Outer Continental Shelf, Gulf of Mexico, Oil and Gas Lease Sales, Western Planning Area Lease Sale 233 and Central Planning Area Lease Sale 231, 40380-40381 [2012-16732]
Download as PDF
40380
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 131 / Monday, July 9, 2012 / Notices
[FR Doc. 2012–16733 Filed 7–6–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–MR–C
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
Outer Continental Shelf, Gulf of
Mexico, Oil and Gas Lease Sales,
Western Planning Area Lease Sale 233
and Central Planning Area Lease Sale
231
Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management (BOEM), Interior.
ACTION: Notice of Intent to Prepare a
Supplemental Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS).
AGENCY:
Authority: This Notice of Intent to Prepare
a Supplemental EIS (NOI) is published
pursuant to the regulations (40 CFR 1501.7)
implementing the provisions of the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969, as
amended (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) (NEPA).
Pursuant to the regulations
implementing the procedural provisions
of NEPA, BOEM is announcing its intent
to prepare a Supplemental EIS for
proposed Western Planning Area (WPA)
Lease Sale 233 and Central Planning
Area (CPA) Lease Sale 231 (WPA/CPA
Supplemental EIS). The proposed lease
sales are in the Gulf of Mexico’s WPA
off the States of Texas and Louisiana
and in the CPA off the States of
Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama.
The WPA/CPA Supplemental EIS will
update the environmental and
socioeconomic analyses in the Gulf of
Mexico OCS Oil and Gas Lease Sales:
2012–2017; WPA Lease Sales 229, 233,
238, 246, and 248; CPA Lease Sales 227,
231, 235, 241, and 247, Final
Environmental Impact Statement (OCS
EIS/EA BOEM 2012–019) (WPA/CPA
Multisale Final EIS). The WPA/CPA
Multisale Final EIS was completed in
July 2012.
A Supplemental EIS is deemed
appropriate to supplement the WPA/
CPA Multisale Final EIS for these lease
sales in order to consider new
circumstances and information arising,
among other things, from the Deepwater
Horizon event. The WPA/CPA
Supplemental EIS analysis will focus on
updating the baseline conditions and
potential environmental effects of oil
and natural gas leasing, exploration,
development, and production in the
WPA and CPA. The WPA/CPA
Supplemental EIS will also analyze the
1.4 nautical mile (nmi) buffer area in the
Western Gap, which was excluded from
the WPA/CPA Multisale EIS but which
may be available in the proposed lease
sale or subsequent sale. The WPA/CPA
sroberts on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:05 Jul 06, 2012
Jkt 226001
Supplemental EIS will assist
decisionmakers in making informed
decisions regarding the approval of
operations, as well as leasing.
The WPA/CPA Supplemental EIS
analysis will focus on the potential
environmental effects of oil and natural
gas leasing, exploration, development,
and production in the areas identified as
the proposed lease sale areas. In
addition to the no action alternative
(i.e., canceling the proposed sales),
other alternatives may be considered for
each proposed lease sale, such as
deferring certain areas from the
proposed lease sales.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On June
28, 2012, the Department of the Interior
released a Proposed Final OCS Oil and
Gas Leasing Program for 2012–2017,
which includes proposed WPA Lease
Sale 233 and CPA Lease Sale 231. The
general area proposed for WPA Lease
Sale 233 covers approximately 29
million acres in the western portion of
the Gulf of Mexico (GOM) (excluding
whole and partial blocks within the
boundary of the Flower Garden Banks
National Marine Sanctuary). The general
area proposed for CPA Lease Sale 231
covers approximately 67 million acres
in the central portion of the GOM
(excluding whole and partial blocks
deferred by the Gulf of Mexico Energy
Security Act of 2006 and blocks that are
beyond the United States Exclusive
Economic Zone in the area known as the
northern portion of the Eastern Gap).
