Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill; Notice of Intent To Prepare a Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement for a Phase III Early Restoration Plan and Early Restoration Project Types, and To Conduct Scoping Meetings, 33431-33432 [2013-13249]
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 107 / Tuesday, June 4, 2013 / Notices
Fort George G. Meade, MD 20755–
5235, 301–677–7085.
Upon finding a Canadian laboratory to
be qualified, HHS will recommend that
DOT certify the laboratory (Federal
Register, July 16, 1996) as meeting the
minimum standards of the Mandatory
Guidelines published in the Federal
Register on April 30, 2010 (75 FR
22809). After receiving DOT
certification, the laboratory will be
included in the monthly list of HHScertified laboratories and participate in
the NLCP certification maintenance
program.
Janine Denis Cook,
Chemist, Division of Workplace Programs,
Center for Substance Abuse Prevention,
SAMHSA.
[FR Doc. 2013–13160 Filed 6–3–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160–20–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
[FWS–R4–FHC–2013–N108;
FVHC98130406900–XXX–FF04G01000]
Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill; Notice of
Intent To Prepare a Programmatic
Environmental Impact Statement for a
Phase III Early Restoration Plan and
Early Restoration Project Types, and
To Conduct Scoping Meetings
Department of the Interior.
Notice of Intent to conduct
scoping.
AGENCY:
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The federal and state natural
resource trustees for the Deepwater
Horizon oil spill (Trustees) intend to
prepare a PEIS under the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) to
evaluate the environmental
consequences of early restoration
project types, as well as the early
restoration projects that the Trustees
intend to propose in an upcoming Phase
III Draft Early Restoration Plan (DERP).
The Trustees intend to evaluate early
restoration project types
programmatically in the PEIS in order to
allow the Trustees to better analyze
cumulative effects of early restoration,
and to tier NEPA analyses for future
early restoration plans to the PEIS,
where appropriate.
DATES: Public comments must be
received by August 2, 2013. Public
scoping meetings will be held as listed
below. The Trustees will announce
specific meeting locations and addresses
to the public prior to the meetings, and
have an active role in the performance testing and
laboratory inspection processes. Other Canadian
laboratories wishing to be considered for the NLCP
may apply directly to the NLCP contractor just as
U.S. laboratories do.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:33 Jun 03, 2013
Jkt 229001
will post the information on the web at
www.gulfspillrestoration.noaa.gov.
Date
Location
June 24, 2013 ....
June 27, 2013 ....
July 16, 2013 ......
July 18, 2013 ......
July 23, 2013 ......
July 25, 2013 ......
Galveston, Texas.
Mobile, Alabama.
Long Beach, Mississippi.
Houma, Louisiana.
Washington, DC.
Pensacola, Florida.
Submitting Comments: You
may submit scoping comments on the
PEIS by any of the following methods:
• Via the Web: https://
www.gulfspillrestoration.noaa.gov.
• For electronic submission of
comments containing attachments,
email to:
earlyrestorationcomments@fws.gov
• U.S. Mail: c/o U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, P.O, Box 2099,
Fairhope, Alabama 36533. All written
scoping comments must be received by
the close of the scoping period to be
considered.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Nanciann Regalado at
Nanciann_Regalado@fws.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
ADDRESSES:
Introduction
On or about April 20, 2010, the
mobile offshore drilling unit Deepwater
Horizon, which was being used to drill
a well for BP Exploration and
Production Inc. (BP), in the Macondo
prospect (Mississippi Canyon 252–
MC252), exploded, caught fire and
subsequently sank in the Gulf of
Mexico, resulting in an unprecedented
volume of oil and other discharges from
the rig and from the wellhead on the
seabed. The Deepwater Horizon oil spill
is the largest oil spill in U.S. history,
discharging millions of barrels of oil
over a period of 87 days. In addition,
well over one million gallons of
dispersants were applied to the waters
of the spill area in an attempt to
disperse the spilled oil. An
undetermined amount of natural gas
was also released to the environment as
a result of the spill.
