Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) Renewable Energy Program Interim Policy Leasing for Marine Hydrokinetic Technology Testing Offshore Florida, 30184-30186 [2011-12724]
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30184
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 100 / Tuesday, May 24, 2011 / Notices
Title of Proposal: Section 8 Random
Digit Dialing Fair Marketing Rent
Surveys.
Description of Information Collection:
These surveys provide HUD with a way
to estimate Section 8 Fair Market Rents
(FMRs) in areas not covered by the
American Community Survey annual
reports and in areas where FMRs are
believed to be incorrect. The affected
public would be those renters random
selected to be surveyed and Section 8
voucher holders. The change in this
request from what has been approved is
to include the use of cell phones, mail
surveys and web-based surveys. The
burden on the respondent and on those
contacted but screened out is to less
than in the previous requests because
fewer surveys are being conducted.
Minor changes have been made to the
survey instrument to make it clearer.
OMB Control Number: 2528–0142.
Agency Form Numbers: None.
Members of Affected Public:
Individuals or Households.
Number of
respondents
Annual
responses
2,314
1
Reporting Burden ..............................................................................
Status of the proposed information
collection: Emergency Collection.
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Authority: The Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995, 44 U.S.C. Chapter 35, as amended.
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management,
Regulation and Enforcement
Dated: May 18, 2011.
Colette Pollard,
Departmental Reports Management Officer,
Officer of the Chief Information Officer.
[Docket No. BOEM–2011–0012]
[FR Doc. 2011–12805 Filed 5–23–11; 8:45 am]
Outer Continental Shelf (OCS)
Renewable Energy Program Interim
Policy Leasing for Marine Hydrokinetic
Technology Testing Offshore Florida
BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
INTER-AMERICAN FOUNDATION
BOARD
Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management, Regulation and
Enforcement (BOEMRE), Interior.
ACTION: Notice of Intent (NOI) to Prepare
an Environmental Assessment (EA).
Sunshine Act Meetings
SUMMARY:
AGENCY:
TIME AND DATE:
June 6, 2011, 9 a.m.–1:30
p.m.
901 N. Stuart Street, Tenth Floor,
Arlington, Virginia 22203.
PLACE:
STATUS:
Open session.
MATTERS TO BE CONSIDERED:
• Approval of the Minutes of the
March 28, 2011, Meeting of the Board of
Directors
• Strategic Plan
• Advisory Council
• Next Meetings
PORTIONS TO BE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC:
• Approval of the Minutes of the
March 28, 2011, Meeting of the Board of
Directors
• Strategic Plan
• Advisory Council
• Next Meetings
PORTIONS TO BE CLOSED TO THE PUBLIC:
jlentini on DSK4TPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
• None
CONTACT PERSON FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Jennifer Hodges Reynolds, (703) 306–
0002.
Jennifer Hodges Reynolds,
General Counsel.
[FR Doc. 2011–12961 Filed 5–20–11; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 7025–01–P
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This notice is being published
as an initial step for the purpose of
involving Federal agencies, states,
tribes, local government, and the public
in the leasing decision for an offshore
technology testing facility located on the
OCS, in accordance with the
Department of the Interior and the
Council on Environmental Quality
(CEQ) regulations implementing the
provisions of the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) of
1969 as amended (42 U.S.C. 4321 et
seq.). On November 6, 2007, the
Minerals Management Service (MMS),
now BOEMRE, announced an interim
policy for authorizing the issuance of
leases for the installation of offshore
data collection and technology testing
facilities on the OCS (72 FR 62673). A
lease application has been submitted
pursuant to the interim policy, initiating
the need for an EA.
On June 11, 2010 Florida Atlantic
University’s (FAU) Southeast National
Marine Renewable Energy Center
(SNMREC) submitted an application to
lease three OCS blocks, approximately
nine to 15 nautical miles offshore of
Fort Lauderdale, Florida, under its
original nomination submitted on
November 8, 2007. These three blocks
are located on the Atlantic OCS in the
Official Protraction Diagram NG 17–06
numbered 7003, 7053, and 7054. The
proposed lease area ranges from a depth
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Sfmt 4703
×
Hours per
response
0.260
=
Burden hours
602
of 262 meters (m) in Block 7053 to 366
m in the southern half of Block 7054.
