Request for Public Engagement in the Interagency Special Report on the Impacts of Climate Change on Human Health in the United States, 7417-7421 [2014-02304]
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 26 / Friday, February 7, 2014 / Proposed Rules
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particular, any substantive revisions to
OAC 3745–17–03, including any
revisions to OAC 3745–17–03(B)(1), are
not at issue in this rulemaking. Only
comments regarding EPA’s correction of
the error in the October 26, 2010, action
are germane to this rulemaking under
section 110(k)(6).
EPA notes that it is neither staying
nor revoking the correction action in the
April 3, 2013, notice, because that could
be misleading to regulated entities,
regulators, and members of the public
alike. Because the error in the October
26, 2010, action was in essence a
typographical error, and because there
was no actual approval of any revisions
to OAC 3745–17–03 other than the
revised cross reference in OAC 3745–
17–03(A), the previously approved
version of the remainder of OAC 3745–
17–03 remains in effect in the Ohio SIP.
Based upon the still pending proposed
disapproval of certain substantive
revisions to OAC 3745–17–03, EPA
believes that parties such as regulated
entities affected by those substantive
revisions would be well aware of this
fact, but not all other parties should be
expected or presumed to have this
degree of understanding or
responsibility to be informed. While
EPA is pursuing correcting action under
authority of CAA section 110(k)(6), to
supersede the correcting action under
the Administrative Procedures Act, that
EPA published on April 3, 2013, EPA
anticipates that the codification as
corrected pursuant to section 110(k)(6)
will replicate the codification as
corrected on April 3, 2013. Accordingly,
EPA is not staying or revoking the
correction in the April 3, 2013, action,
in the interim during this rulemaking
under section 110(k)(6). The April 3,
2013, action will become moot once
EPA takes final action on today’s
proposal.
V. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Under the CAA, the Administrator is
required to approve a SIP submission
that complies with the provisions of the
CAA and applicable Federal regulations.
42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a).
Thus, in reviewing SIP submissions,
EPA’s role is to approve state choices,
provided that they meet the criteria of
the CAA. This action merely corrects an
error in EPA’s prior action and does not
impose additional requirements beyond
those imposed by state law. For that
reason, this action:
• Is not a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ subject to review by the Office
of Management and Budget under
Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993);
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• Does not impose an information
collection burden under the provisions
of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
• Is certified as not having a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
• Does not contain any unfunded
mandate or significantly or uniquely
affect small governments, as described
in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4);
• Does not have Federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
• Is not an economically significant
regulatory action based on health or
safety risks subject to Executive Order
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);
• Is not a significant regulatory action
subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR
28355, May 22, 2001);
• Is not subject to requirements of
Section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the CAA; and
• Does not provide EPA with the
discretionary authority to address, as
appropriate, disproportionate human
health or environmental effects, using
practicable and legally permissible
methods, under Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, this rule does not have
tribal implications as specified by
Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249,
November 9, 2000), because the SIP is
not approved to apply in Indian country
located in the state, and EPA notes that
it will not impose substantial direct
costs on tribal governments or preempt
tribal law.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations,
Particulate matter, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: January 13, 2014.
Susan Hedman,
Regional Administrator, Region 5.
[FR Doc. 2014–01319 Filed 2–6–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR PART 82
[FRL–9906–16–OAR]
Request for Public Engagement in the
Interagency Special Report on the
Impacts of Climate Change on Human
Health in the United States
U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) on behalf of the United
States Global Change Research Program
(USGCRP).
ACTION: Request for Public Submissions
of Comments on a Draft Report
Prospectus, Information, and
Contributing Author Nominations, and
Notice of a Public Forum.
AGENCY:
As part of the President’s
Climate Action Plan and ongoing efforts
within the US Global Change Research
Program (USGCRP), the Interagency
Crosscutting Group on Climate Change
and Human Health (CCHHG) and a
subset of the Interagency National
Climate Assessment Working Group
(INCA) have initiated an interagency
Special Report on the impacts of
observed and projected climate change
on human health in the United States.