The state and federal natural resource
trustees (Trustees) are conducting the
natural resource damage assessment
(NRDA) for the Deepwater Horizon oil
spill under the Oil Pollution Act 1990
(OPA; 33 U.S.C. 2701 et seq.). Pursuant
to OPA, federal and state agencies act as
trustees on behalf of the public to assess
natural resource injuries and losses and
to determine the actions required to
compensate the public for those injuries
and losses. OPA further instructs the
designated trustees to develop and
implement a plan for the restoration,
PO 00000
Frm 00107
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
33431
rehabilitation, replacement, or
acquisition of the equivalent of the
injured natural resources under their
trusteeship, including the loss of use
and services from those resources from
the time of injury until the time
restoration to baseline (the resource
quality and conditions that would exist
if the spill had not occurred) is
complete. Pursuant to the process
articulated in the Framework Agreement
for Early Restoration Addressing
Injuries Resulting from the Deepwater
Horizon Oil Spill (Framework
Agreement), the Trustees have
previously selected, and BP has agreed
to fund, a total of ten early restoration
projects, expected to cost a total of
approximately $71 million, through the
Phase I Early Restoration Plan/
Environmental Assessment (Phase I
ERP) and Phase II Early Restoration
Plan/Environmental Review (Phase II
ERP). These plans are available at:
https://
www.gulfspillrestoration.noaa.gov/
restoration/early-restoration/.
The Trustees are:
• U.S. Department of the Interior
(DOI), as represented by the National
Park Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, and Bureau of Land
Management;
• National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA), on behalf of
the U.S. Department of Commerce;
• U.S. Department of Agriculture
(USDA);
• U.S. Department of Defense
(DOD); 1
• U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (USEPA);
• State of Louisiana Coastal
Protection and Restoration Authority,
Oil Spill Coordinator’s Office,
Department of Environmental Quality,
Department of Wildlife and Fisheries,
and Department of Natural Resources;
• State of Mississippi Department of
Environmental Quality;
• State of Alabama Department of
Conservation and Natural Resources and
Geological Survey of Alabama;
• State of Florida Department of
Environmental Protection and Fish and
Wildlife Conservation Commission; and
• For the State of Texas, Texas Parks
and Wildlife Department, Texas General
Land Office, and Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality.
Background on Early Restoration
On April 20, 2011, BP agreed to
provide up to $1 billion to fund early
1 Although a trustee under OPA by virtue of the
proximity of its facilities to the Deepwater Horizon
oil spill, DOD is not a member of the Trustee
Council and does not participate in Trustee
decision-making.
E:\FR\FM\04JNN1.SGM
04JNN1
33432
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 107 / Tuesday, June 4, 2013 / Notices
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
restoration projects in the Gulf of
Mexico to begin addressing injuries to
natural resources caused by the
Deepwater Horizon oil spill. The
Framework Agreement represents a
preliminary step toward the restoration
of injured natural resources and
replacement of the lost use of those
resources and their services. The
Framework Agreement is intended to
expedite the start of restoration in the
Gulf in advance of the completion of the
injury assessment process. The
Framework Agreement provides a
mechanism through which the Trustees
and BP can work together ‘‘to
commence implementation of early
restoration projects that will provide
meaningful benefits to accelerate
restoration in the Gulf as quickly as
practicable’’ prior to the resolution of
the Trustees’ natural resource damages
claim. Early restoration is not intended
to, and does not fully address all
injuries caused by the Spill. Restoration
beyond early restoration projects will be
required to fully compensate the public
for natural resource losses from the
Spill.
The Trustees’ key objective in
pursuing early restoration is to secure
tangible recovery of natural resources
and natural resource services for the
public’s benefit while the longer-term
process of fully assessing injury and
damages is underway. As the first step
in this accelerated process, the Trustees
released, after public review of a draft,
a Phase I ERP in April 2012. In
December 2012, after public review of a
draft, the Trustees released a Phase II
ERP. Collectively, the Phase I and Phase
II ERPs include a total of ten projects
that were selected by the Trustees and,
after negotiations in accordance with
the terms of the Framework Agreement,
agreed to by BP. Those restoration
actions include nine separate projects
that are ready for implementation, and
one project that the Trustees have
selected for completion for project
design and final NEPA review. The
Trustees have begun implementing
many of the projects selected in the
Phase I and Phase II ERPs.
Phase III Early Restoration
On May 6, 2013, NOAA issued a
public notice in the Federal Register on
behalf of the Trustees. The public notice
announced the Trustees’ intent to
propose additional future early
restoration projects for the purpose of
continuing the process of using early
restoration funding to restore natural
resources, ecological services, and
human use services injured or lost as a
result of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill
disaster. The Trustees expect to propose
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:33 Jun 03, 2013
Jkt 229001
those early restoration projects, and
potentially additional early restoration
projects, to the public in a Phase III
DERP, which will evaluate restoration
alternatives under OPA, the Framework
Agreement, and all applicable legal
requirements. The Trustees intend to
consider both ecological and human use
restoration projects to restore injuries
caused by the Deepwater Horizon oil
spill, addressing the physical and
biological environment as well as the
relationship people have with the
environment.
