Commercial Wind Lease Issuance and Site Characterization Activities on the Atlantic Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) Offshore Rhode Island and Massachusetts, 51391-51393 [2011-21142]
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 160 / Thursday, August 18, 2011 / Notices
the applicant wishes to modify its
nomination.
It is critical that you submit a
complete nomination so that BOEMRE
may evaluate your submission in a
timely manner. If BOEMRE reviews
your nomination and determines that it
is incomplete, BOEMRE will inform you
of this determination in writing. This
letter will describe the information that
BOEMRE determined to be missing from
your nomination, and indicate the
information that you must submit in
order for BOEMRE to deem your
submission complete. You will be given
15 business days from the date of the
letter to submit the information that
BOEMRE found to be missing from your
original submission. If you do not meet
this deadline, or if BOEMRE determines
this second submission to be
insufficient, then BOEMRE may deem
your nomination invalid. In such a case,
BOEMRE would not move forward with
your nomination submitted in response
to this Call.
Requested Information From Interested
or Affected Parties
BOEMRE is requesting from the
public and other interested or affected
parties specific and detailed comments
regarding the following conditions in
the area identified:
(1) Geological and geophysical
conditions (including bottom and
shallow hazards);
(2) Known archaeological and/or
cultural resource sites on the seabed or
nearshore and methodologies used to
acquire that data;
(3) Historic properties potentially
affected by the construction of
meteorological towers, the installation
of meteorological buoys, or commercial
wind development in the area identified
in this Call;
(4) Multiple uses of the area,
including navigation (in particular,
commercial and recreational vessel use),
recreation, and fisheries (commercial
and recreational); and
(5) Other relevant socioeconomic,
biological, and environmental
information.
Protection of Privileged or Confidential
Information
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Freedom of Information Act
BOEMRE will protect privileged or
confidential information that you
submit as required by the Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA). Exemption 4 of
FOIA applies to trade secrets and
commercial or financial information
that you submit that is privileged or
confidential. If you wish to protect the
confidentiality of such information,
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clearly mark it and request that
BOEMRE treat it as confidential.
BOEMRE will not disclose such
information, subject to the requirements
of FOIA. Please label privileged or
confidential information ‘‘Contains
Confidential Information’’ and consider
submitting such information as a
separate attachment.
However, BOEMRE will not treat as
confidential any aggregate summaries of
such information or comments not
containing such information.
Additionally, BOEMRE will not treat as
confidential (1) the legal title of the
nominating entity (for example, the
name of your company), or (2) the list
of whole or partial blocks that you are
nominating. Information that is not
labeled as privileged or confidential will
be regarded by BOEMRE as suitable for
public release.
Section 304 of the National Historic
Preservation Act (16 U.S.C. 470w–3(a))
BOEMRE is required, after
consultation with the Secretary, to
withhold the location, character, or
ownership of historic resources if it
determines that disclosure may, among
other things, risk harm to the historic
resources or impede the use of a
traditional religious site by
practitioners. Tribal entities should
designate information that falls under
Section 304 of NHPA as ‘‘Confidential’’.
Dated: August 1, 2011.
Michael R. Bromwich,
Director, Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management, Regulation and Enforcement.
[FR Doc. 2011–21136 Filed 8–17–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–MR–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management,
Regulation and Enforcement
[Docket No. BOEM–2011–0063]
Commercial Wind Lease Issuance and
Site Characterization Activities on the
Atlantic Outer Continental Shelf (OCS)
Offshore Rhode Island and
Massachusetts
Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management, Regulation and
Enforcement (BOEMRE), Interior.
ACTION: Notice of Intent to Prepare an
Environmental Assessment.