This project application was amended
on February 10, 2011, and describes
data collection and technology testing
activities to be conducted on the
proposed lease. FAU SNMREC intends
to deploy a single-anchor mooring, with
a mooring and telemetry buoy (MTB)
(similar to the Navy Oceanographic
Meteorological Automatic Device
(NOMAD) weather buoys) for the
purpose of testing, for limited periods,
equipment designed to use the Florida
current to generate electricity on the
proposed leasehold. The proposed MTB
would act as both a sensor and
measurement platform and mooring
point for a platform or vessel which can
deploy small-scale ocean current
devices. The device(s) to be deployed
would be limited to 100-kilowatt (kW)
power extraction and seven-meter
diameter rotor(s). Initially, it is
proposed to deploy an experimental
demonstration device with 20 kW
maximum power and a three-meter rotor
diameter from a vessel moored to the
MTB.
BOEMRE intends to prepare an EA for
the purpose of considering the
environmental consequences associated
with issuing an interim policy lease to
FAU SNMREC, which will include
impacts that may result from the
installation of an MTB, deployment of
small-scale ocean current devices, and
operations of a deployment vessel on
the potential leasehold. The EA will
consider multiple environmental issues,
including impacts to benthic habitats,
sea turtles, pelagic fishes, marine
mammals, and existing human uses. At
a minimum, the alternatives that will be
considered are no action (i.e., no
issuance of a lease), and the issuance of
a lease and approval of certain
technology testing activities within the
lease area, such as deployment of
technology demonstration devices,
single anchor moorings, and an MTB.
With this NOI, BOEMRE is requesting
comments and input from Federal, state,
E:\FR\FM\24MYN1.SGM
24MYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 100 / Tuesday, May 24, 2011 / Notices
and local government agencies, tribal
governments, and other interested
parties, which may assist BOEMRE in
identifying the important environmental
issues and any additional alternatives
that should be considered in the EA.
Input is also requested regarding
measures (e.g., limitations on activities
based on technology, siting, or timing)
that would mitigate impacts to
environmental resources and
socioeconomic conditions that could
result from leasing and the technology
testing activities in the lease area.
Consultation with other Federal
agencies, tribal governments, and
affected states will be carried out during
the EA process and will be completed
before a final decision is made on
whether, or under what circumstances
to issue a lease.
Authority: This NOI to prepare an EA is
published pursuant to 43 CFR 46.305.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
jlentini on DSK4TPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Michelle Morin, BOEMRE Office of
Offshore Alternative Energy Programs,
381 Elden Street, MS 4090, Herndon,
Virginia 20170–4817, (703) 787–1340 or
michelle.morin@boemre.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
1. Interim Policy
Subsection 8(p)(1)(C) of the OCS
Lands Act (43 U.S.C. 1337(p)(1)(3)),
which was added by section 388 of the
Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPAct), gave
the Secretary of the Interior the
authority to issue leases, easements and
rights-of-way on the OCS for alternative
energy activities. This authority has
been delegated to BOEMRE. In a
Request for Information and
Nominations published on November 6,
2007, in the Federal Register (72 FR
62673) BOEMRE announced that it had
established an interim policy under
which it would issue limited leases
authorizing alternative energy resource
assessment, data collection, and
technology testing activities on the OCS
and that it was accepting nominations
for limited leases to conduct such
activities. Limited leases issued under
the interim policy for energy resource
assessment data collection and
technology testing activities have a term
of 5 years, and do not authorize the
production or transmission of energy. In
response to the November 6, 2007
notice, BOEMRE received more than 40
nominations proposing areas for limited
leases on the OCS off the Pacific and
Atlantic Coasts.
BOEMRE reviewed in detail all
nominations received and, on April 18,
2008, identified 16 proposed lease areas
for priority consideration based on
factors such as the technological
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16:47 May 23, 2011
Jkt 223001
complexity of the project proposed,
timing needs, competing OCS space-use
issues, and relevant state-supported
renewable energy activities and
initiatives (73 FR 21152). BOEMRE also
took into consideration the importance
of supporting the advancement of
activities related to the development of
each of the renewable energy resource
types that would be studied in the
proposals—wind, current, and wave. Of
the 16 areas, BOEMRE identified four
proposed areas offshore Florida as
priority areas for the testing of ocean
current technology and the collection of
resource data.
In the April 18, 2008 notice, BOEMRE
also solicited from interested parties
expressions of competitive interest in
leasing any of these nominated areas.
See 43 U.S.C. 1337(p)(3). The notice
also invited comments and solicited
information from the public regarding
the suitability of these areas for leasing
and the environmental and
socioeconomic consequences that may
be associated with issuing research
leases in these areas. BOEMRE received
no indications of competitive interest in
acquiring leases within these four areas
offshore Florida, which include the
three blocks identified in FAU
SNMREC’s most recent application. As
a result, BOEMRE intends to make a
final decision on whether to proceed
with the issuance of a lease
noncompetitively, once the required
environmental review, which is the
subject of this NOI, is completed.
