Issuance of Loan Guarantee to Genesis Solar, LLC, for the Genesis Solar Energy Project, 54454-54456 [2011-22403]
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54454
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 170 / Thursday, September 1, 2011 / Notices
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
General questions concerning the
proposed action and the DEIS can be
directed to: Hannah Hadley, Study
Environmental Coordinator (see
ADDRESSES) or Daniel Johnson, Project
Manager, Seattle District, U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers, P.O. 3755, Seattle,
WA 98124–3755, ATTN: CENWS–EN–
CM–CJ; telephone (206) 764–3423; fax
(206) 764–4470; or e-mail
Daniel.E.Johnson@usace.army.mil.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The NOI
to prepare a Draft Environmental Impact
Statement for the Skagit River General
Investigation Study (previously
advertised as the Skagit River Flood
Damage Reduction Study), Skagit
County, Washington was published in
the July 29, 2011 Federal Register (76
FR 45543) for review and comment.
Comments regarding the NOI were
required to be received on or before
August 29, 2011. During the comment
period, requests to extend the comment
period were received.
In response to these requests, the
comment period for the NOI has been
extended through September 9, 2011.
Brenda S. Bowen,
Army Federal Register Liaison Officer.
[FR Doc. 2011–22389 Filed 8–31–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3720–58–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Issuance of Loan Guarantee to
Genesis Solar, LLC, for the Genesis
Solar Energy Project
U.S. Department of Energy.
Record of Decision.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The U.S. Department of
Energy (DOE) announces its decision to
issue a loan guarantee under Title XVII
of the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPAct
2005) to Genesis Solar, LLC, for
construction and startup of the Genesis
Solar Energy Project (GSEP), a 250megawatt (MW) nominal capacity solar
power generating facility on
approximately 1,950 acres, all of which
is administered by the U.S. Department
of the Interior, Bureau of Land
Management (BLM), in Riverside
County, California. The environmental
impacts of constructing and operating
this project were analyzed pursuant to
the National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) in Plan Amendment/Final
Environmental Impact Statement for the
Genesis Solar Energy Project, Riverside
County, California (75 Federal Register
[FR] 52736; August 27, 2010) (Final
EIS), prepared by the BLM Palm
Springs-South Coast Field Office with
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
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DOE as a cooperating agency. BLM
consulted DOE during preparation of
the EIS, DOE provided comments, and
BLM addressed those comments in the
Final EIS. DOE subsequently
determined that its own NEPA
procedures had been satisfied and
adopted the Final EIS. (75 FR 78993;
December 17, 2010)
ADDRESSES: Copies of this Record of
Decision (ROD) and the Final EIS may
be obtained by contacting Matthew
McMillen, NEPA Compliance Officer,
Environmental Compliance Division,
Loan Programs Office (LP–10), U.S.
Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585; telephone 202–
586–7248; or e-mail
Matthew.Mcmillen@hq.doe.gov. The
Final EIS and this ROD are also
available on the DOE NEPA Web site at:
https://nepa.energy.gov, and on the Loan
Programs Web site at: https://
www.loanprograms.energy.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
further information about this ROD,
contact Matthew McMillen, as indicated
in the ADDRESSES section above. For
general information about the DOE
NEPA process, contact Carol Borgstrom,
Director, Office of NEPA Policy and
Compliance (GC–54), U.S. Department
of Energy, 1000 Independence Avenue,
SW., Washington, DC 20585; telephone
202–586–4600; leave a message at 800–
472–2756; or e-mail
AskNEPA@hq.doe.gov. Information
about DOE NEPA activities and access
to DOE NEPA documents are available
through the DOE NEPA Web site at
https://nepa.energy.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The GSEP is a proposed concentrating
solar electrical generating facility using
parabolic trough technology with a drycooling system and associated facilities
located on approximately 1,950 acres of
BLM-administered Federal land in
Riverside County, California,
approximately 27 miles east of the
unincorporated community of Desert
Center and 25 miles west of the
Arizona-California border city of Blythe.
