition. Financial assistance differs
from an acquisition, which refers to
instruments used when the principal
purpose of the transaction is the
acquisition of supplies or services for
the direct benefit of the Government.
The procedures pursuant to this notice
do not apply to acquisitions, which are
covered by the Federal Acquisition
Regulations (FAR).
II. Applicability of Notice—These
procedures apply to the evaluation of
discretionary financial assistance
applications received for programs
within the DOE EERE.
(a) Distinction Between Solicited
Applications and Unsolicited
Proposals—Solicited applications
constitute direct responses by interested
organizations or individuals to DOE
Funding Opportunity Announcements
(FOA) in the form of applications for
discretionary financial assistance
awards. Funding opportunities are
announced using the process set forth in
10 CFR 600.8. When a proposal is
submitted solely on the proposer’s
initiative, and the idea, method or
approach would be ineligible for
assistance under a recent, current, or
planned solicitation, and if, as
determined by DOE, a competitive
solicitation would not be appropriate,
the proposal is considered an
unsolicited proposal. Unsolicited
proposals are awarded on a noncompetitive basis using the criteria set
forth in 10 CFR 600.6(c). The two types
of proposals are treated differently for
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 62 (Thursday, March 31, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 17844-17846]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-7583]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Notice of Availability of the Draft Environmental Impact
Statement and Public Hearing for a Proposed Federal Loan Guarantee To
Support Construction and Start-Up of the Topaz Solar Farm, San Luis
Obispo County, CA
AGENCY: U.S. Department of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of Availability of the Draft Environmental Impact
Statement and Public Hearing.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announces the availability
of the Draft Environmental Impact Statement for the DOE Loan Guarantee
to Royal Bank of Scotland for Construction and Startup of the Topaz
Solar Farm, San Luis Obispo County, California (DOE/EIS-0458D) (Draft
EIS) for public review and comment, as well as the date, location and
time for a public hearing. The Draft EIS analyzes the potential
environmental impacts of the DOE's proposed action of issuing a Federal
loan guarantee to support construction and startup of the Topaz Solar
Farm Project located in San Luis Obispo County, California (Proposed
Project). The Royal Bank of Scotland plc, as Lender-Applicant, with
Topaz Solar Farms, LLC (Topaz) as the borrower, submitted an
application to DOE under the Federal loan guarantee program pursuant to
the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPAct 2005). Topaz is a limited
liability company that is owned by First Solar, Inc. The loan guarantee
would support the financing arranged by the Royal Bank of Scotland for
the construction and start up of the Proposed Project.
Topaz proposes to develop the Project on up to 4,100 acres of land.
As proposed, the nominal 550-megawatt electric generation project would
include the installation of about nine million photovoltaic (PV) solar
modules within approximately 437 arrays and associated electric
equipment. Generated electricity would be sold to Pacific Gas and
Electric (PG&E) under a long-term power purchase agreement. The Project
would be interconnected into PG&E's existing Morro Bay-Midway 230-
kilovolt (kV) transmission line, which runs in an east-to-west
direction through the site and portions of Kern County.
DATES: DOE invites the public to submit comments on the Draft EIS
during the public comment period, which began on March 25, 2011 and
ends on May 9, 2011. DOE will consider all comments postmarked or
received during the comment period in preparing the Final EIS. Comments
received or postmarked after May 9, 2011, will be considered to the
extent practicable. In addition to receiving comments in writing and by
e-mail [See ADDRESSES], DOE will convene a public hearing at which
government agencies, private-sector organizations, Native American
Tribes and individuals are invited to present oral and written comments
on the Draft EIS. The public hearing will be held on April 13, 2011 at
the Carrisa Plains Heritage Association Community Center, 10750 Carrisa
Highway (Highway 58), Santa Margarita, California, 93458; located
approximately one mile east of Soda Lake Road. Oral comments will be
heard during the formal portion of the public hearing beginning at 6:30
pm. The public is also invited to an informal Question & Answer Open
House beginning at 5:30 pm at the location above, during which DOE and
Topaz personnel will be available for individual discussions with
attendees to answer questions about the project and DOE's Proposed
Action. Displays and other forms of information about the proposed
agency action, the EIS process, and Topaz's Proposed Project will also
be available for review.
DOE requests that anyone who wishes to present oral comments at the
public hearing contact Ms. Colamaria by phone or e-mail [see
ADDRESSES]. Individuals who do not make advance arrangements to speak
may register at the meeting. Speakers who need more than five minutes
should indicate the length of time desired in their request. DOE may
need to limit speakers to five minutes initially, but will provide
additional opportunities as time permits. Written comments on the Draft
EIS can also be submitted to DOE officials at the public hearing.
The public hearing and Question & Answer Open House will be
accessible to people with disabilities. In addition, any individual
needing specific assistance, such as a sign language interpreter or
translator, should contact Ms. Colamaria [see ADDRESSES] at least 48
hours in advance of the hearing so that arrangements can be made.