This data-driven technical synthesis and
assessment will be an interagency
product of the USGCRP organized by
the CCHHG. This request for public
engagement presents opportunities to
submit comments on the Draft Report
Prospectus, scientific information to
inform the assessment, and nominations
for contributing authors, and announces
a Public Forum to Inform the
Interagency Special Report on the
Impacts of Climate Change on Human
Health in the United States.
DATES: Comments: Comments on the
draft prospectus, information to inform
the Special Report, and contributing
author nominations may be submitted
during a 30-day period beginning March
1, 2014. All submissions should be
received by USGCRP on or before 11:59
p.m. Eastern Time. March 31, 2014. The
Public Forum will be held March 13,
2013 from 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Eastern Time.
Public Forum: The Public Forum,
organized by the CCHHG, will be held
on March 13, 2014.
ADDRESSES: The March 13, 2014 Public
Forum will be held at the EPA William
Jefferson Clinton East building, Room
1153, 1301 Constitution Avenue NW.,
Washington, DC 20460. To register,
please follow the detailed instructions
as provided below.
Information in response to the
Request for Comments on the Draft
SUMMARY:
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Prospectus, Call for Information, and
Call for Contributing Author
Nominations must be submitted
electronically at: https://
globalchange.gov/component/content/
article/990.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
details on the period for submission of
scientific information, comments on the
Draft Prospectus, and call for
contributing author nominations from
the public, please contact Allison
Crimmins; telephone: 202–343–9170; or
email: healthreport@usgcrp.gov.
[Responses to this notice are not offers
and cannot be accepted by the
Government to form a binding contract
or issue a grant. Information obtained as
a result of this request may be used by
the government. Please do not include
any information that might be
considered proprietary or confidential.]
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Request for Comment on Draft Report
Prospectus
A. How to Submit Comments on the
Draft Prospectus
The Draft Prospectus presented in
Section I.B of this Notice describes
proposed plans for scoping, drafting,
reviewing, producing, and
disseminating the Interagency Special
Report on the Impacts of Climate
Change on Human Health in the United
States. EPA invites interested parties to
review the Draft Prospectus and provide
comments within the 30-day public
comment period, beginning March 1,
2014 and ending 11:59 p.m. Eastern
Time March 31, 2014. The EPA and the
CCHHG are seeking comments on the
Special Report objectives, proposed
topics, and process as outlined in the
Draft Prospectus. Public comments
received on the Draft Prospectus will be
evaluated and used to inform the
Special Report Final Prospectus.
Comments on the Draft Prospectus
can be made at: https://globalchange.gov/
component/content/article/990.
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B. Draft Prospectus for the Interagency
Special Report on the Impacts of
Climate Change on Human Health in
the United States: An Assessment of
Observed and Projected Climate Change
Impacts on Human Health in the U.S.
(1) Overview
As part of the President’s Climate
Action Plan and ongoing efforts within
the US Global Change Research Program
(USGCRP), the Interagency Crosscutting
Group on Climate Change and Human
Health (CCHHG) and a subset of the
Interagency National Climate
Assessment Working Group (INCA)
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have initiated an Interagency Special
Report on the Impacts of Climate
Change on Human Health in the United
States. This data-driven technical
synthesis and assessment will be an
interagency product of the USGCRP,
organized by the CCHHG.
The Special Report will be an
evidence-based, quantitative assessment
of observed and projected climate
change impacts on human health in the
United States. Development of the
report will leverage existing activities of
the CCHHG and INCA members,
aggregate and assess current quantitative
research on human health impacts of
climate change, and summarize the
current state of the science. As a
technical scientific assessment, the
Special Report will extend the work
begun under the 2008 Synthesis and
Assessment Product 4.6 (SAP 4.6)
Analyses of the Effects of Global Change
on Human Health and Welfare and
Human Systems and the forthcoming
third National Climate Assessment
(NCA) by using modeling and analysis
tools to quantify, where possible,
projected national-scale impacts of
climate change to human health. Such
analyses will attempt to identify and
bound impact uncertainties, as well as
better define changes in attributable
epidemiological risks, particularly for
vulnerable populations, with the goal of
informing public health authorities and
other public planning and resource
management entities.