On February 20, 2012, the United
States and Mexico signed an Agreement
between the United States of America
and the United Mexican States
Concerning Transboundary
Hydrocarbon Reservoirs in the Gulf of
Mexico (hereinafter referred to as the
‘‘Agreement’’). Upon the Agreement’s
entry into force, additional acreage that
lies within 1.4 nmi north of the
continental shelf boundary in the area
formerly known as the Western Gap will
be available for lease. A treaty with
Mexico currently prohibits leasing in
this 1.4 nmi buffer area until 2014. This
area includes acreage in the CPA and
WPA along the continental shelf
boundary between the United States and
Mexico. If the Agreement enters into
force, this 1.4 nmi buffer area may be
available for leasing prior to 2014. When
this area becomes available for lease, it
will be announced in a Notice of Sale.
The 1.4 nmi buffer area was not
previously considered in the Multisale
Final EIS, but potential impacts on this
area will be considered in the WPA/
CPA Supplemental EIS.
This Federal Register notice is not an
announcement to hold the proposed
PO 00000
Frm 00061
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
lease sales, but is a continuation of
information gathering and is published
early in the environmental review
process as required by NEPA. The
comments received during the scoping
comment period will help form the
content of the WPA/CPA Supplemental
EIS and will be summarized in presale
documentation prepared prior to
holding the proposed WPA or CPA lease
sales. If, after completion of the
Supplemental EIS, the Secretary’s
decision is to hold one or both of the
lease sales, then the lease sale areas
identified in the Notice of Sale may
exclude or defer certain lease blocks
from the areas offered. For purposes of
the WPA/CPA Supplemental EIS and to
adequately assess the potential impacts
of two area wide lease sales, however,
BOEM is conservatively assuming that
all unleased blocks may be offered in
the proposed WPA and CPA lease sales.
In order to ensure a greater level of
transparency during the Outer
Continental Shelf Lands Act (OCSLA)
stages and tiered NEPA processes of the
Proposed Final OCS Oil & Gas Leasing
Program 2012–2017, (the Five-Year
Program), BOEM established an
alternative and mitigation tracking table
(the Table), which is designed to track
the receipt and treatment of alternative
and mitigation suggestions. Section
4.3.2 of the Outer Continental Shelf Oil
and Gas Leasing Program: 2012–2017;
Final Programmatic Environmental
Impact Statement (the Five-Year EIS)
(https://www.boem.gov/5-year/20122017/PEIS.aspx) has presented a list of
deferral and alternatives requests that
were received during the development
of the Five-Year EIS but were
determined to be more appropriately
considered at subsequent OCSLA and
NEPA stages. The WPA/CPA Multisale
Final EIS addressed these deferral and
alternatives requests, even though they
were ultimately deemed inappropriate
for further analysis as a separate
alternative or deferral from those
already included and considered in the
WPA/CPA Multisale Final EIS. In future
NEPA analyses, BOEM will continue to
evaluate whether these or other deferral
or alternative requests warrant
additional consideration as appropriate.
(Please refer to Sections 2.2.1.1 and
2.2.1.1 of the WPA/CPA Multisale Final
EIS for a complete discussion; https://
www.boem.gov/EnvironmentalStewardship/EnvironmentalAssessment/NEPA/nepaprocess.aspx).
The key requirement at each stage in the
NEPA process is to identify how the
recommendations for deferral and
mitigation requests are being addressed
and whether new information or
E:\FR\FM\09JYN1.SGM
09JYN1
sroberts on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 131 / Monday, July 9, 2012 / Notices
circumstances favor new or different
analytical approaches in response to
these requests.
Additionally, BOEM has created a
tailored map of the potentially affected
area through the Multipurpose Marine
Cadastre (MMC) Web site, https://
boem.gov/Oil-and-Gas-Energy-Program/
Leasing/Five-Year-Program/Lease-SaleSchedule/Interactive-Maps.aspx. This
map is an integrated marine information
system that provides a more
comprehensive look at geospatial data
and ongoing activities and studies
occurring in the area being considered.
This Web site provides the ability to
view multiple data layers of existing
geospatial data. Commenters can suggest
data layers for consideration by
following the commenting instructions
below.