AGENCY:
This notice is being published
as an initial step for the purpose of
involving Federal agencies, states,
tribes, local government, offshore wind
energy developers, and the public in the
Department of the Interior’s (DOI)
‘‘Smart from the Start’’ wind energy
SUMMARY:
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51391
initiative. The purpose of the ‘‘Smart
from the Start’’ wind energy initiative is
to identify areas that may be most
suitable for wind energy leasing on the
OCS, and to obtain public and expert
input that will inform the Department’s
decisionmaking with regard to issuing
leases and approving site assessment
activities in these areas, in accordance
with the DOI 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 23,
2010, Secretary of the Interior Ken
Salazar announced the ‘‘Smart from the
Start’’ renewable energy initiative to
accelerate the responsible development
of renewable energy resources on the
Atlantic OCS. The initiative focuses on
the identification and refinement of
areas on the OCS that are most suitable
for renewable energy development
(Wind Energy Areas (WEAs)), and
utilizes coordinated environmental
studies, large-scale planning processes,
and expedited review processes within
these areas to achieve an efficient and
responsible renewable energy leasing
process.
In consultation with other Federal
agencies and the Rhode Island and
Massachusetts Renewable Energy Task
Forces, BOEMRE has identified an area
for consideration for potential future
wind energy leasing. This area, offshore
Rhode Island and Massachusetts, is
identified in the Commercial Leasing for
Wind Power on the Outer Continental
Shelf (OCS) Offshore Rhode Island and
Massachusetts-Call for Information and
Nominations (Call), which is being
published concurrently with this notice.
The area identified in the Call and this
notice is located within the Area of
Mutual Interest (AMI), as described by
a Memorandum of Understanding
(MOU) between the Governors of Rhode
Island and Massachusetts.
More information on the task forces
and the ‘‘Smart from the Start’’ initiative
can be found at: https://
www.boemre.gov/offshore/
RenewableEnergy/
StateActivitiesProjects.htm and https://
www.doi.gov/news/pressreleases/
Salazar-Launches-Smart-from-the-StartInitiative-to-Speed-Offshore-WindEnergy-Development-off-the-AtlanticCoast.cfm.
BOEMRE intends to prepare an
environmental assessment (EA), which
will consider the environmental
consequences associated with issuing
commercial wind leases and approving
site assessment activities on those leases
(within all or some of this Call Area).
The EA will not analyze or support
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51392
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 160 / Thursday, August 18, 2011 / Notices
development activities. If a successful
lessee proposes development activity,
the specific proposal will be given full
review at that time. BOEMRE is seeking
public input regarding the identification
of the important environmental and/or
socioeconomic issues and alternatives to
be considered in the EA.
Authority: This Notice of Intent (NOI) to
prepare an environmental assessment 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. The OCS Wind Energy Leasing and
Development Process
There are three key phases of the
wind energy leasing and development
process on the OCS: (1) Lease issuance;
(2) approval of a site assessment plan
(SAP); and (3) approval of a
construction and operation plan (COP).
The first phase, issuance of a
commercial renewable energy lease,
gives the lessee an exclusive right to
apply for approval of subsequent plans,
the approval of which is necessary for
a lessee to advance to the next stage of
the renewable energy development
process. The second phase is the
applicant’s submission, and BOEMRE’s
subsequent review and approval of a
SAP. Approval of a SAP would allow
the lessee to construct and install a
meteorological tower and/or buoys on
the leasehold. See 30 CFR 285.600–
285.601; 285.605–285.618. After the
lessee has collected sufficient site
characterization and assessment data,
the lessee may submit a COP, the review
of which could authorize the actual
construction and operation of a
renewable energy facility on the lease.
See 30 CFR 285.620–285.629. Although
BOEMRE does not authorize site
characterization activities (i.e.,
geological and geophysical surveys and
core samples), a lessee must submit the
results of such surveys before BOEMRE
can consider its COP. See 30 CFR
285.626.
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2. Proposed Action and Scope of
Analysis
The proposed action that will be the
subject of the EA is the issuance of
renewable energy leases within all or
some of the Call Area described in this
Notice, and the approval of site
assessment activities on those leases
(i.e., Phases 1 and 2 of the wind energy
leasing and development process).