As noted above, the Trustees intend to
prepare a PEIS in accordance with
NEPA to evaluate the environmental
consequences of restoration projects that
the Trustees intend to propose in a
Phase III DERP. In addition, the Trustees
intend to evaluate early restoration
project types in the PEIS in order to
allow the Trustees to tier NEPA analyses
for future early restoration projects to
the PEIS, where appropriate. Examples
of the early restoration project types the
Trustees intend to evaluate in the PEIS
could include: Create and improve
wetlands; protect shorelines and reduce
erosion; restore barrier islands and
beaches; restore submerged aquatic
vegetation; restore oysters; restore and
protect finfish and shellfish; restore and
protect birds; restore and protect sea
turtles; enhance public access to natural
resources for recreational use; enhance
recreational experiences; promote
environmental and cultural
stewardship, education, and outreach;
enhance management of recreational
uses; and, remove and reduce landbased and marine debris.
Throughout the early restoration
process, the Trustees have actively
solicited public input on restoration
project ideas through a variety of
mechanisms, including public meetings,
electronic communication, and creation
of a Trustee-wide public Web site and
database to share information and
receive public project submissions. The
Trustees received extensive comments
and restoration project ideas during the
scoping process for a comprehensive
Gulf Spill Restoration PEIS prepared by
NOAA on behalf of the Trustees in 2011
(76 FR 9327–9328). NOAA’s preparation
of a draft comprehensive Gulf Spill
Restoration PEIS on behalf of the
Trustees is intended to apply to all
natural resource restoration following
the completion of the NRDA, which is
still underway. The PEIS that is the
subject of this Notice of Intent is
specifically and more narrowly focused
on early restoration.
The purpose of the scoping process is
to identify the concerns of the affected
public and federal agencies, states, and
PO 00000
Frm 00108
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Indian tribes, involve the public in the
decision making process, facilitate
efficient early restoration planning and
environmental review, define the issues
and alternatives that will be examined
in detail, and save time by ensuring that
draft documents adequately address
relevant issues. The scoping process
reduces paperwork and delay by
ensuring that important issues are
considered early in the decision making
process. Following the scoping process,
the Trustees will prepare a draft PEIS
and Phase III DERP, at which time the
public will be encouraged to comment
on the document(s). Similar to the
scoping process, public comment
meetings will be held at that time to
gather public input on the document(s).
Invitation To Comment
The Trustees seek public involvement
in the scoping process and development
of the PEIS. The Trustees invite public
comment during the 60-day public
comment period regarding the scope,
content, and any significant issues the
Trustees should consider in the PEIS.
Next Steps
Following scoping, the Trustees
intend to release the draft PEIS and
Phase III DERP by late 2013 or early
2014. At that time, the Trustees will
invite public review and comment on
the document(s).
Administrative Record
The documents comprising the
Administrative Record can be viewed
electronically at the following location:
https://www.doi.gov/deepwaterhorizon.
Authority
The authority of this action is the
National Environmental Policy Act (42
U.S.C. 4321 et seq.), the Oil Pollution
Act of 1990 (33 U.S.C. 2701 et seq.), and
the implementing Natural Resource
Damage Assessment regulations found
at 15 CFR part 990.
Kevin D Reynolds,
Acting DOI Authorized Official.
[FR Doc. 2013–13249 Filed 5–31–13; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Office of the Secretary
Wildland Fire Executive Council
Meeting Schedule
Office of the Secretary, Interior.
Notice of meeting.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: In accordance with the
requirements of the Federal Advisory
E:\FR\FM\04JNN1.SGM
04JNN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 107 (Tuesday, June 4, 2013)]
[Notices]
[Pages 33431-33432]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-13249]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
[FWS-R4-FHC-2013-N108; FVHC98130406900-XXX-FF04G01000]
Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill; Notice of Intent To Prepare a
Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement for a Phase III Early
Restoration Plan and Early Restoration Project Types, and To Conduct
Scoping Meetings
AGENCY: Department of the Interior.
ACTION: Notice of Intent to conduct scoping.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The federal and state natural resource trustees for the
Deepwater Horizon oil spill (Trustees) intend to prepare a PEIS under
the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) to evaluate the
environmental consequences of early restoration project types, as well
as the early restoration projects that the Trustees intend to propose
in an upcoming Phase III Draft Early Restoration Plan (DERP). The
Trustees intend to evaluate early restoration project types
programmatically in the PEIS in order to allow the Trustees to better
analyze cumulative effects of early restoration, and to tier NEPA
analyses for future early restoration plans to the PEIS, where
appropriate.