The GSEP will consist of two
independent solar electric generating
facilities with a net electrical output of
125 MW each, resulting in a total net
electrical output of 250 MW. In addition
to the generating facility, the project
includes a distribution line, a 14-mile
electrical transmission line, fiber-optic
lines, a natural-gas pipeline, and a 6.5mile access road. A double-circuit 230kilovolt (kV) transmission line will be
constructed to connect to the Southern
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California Edison Colorado River
substation via the existing Blythe
Energy Project Transmission Line
between the Julian Hinds and Buck
substations. The linear facilities will
encompass approximately 90 acres
outside the proposed project site.
On January 31, 2007, BLM’s Palm
Springs-South Coast Field Office
received an application pursuant to
Title V of the Federal Land Policy and
Management Act (43 United States Code
[U.S.C.] 1761) for a right-of-way (ROW)
to construct, operate, maintain, and
decommission a project identified as the
NextEra Ford Dry Lake Solar Power
Plant on BLM-administered Federal
land in Riverside County, California. In
June 2009, the applicant notified BLM
that the company name was being
changed to Genesis Solar, LLC, and the
project became known as the Genesis
Solar Energy Project (GSEP). The BLM
California Desert Conservation Area
(CDCA) Plan requires that all sites
associated with power generation or
transmission not identified in the CDCA
Plan be considered through the plan
amendment process. BLM approved the
Proposed Plan Amendment to the CDCA
Plan to allow the GSEP and approved a
solar energy ROW to Genesis Solar, LLC,
for the project; on November 4, 2010,
the Secretary of the Interior approved
these decisions.
In June 2010, Genesis Solar, LLC
applied to DOE for a loan guarantee
under Title XVII of EPAct 2005, as
amended by Section 406 of the
American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act of 2009. (Recovery Act) On
September 1, 2010, DOE invited the
applicant to submit a Part II application
in accordance with the DOE Federal
Loan Guarantee Solicitation for
Commercial Technology Renewable
Energy Generation Projects under the
Financial Institution Partnership
Program, No. DE–FOA–0000166. On
November 17, 2010, Genesis Solar, LLC
submitted its Part II application for an
$800 million loan guarantee to support
the financing of the GSEP.
NEPA Review
BLM was the lead Federal agency in
the preparation of the Genesis Solar
Energy Project EIS, and DOE was a
cooperating agency pursuant to a
Memorandum of Agreement between
DOE and BLM signed in January 2010.
DOE reviewed the content of the draft
EIS and provided comments to BLM to
ensure that the DOE NEPA regulations
(10 Code of Federal Regulations part
1021) were satisfied.
On November 23, 2009, the BLM
published the ‘‘Notice of Intent to
Prepare an Environmental Impact
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 170 / Thursday, September 1, 2011 / Notices
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Statement/Staff Assessment for the
NextEra Ford Dry Lake Solar Power
Plant, Riverside County, CA, and
Possible Land Use Plan Amendment’’ in
the Federal Register (74 FR 61167), with
a 30-day scoping period for public
comments that closed on December 23,
2009. The project name later changed to
Genesis Solar Energy Project. The
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
published a Notice of Availability of the
Draft EIS and the Draft CDCA Plan
Amendment for GSEP in the Federal
Register on April 9, 2010 (75 FR 18204).
The Draft EIS was available for a 90-day
public comment period, which closed
on July 8, 2010. Comments received on
the Draft EIS were addressed in the Plan
Amendment and Final Environmental
Impact Statement for the Genesis Solar
Energy Project, and EPA published a
Notice of Availability in the Federal
Register on August 27, 2010 (75 FR
52736). BLM made the Final EIS
available for an additional 30-day public
review and comment period from
August 27 to September 27, 2010. All
substantive comments received during
the 30-day public review and comment
period were responded to in Appendix
1 of the Record of Decision for the
Genesis Solar Energy Project and
Amendment to the California Desert
Conservation Area Resource
Management Plan, Riverside County, CA
(BLM ROD). BLM published its ROD in
the Federal Register on November 12,
2010 (75 FR 69458). Links to these
documents can be found at the BLM
Web site: https://www.blm.gov/ca/st/en/
prog/energy/fasttrack/genesis/
fedstatus.html.