BOEMRE will also consider in the EA
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the environmental impacts associated
with the site characterization activities
that it anticipates lessees might
eventually undertake to fulfill the COP
information requirements at 30 CFR
285.626.
The EA will not, however, be used to
support any future decision regarding
the approval of the construction or
operation of any wind energy facility on
leases that may be issued within all or
some of this Call Area. BOEMRE is not
currently considering any such plan,
nor has any plan been submitted. If and
when a lessee is ready to begin this
third phase of renewable energy
development, it will submit a COP. If a
COP is submitted for a particular project
on a lease, a separate site- and projectspecific NEPA analysis would be
prepared. This would take the form of
an Environmental Impact Statement
(EIS) and would provide additional
opportunities for public involvement
pursuant to NEPA and the CEQ
regulations at 40 CFR parts 1500–1508.
Such an EIS process would provide the
public and Federal officials with
comprehensive site- and project-specific
information, and the EIS would
consider the reasonably foreseeable
environmental impacts of the specific
project that the lessee is proposing.
These potential impacts will be taken
into account when deciding whether to
approve, approve with modification, or
deny the COP pursuant to 30 CFR
285.628.
The EA, which is the subject of this
notice, will consider the environmental
consequences associated with
reasonably foreseeable leasing scenarios
(not development itself), reasonably
foreseeable site characterization
scenarios within these lease areas
(including geophysical, geotechnical,
archeological, and biological surveys),
and reasonably foreseeable site
assessment scenarios (including the
installation and operation of
meteorological towers and buoys) on the
leases that may be issued within all or
some of the Call Area. At a minimum,
the alternatives that will be considered
are: no action (i.e., no issuance of leases
or approval of site assessment
activities); and the issuance of leases
and approval of site assessment
activities within the areas described in
Section 4 of this Notice. BOEMRE is
therefore soliciting input on the
environmental issues and alternatives to
be considered in the EA related to the
potential environmental effects of the
activities described above.
Federal, state, and local government
agencies, tribal governments, and other
interested parties may assist BOEMRE
in determining the issues and any
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Fmt 4703
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additional alternatives to be analyzed in
the EA. Input is also requested on
measures (e.g., limitations on activities
based on technology, distance from
shore, or timing) that would mitigate
impacts to environmental resources and
socioeconomic conditions that could
result from leasing, site characterization,
and site assessment in and around the
Call Area described below. 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 any
particular lease will be issued or site
assessment activities on those leases
approved.
If BOEMRE determines during the EA
process that issuing leases and
conducting site characterization and
assessment activities offshore within the
Call Area would result in significant
environmental impacts, then BOEMRE
would publish a NOI to prepare an EIS
for the issuance of renewable energy
leases and approval of site assessment
activities within all or some of this Call
Area. If BOEMRE determines during the
EA process that issuing leases and
conducting site characterization and
assessment activities within all or some
of this Call Area would not result in
significant environmental impacts, then
BOEMRE would issue a Finding of No
Significant Impact (FONSI). After either
a FONSI is issued or the EIS process is
completed, BOEMRE may issue one or
more renewable energy leases within all
or some of this Call Area. In the event
that a particular lease is issued, and the
lessee submits a SAP, BOEMRE will
determine whether the EA adequately
considers the environmental
consequences of the activities proposed
in the lessee’s SAP. If the analysis in the
EA adequately addresses these
consequences, then no further NEPA
analysis would be required before the
SAP is approved. If that analysis is
inadequate, additional NEPA analysis
would be conducted before the SAP
could be approved.