ADDRESSES: Public comments can be submitted electronically or by U.S.
Mail. Written comments on the proposed EIS scope should be signed and
addressed to the NEPA Document Manager for this project: Ms. Angela
Colamaria, Loan Guarantee Program (LP-10), U.S. Department of Energy,
1000 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20585. Electronic
submission of comments is encouraged due to processing time required
for regular mail. Comments can be submitted electronically by sending
an e-mail to: Topaz-EIS@hq.doe.gov. All electronic and written comments
should reference the following document number: DOE/EIS-0458.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: To obtain additional information about
this EIS, the public hearing, or to receive a copy of the Draft EIS,
contact Angela Colamaria by telephone: 202-287-5387; toll-free number:
800-832-0885 ext. 75387; or electronic mail:
Angela.Colamaria@hq.doe.gov. For general information on the DOE NEPA
process, please contact: Ms. Carol M. Borgstrom, Director, Office of
NEPA Policy and Compliance (GC-54), U.S. Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20585; telephone: 202-586-
4600; facsimile: 202-586-7031; electronic mail: askNEPA@hq.doe.gov;
[[Page 17845]]
or leave a toll-free message at 800-472-2756.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Title XVII of EPAct 2005 established a
Federal loan guarantee program for eligible energy projects, and was
amended by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 to create
Section 1705 of Title XVII (42 U.S.C. 16516), authorizing a new program
for rapid deployment of renewable energy projects and related
manufacturing facilities, electric power transmission projects, and
leading edge biofuels projects. The Section 1705 Program is designed to
address the current economic conditions of the nation, in part, through
financing such projects.
The Royal Bank of Scotland plc, as Lender-Applicant, with Topaz as
the borrower, applied to DOE for a federal loan guarantee under the
Solicitation entitled, ``Federal Loan Guarantees for Commercial
Technology Renewable Energy Generation Projects under the Financial
Institution Partnership Program'' (Solicitation No. DE-FOA-0000166),
issued on October 7, 2009.
The purpose and need for action by DOE is to comply with its
mandate under EPAct 2005 by selecting eligible projects that meet the
goals of Section 1705 Program, as summarized above. The EIS will inform
DOE's decision on whether to issue a loan guarantee to Topaz to support
the Proposed Project. DOE's proposed action is to issue a loan
guarantee to Topaz to support construction and start-up of the Topaz
Solar Farm. The Proposed Project would be located in an unincorporated
portion of eastern San Luis Obispo County, California, adjacent to
Highway 58 and east of Bitterwater Road. Topaz has options to purchase
approximately 10,000 acres of land in the Project area. The Proposed
Project would be developed on up to 4,100 acres of land within one of
two overlapping study areas.
The Proposed Project would consist of: a solar field of
approximately nine million ground-mounted PV modules that collect solar
radiation to produce electricity; an electrical collection system that
converts generated power from direct current (DC) to alternating
current (AC) and delivers it to a new Project substation which collects
and converts the generated power from 34.5 kV to 230 kV for delivery
via a new PG&E switching station to PG&E's existing Morro Bay-Midway
230-kV transmission line; and the aforementioned PG&E switching station
that interconnects the Proposed Project to PG&E's existing transmission
line. After construction, PG&E would own and operate the switching
station. As part of the Proposed Project, Topaz would also construct
and operate a Monitoring and Maintenance Facility and a Solar Energy
Learning Center within the Proposed Project's site boundary. The
Proposed Project would also include up to 22 miles of on-site access
roads as well as leach field and septic systems for the two facilities
listed above.
Topaz has interconnection agreements in place for the first 400 MW
of Project capacity. The California Independent System Operator has
determined that network upgrades would be required to accommodate the
Proposed Project's remaining 150 MW, as well as other generation
projects in the region. Network upgrades could include the
reconductoring of 35 miles of the 230-kV transmission lines between the
new PG&E switching station and the Midway Substation. Such upgrades
would extend the height of every other existing tower by 20 feet, but
would not introduce a new structure.
Alternatives
In determining the range of reasonable alternatives to be
considered in the EIS for the Proposed Project, DOE identified the
reasonable alternatives that would satisfy the underlying purpose and
need for agency action. Rather than being directly responsible for the
siting, construction, and operation of respective projects selected in
response to solicitations under EPAct 2005, DOE's actions are limited
to guaranteeing the debt obligation for the project. Therefore, DOE's
overall decision will be to either provide a loan guarantee for the
Proposed Project or to decline to provide a loan guarantee (i.e., the
No Action alternative, as discussed below). The potential environmental
impacts of a No Action alternative, as well as two Project-Specific
alternatives, are analyzed in the EIS.