Interim policy leases will be governed
by the terms outlined in the interim
policy lease and stipulations published
in the Federal Register (73 FR 21363) on
April 21, 2008. More information about
the interim policy can be found at:
https://www.boemre.gov/offshore/
RenewableEnergy/Regulatory
Information.htm#Interim_Policy.
2. Cooperating Agencies
BOEMRE invites other Federal
agencies and state, tribal, and local
governments to consider becoming
cooperating agencies in the preparation
of the EA. CEQ regulations
implementing the procedural provisions
of NEPA define cooperating agencies as
those with ‘‘jurisdiction by law or
special expertise’’ (40 CFR 1508.5).
Potential cooperating agencies should
consider their authority and capacity to
assume the responsibilities of a
cooperating agency and remember that
an agency’s role in the environmental
analysis neither enlarges nor diminishes
the final decision-making authority of
any other agency involved in the NEPA
process.
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30185
Upon request, BOEMRE will provide
potential cooperating agencies with a
draft Memorandum of Agreement that
includes a schedule with critical action
dates and milestones, mutual
responsibilities, designated points of
contact, and expectations for handling
pre-decisional information. Agencies
should also consider the ‘‘Factors for
Determining Whether to Invite, Decline,
or End Cooperating Agency Status’’ in
Attachment 1 to CEQ’s January 30, 2002,
Memorandum for the Heads of Federal
Agencies: Cooperating Agencies in
Implementing the Procedural
Requirements of the NEPA. A copy of
this document is available at: https://ceq.
hss.doe.gov/nepa/regs/cooperating/
cooperatingagenciesmemorandum.html
and https://ceq.hss.doe.gov/nepa/regs/
cooperating/cooperatingagencymemo
factors.html.
BOEMRE, as the lead agency, will not
provide financial assistance to
cooperating agencies. Even if an
organization is not a cooperating
agency, opportunities will exist to
provide information and comments to
BOEMRE during the normal public
input phases of the NEPA/EA process.
3. Comments
Federal, state, local government
agencies, tribal governments, and other
interested parties are requested to send
their written comments regarding
important environmental issues and the
identification of reasonable alternatives
related to the proposed issuance of a
limited lease to FAU SNMREC on which
it intends to conduct data collection and
technology testing activities in one of
the following ways:
1. Electronically: https://
www.regulations.gov. In the entry titled
‘‘Enter Keyword or ID,’’ enter ‘‘BOEM–
2011–0012,’’ then click ‘‘Search’’. Follow
the instructions to submit public
comments and view supporting and
related materials available for this
document.
2. In written form, delivered by hand
or by mail, enclosed in an envelope
labeled ‘‘Comments on OCS Renewable
Energy Program Interim Policy Lease for
FAU SNMREC’’ to Program Manager,
Office of Offshore Alternative Energy
Programs (MS 4090), Bureau of Ocean
Energy Management, Regulation and
Enforcement, 381 Elden Street,
Herndon, Virginia 20170.
Comments should be submitted no
later than June 23, 2011.
E:\FR\FM\24MYN1.SGM
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30186
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 100 / Tuesday, May 24, 2011 / Notices
Dated: May 18, 2011.
L. Renee Orr,
Acting Associate Director for Offshore Energy
and Minerals Management.
[FR Doc. 2011–12724 Filed 5–23–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–MR–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
[FWS–R9–MB–2011–N104; FY 11 91100–
3740–GRNT 7C]
Proposed Information Collection;
Migratory Birds and Wetlands
Conservation Grant Programs
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice; request for comments.
AGENCY:
We (U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service) will ask the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) to
approve the information collection (IC)
described below. As required by the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 and
as part of our continuing efforts to
reduce paperwork and respondent
burden, we invite the general public and
other Federal agencies to take this
opportunity to comment on this IC. This
IC is scheduled to expire on December
31, 2011. We may not conduct or
sponsor and a person is not required to
respond to a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid OMB
control number.
DATES: To ensure that we are able to
consider your comments on this IC, we
must receive them by July 25, 2011.
ADDRESSES: Send your comments on the
IC to the Service Information Collection
Clearance Officer, Fish and Wildlife
Service, MS 2042–PDM, 4401 North
Fairfax Drive, Arlington, VA 22203
(mail); or INFOCOL@fws.gov (e-mail).