3. Information That Will Be
Incorporated Into the EA
On November 6, 2007, BOEMRE
published a Notice of Availability in the
Federal Register (72 FR 62,672) of the
Programmatic EIS for Alternative Energy
Development and Production and
Alternate Use of Facilities on the Outer
Continental Shelf, Final EIS (OCS
Report MMS 2007–046) (Programmatic
EIS). On June 26, 2009, BOEMRE
published a Notice of Availability in the
Federal Register (74 FR 30,616) of the
EA for Issuance of Leases for Wind
Resource Data Collection on the Outer
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 160 / Thursday, August 18, 2011 / Notices
Continental Shelf Offshore Delaware
and New Jersey (OCS EIS/EA MMS
2009–025) (Interim Policy EA), which
addressed similar activities.
BOEMRE will incorporate the
environmental and socioeconomic
analyses of site characterization and
assessment activities from the
Programmatic EIS, Interim Policy EA,
and other public information to inform
its analysis in the EA. The EA will be
developed using many of the principles
of coastal and marine spatial planning,
such as comprehensive interagency
coordination, to identify information
needs for COP submittals necessary for
future decisionmaking regarding wind
energy development.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
4. Description of the Call Area
BOEMRE has identified an area for
consideration for potential future wind
energy leasing in consultation with
other Federal agencies and the Rhode
Island and Massachusetts Renewable
Energy Task Forces. The area identified
in the Call and this notice is located
within the AMI, as described by a MOU
between the Governors of Rhode Island
and Massachusetts. The Call Area is
divided into two areas separated by an
existing traffic separation scheme. A
detailed description of the area can be
found in the Call that is published
concurrently with this notice.
Map of the Call Area
A map of the area can be found at the
following URL: https://www.boemre.gov/
offshore/RenewableEnergy/
StateActivities-RhodeIsland.htm.
A large-scale map of the Call Area
showing boundaries of the area with
numbered blocks is available from
BOEMRE at the following address:
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management,
Regulation and Enforcement, Office of
Offshore Alternative Energy Programs,
381 Elden Street, Mail Stop 4090,
Herndon, Virginia 20170, Phone: (703)
787–1320.
Based on the information submitted
in response to this notice and the
aforementioned Call, BOEMRE would
identify an area in which interest exists,
and which will be subject to
environmental analysis, in consultation
with appropriate Federal agencies,
states, local governments, tribes and
other interested parties. The area
identified will constitute a WEA under
the ‘‘Smart from the Start’’ initiative,
which will be the area analyzed in the
EA.
5. Cooperating Agencies
BOEMRE invites other Federal
agencies and state, tribal, and local
governments to consider becoming
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cooperating agencies in the preparation
of this 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 to remember
that an agency’s role in the
environmental analysis neither enlarges
nor diminishes the final decisionmaking
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
predecisional information. Agencies
should also consider the ‘‘Factors for
Determining 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.
6. Comments
Federal, state, local government
agencies, tribal governments, and other
interested parties are requested to send
their written comments regarding
environmental issues and the
identification of reasonable alternatives
related to the proposed actions
described in this notice in one of the
following ways:
1. Electronically: https://
www.regulations.gov. In the entry titled
‘‘Enter Keyword or ID,’’ enter BOEM–
2011–0063, 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 Rhode Island
and Massachusetts EA’’ to Program
Manager, Office of Offshore Alternative
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51393
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
October 3, 2011.
Dated: July 27, 2011.
Robert P. LaBelle,
Acting Associate Director for Offshore Energy
and Minerals Management.
[FR Doc. 2011–21142 Filed 8–17–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–MR–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[LLWYP00000–L51100000–GA0000–
LVEMK09CK370; WYW176095]
Notice of Availability of the Record of
Decision for the Wright Area South
Porcupine Coal Lease-by-Application
and Environmental Impact Statement,
Wyoming
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
National Environmental Policy Act of
1969, as amended, the Bureau of Land
Management (BLM) announces the
availability of the Record of Decision
(ROD) for the South Porcupine Coal
Lease-by-Application (LBA) included in
the Wright Area Coal Lease
Applications Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS).
ADDRESSES: The document is available
electronically on the following Web site:
https://www.blm.gov/wy/st/en/info/
NEPA/HighPlains/Wright-Coal.html.
