Intent To Prepare Environmental Impact Statements: Potential Commercial Wind Lease Issuance and Decision Regarding Approval of Construction and Operations Plan on the Atlantic Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) Offshore Maine, 47876-47877 [2012-19592]
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 155 / Friday, August 10, 2012 / Notices
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nr_info@nps.gov.
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Alexis Abernathy, National Register of
Historic Places program, National Park
Service; 1849 C Street NW (2280);
Washington, DC 20240; Telephone (202)
354–2236; Email: nr_info@nps.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: With the
1990 release of National Register
Bulletin 38, Guidelines for Evaluating
and Documenting Traditional Cultural
Properties, NPS clarified a broader
scope of properties that could be
considered eligible for listing in the
National Register of Historic Places (NR)
for their significance as Traditional
Cultural Properties, and provided
written guidance on working with these
properties. This policy direction was
followed by the provision in the 1992
amendment to the National Historic
Preservation Act stating: ‘‘Properties of
traditional religious and cultural
importance to an Indian tribe or Native
Hawaiian organization may be
determined to be eligible for inclusion
in the National Register.’’ While
Bulletin 38 remains an essential, basic
resource for identifying, evaluating, and
documenting TCPs, in recent years the
number of requests for additional
assistance in this regard from State and
Tribal Historic Preservation Offices,
Federal agencies, and preservation
professionals has increased
significantly. NPS believes the best way
to address these requests is through the
provision of updated, published
guidance on how to better identify and
evaluate:
• What constitutes a ‘‘traditional’’
community
• ‘‘Continuity of use’’ by a traditional
community
• Evolving uses of resources by a
traditional community
• Multiple lines of documentary
evidence
• Broad ethnographic landscapes
• Property boundaries
• Resource integrity
In addition to the issues noted above,
NPS is also seeking to identify and
address any other ‘‘user-identified’’
TCP-related issues, as well as requesting
comments and recommendations that
specifically address the development of
published guidance related to
identifying, evaluating, and
documenting NR-eligible Native
American landscapes. NPS requests that
all comments and recommendations
related to the issues outlined above
should be forwarded via email to:
nr_info@nps.gov. Respondents should
identify their submission(s) as a ‘‘TCP/
NAL Comment’’ in their email ‘‘subject’’
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:02 Aug 09, 2012
Jkt 226001
box. Responses submitted via email will
be posted on an ongoing basis beginning
the first week of June, 2012 on the NR
Web site located at: https://www.nps.gov/
history/nr/publications/guidance/
TCP_comments.htm. 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.
The National Register Program looks
forward to hearing comments on these
issues.
Dated: July 10, 2012.
J. Paul Loether,
Chief, National Register of Historic Places/
National Historic Landmarks Program.
[FR Doc. 2012–19594 Filed 8–9–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4312–51–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
[Docket No. BOEM–2012–0049]
Intent To Prepare Environmental
Impact Statements: Potential
Commercial Wind Lease Issuance and
Decision Regarding Approval of
Construction and Operations Plan on
the Atlantic Outer Continental Shelf
(OCS) Offshore Maine
governments, and other interested
parties are requested to send their
written comments on the important
issues to be considered in the EIS by
either of the following two methods:
1. Federal eRulemaking Portal:
https://www.regulations.gov. In the entry
titled ‘‘Enter Keyword or ID,’’ enter
BOEM–2012–0049, and then click
‘‘search.’’ Follow the instructions to
submit public comments and view
supporting and related materials
available for this notice.
2. By U.S. Postal Service or other
delivery service, send your comments
and information to the following
address: Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management, Office of Renewable
Energy, 381 Elden Street, HM 1328,
Herndon, Virginia 20170–4817.
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 comments
to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able to
do so.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Michelle Morin, BOEM, Environment
Branch for Renewable Energy, 381
Elden Street, HM 1328, Herndon,
Virginia 20170–4817; (703) 787–1722 or
michelle.morin@boem.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
1. Background
Statoil NA’s proposed project,
Hywind Maine, would consist of four 3AGENCY: Bureau of Ocean Energy
megawatt (MW) floating wind turbine
Management (BOEM), Interior.
generators (WTGs) configured for a total
ACTION: Notice.
of 12 MW. The project would be located
in water depths greater than 100 meters
SUMMARY: On October 12, 2011, BOEM
approximately 12 nautical miles off the
received an unsolicited request from
coast of Maine. Statoil NA’s short-term
Statoil North America Inc. (Statoil NA)
for a commercial wind lease on the OCS objective is to construct the Hywind
offshore Maine. Upon the submittal of a Maine project to demonstrate the
construction and operations plan (COP), commercial potential of the existing
floating offshore Hywind technology,
BOEM intends to prepare an
while responding to a corresponding
environmental impact statement (EIS)
Request for Proposal issued by the
that will consider the environmental
Maine Public Utilities Commission. The
consequences associated with the
company’s long-term objective, not
Hywind Maine project proposed by
represented in this leasing request by
Statoil NA, and to obtain public input
Statoil NA, is to construct a full-scale,
regarding important environmental
deepwater floating wind turbine facility
issues that should be considered in the
that leverages economies of scale as well
EIS.