On October 7, 2010, DOE received a
comment letter from the California
Unions for Reliable Energy (CURE)
regarding Colorado River water rights
and the need for an approved water
allocation for GSEP. DOE reviewed the
comment responses prepared by BLM
and published in the Final EIS and the
information provided in the BLM ROD,
and concurs with BLM as stated in its
ROD that:
The BLM has thoroughly reviewed the
regulatory framework regarding the use of the
accounting surface methodology of
determining impacts to the Colorado River
and determined that no formal regulation
exists that requires Genesis to acquire an
allocation at this time. The Bureau of
Reclamation has not finalized its rule on the
accounting surface methodology for the
Colorado River. This ROD recognizes that,
should a rulemaking be finalized on the
currently proposed accounting surface
method, the BLM will work with Genesis to
ensure that appropriate processes are
followed to obtain such an allocation. (BLM
ROD, Section 1.2, page 13)
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Alternatives Considered
BLM considered six alternatives: (1)
The project identified in the Final EIS
as the Proposed Action (parabolic
trough technology with wet cooling); (2)
the Dry Cooling Alternative (identified
in the Final EIS as the Preferred
Alternative and ultimately selected by
BLM); (3) the Reduced Acreage
Alternative; (4) No Action Alternative
A; (5) No Action Alternative B; and (6)
No Action Alternative C (under which
no ROW grant for the GSEP would be
authorized but the CDCA Plan would be
amended). Chapter 2 of the Final EIS
describes these alternatives in detail,
and they are fully analyzed in Chapters
3 and 4 of the Final EIS.
The Dry Cooling Alternative,
identified as the BLM Selected
Alternative in the BLM ROD, requires
mitigation measures identified in
Chapter 4 of the Final EIS; the complete
language of these measures, terms, and
conditions is provided in Appendix G,
Conditions of Certification, of the Final
EIS. BLM has incorporated these
requirements as terms and conditions
into the ROW. In addition, BLM
developed a Compliance Monitoring
Plan, which is included as Appendix 6
to the BLM ROD.
The DOE decision is whether or not
to issue a loan guarantee to Genesis
Solar, LLC for $800 million to support
construction and startup of the GSEP.
Accordingly, the DOE alternatives in the
Final EIS are (1) Issue the loan
guarantee for construction and startup
of the GSEP under the Dry Cooling
Alternative identified as the BLM
Selected Alternative in the BLM ROD,
and (2) the No Action Alternative.
Under the No Action Alternative, DOE
would not issue a loan guarantee for the
project, and it is not likely that Genesis
Solar, LLC would implement the project
as currently planned.
Environmentally Preferable Alternative
The BLM ROD identifies three
environmentally preferable alternatives:
(1) No Action Alternative A, under
which BLM would not approve the
ROW for the GSEP and would not
amend the CDCA Plan; (2) No Action
Alternative B, under which BLM would
not authorize the ROW for the GSEP but
would amend the CDCA Plan to make
the project site unavailable for any type
of solar energy development; and (3) the
Dry Cooling Alternative, under which
the project would use dry cooling
technology to generate the same energy
output using the same footprint but
would reduce water consumption by
87%. No Action Alternatives A and B
would not have impacts on the ground.
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54455
However, neither of these alternatives
would allow the development of
renewable energy, which is a national
priority. The Dry Cooling Alternative is
the BLM Preferred Alternative in the
Final EIS and is identified as the
Selected Alternative in the BLM ROD
because it allows the development of
renewable energy. No wetlands would
be filled and no delineated floodplains
would be affected under the Dry Cooling
Alternative.
DOE has decided that its Alternative
1, to issue a loan guarantee for
construction and startup of the GSEP
under the Dry Cooling Alternative, is
environmentally preferable. DOE has
determined that this alternative offers
environmental benefits due to a
reduction in impacts to water resources,
while allowing the project’s total
generation capacity of 250 MW of
renewable energy development. In
addition, DOE has determined that this
alternative offers substantial
environmental benefits due to
anticipated reductions in greenhouse
gas emissions as described in the Final
EIS, and that all practicable means to
avoid or minimize environmental harm,
as described in the BLM ROD and its
appendices for the GSEP, are adopted as
required mitigation measures by BLM.