Paper copies of the ROD are also
available at the following BLM office
locations:
• Bureau of Land Management,
Wyoming State Office, 5353
Yellowstone Road, Cheyenne, Wyoming
82009; and
• Bureau of Land Management,
Wyoming High Plains District Office,
2987 Prospector Drive, Casper,
Wyoming 82604.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Tyson Sackett, Acting Wyoming Coal
Coordinator, at (307) 775–6487, or Ms.
Sarah Bucklin, EIS Project Manager, at
(307) 261–7541. Mr. Sackett’s office is
located at the BLM Wyoming State
Office, 5353 Yellowstone Road,
Cheyenne, Wyoming 82009. Ms.
Bucklin’s office is located at the BLM
High Plains District Office, 2987
Prospector Drive, Casper, Wyoming
82604. Persons who use a
telecommunications device for the deaf
SUMMARY:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 160 (Thursday, August 18, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 51391-51393]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-21142]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement
[Docket No. BOEM-2011-0063]
Commercial Wind Lease Issuance and Site Characterization
Activities on the Atlantic Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) Offshore Rhode
Island and Massachusetts
AGENCY: Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement
(BOEMRE), Interior.
ACTION: Notice of Intent to Prepare an Environmental Assessment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This notice is being published as an initial step for the
purpose of involving Federal agencies, states, tribes, local
government, offshore wind energy developers, and the public in the
Department of the Interior's (DOI) ``Smart from the Start'' wind energy
initiative. The purpose of the ``Smart from the Start'' wind energy
initiative is to identify areas that may be most suitable for wind
energy leasing on the OCS, and to obtain public and expert input that
will inform the Department's decisionmaking with regard to issuing
leases and approving site assessment activities in these areas, in
accordance with the DOI 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 23, 2010, Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar announced the
``Smart from the Start'' renewable energy initiative to accelerate the
responsible development of renewable energy resources on the Atlantic
OCS. The initiative focuses on the identification and refinement of
areas on the OCS that are most suitable for renewable energy
development (Wind Energy Areas (WEAs)), and utilizes coordinated
environmental studies, large-scale planning processes, and expedited
review processes within these areas to achieve an efficient and
responsible renewable energy leasing process.
In consultation with other Federal agencies and the Rhode Island
and Massachusetts Renewable Energy Task Forces, BOEMRE has identified
an area for consideration for potential future wind energy leasing.
This area, offshore Rhode Island and Massachusetts, is identified in
the Commercial Leasing for Wind Power on the Outer Continental Shelf
(OCS) Offshore Rhode Island and Massachusetts-Call for Information and
Nominations (Call), which is being published concurrently with this
notice. The area identified in the Call and this notice is located
within the Area of Mutual Interest (AMI), as described by a Memorandum
of Understanding (MOU) between the Governors of Rhode Island and
Massachusetts.
More information on the task forces and the ``Smart from the
Start'' initiative can be found at: https://www.boemre.gov/offshore/RenewableEnergy/StateActivitiesProjects.htm and https://www.doi.gov/news/pressreleases/Salazar-Launches-Smart-from-the-Start-Initiative-to-Speed-Offshore-Wind-Energy-Development-off-the-Atlantic-Coast.cfm.
BOEMRE intends to prepare an environmental assessment (EA), which
will consider the environmental consequences associated with issuing
commercial wind leases and approving site assessment activities on
those leases (within all or some of this Call Area). The EA will not
analyze or support
[[Page 51392]]
development activities. If a successful lessee proposes development
activity, the specific proposal will be given full review at that time.
BOEMRE is seeking public input regarding the identification of the
important environmental and/or socioeconomic issues and alternatives to
be considered in the EA.