Scoping Process: Through this NOI,
BOEM is also announcing the scoping
process for the WPA/CPA Supplemental
EIS. Throughout the scoping process,
Federal, state, tribal, and local
government agencies, and other
interested parties have the opportunity
to aid BOEM in determining the
significant issues, reasonable
alternatives, and potential mitigation
measures to be analyzed in the WPA/
CPA Supplemental EIS, as well as
providing additional information.
BOEM will use the NEPA commenting
process to satisfy the public
involvement process for Section 106 of
the National Historic Preservation Act
(16 U.S.C. 470f), as provided for in
36 CFR 800.2(d)(3).
Cooperating Agency: BOEM invites
other Federal agencies and sate, tribal,
and local governments to consider
becoming cooperating agencies in the
preparation of the WPA/CPA
Supplemental EIS. We invite qualified
government entities to inquire about
cooperating agency status for the WPA/
CPA Supplemental EIS. Following the
guidelines from the Council of
Environmental Quality (CEQ), qualified
agencies and governments are those
with ‘‘jurisdiction by law or special
expertise.’’ 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, BOEM will provide
potential cooperating agencies with a
written summary of ground rules for
cooperating agencies, including time
schedules and critical action dates,
milestones, responsibilities, scope and
detail of cooperating agencies’
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:20 Jul 06, 2012
Jkt 226001
contributions, and availability of
predecisional information. BOEM
anticipates this summary will form the
basis for a Memorandum of Agreement
between BOEM and each cooperating
agency. 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 National
Environmental Policy Act. These
documents are available at the following
locations on the Internet: https://nepa.
fhwa.dot.gov/ReNEPA/ReNepa.nsf/All
+Documents/D155918ABFA4EB3A852
56BF20071E9AE/$FILE/
Cooperating%20Agencies%20
Memorandum.1.30.02.doc and https://
nepa.fhwa.dot.gov/ReNEPA/
ReNepa.nsf/All+Documents/
D155918ABFA4EB3A85256
BF20071E9AE/$FILE/Cooperating
%20Agency%20Memo%
20Factors.1.30.02.doc.
BOEM, 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
BOEM during the normal public input
stages of the NEPA/EIS process. For
further information about cooperating
agencies, please contact Mr. Gary D.
Goeke at (504) 736–3233.
Comments: All interested parties,
including Federal, state, and local
government agencies, and the general
public, may submit written comments
on the scope of the WPA/CPA
Supplemental EIS, significant issues
that should be addressed, alternatives
that should be considered, potential
mitigation measures, and the types of oil
and gas activities of interest in the
proposed lease sale areas.
Written scoping comments may be
submitted in one of the following two
ways:
1. In an envelope labeled ‘‘Scoping for
the WPA/CPA Supplemental EIS’’ and
mailed (or hand delivered) to Mr. Gary
D. Goeke, Chief, Regional Assessment
Section, Office of Environment (MS
5410), Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management, Gulf of Mexico OCS
Region, 1201 Elmwood Park Boulevard,
New Orleans, Louisiana 70123–2394; or
2. BOEM email address:
Ls_233_231SEIS@boem.gov.
Petitions, although accepted, do not
generally provide useful information to
assist in scoping. BOEM does not
consider anonymous comments. Before
including your address, phone number,
email address, or other personal
PO 00000
Frm 00062
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
40381
identifying information in your
comment, you should be aware that
your entire comment—including your
personal identifying information—may
be made publicly available at any time.
While you can ask us in your comment
to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able to
do so. If you wish for your name and/
or address to be withheld, you must
state your preference prominently at the
beginning of your comment. All
submissions from organizations or
businesses and from individuals
identifying themselves as
representatives or officials of
organizations or businesses will be
made available for public inspection in
their entirety.
DATES: Comments must be received no
later than August 8, 2012 at the address
specified below.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
information on the WPA/CPA
Supplemental EIS, scoping process, the
submission of comments, or BOEM’s
policies associated with this notice,
please contact Mr. Gary D. Goeke, Chief,
Regional Assessment Section, Office of
Environment (MS 5410), Bureau of
Ocean Energy Management, Gulf of
Mexico OCS Region, 1201 Elmwood
Park Boulevard, New Orleans, Louisiana
70123–2394, telephone (504) 736–3233.