Consultation
As the lead Federal agency for the
GSEP, BLM complied with Section 106
of the National Historic Preservation Act
and consulted with the Advisory
Council on Historic Preservation, the
California State Historic Preservation
Officer, and interested Native American
tribes; complied with Section 7 of the
Endangered Species Act and the Bald
and Golden Eagle Protection Act and
consulted with the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service; and entered into
government-to-government
consultations with a number of tribal
governments. In addition, BLM
consulted with the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers, which determined that the
project site does not impact waters of
the United States and that a Clean Water
Act permit will not be required, and the
State of California and Riverside County
regarding compliance with state and
local laws. Section 5.5 of the BLM ROD
summarizes consultations with agencies
and other entities.
Intentional Destructive Acts
As a part of its own review, DOE
verified that the potential
environmental impact of acts of
terrorism, sabotage or other intentional
destructive acts was considered in the
Final EIS. DOE concluded that the
proposed GSEP presents an unlikely
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 170 / Thursday, September 1, 2011 / Notices
target for an act of terrorism or sabotage.
Further, as discussed in the Final EIS,
the site security measures provide
appropriate levels of security to protect
electrical infrastructure from malicious
mischief, vandalism, or domestic/
foreign terrorist attacks.
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Decision
DOE has decided to issue a loan
guarantee for construction and startup
of GSEP under the Dry Cooling
Alternative, as described in the Final
EIS and BLM ROD.
Approval of the loan guarantee for
GSEP responds to the DOE purpose and
need pursuant to Section 1705 of EPAct
2005 (42 U.S.C. 16511–16514), which
was added to EPAct 2005 by the
Recovery Act. Section 1705 authorizes a
program for rapid deployment of
renewable energy projects and related
manufacturing facilities, electric power
transmission projects, and leading-edge
biofuels projects. The primary purposes
of the Recovery Act are job preservation
and creation, infrastructure investment,
energy efficiency and science, assistance
to the unemployed, and state and local
fiscal stabilization. The Section 1705
program is designed to address the
economic conditions of the Nation, in
part, through renewable energy,
transmission, and leading-edge biofuels
projects. Eligible projects must
commence construction by September
30, 2011.
Mitigation
The GSEP project for which DOE has
decided to issue a loan guarantee
includes mitigation measures, terms,
and conditions applied by BLM in its
ROW. The mitigation measures, terms,
and conditions represent practicable
means to avoid or minimize
environmental impacts from the
selected alternative (the Dry Cooling
Alternative). BLM is lead Federal
agency for the GSEP project under
NEPA and is responsible for ensuring
compliance with all adopted mitigation
measures, terms, and conditions for the
GSEP project set forth in the Final EIS
and ROD. The complete language of the
mitigation measures, terms, and
conditions is provided in Appendix G of
the Final EIS, and the Compliance
Monitoring Plan is provided in
Appendix 6 of the BLM ROD. BLM has
also incorporated the mitigation
measures, terms, and conditions into the
ROW as terms and conditions.
The DOE loan guarantee agreement
requires that the applicant comply with
all applicable laws and the terms of the
ROW, including mitigation measures.
An applicant’s failure to comply with
applicable laws and the ROW would
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16:16 Aug 31, 2011
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constitute a default. Upon continuance
of a default, DOE would have the right
under the loan guarantee agreement
between DOE and the applicant to
exercise usual and customary remedies.
To ensure that the applicant so
performs, the Loan Programs Office
monitors all operative loan guarantee
transactions.
Issued in Washington, DC, on August 25,
2011.
Jonathan M. Silver,
Executive Director, Loan Programs Office.
[FR Doc. 2011–22403 Filed 8–31–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–10–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Office of Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy
[Case No. RF–019]
Petition for Waiver and Notice of
Granting the Application for Interim
Waiver of Samsung from the
Department of Energy Residential
Refrigerator and Refrigerator-Freezer
Test Procedure
Office of Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy, Department of
Energy.
ACTION: Notice of Petition for Waiver
and Request for Public Comments.
AGENCY:
This notice announces receipt
of and publishes the Samsung
Electronics America, Inc. (Samsung)
petition for waiver (hereafter,
‘‘petition’’) from specified portions of
the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)
test procedure for determining the
energy consumption of electric
refrigerators and refrigerator-freezers.