DATES: Public comments must be received by August 2, 2013. Public
scoping meetings will be held as listed below. The Trustees will
announce specific meeting locations and addresses to the public prior
to the meetings, and will post the information on the web at
www.gulfspillrestoration.noaa.gov.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date Location
------------------------------------------------------------------------
June 24, 2013......................... Galveston, Texas.
June 27, 2013......................... Mobile, Alabama.
July 16, 2013......................... Long Beach, Mississippi.
July 18, 2013......................... Houma, Louisiana.
July 23, 2013......................... Washington, DC.
July 25, 2013......................... Pensacola, Florida.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ADDRESSES: Submitting Comments: You may submit scoping comments on the
PEIS by any of the following methods:
Via the Web: https://www.gulfspillrestoration.noaa.gov.
For electronic submission of comments containing
attachments, email to: earlyrestorationcomments@fws.gov
U.S. Mail: c/o U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, P.O, Box
2099, Fairhope, Alabama 36533. All written scoping comments must be
received by the close of the scoping period to be considered.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Nanciann Regalado at Nanciann_Regalado@fws.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Introduction
On or about April 20, 2010, the mobile offshore drilling unit
Deepwater Horizon, which was being used to drill a well for BP
Exploration and Production Inc. (BP), in the Macondo prospect
(Mississippi Canyon 252-MC252), exploded, caught fire and subsequently
sank in the Gulf of Mexico, resulting in an unprecedented volume of oil
and other discharges from the rig and from the wellhead on the seabed.
The Deepwater Horizon oil spill is the largest oil spill in U.S.
history, discharging millions of barrels of oil over a period of 87
days. In addition, well over one million gallons of dispersants were
applied to the waters of the spill area in an attempt to disperse the
spilled oil. An undetermined amount of natural gas was also released to
the environment as a result of the spill.
The state and federal natural resource trustees (Trustees) are
conducting the natural resource damage assessment (NRDA) for the
Deepwater Horizon oil spill under the Oil Pollution Act 1990 (OPA; 33
U.S.C. 2701 et seq.). Pursuant to OPA, federal and state agencies act
as trustees on behalf of the public to assess natural resource injuries
and losses and to determine the actions required to compensate the
public for those injuries and losses. OPA further instructs the
designated trustees to develop and implement a plan for the
restoration, rehabilitation, replacement, or acquisition of the
equivalent of the injured natural resources under their trusteeship,
including the loss of use and services from those resources from the
time of injury until the time restoration to baseline (the resource
quality and conditions that would exist if the spill had not occurred)
is complete. Pursuant to the process articulated in the Framework
Agreement for Early Restoration Addressing Injuries Resulting from the
Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill (Framework Agreement), the Trustees have
previously selected, and BP has agreed to fund, a total of ten early
restoration projects, expected to cost a total of approximately $71
million, through the Phase I Early Restoration Plan/Environmental
Assessment (Phase I ERP) and Phase II Early Restoration Plan/
Environmental Review (Phase II ERP). These plans are available at:
https://www.gulfspillrestoration.noaa.gov/restoration/early-restoration/.
The Trustees are:
U.S. Department of the Interior (DOI), as represented by
the National Park Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and Bureau
of Land Management;
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), on
behalf of the U.S. Department of Commerce;
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA);
U.S. Department of Defense (DOD); \1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Although a trustee under OPA by virtue of the proximity of
its facilities to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, DOD is not a
member of the Trustee Council and does not participate in Trustee
decision-making.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA);
State of Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration
Authority, Oil Spill Coordinator's Office, Department of Environmental
Quality, Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, and Department of
Natural Resources;
State of Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality;
State of Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural
Resources and Geological Survey of Alabama;
State of Florida Department of Environmental Protection
and Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission; and
For the State of Texas, Texas Parks and Wildlife
Department, Texas General Land Office, and Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality.
Background on Early Restoration
On April 20, 2011, BP agreed to provide up to $1 billion to fund
early
[[Page 33432]]
restoration projects in the Gulf of Mexico to begin addressing injuries
to natural resources caused by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. The
Framework Agreement represents a preliminary step toward the
restoration of injured natural resources and replacement of the lost
use of those resources and their services. The Framework Agreement is
intended to expedite the start of restoration in the Gulf in advance of
the completion of the injury assessment process. The Framework
Agreement provides a mechanism through which the Trustees and BP can
work together ``to commence implementation of early restoration
projects that will provide meaningful benefits to accelerate
restoration in the Gulf as quickly as practicable'' prior to the
resolution of the Trustees' natural resource damages claim. Early
restoration is not intended to, and does not fully address all injuries
caused by the Spill. Restoration beyond early restoration projects will
be required to fully compensate the public for natural resource losses
from the Spill.