The lead and coordinating Federal
agencies for the Special Report are the
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC), National Institute of
Health (NIH), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
and Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA).
(2) Proposed Focus Areas
The proposed scope of the Special
Report will cover the following eight
focus areas, which will each comprise a
section of the Special Report:
(a) Thermal Extremes: Heat and Cold
Waves
(b) Air Quality Impacts
(c) Vectorborne and Zoonotic Disease
(d) Waterborne and Foodborne
Diseases
(e) Food Safety
(f) Extreme Weather and Climate
Events
(g) Mental Health and Stress-Related
Disorders
(h) Vulnerable Regions and
Subpopulations to Health Impacts of
Climate Change
The authors will review and assess the
literature in each focus area in order to
summarize the state of the science
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regarding observed and projected
health-related climate change impacts
and associated changes in risk. Four
sections of the Special Report propose
to go beyond the assessment of literature
to present additional modeling and/or
quantitative analyses of the projected
health impacts from climate change.
Additional quantitative analyses
conducted for the Special Report are
proposed in the areas of:
(1) Extreme Heat Mortality
(2) Air Quality Impacts (Ozone or PM
2.5)
(3) Lyme Disease
(4) Vibrio-related Illness.
The sections below provide more detail
on the scope of observations and
projections that will be included in each
section.
(a) Observed Climate Change Impacts
on Human Health
Where possible, the Special Report
will identify relationships between
global, national, and regional climate
changes and associated impacts on
human health in the United States over
the last century. Each section will
include a ‘‘state of the science’’
overview aimed at understanding
observed impacts and developing/
maintaining climate-health indicators.
Because the impacts of climate change
on health are complex and often
dependent on multiple confounding
socioeconomic and environmental
factors, the methodology for developing
appropriate climate and health
indicators is challenging and still
emerging. The authors of each section
will leverage current efforts across
multiple agencies to begin to address
methodological challenges and further
develop climate and health indicators,
including the NCA indicator work and
ongoing efforts at the EPA, CDC
(through the Environmental Public
Health Tracking Network), NIH (in
collaboration with World Health
Organization), and others.
Though it is often difficult to attribute
the exact impact of climate on many
health indicators due to confounding
factors (e.g., the ability of communities
to prepare for and respond to the risks
posed by climate change; the
vulnerability of different populations
and communities), such indicators will
be instrumental not only in tracking and
measuring health impacts of climate
change, but also in identifying areas
where public health intervention is
most needed or likely to be most
effective. A more comprehensive set of
indicators will collectively demonstrate
and communicate observed changes in
climate change risk to Americans.
Where quantitative national
indicators are not available, or where
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health impacts are too secondary or
indirect in nature to attribute to climate
change, a qualitative examination of the
state of the science will provide context
for these additional health threats and
may serve to identify areas for future
research. Further investigation of the
impacts of climate change on
Americans’ overall well-being and
welfare, though important, is beyond
the scope of this report.
(b) Projected Changes in Health Risks
While certain advances in the state of
the science over the last five years are
evident, research on projected changes
in future health risk under different
climate scenarios is in varying stages of
development. As such, each section of
the Special Report will seek to
summarize the literature on modeling
and quantification efforts regarding
climate impacts on human health. The
authors will pay special attention to
research that frames risks in terms of
probability-based changes in exposure,
vulnerability, and adaptive capacity.
As stated previously, four sections
will include additional quantitative
analyses to evaluate a range of possible
changes in future health-related climate
impacts and risks: (1) Extreme Heat
Mortality; (2) Air Quality Impacts
(Ozone or PM2.5); (3) Lyme Disease; and
(4) Vibrio-related Illness. The authors
will leverage existing or ongoing
research or analytical efforts to derive
additional quantitative analyses
developed specifically for this report.