Please include 1018–0100 in the subject
line of your comments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: To
request additional information about
this IC, contact Hope Grey at INFOCOL@
fws.gov (e-mail) or 703–358–2482
(telephone).
SUMMARY:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
jlentini on DSK4TPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
I. Abstract
The Division of Bird Habitat
Conservation administers grant
programs associated with the North
American Wetlands Conservation Act
(NAWCA), Public Law 101–233 and the
Neotropical Migratory Bird
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16:47 May 23, 2011
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Conservation Act (NMBCA), Public Law
106–247. Currently, information that we
collect for NMBCA grants is approved
under OMB Control No. 1018–0113,
which expires March 31, 2012. We are
proposing to consolidate NAWCA and
NMBCA grants under OMB Control No.
1018–0100. If OMB approves this
request, we will discontinue OMB
Control Number 1018–0113.
North American Wetlands Conservation
Act Grants
NAWCA provides matching grants to
organizations and individuals who have
developed partnerships to carry out
wetlands conservation projects in the
United States, Canada, and Mexico for
the benefit of wetlands-associated
migratory birds and other wildlife.
There is a Standard and a Small Grants
Program. Both are competitive grants
programs and require that grant requests
be matched by partner contributions at
no less than a 1-to-1 ratio. Funds from
U.S. Federal sources may contribute to
a project, but are not eligible as match.
The Standard Grants Program
supports projects in Canada, the United
States, and Mexico that involve longterm protection, restoration, and/or
enhancement of wetlands and
associated uplands habitats. In Mexico,
partners may also conduct projects
involving technical training,
environmental education and outreach,
organizational infrastructure
development, and sustainable-use
studies.
The Small Grants Program operates
only in the United States. It supports the
same type of projects and adheres to the
same selection criteria and
administrative guidelines as the U.S.
Standard Grants Program. However,
project activities are usually smaller in
scope and involve fewer project dollars.
Grant requests may not exceed $75,000,
and funding priority is given to grantees
or partners new to the NAWCA Grants
Program.
We publish notices of funding
availability on the Grants.gov Web site
at https://www.grants.gov as well as in
the Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance at https://cfda.gov. To
compete for grant funds, partnerships
submit applications that describe in
substantial detail project locations,
project resources, future benefits, and
other characteristics that meet the
standards established by the North
American Wetlands Conservation
Council and the requirements of
NAWCA. Materials that describe the
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
program and assist applicants in
formulating project proposals are
available on our Web site at https://
www.fws.gov/birdhabitat/Grants/
NAWCA. Persons who do not have
access to the Internet may obtain
instructional materials by mail. We have
not made any major changes in the
scope and general nature of the
instructions since the OMB first
approved the information collection in
1999.
Neotropical Migratory Bird
Conservation Act
NMBCA establishes a matching grant
programs to fund projects that promote
the conservation of neotropical
migratory birds in the United States,
Canada, Latin America, and the
Caribbean.
We publish notices of funding
availability on the Grants.gov Web site
as well as in the Catalog of Federal
Domestic Assistance. To compete for
grant funds, partnerships submit
applications that describe in substantial
detail project locations, project
resources, future benefits, and other
characteristics that meet the standards
established by the Fish and Wildlife
Service and the requirements of
NMBCA.
Materials that describe the program
and assist applicants in formulating
project proposals for consideration are
available on our Web site at https://
www.fws.gov/birdhabitat/Grants/
NMBCA/index.shtm. Persons who do
not have access to the Internet may
obtain instructional materials by mail.
We have not made any major changes in
the scope and general nature of the
instructions since the OMB first
approved the information collection in
2002.
II. Data
OMB Control Number: 1018–0100.
Title: Migratory Birds and Wetlands
Conservation Grant Programs.
Service Form Number(s): None.
Type of Request: Extension of
currently approved collection.
Description of Respondents: Domestic
and foreign individuals, businesses and
other for-profit organizations;
educational organizations; not-for-profit
institutions; and Federal, State, local,
and/or tribal governments.
Respondent’s Obligation: Required to
obtain or retain a benefit.
Frequency of Collection: On occasion.
E:\FR\FM\24MYN1.SGM
24MYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 100 (Tuesday, May 24, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 30184-30186]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-12724]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement
[Docket No. BOEM-2011-0012]
Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) Renewable Energy Program Interim
Policy Leasing for Marine Hydrokinetic Technology Testing Offshore
Florida
AGENCY: Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement
(BOEMRE), Interior.