The Project-Specific alternatives include alternate configurations
for the solar arrays. Within the Proposed Project site, Topaz
identified two Study Areas (Study Area A and Study Area B) that would
be suitable for the Proposed Project, although construction of the
Proposed Project would take place on only one Study Area if the
Proposed Project is approved. DOE analyzed both Study Areas available
to Topaz as project-specific alternatives (Project-Specific Alternative
A and Project-Specific Alternative B).
Under the No Action alternative, DOE would not provide the loan
guarantee to Topaz. In this case, Topaz may have greater difficulty
obtaining financing for the Project, which may result in a delay in the
start of construction, construction in smaller phases over a longer
time period, potentially increased project cost, or could possibly
result in the Proposed Project not being built. Although Topaz may
still pursue the Project without the loan guarantee, as defined above,
for purposes of the Draft EIS analysis, it is assumed that the No
Action alternative would result in no Project or in a no build
scenario. DOE does not have a preferred alternative at this time, and
will identify its preferred alternative in the Final EIS.
Floodplain Assessment
In the October 22, 2010 Notice of Intent to Prepare an
Environmental Impact Statement (75 FR 65306), DOE provided notice of a
proposed DOE action in a floodplain pursuant to DOE Floodplain and
Wetland Environmental Review Requirements (10 CFR Part 1022). Overhead
electrical lines would need to cross 100-year floodplains (unnamed
drainages within the Carrizo Plain, northwest of Soda Lake). Since some
of the floodplains on the project site are greater than 200 feet wide
and posts are needed every 200 feet to support overhead lines, the
installation of posts within the floodplain is anticipated. DOE has
prepared a floodplain assessment as required by DOE regulations.
Interested parties may comment on the floodplain assessment, which has
been incorporated into the Draft EIS.
Scope of Draft EIS and Environmental Review Process
The DOE prepared this Draft EIS pursuant to the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969, as amended (NEPA), the Council on
Environmental Quality (CEQ) NEPA regulations, and the DOE NEPA
implementing procedures. The Draft EIS analyzes the environmental
consequences that may result from the Proposed Action, including the
alternative layout options, and the No Action Alternative. Potential
impacts identified during the scoping process and analyzed in the Draft
EIS related to the following: Air quality; greenhouse gas emissions and
climate change; energy use and production; water resources, including
groundwater and surface waters; wetlands and floodplains; geological
resources; ecological resources, including species of special concern
and threatened and endangered species such as the San Joaquin kit fox,
longhorn fairy shrimp and vernal pool fairy shrimp; cultural resources,
including historic structures and properties, sites of religious and
cultural significance to Tribes, and archaeological resources; land
use;
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visual resources and aesthetics; transportation and traffic; noise and
vibration; hazardous materials and solid waste management; human health
and safety; accidents and terrorism; socioeconomics, including impacts
to community services; environmental justice; and cumulative impacts.
Because the Proposed Project may affect listed species under the
Endangered Species Act (ESA), DOE has also initiated consultation
regarding the project with the U.S. Department of the Interior's Fish
and Wildlife Service under Section 7 of the ESA.
The Topaz Proposed Project site is expected to impact waters
subject to the jurisdiction of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
(USACE); therefore the Proposed Project will require a Clean Water Act
(CWA) Section 404 Permit. As a result, USACE has participated as a
cooperating agency in the preparation of this Draft EIS and will use
this EIS (in part) to determine whether to issue a Section 404 permit.
USACE will issue a separate decision document on the CWA Section 404
permit for the Proposed Project that will incorporate the environmental
analyses from this EIS.
The DOE will use and coordinate the NEPA public comment process to
satisfy the public involvement requirements of Section 106 of the
National Historic Preservation Act (16 U.S.C. 470f) as provided for in
36 CFR 800.2(d)(3). DOE has invited Federally-recognized American
Indian Tribes that have historic interests in the area to also
participate in government-to-government consultation regarding the
Proposed Project. In addition to these Federally-recognized tribes, the
California Native American Heritage Commission provided DOE with a
Native American contacts list in the project area. DOE contacted
parties on the list to solicit concerns or comments on the Proposed
Project.
Availability of the Draft EIS
Copies of the Draft EIS have been distributed to: Members of
Congress; Native American Tribal governments, Federal, State, and local
officials; and agencies, organizations and individuals who may be
interested or affected. The Draft EIS is on the Department of Energy's
NEPA Web site at https://www.nepa.energy.gov under ``DOE NEPA
Documents'' and on the Loan Program Office's Web site at https://www.lgprogram.energy.gov/NEPA_EIS.html.
Copies of the Draft EIS are also available for review at the
Simmler Public Library/California Valley Community Service District;
13080 Soda Lake Road; California Valley, CA 93453 and the San Luis
Obispo County Department of Planning and Building; 976 Osos St. Room
300; San Luis Obispo, CA 93408.
Issued in Washington, DC, on March 25, 2011.
Jonathan M. Silver,
Executive Director, Loan Programs Office.
[FR Doc. 2011-7583 Filed 3-30-11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P