This work will identify areas where
probabilistic changes in attributable
risks can be characterized, and where
scientific uncertainty has been better
defined since the publication of SAP
4.6. Each section will utilize established
processes for determining and reporting
confidence levels and likelihood of
specific impacts across a range of
scenarios and possible outcomes, and
will articulate all standards or modeling
assumptions. Existing products from
other agency workgroups, such as the
USGCRP’s Metadata Access Tool for
Climate and Health (MATCH) online
database, will be incorporated as
appropriate.
For certain health outcomes, research
that characterizes human health risks in
terms of probability-based changes in
exposure or vulnerability may provide a
way to contextualize health risks in
terms relevant for public health officials
and planners. For example, the
relationship between projected
temperature increases and certain
waterborne pathogens (e.g., Vibrio
bacteria) is well known, but the link
between projected changes in exposure
to these pathogens and the projected
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increase in disease incidence remain
uncertain. Thus, a probability-based
metric of changes in vulnerability may
be used to simply and clearly
communicate changes in risk into the
future and under alternative climate
scenarios where a robust national
projection in the annual number of
cases of such diseases is not possible to
derive at this time. Where appropriate,
such risk-based framing will be highly
valuable to informing efforts aimed at
preventing or responding to climate
impacts. In addition, this section may
provide a framework for conveying
complex changes in risk under
uncertainty by mapping especially
vulnerable populations or sites
specifically related to environmental
justice concerns.
(c) Other Report Scope Considerations
Geographical Scope: The focus of the
Special Report is on impacts within the
United States. The report may consider
global linkages and implications where
appropriate. For instance, global studies
may be considered for certain impact
areas where there is a lack of long-term,
consistent historical monitoring, such as
the health impacts of extreme weather
events. In some instances, regional
studies may be more appropriate in
geographic areas where risk is not
homogenous across the nation, such as
the spread of Lyme Disease.
Timescales: While climate change is
observed and measured on long-term
(30+ years) time scales, decision
frameworks for public health officials
and regional planners are often based on
much shorter time scales, determined by
epidemiological, political, and/or
budgeting factors. This Special Report
will quantify the implications of
overlaying impact trends that occur on
typical climatological time frames (e.g.,
from changes in extreme weather events
to end-of-century projections of impacts
such as sea level rise) on data from
epidemiological time frames (e.g., from
immediate or episodic health threats to
cumulative exposure or the appearance
of developmental effects).
Uncertainty: Uncertainty will be
characterized as qualitative confidence
levels and, where possible, quantitative
probabilistic likelihoods of specific
impacts across a range of scenarios and
possible outcomes. Measures of
uncertainty expressed in the Special
Report will be based on scientific
evidence, statistical analysis of
observations or model results, and
expert judgment. The Special Report
will follow NCA guidelines for
transparent reporting of likelihood,
confidence, and uncertainty findings.
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Complex Linkages and Potentially
Confounding Factors: Many factors will
affect the impact of climate change on
human health; not all of these factors
will be addressed in the Special Report.
For example, a population’s
vulnerability (1) may be affected by
direct climate changes or by non-climate
factors (e.g., changes in population
dynamics, economic development,
education, infrastructure, behavior,
technology, and ecosystems); (2) may
differ across regions and in urban, rural,
and coastal communities; and (3) may
be influenced by individual
vulnerability factors such as age,
socioeconomic status, and existing
physical and/or mental illness or
disability. In addition, climate change or
other non-climate factors will cause
changes in adaptive capacity, ranging
from an individual’s ability to
acclimatize to different meteorological
conditions to a community’s ability to
prepare for and recover from damage,
injuries, and lives lost due to extreme
weather events. Attribution and
detection considerations will be
discussed in the introductory section(s)
of the Special Report. However,
projections of many of the factors listed
above, and many other compounding,
secondary, or indirect climate effects,
though important to consider as part of
a comprehensive assessment of changes
in risks, may be beyond the scope of this
report.