Dated: July 3, 2012.
Tommy P. Beaudreau,
Director, Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management.
[FR Doc. 2012–16732 Filed 7–6–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–MR–P
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
COMMISSION
[Investigation No. 337–TA–806]
Certain Digital Televisions Containing
Integrated Circuit Devices and
Components Thereof, Notice of
Commission Determination Not To
Review an Initial Determination
Terminating the Investigation as to
Sole Respondent Vizio, Inc.;
Termination of Investigation
U.S. International Trade
Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
Notice is hereby given that
the U.S. International Trade
Commission has determined not to
review the presiding administrative law
judge’s (‘‘ALJ’’) initial determination
(‘‘ID’’) (Order No. 10) terminating the
investigation with respect to sole
respondent Vizio, Inc. (‘‘Vizio’’) on the
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\09JYN1.SGM
09JYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 131 (Monday, July 9, 2012)]
[Notices]
[Pages 40380-40381]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-16732]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
Outer Continental Shelf, Gulf of Mexico, Oil and Gas Lease Sales,
Western Planning Area Lease Sale 233 and Central Planning Area Lease
Sale 231
AGENCY: Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM), Interior.
ACTION: Notice of Intent to Prepare a Supplemental Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Authority: This Notice of Intent to Prepare a Supplemental EIS
(NOI) is published pursuant to the regulations (40 CFR 1501.7)
implementing the provisions of the National Environmental Policy Act
of 1969, as amended (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) (NEPA).
SUMMARY: Pursuant to the regulations implementing the procedural
provisions of NEPA, BOEM is announcing its intent to prepare a
Supplemental EIS for proposed Western Planning Area (WPA) Lease Sale
233 and Central Planning Area (CPA) Lease Sale 231 (WPA/CPA
Supplemental EIS). The proposed lease sales are in the Gulf of Mexico's
WPA off the States of Texas and Louisiana and in the CPA off the States
of Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama. The WPA/CPA Supplemental EIS
will update the environmental and socioeconomic analyses in the Gulf of
Mexico OCS Oil and Gas Lease Sales: 2012-2017; WPA Lease Sales 229,
233, 238, 246, and 248; CPA Lease Sales 227, 231, 235, 241, and 247,
Final Environmental Impact Statement (OCS EIS/EA BOEM 2012-019) (WPA/
CPA Multisale Final EIS). The WPA/CPA Multisale Final EIS was completed
in July 2012.
A Supplemental EIS is deemed appropriate to supplement the WPA/CPA
Multisale Final EIS for these lease sales in order to consider new
circumstances and information arising, among other things, from the
Deepwater Horizon event. The WPA/CPA Supplemental EIS analysis will
focus on updating the baseline conditions and potential environmental
effects of oil and natural gas leasing, exploration, development, and
production in the WPA and CPA. The WPA/CPA Supplemental EIS will also
analyze the 1.4 nautical mile (nmi) buffer area in the Western Gap,
which was excluded from the WPA/CPA Multisale EIS but which may be
available in the proposed lease sale or subsequent sale. The WPA/CPA
Supplemental EIS will assist decisionmakers in making informed
decisions regarding the approval of operations, as well as leasing.
The WPA/CPA Supplemental EIS analysis will focus on the potential
environmental effects of oil and natural gas leasing, exploration,
development, and production in the areas identified as the proposed
lease sale areas. In addition to the no action alternative (i.e.,
canceling the proposed sales), other alternatives may be considered for
each proposed lease sale, such as deferring certain areas from the
proposed lease sales.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On June 28, 2012, the Department of the
Interior released a Proposed Final OCS Oil and Gas Leasing Program for
2012-2017, which includes proposed WPA Lease Sale 233 and CPA Lease
Sale 231. The general area proposed for WPA Lease Sale 233 covers
approximately 29 million acres in the western portion of the Gulf of
Mexico (GOM) (excluding whole and partial blocks within the boundary of
the Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary). The general area
proposed for CPA Lease Sale 231 covers approximately 67 million acres
in the central portion of the GOM (excluding whole and partial blocks
deferred by the Gulf of Mexico Energy Security Act of 2006 and blocks
that are beyond the United States Exclusive Economic Zone in the area
known as the northern portion of the Eastern Gap).