ACTION: Notice of Intent (NOI) to Prepare an Environmental Assessment
(EA).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This notice is being published as an initial step for the
purpose of involving Federal agencies, states, tribes, local
government, and the public in the leasing decision for an offshore
technology testing facility located on the OCS, in accordance with the
Department of the Interior and the Council on Environmental Quality
(CEQ) regulations implementing the provisions of the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) of 1969 as amended (42 U.S.C. 4321 et
seq.). On November 6, 2007, the Minerals Management Service (MMS), now
BOEMRE, announced an interim policy for authorizing the issuance of
leases for the installation of offshore data collection and technology
testing facilities on the OCS (72 FR 62673). A lease application has
been submitted pursuant to the interim policy, initiating the need for
an EA.
On June 11, 2010 Florida Atlantic University's (FAU) Southeast
National Marine Renewable Energy Center (SNMREC) submitted an
application to lease three OCS blocks, approximately nine to 15
nautical miles offshore of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, under its original
nomination submitted on November 8, 2007. These three blocks are
located on the Atlantic OCS in the Official Protraction Diagram NG 17-
06 numbered 7003, 7053, and 7054. The proposed lease area ranges from a
depth of 262 meters (m) in Block 7053 to 366 m in the southern half of
Block 7054. This project application was amended on February 10, 2011,
and describes data collection and technology testing activities to be
conducted on the proposed lease. FAU SNMREC intends to deploy a single-
anchor mooring, with a mooring and telemetry buoy (MTB) (similar to the
Navy Oceanographic Meteorological Automatic Device (NOMAD) weather
buoys) for the purpose of testing, for limited periods, equipment
designed to use the Florida current to generate electricity on the
proposed leasehold. The proposed MTB would act as both a sensor and
measurement platform and mooring point for a platform or vessel which
can deploy small-scale ocean current devices. The device(s) to be
deployed would be limited to 100-kilowatt (kW) power extraction and
seven-meter diameter rotor(s). Initially, it is proposed to deploy an
experimental demonstration device with 20 kW maximum power and a three-
meter rotor diameter from a vessel moored to the MTB.
BOEMRE intends to prepare an EA for the purpose of considering the
environmental consequences associated with issuing an interim policy
lease to FAU SNMREC, which will include impacts that may result from
the installation of an MTB, deployment of small-scale ocean current
devices, and operations of a deployment vessel on the potential
leasehold. The EA will consider multiple environmental issues,
including impacts to benthic habitats, sea turtles, pelagic fishes,
marine mammals, and existing human uses. At a minimum, the alternatives
that will be considered are no action (i.e., no issuance of a lease),
and the issuance of a lease and approval of certain technology testing
activities within the lease area, such as deployment of technology
demonstration devices, single anchor moorings, and an MTB.
With this NOI, BOEMRE is requesting comments and input from
Federal, state,
[[Page 30185]]
and local government agencies, tribal governments, and other interested
parties, which may assist BOEMRE in identifying the important
environmental issues and any additional alternatives that should be
considered in the EA. Input is also requested regarding measures (e.g.,
limitations on activities based on technology, siting, or timing) that
would mitigate impacts to environmental resources and socioeconomic
conditions that could result from leasing and the technology testing
activities in the lease area. Consultation with other Federal agencies,
tribal governments, and affected states will be carried out during the
EA process and will be completed before a final decision is made on
whether, or under what circumstances to issue a lease.
Authority: This NOI to prepare an EA is published pursuant to
43 CFR 46.305.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Michelle Morin, BOEMRE Office of
Offshore Alternative Energy Programs, 381 Elden Street, MS 4090,
Herndon, Virginia 20170-4817, (703) 787-1340 or
michelle.morin@boemre.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
1. Interim Policy
Subsection 8(p)(1)(C) of the OCS Lands Act (43 U.S.C.
1337(p)(1)(3)), which was added by section 388 of the Energy Policy Act
of 2005 (EPAct), gave the Secretary of the Interior the authority to
issue leases, easements and rights-of-way on the OCS for alternative
energy activities. This authority has been delegated to BOEMRE. In a
Request for Information and Nominations published on November 6, 2007,
in the Federal Register (72 FR 62673) BOEMRE announced that it had
established an interim policy under which it would issue limited leases
authorizing alternative energy resource assessment, data collection,
and technology testing activities on the OCS and that it was accepting
nominations for limited leases to conduct such activities. Limited
leases issued under the interim policy for energy resource assessment
data collection and technology testing activities have a term of 5
years, and do not authorize the production or transmission of energy.