The waiver request pertains to certain
basic models in Samsung’s product
lines that incorporate multiple defrost
cycles. In its petition, Samsung provides
an alternate test procedure that is the
same as the test procedure DOE
published in an interim final rule. DOE
solicits comments, data, and
information concerning Samsung’s
petition and the suggested alternate test
procedure. DOE also publishes notice of
the grant of an interim waiver to
Samsung.
DATES: DOE will accept comments, data,
and information with respect to the
Samsung Petition until, but no later
than October 3, 2011.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by case number ‘‘RF–019,’’ by
any of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
SUMMARY:
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Sfmt 4703
• E-mail: AS_Waiver_Requests@ee.
doe.gov Include the case number [Case
No. RF–017] in the subject line of the
message.
• Mail: Ms. Brenda Edwards, U.S.
Department of Energy, Building
Technologies Program, Mailstop EE–2J/
1000 Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585–0121.
Telephone: (202) 586–2945. Please
submit one signed original paper copy.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: Ms. Brenda
Edwards, U.S. Department of Energy,
Building Technologies Program, 950
L’Enfant Plaza SW., Suite 600,
Washington, DC 20024. Please submit
one signed original paper copy.
Docket: For access to the docket to
review the background documents
relevant to this matter, you may visit the
U.S. Department of Energy, 950 L’Enfant
Plaza SW., (Resource Room of the
Building Technologies Program),
Washington, DC, 20024; (202) 586–2945,
between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except Federal holidays.
Available documents include the
following items: (1) This notice; (2)
public comments received; (3) the
petition for waiver and application for
interim waiver; and (4) prior DOE
rulemakings regarding similar
refrigerator-freezers. Please call Ms.
Brenda Edwards at the above telephone
number for additional information
regarding visiting the Resource Room.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dr.
Michael G. Raymond, U.S. Department
of Energy, Building Technologies
Program, Mail Stop EE–2J, Forrestal
Building, 1000 Independence Avenue,
SW., Washington, DC 20585–0121.
Telephone: (202) 586–9611. E-mail:
Michael.Raymond@ee.doe.gov.
Ms. Elizabeth Kohl, U.S. Department
of Energy, Office of the General Counsel,
Mail Stop GC–71, Forrestal Building,
1000 Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585–0103.
Telephone: (202) 586–7796. E-mail:
Elizabeth.Kohl@hq.doe.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background and Authority
Title III, part B of the Energy Policy
and Conservation Act of 1975 (EPCA),
Public Law 94–163 (42 U.S.C. 6291–
6309, as codified, established the Energy
Conservation Program for Consumer
Products Other Than Automobiles, a
program covering most major household
appliances, which includes the electric
refrigerators and refrigerator-freezers
that are the focus of this notice.1 Part B
includes definitions, test procedures,
1 For editorial reasons, upon codification in the
U.S. Code, part B was re-designated part A.
E:\FR\FM\01SEN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 170 (Thursday, September 1, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 54454-54456]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-22403]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Issuance of Loan Guarantee to Genesis Solar, LLC, for the Genesis
Solar Energy Project
AGENCY: U.S. Department of Energy.
ACTION: Record of Decision.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announces its decision to
issue a loan guarantee under Title XVII of the Energy Policy Act of
2005 (EPAct 2005) to Genesis Solar, LLC, for construction and startup
of the Genesis Solar Energy Project (GSEP), a 250-megawatt (MW) nominal
capacity solar power generating facility on approximately 1,950 acres,
all of which is administered by the U.S. Department of the Interior,
Bureau of Land Management (BLM), in Riverside County, California. The
environmental impacts of constructing and operating this project were
analyzed pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) in
Plan Amendment/Final Environmental Impact Statement for the Genesis
Solar Energy Project, Riverside County, California (75 Federal Register
[FR] 52736; August 27, 2010) (Final EIS), prepared by the BLM Palm
Springs-South Coast Field Office with DOE as a cooperating agency. BLM