On February 20, 2012, the United States and Mexico signed an
Agreement between the United States of America and the United Mexican
States Concerning Transboundary Hydrocarbon Reservoirs in the Gulf of
Mexico (hereinafter referred to as the ``Agreement''). Upon the
Agreement's entry into force, additional acreage that lies within 1.4
nmi north of the continental shelf boundary in the area formerly known
as the Western Gap will be available for lease. A treaty with Mexico
currently prohibits leasing in this 1.4 nmi buffer area until 2014.
This area includes acreage in the CPA and WPA along the continental
shelf boundary between the United States and Mexico. If the Agreement
enters into force, this 1.4 nmi buffer area may be available for
leasing prior to 2014. When this area becomes available for lease, it
will be announced in a Notice of Sale. The 1.4 nmi buffer area was not
previously considered in the Multisale Final EIS, but potential impacts
on this area will be considered in the WPA/CPA Supplemental EIS.
This Federal Register notice is not an announcement to hold the
proposed lease sales, but is a continuation of information gathering
and is published early in the environmental review process as required
by NEPA. The comments received during the scoping comment period will
help form the content of the WPA/CPA Supplemental EIS and will be
summarized in presale documentation prepared prior to holding the
proposed WPA or CPA lease sales. If, after completion of the
Supplemental EIS, the Secretary's decision is to hold one or both of
the lease sales, then the lease sale areas identified in the Notice of
Sale may exclude or defer certain lease blocks from the areas offered.
For purposes of the WPA/CPA Supplemental EIS and to adequately assess
the potential impacts of two area wide lease sales, however, BOEM is
conservatively assuming that all unleased blocks may be offered in the
proposed WPA and CPA lease sales.
In order to ensure a greater level of transparency during the Outer
Continental Shelf Lands Act (OCSLA) stages and tiered NEPA processes of
the Proposed Final OCS Oil & Gas Leasing Program 2012-2017, (the Five-
Year Program), BOEM established an alternative and mitigation tracking
table (the Table), which is designed to track the receipt and treatment
of alternative and mitigation suggestions. Section 4.3.2 of the Outer
Continental Shelf Oil and Gas Leasing Program: 2012-2017; Final
Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement (the Five-Year EIS) (https://www.boem.gov/5-year/2012-2017/PEIS.aspx) has presented a list of
deferral and alternatives requests that were received during the
development of the Five-Year EIS but were determined to be more
appropriately considered at subsequent OCSLA and NEPA stages. The WPA/
CPA Multisale Final EIS addressed these deferral and alternatives
requests, even though they were ultimately deemed inappropriate for
further analysis as a separate alternative or deferral from those
already included and considered in the WPA/CPA Multisale Final EIS. In
future NEPA analyses, BOEM will continue to evaluate whether these or
other deferral or alternative requests warrant additional consideration
as appropriate. (Please refer to Sections 2.2.1.1 and 2.2.1.1 of the
WPA/CPA Multisale Final EIS for a complete discussion; https://www.boem.gov/Environmental-Stewardship/Environmental-Assessment/NEPA/nepaprocess.aspx). The key requirement at each stage in the NEPA
process is to identify how the recommendations for deferral and
mitigation requests are being addressed and whether new information or
[[Page 40381]]
circumstances favor new or different analytical approaches in response
to these requests.
Additionally, BOEM has created a tailored map of the potentially
affected area through the Multipurpose Marine Cadastre (MMC) Web site,
https://boem.gov/Oil-and-Gas-Energy-Program/Leasing/Five-Year-Program/Lease-Sale-Schedule/Interactive-Maps.aspx. This map is an integrated
marine information system that provides a more comprehensive look at
geospatial data and ongoing activities and studies occurring in the
area being considered. This Web site provides the ability to view
multiple data layers of existing geospatial data. Commenters can
suggest data layers for consideration by following the commenting
instructions below.