Research Needs: While the goal of the
Special Report is to highlight the
current state of the science regarding
climate impacts on health, research
needs identified through the
development of this assessment will be
briefly summarized in the concluding
section(s), as they may serve to inform
ongoing gap analyses being conducted
outside the scope of this Special Report.
(3) Process
(a) Audience, and Communicating
Health Risks Associated With Climate
Change
The Special Report will be designed
to inform public health officials, urban
planners, decision makers, and other
stakeholders at multiple levels of
government who are interested in better
understanding the risks climate change
presents to human health. The goal of
this Special Report is to provide these
groups with updated information on the
observed and projected impacts of
climate change on human health and
changes in risk to health. Though the
report will not include policy
recommendations, this information may
help inform adaptation decisions and
other strategies in the public health
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arena. Better definitions of health risk
and uncertainty will improve hazard
identification and allow for bettercoordinated responses to the impacts of
climate change on human health. To
that end, the Special Report will also
highlight ongoing research focused on
quantifying the risks to health
associated with climate change.
(b) Lead Authors, Contributing Authors,
and Required Expertise
Authors will be selected based on
their demonstrated subject matter
expertise, their relevant publications
and knowledge of specific topics
designated in the draft outline, their
demonstrated writing abilities and
accomplishments, and their availability,
such that they can aid in the
development of a robust scientific,
technical assessment. As a federal
interagency report, the selection of lead
authors will be limited to Federal
employees and their contractors. Lead
Authors may include a selection of
CCHHG members, attendees of an initial
scoping workshop, and other federal
colleagues and contractors with relevant
expertise. There is potential for
additional cooperation with existing
efforts, including the NCA indicators
team, NIH literature review workgroup,
and other agency collaborations.
Contributing Authors with relevant
subject matter expertise may be
nominated by lead authors, CCHHG or
other interagency members, and the
general public (through this public
Federal Register notice calling for
contributing author nominations).
Contributing Authors may be federal
employees or non-federal subject
experts. If needed to fill gaps in
expertise, Contributing Authors will be
selected through an independent
process led by an EPA contractor based
on expertise (e.g., scholarly
publications, etc.) and other criteria.
Collectively, the Lead and
Contributing Authors will be
responsible for preparing the initial
draft of the report, including the text
and any analysis required to synthesize
the underlying studies on which the
Special Report is based. Authors will
rely on existing peer-reviewed literature
as a basis for the report. Lead Authors
will decide how best to organize their
respective teams, including division of
responsibility and time requirements
among the Contributing and Lead
Authors. In addition, Lead Authors and
Contributing Authors will be
responsible for reviewing relevant
literature submissions made through
this Federal Register Notice call for
information to inform the Special
Report, and for responding to public
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comments on the Draft Special Report.
All authors should be accomplished
writers and have demonstrated
technical backgrounds in at least one
field relevant to the implications of
climate change on human health in the
United States.
(c) Agency Roles
The CCHHG will be responsible for
compiling and synthesizing
contributions from all authors. From
within the CCHHG, a steering
committee for the Special Report has
been established to provide guidance
and coordination to staff/authors. Lead
agencies (EPA, NOAA, CDC, NIH) will
provide staff support including, where
appropriate, contractor support. EPA
will serve a coordinating function to
include providing support and
facilitation of two planning workshops
to bring together CCHHG members,
federal agency experts, and supporting
contractors, as appropriate. The
workshops will serve to facilitate the
scoping and development of report
outlines and drafts, and to identify any
model analyses or data retrieval needed
for the assessment. EPA will work
closely with the CCHHG Steering
Committee to provide others (e.g.,
USGCRP) with regular progress updates.