consulted DOE during preparation of the EIS, DOE provided comments, and
BLM addressed those comments in the Final EIS. DOE subsequently
determined that its own NEPA procedures had been satisfied and adopted
the Final EIS. (75 FR 78993; December 17, 2010)
ADDRESSES: Copies of this Record of Decision (ROD) and the Final EIS
may be obtained by contacting Matthew McMillen, NEPA Compliance
Officer, Environmental Compliance Division, Loan Programs Office (LP-
10), U.S. Department of Energy, 1000 Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585; telephone 202-586-7248; or e-mail
Matthew.Mcmillen@hq.doe.gov. The Final EIS and this ROD are also
available on the DOE NEPA Web site at: https://nepa.energy.gov, and on
the Loan Programs Web site at: https://www.loanprograms.energy.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For further information about this
ROD, contact Matthew McMillen, as indicated in the ADDRESSES section
above. For general information about the DOE NEPA process, contact
Carol Borgstrom, Director, Office of NEPA Policy and Compliance (GC-
54), U.S. Department of Energy, 1000 Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585; telephone 202-586-4600; leave a message at 800-
472-2756; or e-mail AskNEPA@hq.doe.gov. Information about DOE NEPA
activities and access to DOE NEPA documents are available through the
DOE NEPA Web site at https://nepa.energy.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The GSEP is a proposed concentrating solar electrical generating
facility using parabolic trough technology with a dry-cooling system
and associated facilities located on approximately 1,950 acres of BLM-
administered Federal land in Riverside County, California,
approximately 27 miles east of the unincorporated community of Desert
Center and 25 miles west of the Arizona-California border city of
Blythe. The GSEP will consist of two independent solar electric
generating facilities with a net electrical output of 125 MW each,
resulting in a total net electrical output of 250 MW. In addition to
the generating facility, the project includes a distribution line, a
14-mile electrical transmission line, fiber-optic lines, a natural-gas
pipeline, and a 6.5-mile access road. A double-circuit 230-kilovolt
(kV) transmission line will be constructed to connect to the Southern
California Edison Colorado River substation via the existing Blythe
Energy Project Transmission Line between the Julian Hinds and Buck
substations. The linear facilities will encompass approximately 90
acres outside the proposed project site.
On January 31, 2007, BLM's Palm Springs-South Coast Field Office
received an application pursuant to Title V of the Federal Land Policy
and Management Act (43 United States Code [U.S.C.] 1761) for a right-
of-way (ROW) to construct, operate, maintain, and decommission a
project identified as the NextEra Ford Dry Lake Solar Power Plant on
BLM-administered Federal land in Riverside County, California. In June
2009, the applicant notified BLM that the company name was being
changed to Genesis Solar, LLC, and the project became known as the
Genesis Solar Energy Project (GSEP). The BLM California Desert
Conservation Area (CDCA) Plan requires that all sites associated with
power generation or transmission not identified in the CDCA Plan be
considered through the plan amendment process. BLM approved the
Proposed Plan Amendment to the CDCA Plan to allow the GSEP and approved
a solar energy ROW to Genesis Solar, LLC, for the project; on November
4, 2010, the Secretary of the Interior approved these decisions.
In June 2010, Genesis Solar, LLC applied to DOE for a loan
guarantee under Title XVII of EPAct 2005, as amended by Section 406 of
the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. (Recovery Act) On
September 1, 2010, DOE invited the applicant to submit a Part II
application in accordance with the DOE Federal Loan Guarantee
Solicitation for Commercial Technology Renewable Energy Generation
Projects under the Financial Institution Partnership Program, No. DE-
FOA-0000166. On November 17, 2010, Genesis Solar, LLC submitted its
Part II application for an $800 million loan guarantee to support the
financing of the GSEP.
NEPA Review
BLM was the lead Federal agency in the preparation of the Genesis
Solar Energy Project EIS, and DOE was a cooperating agency pursuant to
a Memorandum of Agreement between DOE and BLM signed in January 2010.
DOE reviewed the content of the draft EIS and provided comments to BLM
to ensure that the DOE NEPA regulations (10 Code of Federal Regulations
part 1021) were satisfied.