as technical and operational
Authority: The Notice of Intent to prepare
enhancements developed in the Hywind
an EIS is published pursuant to 40 CFR
Maine project. The full-scale project
1501.7.
would be subject to a subsequent and
DATES: Comments should be submitted
separate leasing and environmental
no later than November 8, 2012.
review process.
BOEM will publish a Request for
Submission Procedures: Federal, state,
Interest (RFI) concurrently with this
local government agencies, tribal
PO 00000
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10AUN1
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 155 / Friday, August 10, 2012 / Notices
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
NOI to determine whether competitive
interest exists for the area requested by
Statoil NA, as required by 43
U.S.1337(p)(3). The RFI also requests
that interested and affected parties
comment and provide information about
site conditions and multiple uses within
the area identified in the notice that
would be relevant to the proposed
project or its impacts. Comments
received on the RFI will be included as
part of the scoping process for the EIS.
If BOEM determines there is no
competition, Statoil NA would submit a
construction and operations plan (COP)
to BOEM that describes the proposed
construction, activities, and
decommissioning plans for all proposed
facilities and includes the results of any
site characterization surveys that have
been conducted, such as geophysical,
geotechnical, archaeological, and
biological surveys. See 30 CFR 585.620–
585.629. However, if BOEM determines
there is competition, then it will
proceed with the competitive leasing
process outlined in 30 CFR 585.211–
225. In the event there is competition,
BOEM is likely to proceed under the
‘‘Smart from the Start’’ initiative, as it
has elsewhere on the Atlantic OCS, by
preparing an environmental assessment
(EA) that analyzes the potential impacts
of lease issuance and associated site
characterization and assessment
activities. Implementation of this
process, including the preparation of
such NEPA analysis would necessitate
issuance of a new NOI. Whether
following competitive or noncompetitive procedures, BOEM will
comply with all applicable requirements
of National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) prior to making a decision on
whether or not to issue a lease and
approve, disapprove, or approve with
modifications the associated plan(s).
Statoil NA’s October 12, 2011
application and map of the proposed
lease area can be found at the following
URL: https://www.boem.gov/RenewableEnergy-Program/State-Activities/
Maine.aspx.
2. Proposed Action and Scope of
Analysis
This notice starts the formal scoping
process for the EIS under 40 CFR 150.7,
and solicits information regarding
important environmental issues,
alternatives, and mitigation that should
be considered in the EIS. BOEM will use
responses to this NOI and the EIS public
input process to satisfy the public
involvement requirements of the
National Historic Preservation Act (16
U.S.C. 470f), as provided in 36 CFR
800.2(d)(3), and is seeking information
from the public on the identification of
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:02 Aug 09, 2012
Jkt 226001
historic properties that might be
impacted by the Statoil NA project. The
analyses contained within the EIS will
also support compliance with other
environmental statutes (e.g., Endangered
Species Act, Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act, and
Marine Mammal Protection Act).
The proposed action that will be the
subject of the EIS is the issuance of a
commercial lease and the approval or
approval with modification of the COP
for Statoil NA’s Hywind Maine project
offshore Maine. In addition to the no
action alternative (i.e., no issuance of a
commercial lease or approval of the
COP), other alternatives may be
considered, such as exclusion of certain
areas from project siting or modification
of project activities. The EIS will
consider the reasonably foreseeable
environmental consequences associated
with the project, including the impacts
of site characterization surveys that may
be undertaken by Statoil NA and the
construction, operations, maintenance,
and decommissioning of the four WTGs
that would be serially interconnected
with infield cables and with a subsea
export cable to shore. After a COP is
submitted and a draft EIS issued, the
public will have further opportunity to
comment.
3. Cooperating Agencies
BOEM invites Federal, state, and local
government agencies, as well as tribal
governments, to consider becoming
cooperating agencies in the preparation
of this EIS. Council on Environmental
Quality (CEQ) regulations implementing
the procedural provisions of NEPA
defines cooperating agencies as those
with ‘‘jurisdiction by law or special
expertise’’ (40 CFR 1508.5). Potential
cooperating agencies should consider
their authority and capacity to assume
the responsibilities of a cooperating
agency and remember that an agency’s
role in the environmental analysis
neither enlarges nor diminishes the final
decision-making authority of any other
agency involved in the NEPA process.