(d) Information Quality and Peer Review
The Special Report will be a federal
interagency USGCRP product. As such,
the process for preparation will be
consistent with the guidelines for
preparing USGCRP products, with
referenced materials derived primarily
from the existing peer-reviewed
scientific literature and consistent with
USGCRP guidance regarding use of grey
literature. The report will follow federal
information quality, transparency, and
accessibility guidelines, and will
undergo peer review, public review, and
final interagency review.
(e) Process for Public Engagement and
Publication
The CCHHG Steering Committee
plans to provide a number of
opportunities for public engagement in
scoping, informing, and reviewing the
Special Report. During the initial
scoping phase, the following
opportunities will be available as
described in this Federal Register
Notice:
(i) Notice of Request for Comments on
Draft Report Prospectus: A 30-day call
for comments on the Special Report
objectives, proposed topics, and process
as outlined in the Draft Prospectus.
(ii) Call for Information: A 30-day call
for submissions of recent, relevant,
scientific and/or technical research
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studies on observed and/or projected
climate change impacts on human
health in the United States that have
been peer-reviewed and published or
accepted for publication.
(iii) Nominations for Contributing
Authors: A 30-day call for nominations
of Contributing Authors to assist chapter
author teams in the development of the
Special Report chapters or sections.
Interested parties are invited to submit
nominations of subject matter experts,
with descriptions of relevant expertise
and publications
(iv) Notice of Public Forum to Inform
the Interagency Special Report on the
Impacts of Climate Change on Human
Health in the United States: A free and
open public forum to be convened
March 13, 2014 at a federal facility in
Washington, DC to facilitate engagement
with stakeholders, non-federal subject
matter experts, and interested public.
After completion of a Public Review
Draft of the Special Report, EPA on
behalf of the USGCRP will issue a
second Federal Register Notice to
announce a 45-day public comment
period for the draft report. The public
will be able to view the Draft Special
Report and submit comments to an
online docket available on the
USGCRP’s Web site. The CCHHG
Steering Committee will also work to
schedule side events, presentations at
relevant conferences, and webinars to
further engage the community of experts
and the general public. Public
comments received on the Draft Special
Report will be evaluated and used to
inform the final report.
The CCHHG and USGCRP will
publish the final Special Report
electronically and consider options for
hard copy publication. They will also
explore options for online integration
with future phases of the USGCRP’s
Global Change Information System. A
full communications plan will be
developed by the lead and supporting
agencies along with designated authors,
with input and assistance from the
USGCRP communications team.
(f) Proposed Timing
The Special Report is an interim
report, designed to be released after the
third and before the fourth National
Climate Assessments. A draft of the
Special Report is expected to be made
available for public comment early in
2015, with final publication expected in
late 2015.
II. Call for Relevant Scientific
Information To Inform the Special
Report
Interested parties are invited to assist
the EPA and USGCRP in collecting and
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refining the scientific information base
for the assessment. To do so, parties are
asked to submit recent, relevant,
scientific and/or technical research
studies on observed and/or projected
climate change impacts on human
health in the United States that have
been peer-reviewed and/or published or
accepted for publication in the peer
reviewed literature.
All scientific literature submitted in
response to this call for information
must be received within the 30-day call
for information period, beginning March
1, 2014 and ending 11:59 p.m. Eastern
Time on March 31, 2014. Submissions
must be uploaded electronically at:
https://globalchange.gov/component/
content/article/990.
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III. Call for Contributing Authors
Nominations
EPA and the CCHHG are also calling
for nominations for Contributing
Authors to assist specific chapter author
teams in the development of the Special
Report chapters or sections. Interested
parties are invited to submit
nominations of subject matter experts,
with descriptions of relevant expertise
and publications. Contributing authors
will assist in the preparation of specific
sections of the report, working closely
with chapter author leads and teams.