In response to the November 6, 2007 notice, BOEMRE received more than
40 nominations proposing areas for limited leases on the OCS off the
Pacific and Atlantic Coasts.
BOEMRE reviewed in detail all nominations received and, on April
18, 2008, identified 16 proposed lease areas for priority consideration
based on factors such as the technological complexity of the project
proposed, timing needs, competing OCS space-use issues, and relevant
state-supported renewable energy activities and initiatives (73 FR
21152). BOEMRE also took into consideration the importance of
supporting the advancement of activities related to the development of
each of the renewable energy resource types that would be studied in
the proposals--wind, current, and wave. Of the 16 areas, BOEMRE
identified four proposed areas offshore Florida as priority areas for
the testing of ocean current technology and the collection of resource
data.
In the April 18, 2008 notice, BOEMRE also solicited from interested
parties expressions of competitive interest in leasing any of these
nominated areas. See 43 U.S.C. 1337(p)(3). The notice also invited
comments and solicited information from the public regarding the
suitability of these areas for leasing and the environmental and
socioeconomic consequences that may be associated with issuing research
leases in these areas. BOEMRE received no indications of competitive
interest in acquiring leases within these four areas offshore Florida,
which include the three blocks identified in FAU SNMREC's most recent
application. As a result, BOEMRE intends to make a final decision on
whether to proceed with the issuance of a lease noncompetitively, once
the required environmental review, which is the subject of this NOI, is
completed.
Interim policy leases will be governed by the terms outlined in the
interim policy lease and stipulations published in the Federal Register
(73 FR 21363) on April 21, 2008. More information about the interim
policy can be found at: https://www.boemre.gov/offshore/RenewableEnergy/RegulatoryInformation.htm#Interim_Policy.
2. Cooperating Agencies
BOEMRE invites other Federal agencies and state, tribal, and local
governments to consider becoming cooperating agencies in the
preparation of the EA. CEQ regulations implementing the procedural
provisions of NEPA define cooperating agencies as those with
``jurisdiction by law or special expertise'' (40 CFR 1508.5). Potential
cooperating agencies should consider their authority and capacity to
assume the responsibilities of a cooperating agency and remember that
an agency's role in the environmental analysis neither enlarges nor
diminishes the final decision-making authority of any other agency
involved in the NEPA process.
Upon request, BOEMRE will provide potential cooperating agencies
with a draft Memorandum of Agreement that includes a schedule with
critical action dates and milestones, mutual responsibilities,
designated points of contact, and expectations for handling pre-
decisional information. Agencies should also consider the ``Factors for
Determining Whether to Invite, Decline, or End Cooperating Agency
Status'' in Attachment 1 to CEQ's January 30, 2002, Memorandum for the
Heads of Federal Agencies: Cooperating Agencies in Implementing the
Procedural Requirements of the NEPA. A copy of this document is
available at: https://ceq.hss.doe.gov/nepa/regs/cooperating/cooperatingagenciesmemorandum.html and https://ceq.hss.doe.gov/nepa/regs/cooperating/cooperatingagencymemofactors.html.
BOEMRE, as the lead agency, will not provide financial assistance
to cooperating agencies. Even if an organization is not a cooperating
agency, opportunities will exist to provide information and comments to
BOEMRE during the normal public input phases of the NEPA/EA process.
3. Comments
Federal, state, local government agencies, tribal governments, and
other interested parties are requested to send their written comments
regarding important environmental issues and the identification of
reasonable alternatives related to the proposed issuance of a limited
lease to FAU SNMREC on which it intends to conduct data collection and
technology testing activities in one of the following ways:
1. Electronically: https://www.regulations.gov. In the entry titled
``Enter Keyword or ID,'' enter ``BOEM-2011-0012,'' then click
``Search''. Follow the instructions to submit public comments and view
supporting and related materials available for this document.
2. In written form, delivered by hand or by mail, enclosed in an
envelope labeled ``Comments on OCS Renewable Energy Program Interim
Policy Lease for FAU SNMREC'' to Program Manager, Office of Offshore
Alternative Energy Programs (MS 4090), Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management, Regulation and Enforcement, 381 Elden Street, Herndon,
Virginia 20170.
Comments should be submitted no later than June 23, 2011.
[[Page 30186]]
Dated: May 18, 2011.
L. Renee Orr,
Acting Associate Director for Offshore Energy and Minerals Management.
[FR Doc. 2011-12724 Filed 5-23-11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-MR-P