Upon request, BOEM will provide
potential cooperating agencies with a
draft Memorandum of Agreement that
includes a schedule with critical action
dates and milestones, mutual
responsibilities, designated points of
contact, and expectations for handling
pre-decisional information. Agencies
should also consider the ’’Factors for
Determining 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:
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
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47877
https://ceg.hss.doe.gov/nepa/regs/
cooperating/
cooperatingagenciesmemorandum.html
and at: https://ceg.hss.doe.gov/nepa/regs/
cooperating/
cooperatingagencymemofactors.html.
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
phases of the NEPA/EIS process.
4. Public Scoping Meetings
Public scoping meetings will be held
in Maine later this year. Specific times
and venues will be posted on the BOEM
Web site and published in the Federal
Register per 40 CFR 1506.6.
Dated: August 1, 2012.
Tommy P. Beaudreau,
Director, Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management.
[FR Doc. 2012–19592 Filed 8–9–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–VH–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
[Docket No. BOEM–2012–0003]
Potential Commercial Leasing for Wind
Power on the Outer Continental Shelf
(OCS) Offshore Maine; Request for
Interest
Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management (BOEM), Interior.
ACTION: Public Notice of an Unsolicited
Request for a Commercial OCS Wind
Lease, Request for Interest, and Request
for Public Comment
AGENCY:
The purpose of this public
notice is to: (1) Describe the proposal
submitted to BOEM by Statoil North
America (Statoil NA) to acquire an OCS
wind lease; (2) solicit public input
regarding the proposal, its potential
environmental consequences, and the
use of the area in which the proposed
project would be located; and (3) solicit
submissions of indications of
competitive interest for a commercial
lease for wind energy development on
the OCS off the coast of Maine for the
area identified in this notice.
On October 12, 2011, BOEM received
an unsolicited request from Statoil NA
for a commercial wind lease on the OCS
offshore Maine. Statoil NA’s proposed
project, ‘‘Hywind Maine,’’ would
consist of four 3-megawatt (MW) wind
turbine generators (WTG) configured for
a total of 12-MW in water depths greater
than 100 meters and be located
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\10AUN1.SGM
10AUN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 155 (Friday, August 10, 2012)]
[Notices]
[Pages 47876-47877]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-19592]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
[Docket No. BOEM-2012-0049]
Intent To Prepare Environmental Impact Statements: Potential
Commercial Wind Lease Issuance and Decision Regarding Approval of
Construction and Operations Plan on the Atlantic Outer Continental
Shelf (OCS) Offshore Maine
AGENCY: Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM), Interior.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: On October 12, 2011, BOEM received an unsolicited request from
Statoil North America Inc. (Statoil NA) for a commercial wind lease on
the OCS offshore Maine. Upon the submittal of a construction and
operations plan (COP), BOEM intends to prepare an environmental impact
statement (EIS) that will consider the environmental consequences
associated with the Hywind Maine project proposed by Statoil NA, and to
obtain public input regarding important environmental issues that
should be considered in the EIS.
Authority: The Notice of Intent to prepare an EIS is published
pursuant to 40 CFR 1501.7.
DATES: Comments should be submitted no later than November 8, 2012.
Submission Procedures: Federal, state, local government agencies,
tribal governments, and other interested parties are requested to send
their written comments on the important issues to be considered in the
EIS by either of the following two methods:
1. Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov. In the
entry titled ``Enter Keyword or ID,'' enter BOEM-2012-0049, and then
click ``search.'' Follow the instructions to submit public comments and
view supporting and related materials available for this notice.
2. By U.S. Postal Service or other delivery service, send your
comments and information to the following address: Bureau of Ocean
Energy Management, Office of Renewable Energy, 381 Elden Street, HM
1328, Herndon, Virginia 20170-4817.
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 comments to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we cannot guarantee that we will be
able to do so.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Michelle Morin, BOEM, Environment
Branch for Renewable Energy, 381 Elden Street, HM 1328, Herndon,
Virginia 20170-4817; (703) 787-1722 or michelle.morin@boem.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
1. Background
Statoil NA's proposed project, Hywind Maine, would consist of four
3-megawatt (MW) floating wind turbine generators (WTGs) configured for
a total of 12 MW. The project would be located in water depths greater
than 100 meters approximately 12 nautical miles off the coast of Maine.
Statoil NA's short-term objective is to construct the Hywind Maine
project to demonstrate the commercial potential of the existing
floating offshore Hywind technology, while responding to a
corresponding Request for Proposal issued by the Maine Public Utilities
Commission. The company's long-term objective, not represented in this
leasing request by Statoil NA, is to construct a full-scale, deepwater
floating wind turbine facility that leverages economies of scale as
well as technical and operational enhancements developed in the Hywind
Maine project. The full-scale project would be subject to a subsequent
and separate leasing and environmental review process.