The Trustees' key objective in pursuing early restoration is to
secure tangible recovery of natural resources and natural resource
services for the public's benefit while the longer-term process of
fully assessing injury and damages is underway. As the first step in
this accelerated process, the Trustees released, after public review of
a draft, a Phase I ERP in April 2012. In December 2012, after public
review of a draft, the Trustees released a Phase II ERP. Collectively,
the Phase I and Phase II ERPs include a total of ten projects that were
selected by the Trustees and, after negotiations in accordance with the
terms of the Framework Agreement, agreed to by BP. Those restoration
actions include nine separate projects that are ready for
implementation, and one project that the Trustees have selected for
completion for project design and final NEPA review. The Trustees have
begun implementing many of the projects selected in the Phase I and
Phase II ERPs.
Phase III Early Restoration
On May 6, 2013, NOAA issued a public notice in the Federal Register
on behalf of the Trustees. The public notice announced the Trustees'
intent to propose additional future early restoration projects for the
purpose of continuing the process of using early restoration funding to
restore natural resources, ecological services, and human use services
injured or lost as a result of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill
disaster. The Trustees expect to propose those early restoration
projects, and potentially additional early restoration projects, to the
public in a Phase III DERP, which will evaluate restoration
alternatives under OPA, the Framework Agreement, and all applicable
legal requirements. The Trustees intend to consider both ecological and
human use restoration projects to restore injuries caused by the
Deepwater Horizon oil spill, addressing the physical and biological
environment as well as the relationship people have with the
environment.
As noted above, the Trustees intend to prepare a PEIS in accordance
with NEPA to evaluate the environmental consequences of restoration
projects that the Trustees intend to propose in a Phase III DERP. In
addition, the Trustees intend to evaluate early restoration project
types in the PEIS in order to allow the Trustees to tier NEPA analyses
for future early restoration projects to the PEIS, where appropriate.
Examples of the early restoration project types the Trustees intend to
evaluate in the PEIS could include: Create and improve wetlands;
protect shorelines and reduce erosion; restore barrier islands and
beaches; restore submerged aquatic vegetation; restore oysters; restore
and protect finfish and shellfish; restore and protect birds; restore
and protect sea turtles; enhance public access to natural resources for
recreational use; enhance recreational experiences; promote
environmental and cultural stewardship, education, and outreach;
enhance management of recreational uses; and, remove and reduce land-
based and marine debris.
Throughout the early restoration process, the Trustees have
actively solicited public input on restoration project ideas through a
variety of mechanisms, including public meetings, electronic
communication, and creation of a Trustee-wide public Web site and
database to share information and receive public project submissions.
The Trustees received extensive comments and restoration project ideas
during the scoping process for a comprehensive Gulf Spill Restoration
PEIS prepared by NOAA on behalf of the Trustees in 2011 (76 FR 9327-
9328). NOAA's preparation of a draft comprehensive Gulf Spill
Restoration PEIS on behalf of the Trustees is intended to apply to all
natural resource restoration following the completion of the NRDA,
which is still underway. The PEIS that is the subject of this Notice of
Intent is specifically and more narrowly focused on early restoration.
The purpose of the scoping process is to identify the concerns of
the affected public and federal agencies, states, and Indian tribes,
involve the public in the decision making process, facilitate efficient
early restoration planning and environmental review, define the issues
and alternatives that will be examined in detail, and save time by
ensuring that draft documents adequately address relevant issues. The
scoping process reduces paperwork and delay by ensuring that important
issues are considered early in the decision making process. Following
the scoping process, the Trustees will prepare a draft PEIS and Phase
III DERP, at which time the public will be encouraged to comment on the
document(s). Similar to the scoping process, public comment meetings
will be held at that time to gather public input on the document(s).
Invitation To Comment
The Trustees seek public involvement in the scoping process and
development of the PEIS. The Trustees invite public comment during the
60-day public comment period regarding the scope, content, and any
significant issues the Trustees should consider in the PEIS.
Next Steps
Following scoping, the Trustees intend to release the draft PEIS
and Phase III DERP by late 2013 or early 2014. At that time, the
Trustees will invite public review and comment on the document(s).
Administrative Record
The documents comprising the Administrative Record can be viewed
electronically at the following location: https://www.doi.gov/deepwaterhorizon.
Authority
The authority of this action is the National Environmental Policy
Act (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.), the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 (33 U.S.C.
2701 et seq.), and the implementing Natural Resource Damage Assessment
regulations found at 15 CFR part 990.
Kevin D Reynolds,
Acting DOI Authorized Official.
[FR Doc. 2013-13249 Filed 5-31-13; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-P