On November 23, 2009, the BLM published the ``Notice of Intent to
Prepare an Environmental Impact
[[Page 54455]]
Statement/Staff Assessment for the NextEra Ford Dry Lake Solar Power
Plant, Riverside County, CA, and Possible Land Use Plan Amendment'' in
the Federal Register (74 FR 61167), with a 30-day scoping period for
public comments that closed on December 23, 2009. The project name
later changed to Genesis Solar Energy Project. The Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) published a Notice of Availability of the Draft
EIS and the Draft CDCA Plan Amendment for GSEP in the Federal Register
on April 9, 2010 (75 FR 18204). The Draft EIS was available for a 90-
day public comment period, which closed on July 8, 2010. Comments
received on the Draft EIS were addressed in the Plan Amendment and
Final Environmental Impact Statement for the Genesis Solar Energy
Project, and EPA published a Notice of Availability in the Federal
Register on August 27, 2010 (75 FR 52736). BLM made the Final EIS
available for an additional 30-day public review and comment period
from August 27 to September 27, 2010. All substantive comments received
during the 30-day public review and comment period were responded to in
Appendix 1 of the Record of Decision for the Genesis Solar Energy
Project and Amendment to the California Desert Conservation Area
Resource Management Plan, Riverside County, CA (BLM ROD). BLM published
its ROD in the Federal Register on November 12, 2010 (75 FR 69458).
Links to these documents can be found at the BLM Web site: https://www.blm.gov/ca/st/en/prog/energy/fasttrack/genesis/fedstatus.html.
On October 7, 2010, DOE received a comment letter from the
California Unions for Reliable Energy (CURE) regarding Colorado River
water rights and the need for an approved water allocation for GSEP.
DOE reviewed the comment responses prepared by BLM and published in the
Final EIS and the information provided in the BLM ROD, and concurs with
BLM as stated in its ROD that:
The BLM has thoroughly reviewed the regulatory framework
regarding the use of the accounting surface methodology of
determining impacts to the Colorado River and determined that no
formal regulation exists that requires Genesis to acquire an
allocation at this time. The Bureau of Reclamation has not finalized
its rule on the accounting surface methodology for the Colorado
River. This ROD recognizes that, should a rulemaking be finalized on
the currently proposed accounting surface method, the BLM will work
with Genesis to ensure that appropriate processes are followed to
obtain such an allocation. (BLM ROD, Section 1.2, page 13)
Alternatives Considered
BLM considered six alternatives: (1) The project identified in the
Final EIS as the Proposed Action (parabolic trough technology with wet
cooling); (2) the Dry Cooling Alternative (identified in the Final EIS
as the Preferred Alternative and ultimately selected by BLM); (3) the
Reduced Acreage Alternative; (4) No Action Alternative A; (5) No Action
Alternative B; and (6) No Action Alternative C (under which no ROW
grant for the GSEP would be authorized but the CDCA Plan would be
amended). Chapter 2 of the Final EIS describes these alternatives in
detail, and they are fully analyzed in Chapters 3 and 4 of the Final
EIS.
The Dry Cooling Alternative, identified as the BLM Selected
Alternative in the BLM ROD, requires mitigation measures identified in
Chapter 4 of the Final EIS; the complete language of these measures,
terms, and conditions is provided in Appendix G, Conditions of
Certification, of the Final EIS. BLM has incorporated these
requirements as terms and conditions into the ROW. In addition, BLM
developed a Compliance Monitoring Plan, which is included as Appendix 6
to the BLM ROD.
The DOE decision is whether or not to issue a loan guarantee to
Genesis Solar, LLC for $800 million to support construction and startup
of the GSEP. Accordingly, the DOE alternatives in the Final EIS are (1)
Issue the loan guarantee for construction and startup of the GSEP under
the Dry Cooling Alternative identified as the BLM Selected Alternative
in the BLM ROD, and (2) the No Action Alternative. Under the No Action
Alternative, DOE would not issue a loan guarantee for the project, and
it is not likely that Genesis Solar, LLC would implement the project as
currently planned.
Environmentally Preferable Alternative
The BLM ROD identifies three environmentally preferable
alternatives: (1) No Action Alternative A, under which BLM would not
approve the ROW for the GSEP and would not amend the CDCA Plan; (2) No
Action Alternative B, under which BLM would not authorize the ROW for
the GSEP but would amend the CDCA Plan to make the project site
unavailable for any type of solar energy development; and (3) the Dry
Cooling Alternative, under which the project would use dry cooling
technology to generate the same energy output using the same footprint
but would reduce water consumption by 87%. No Action Alternatives A and
B would not have impacts on the ground. However, neither of these
alternatives would allow the development of renewable energy, which is
a national priority. The Dry Cooling Alternative is the BLM Preferred
Alternative in the Final EIS and is identified as the Selected
Alternative in the BLM ROD because it allows the development of
renewable energy. No wetlands would be filled and no delineated
floodplains would be affected under the Dry Cooling Alternative.