BOEM will publish a Request for Interest (RFI) concurrently with
this
[[Page 47877]]
NOI to determine whether competitive interest exists for the area
requested by Statoil NA, as required by 43 U.S.1337(p)(3). The RFI also
requests that interested and affected parties comment and provide
information about site conditions and multiple uses within the area
identified in the notice that would be relevant to the proposed project
or its impacts. Comments received on the RFI will be included as part
of the scoping process for the EIS.
If BOEM determines there is no competition, Statoil NA would submit
a construction and operations plan (COP) to BOEM that describes the
proposed construction, activities, and decommissioning plans for all
proposed facilities and includes the results of any site
characterization surveys that have been conducted, such as geophysical,
geotechnical, archaeological, and biological surveys. See 30 CFR
585.620-585.629. However, if BOEM determines there is competition, then
it will proceed with the competitive leasing process outlined in 30 CFR
585.211-225. In the event there is competition, BOEM is likely to
proceed under the ``Smart from the Start'' initiative, as it has
elsewhere on the Atlantic OCS, by preparing an environmental assessment
(EA) that analyzes the potential impacts of lease issuance and
associated site characterization and assessment activities.
Implementation of this process, including the preparation of such NEPA
analysis would necessitate issuance of a new NOI. Whether following
competitive or non-competitive procedures, BOEM will comply with all
applicable requirements of National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
prior to making a decision on whether or not to issue a lease and
approve, disapprove, or approve with modifications the associated
plan(s).
Statoil NA's October 12, 2011 application and map of the proposed
lease area can be found at the following URL: https://www.boem.gov/Renewable-Energy-Program/State-Activities/Maine.aspx.
2. Proposed Action and Scope of Analysis
This notice starts the formal scoping process for the EIS under 40
CFR 150.7, and solicits information regarding important environmental
issues, alternatives, and mitigation that should be considered in the
EIS. BOEM will use responses to this NOI and the EIS public input
process to satisfy the public involvement requirements of the National
Historic Preservation Act (16 U.S.C. 470f), as provided in 36 CFR
800.2(d)(3), and is seeking information from the public on the
identification of historic properties that might be impacted by the
Statoil NA project. The analyses contained within the EIS will also
support compliance with other environmental statutes (e.g., Endangered
Species Act, Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act,
and Marine Mammal Protection Act).
The proposed action that will be the subject of the EIS is the
issuance of a commercial lease and the approval or approval with
modification of the COP for Statoil NA's Hywind Maine project offshore
Maine. In addition to the no action alternative (i.e., no issuance of a
commercial lease or approval of the COP), other alternatives may be
considered, such as exclusion of certain areas from project siting or
modification of project activities. The EIS will consider the
reasonably foreseeable environmental consequences associated with the
project, including the impacts of site characterization surveys that
may be undertaken by Statoil NA and the construction, operations,
maintenance, and decommissioning of the four WTGs that would be
serially interconnected with infield cables and with a subsea export
cable to shore. After a COP is submitted and a draft EIS issued, the
public will have further opportunity to comment.
3. Cooperating Agencies
BOEM invites Federal, state, and local government agencies, as well
as tribal governments, to consider becoming cooperating agencies in the
preparation of this EIS. Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ)
regulations implementing the procedural provisions of NEPA defines
cooperating agencies as those with ``jurisdiction by law or special
expertise'' (40 CFR 1508.5). Potential cooperating agencies should
consider their authority and capacity to assume the responsibilities of
a cooperating agency and remember that an agency's role in the
environmental analysis neither enlarges nor diminishes the final
decision-making authority of any other agency involved in the NEPA
process.
Upon request, BOEM will provide potential cooperating agencies with
a draft Memorandum of Agreement that includes a schedule with critical
action dates and milestones, mutual responsibilities, designated points
of contact, and expectations for handling pre-decisional information.
Agencies should also consider the ''Factors for Determining 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://ceg.hss.doe.gov/nepa/regs/cooperating/cooperatingagenciesmemorandum.html and at: https://ceg.hss.doe.gov/nepa/regs/cooperating/cooperatingagencymemofactors.html.
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 phases of the NEPA/EIS process.
4. Public Scoping Meetings
Public scoping meetings will be held in Maine later this year.
Specific times and venues will be posted on the BOEM Web site and
published in the Federal Register per 40 CFR 1506.6.
Dated: August 1, 2012.
Tommy P. Beaudreau,
Director, Bureau of Ocean Energy Management.
[FR Doc. 2012-19592 Filed 8-9-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-VH-P