Scoping Process: Through this NOI, BOEM is also announcing the
scoping process for the WPA/CPA Supplemental EIS. Throughout the
scoping process, Federal, state, tribal, and local government agencies,
and other interested parties have the opportunity to aid BOEM in
determining the significant issues, reasonable alternatives, and
potential mitigation measures to be analyzed in the WPA/CPA
Supplemental EIS, as well as providing additional information. BOEM
will use the NEPA commenting process to satisfy the public involvement
process for Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act (16
U.S.C. 470f), as provided for in 36 CFR 800.2(d)(3).
Cooperating Agency: BOEM invites other Federal agencies and sate,
tribal, and local governments to consider becoming cooperating agencies
in the preparation of the WPA/CPA Supplemental EIS. We invite qualified
government entities to inquire about cooperating agency status for the
WPA/CPA Supplemental EIS. Following the guidelines from the Council of
Environmental Quality (CEQ), qualified agencies and governments are
those with ``jurisdiction by law or special expertise.'' 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, BOEM will provide potential
cooperating agencies with a written summary of ground rules for
cooperating agencies, including time schedules and critical action
dates, milestones, responsibilities, scope and detail of cooperating
agencies' contributions, and availability of predecisional information.
BOEM anticipates this summary will form the basis for a Memorandum of
Agreement between BOEM and each cooperating agency. 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 National Environmental Policy Act. These documents
are available at the following locations on the Internet: https://
nepa.fhwa.dot.gov/ReNEPA/ReNepa.nsf/All+Documents/
D155918ABFA4EB3A85256BF20071E9AE/$FILE/
Cooperating%20Agencies%20Memorandum.1.30.02.doc and https://
nepa.fhwa.dot.gov/ReNEPA/ReNepa.nsf/All+Documents/
D155918ABFA4EB3A85256BF20071E9AE/$FILE/
Cooperating%20Agency%20Memo%20Factors.1.30.02.doc.
BOEM, 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
BOEM during the normal public input stages of the NEPA/EIS process. For
further information about cooperating agencies, please contact Mr. Gary
D. Goeke at (504) 736-3233.
Comments: All interested parties, including Federal, state, and
local government agencies, and the general public, may submit written
comments on the scope of the WPA/CPA Supplemental EIS, significant
issues that should be addressed, alternatives that should be
considered, potential mitigation measures, and the types of oil and gas
activities of interest in the proposed lease sale areas.
Written scoping comments may be submitted in one of the following
two ways:
1. In an envelope labeled ``Scoping for the WPA/CPA Supplemental
EIS'' and mailed (or hand delivered) to Mr. Gary D. Goeke, Chief,
Regional Assessment Section, Office of Environment (MS 5410), Bureau of
Ocean Energy Management, Gulf of Mexico OCS Region, 1201 Elmwood Park
Boulevard, New Orleans, Louisiana 70123-2394; or
2. BOEM email address: Ls_233_231SEIS@boem.gov.
Petitions, although accepted, do not generally provide useful
information to assist in scoping. BOEM does not consider anonymous
comments. Before including your address, phone number, email address,
or other personal identifying information in your comment, you should
be aware that your entire comment--including your personal identifying
information--may be made publicly available at any time. While you can
ask us in your comment to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we cannot guarantee that we will be
able to do so. If you wish for your name and/or address to be withheld,
you must state your preference prominently at the beginning of your
comment. All submissions from organizations or businesses and from
individuals identifying themselves as representatives or officials of
organizations or businesses will be made available for public
inspection in their entirety.
DATES: Comments must be received no later than August 8, 2012 at the
address specified below.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For information on the WPA/CPA
Supplemental EIS, scoping process, the submission of comments, or
BOEM's policies associated with this notice, please contact Mr. Gary D.
Goeke, Chief, Regional Assessment Section, Office of Environment (MS
5410), Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Gulf of Mexico OCS Region,
1201 Elmwood Park Boulevard, New Orleans, Louisiana 70123-2394,
telephone (504) 736-3233.
Dated: July 3, 2012.
Tommy P. Beaudreau,
Director, Bureau of Ocean Energy Management.
[FR Doc. 2012-16732 Filed 7-6-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-MR-P