Authority: This Notice of Intent (NOI) to prepare an
environmental assessment 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. The OCS Wind Energy Leasing and Development Process
There are three key phases of the wind energy leasing and
development process on the OCS: (1) Lease issuance; (2) approval of a
site assessment plan (SAP); and (3) approval of a construction and
operation plan (COP). The first phase, issuance of a commercial
renewable energy lease, gives the lessee an exclusive right to apply
for approval of subsequent plans, the approval of which is necessary
for a lessee to advance to the next stage of the renewable energy
development process. The second phase is the applicant's submission,
and BOEMRE's subsequent review and approval of a SAP. Approval of a SAP
would allow the lessee to construct and install a meteorological tower
and/or buoys on the leasehold. See 30 CFR 285.600-285.601; 285.605-
285.618. After the lessee has collected sufficient site
characterization and assessment data, the lessee may submit a COP, the
review of which could authorize the actual construction and operation
of a renewable energy facility on the lease. See 30 CFR 285.620-
285.629. Although BOEMRE does not authorize site characterization
activities (i.e., geological and geophysical surveys and core samples),
a lessee must submit the results of such surveys before BOEMRE can
consider its COP. See 30 CFR 285.626.
2. Proposed Action and Scope of Analysis
The proposed action that will be the subject of the EA is the
issuance of renewable energy leases within all or some of the Call Area
described in this Notice, and the approval of site assessment
activities on those leases (i.e., Phases 1 and 2 of the wind energy
leasing and development process). BOEMRE will also consider in the EA
the environmental impacts associated with the site characterization
activities that it anticipates lessees might eventually undertake to
fulfill the COP information requirements at 30 CFR 285.626.
The EA will not, however, be used to support any future decision
regarding the approval of the construction or operation of any wind
energy facility on leases that may be issued within all or some of this
Call Area. BOEMRE is not currently considering any such plan, nor has
any plan been submitted. If and when a lessee is ready to begin this
third phase of renewable energy development, it will submit a COP. If a
COP is submitted for a particular project on a lease, a separate site-
and project-specific NEPA analysis would be prepared. This would take
the form of an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) and would provide
additional opportunities for public involvement pursuant to NEPA and
the CEQ regulations at 40 CFR parts 1500-1508. Such an EIS process
would provide the public and Federal officials with comprehensive site-
and project-specific information, and the EIS would consider the
reasonably foreseeable environmental impacts of the specific project
that the lessee is proposing. These potential impacts will be taken
into account when deciding whether to approve, approve with
modification, or deny the COP pursuant to 30 CFR 285.628.
The EA, which is the subject of this notice, will consider the
environmental consequences associated with reasonably foreseeable
leasing scenarios (not development itself), reasonably foreseeable site
characterization scenarios within these lease areas (including
geophysical, geotechnical, archeological, and biological surveys), and
reasonably foreseeable site assessment scenarios (including the
installation and operation of meteorological towers and buoys) on the
leases that may be issued within all or some of the Call Area. At a
minimum, the alternatives that will be considered are: no action (i.e.,
no issuance of leases or approval of site assessment activities); and
the issuance of leases and approval of site assessment activities
within the areas described in Section 4 of this Notice. BOEMRE is
therefore soliciting input on the environmental issues and alternatives
to be considered in the EA related to the potential environmental
effects of the activities described above.
Federal, state, and local government agencies, tribal governments,
and other interested parties may assist BOEMRE in determining the
issues and any additional alternatives to be analyzed in the EA. Input
is also requested on measures (e.g., limitations on activities based on
technology, distance from shore, or timing) that would mitigate impacts
to environmental resources and socioeconomic conditions that could
result from leasing, site characterization, and site assessment in and
around the Call Area described below. 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 any particular lease will be issued or site assessment
activities on those leases approved.