Submissions must demonstrate that
nominees are accomplished Englishspeaking writers with demonstrated
technical backgrounds, such that they
can aid in the development of a robust
scientific, technical assessment as
subject matter experts in one or more of
the following areas of climate-related
health impacts:
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(a) Thermal Extremes: Heat and Cold
Waves
(b) Air Quality Impacts
(c) Vectorborne and Zoonotic Disease
(d) Waterborne and Foodborne
Diseases
(e) Food Safety
(f) Extreme Weather and Climate
Events
(g) Mental Health and Stress-Related
Disorders related to Climate Change
(h) Vulnerable Regions and
Subpopulations to Health Impacts of
Climate Change
Responses to this request must be made
within the 30-day call for Contributing
Author nominations period, beginning
March 1, 2014 and ending 11:59 p.m.
Eastern Time on March 31, 2014. A
completed nomination form, including a
curriculum vitae or resume for each
nominee that demonstrates the
nominee’s relevant area of expertise,
must be submitted electronically at:
https://globalchange.gov/component/
content/article/990. The curriculum
vitae or resume must be in English and
preferably no more than 5 pages,
identifying topical expertise and
relevant publications. The nomination
form will also ask for a brief statement
of primary expertise (e.g., projected
climate impacts on air quality, climaterelated vectorborne diseases, waterborne
diseases in the U.S.). Please also ensure
that curriculum vitae or resume include
address, phone number, email address,
education, and the following
information, if applicable: professional
association membership, committee
involvement, involvement in the
development of other scientific
assessments, scientific publications in
PO 00000
Frm 00016
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 9990
7421
this field, and relevant leadership
activities.
IV. How To Register for the Public
Forum To Inform the Interagency
Special Report on the Impacts of
Climate Change on Human Health in
the United States
The Public Forum will be held on
March 13, 2014, at the EPA William
Jefferson Clinton East building, Room
1153, 1301 Constitution Avenue NW.,
Washington, DC 20460. It is open and
free to the public, but with limited
space available. The first 120 people to
register may attend. Registration will be
available beginning February 13, 2014.
Please register by going to https://
globalchange.gov/component/content/
article/990. Because this Public Forum
is being held at a U.S. government
facility, individuals planning to attend
the hearing should be prepared to show
valid picture identification to the
security staff in order to gain access to
the meeting room. The forum is an
opportunity for public engagement, but
since the event will not be formally
recorded, it does not replace the Call for
Information request in Section II or the
Call for Contributing Author
Nominations in Section III of this
Notice; all submissions of relevant
scientific information and Contributing
Author nominees must be made to the
USGCRP Web site as described above.
Dated: January 28, 2014.
Sarah Dunham,
Director, Office of Atmospheric Programs.
[FR Doc. 2014–02304 Filed 2–6–14; 8:45 am]
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E:\FR\FM\07FEP1.SGM
07FEP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 26 (Friday, February 7, 2014)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 7417-7421]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-02304]
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR PART 82
[FRL-9906-16-OAR]
Request for Public Engagement in the Interagency Special Report
on the Impacts of Climate Change on Human Health in the United States
AGENCY: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on behalf of the
United States Global Change Research Program (USGCRP).
ACTION: Request for Public Submissions of Comments on a Draft Report
Prospectus, Information, and Contributing Author Nominations, and
Notice of a Public Forum.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: As part of the President's Climate Action Plan and ongoing
efforts within the US Global Change Research Program (USGCRP), the
Interagency Crosscutting Group on Climate Change and Human Health
(CCHHG) and a subset of the Interagency National Climate Assessment
Working Group (INCA) have initiated an interagency Special Report on
the impacts of observed and projected climate change on human health in
the United States. This data-driven technical synthesis and assessment
will be an interagency product of the USGCRP organized by the CCHHG.
This request for public engagement presents opportunities to submit
comments on the Draft Report Prospectus, scientific information to
inform the assessment, and nominations for contributing authors, and
announces a Public Forum to Inform the Interagency Special Report on
the Impacts of Climate Change on Human Health in the United States.
DATES: Comments: Comments on the draft prospectus, information to
inform the Special Report, and contributing author nominations may be
submitted during a 30-day period beginning March 1, 2014. All
submissions should be received by USGCRP on or before 11:59 p.m.