DOE has decided that its Alternative 1, to issue a loan guarantee
for construction and startup of the GSEP under the Dry Cooling
Alternative, is environmentally preferable. DOE has determined that
this alternative offers environmental benefits due to a reduction in
impacts to water resources, while allowing the project's total
generation capacity of 250 MW of renewable energy development. In
addition, DOE has determined that this alternative offers substantial
environmental benefits due to anticipated reductions in greenhouse gas
emissions as described in the Final EIS, and that all practicable means
to avoid or minimize environmental harm, as described in the BLM ROD
and its appendices for the GSEP, are adopted as required mitigation
measures by BLM.
Consultation
As the lead Federal agency for the GSEP, BLM complied with Section
106 of the National Historic Preservation Act and consulted with the
Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, the California State
Historic Preservation Officer, and interested Native American tribes;
complied with Section 7 of the Endangered Species Act and the Bald and
Golden Eagle Protection Act and consulted with the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service; and entered into government-to-government
consultations with a number of tribal governments. In addition, BLM
consulted with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which determined that
the project site does not impact waters of the United States and that a
Clean Water Act permit will not be required, and the State of
California and Riverside County regarding compliance with state and
local laws. Section 5.5 of the BLM ROD summarizes consultations with
agencies and other entities.
Intentional Destructive Acts
As a part of its own review, DOE verified that the potential
environmental impact of acts of terrorism, sabotage or other
intentional destructive acts was considered in the Final EIS. DOE
concluded that the proposed GSEP presents an unlikely
[[Page 54456]]
target for an act of terrorism or sabotage. Further, as discussed in
the Final EIS, the site security measures provide appropriate levels of
security to protect electrical infrastructure from malicious mischief,
vandalism, or domestic/foreign terrorist attacks.
Decision
DOE has decided to issue a loan guarantee for construction and
startup of GSEP under the Dry Cooling Alternative, as described in the
Final EIS and BLM ROD.
Approval of the loan guarantee for GSEP responds to the DOE purpose
and need pursuant to Section 1705 of EPAct 2005 (42 U.S.C. 16511-
16514), which was added to EPAct 2005 by the Recovery Act. Section 1705
authorizes a program for rapid deployment of renewable energy projects
and related manufacturing facilities, electric power transmission
projects, and leading-edge biofuels projects. The primary purposes of
the Recovery Act are job preservation and creation, infrastructure
investment, energy efficiency and science, assistance to the
unemployed, and state and local fiscal stabilization. The Section 1705
program is designed to address the economic conditions of the Nation,
in part, through renewable energy, transmission, and leading-edge
biofuels projects. Eligible projects must commence construction by
September 30, 2011.
Mitigation
The GSEP project for which DOE has decided to issue a loan
guarantee includes mitigation measures, terms, and conditions applied
by BLM in its ROW. The mitigation measures, terms, and conditions
represent practicable means to avoid or minimize environmental impacts
from the selected alternative (the Dry Cooling Alternative). BLM is
lead Federal agency for the GSEP project under NEPA and is responsible
for ensuring compliance with all adopted mitigation measures, terms,
and conditions for the GSEP project set forth in the Final EIS and ROD.
The complete language of the mitigation measures, terms, and conditions
is provided in Appendix G of the Final EIS, and the Compliance
Monitoring Plan is provided in Appendix 6 of the BLM ROD. BLM has also
incorporated the mitigation measures, terms, and conditions into the
ROW as terms and conditions.
The DOE loan guarantee agreement requires that the applicant comply
with all applicable laws and the terms of the ROW, including mitigation
measures. An applicant's failure to comply with applicable laws and the
ROW would constitute a default. Upon continuance of a default, DOE
would have the right under the loan guarantee agreement between DOE and
the applicant to exercise usual and customary remedies. To ensure that
the applicant so performs, the Loan Programs Office monitors all
operative loan guarantee transactions.
Issued in Washington, DC, on August 25, 2011.
Jonathan M. Silver,
Executive Director, Loan Programs Office.
[FR Doc. 2011-22403 Filed 8-31-11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-10-P