If BOEMRE determines during the EA process that issuing leases and
conducting site characterization and assessment activities offshore
within the Call Area would result in significant environmental impacts,
then BOEMRE would publish a NOI to prepare an EIS for the issuance of
renewable energy leases and approval of site assessment activities
within all or some of this Call Area. If BOEMRE determines during the
EA process that issuing leases and conducting site characterization and
assessment activities within all or some of this Call Area would not
result in significant environmental impacts, then BOEMRE would issue a
Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI). After either a FONSI is
issued or the EIS process is completed, BOEMRE may issue one or more
renewable energy leases within all or some of this Call Area. In the
event that a particular lease is issued, and the lessee submits a SAP,
BOEMRE will determine whether the EA adequately considers the
environmental consequences of the activities proposed in the lessee's
SAP. If the analysis in the EA adequately addresses these consequences,
then no further NEPA analysis would be required before the SAP is
approved. If that analysis is inadequate, additional NEPA analysis
would be conducted before the SAP could be approved.
3. Information That Will Be Incorporated Into the EA
On November 6, 2007, BOEMRE published a Notice of Availability in
the Federal Register (72 FR 62,672) of the Programmatic EIS for
Alternative Energy Development and Production and Alternate Use of
Facilities on the Outer Continental Shelf, Final EIS (OCS Report MMS
2007-046) (Programmatic EIS). On June 26, 2009, BOEMRE published a
Notice of Availability in the Federal Register (74 FR 30,616) of the EA
for Issuance of Leases for Wind Resource Data Collection on the Outer
[[Page 51393]]
Continental Shelf Offshore Delaware and New Jersey (OCS EIS/EA MMS
2009-025) (Interim Policy EA), which addressed similar activities.
BOEMRE will incorporate the environmental and socioeconomic
analyses of site characterization and assessment activities from the
Programmatic EIS, Interim Policy EA, and other public information to
inform its analysis in the EA. The EA will be developed using many of
the principles of coastal and marine spatial planning, such as
comprehensive interagency coordination, to identify information needs
for COP submittals necessary for future decisionmaking regarding wind
energy development.
4. Description of the Call Area
BOEMRE has identified an area for consideration for potential
future wind energy leasing in consultation with other Federal agencies
and the Rhode Island and Massachusetts Renewable Energy Task Forces.
The area identified in the Call and this notice is located within the
AMI, as described by a MOU between the Governors of Rhode Island and
Massachusetts. The Call Area is divided into two areas separated by an
existing traffic separation scheme. A detailed description of the area
can be found in the Call that is published concurrently with this
notice.
Map of the Call Area
A map of the area can be found at the following URL: https://www.boemre.gov/offshore/RenewableEnergy/StateActivities-RhodeIsland.htm.
A large-scale map of the Call Area showing boundaries of the area
with numbered blocks is available from BOEMRE at the following address:
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement, Office
of Offshore Alternative Energy Programs, 381 Elden Street, Mail Stop
4090, Herndon, Virginia 20170, Phone: (703) 787-1320.
Based on the information submitted in response to this notice and
the aforementioned Call, BOEMRE would identify an area in which
interest exists, and which will be subject to environmental analysis,
in consultation with appropriate Federal agencies, states, local
governments, tribes and other interested parties. The area identified
will constitute a WEA under the ``Smart from the Start'' initiative,
which will be the area analyzed in the EA.
5. Cooperating Agencies
BOEMRE invites other Federal agencies and state, tribal, and local
governments to consider becoming cooperating agencies in the
preparation of this 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 to remember
that an agency's role in the environmental analysis neither enlarges
nor diminishes the final decisionmaking 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
predecisional information. Agencies should also consider the ``Factors
for Determining 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.
6. Comments
Federal, state, local government agencies, tribal governments, and
other interested parties are requested to send their written comments
regarding environmental issues and the identification of reasonable
alternatives related to the proposed actions described in this notice
in one of the following ways:
1. Electronically: https://www.regulations.gov. In the entry titled
``Enter Keyword or ID,'' enter BOEM-2011-0063, 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 Rhode Island and Massachusetts EA'' 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 October 3, 2011.
Dated: July 27, 2011.
Robert P. LaBelle,
Acting Associate Director for Offshore Energy and Minerals Management.
[FR Doc. 2011-21142 Filed 8-17-11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-MR-P