Eastern Time. March 31, 2014. The Public Forum will be held March 13,
2013 from 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Eastern Time.
Public Forum: The Public Forum, organized by the CCHHG, will be
held on March 13, 2014.
ADDRESSES: The March 13, 2014 Public Forum will be held at the EPA
William Jefferson Clinton East building, Room 1153, 1301 Constitution
Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20460. To register, please follow the
detailed instructions as provided below.
Information in response to the Request for Comments on the Draft
[[Page 7418]]
Prospectus, Call for Information, and Call for Contributing Author
Nominations must be submitted electronically at: https://globalchange.gov/component/content/article/990.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For details on the period for
submission of scientific information, comments on the Draft Prospectus,
and call for contributing author nominations from the public, please
contact Allison Crimmins; telephone: 202-343-9170; or email:
healthreport@usgcrp.gov.
[Responses to this notice are not offers and cannot be accepted by
the Government to form a binding contract or issue a grant. Information
obtained as a result of this request may be used by the government.
Please do not include any information that might be considered
proprietary or confidential.]
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Request for Comment on Draft Report Prospectus
A. How to Submit Comments on the Draft Prospectus
The Draft Prospectus presented in Section I.B of this Notice
describes proposed plans for scoping, drafting, reviewing, producing,
and disseminating the Interagency Special Report on the Impacts of
Climate Change on Human Health in the United States. EPA invites
interested parties to review the Draft Prospectus and provide comments
within the 30-day public comment period, beginning March 1, 2014 and
ending 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time March 31, 2014. The EPA and the CCHHG
are seeking comments on the Special Report objectives, proposed topics,
and process as outlined in the Draft Prospectus. Public comments
received on the Draft Prospectus will be evaluated and used to inform
the Special Report Final Prospectus.
Comments on the Draft Prospectus can be made at: https://globalchange.gov/component/content/article/990.
B. Draft Prospectus for the Interagency Special Report on the Impacts
of Climate Change on Human Health in the United States: An Assessment
of Observed and Projected Climate Change Impacts on Human Health in the
U.S.
(1) Overview
As part of the President's Climate Action Plan and ongoing efforts
within the US Global Change Research Program (USGCRP), the Interagency
Crosscutting Group on Climate Change and Human Health (CCHHG) and a
subset of the Interagency National Climate Assessment Working Group
(INCA) have initiated an Interagency Special Report on the Impacts of
Climate Change on Human Health in the United States. This data-driven
technical synthesis and assessment will be an interagency product of
the USGCRP, organized by the CCHHG.
The Special Report will be an evidence-based, quantitative
assessment of observed and projected climate change impacts on human
health in the United States. Development of the report will leverage
existing activities of the CCHHG and INCA members, aggregate and assess
current quantitative research on human health impacts of climate
change, and summarize the current state of the science. As a technical
scientific assessment, the Special Report will extend the work begun
under the 2008 Synthesis and Assessment Product 4.6 (SAP 4.6) Analyses
of the Effects of Global Change on Human Health and Welfare and Human
Systems and the forthcoming third National Climate Assessment (NCA) by
using modeling and analysis tools to quantify, where possible,
projected national-scale impacts of climate change to human health.
Such analyses will attempt to identify and bound impact uncertainties,
as well as better define changes in attributable epidemiological risks,
particularly for vulnerable populations, with the goal of informing
public health authorities and other public planning and resource
management entities.
The lead and coordinating Federal agencies for the Special Report
are the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), National
Institute of Health (NIH), National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA), and Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
(2) Proposed Focus Areas
The proposed scope of the Special Report will cover the following
eight focus areas, which will each comprise a section of the Special
Report:
(a) Thermal Extremes: Heat and Cold Waves
(b) Air Quality Impacts
(c) Vectorborne and Zoonotic Disease
(d) Waterborne and Foodborne Diseases
(e) Food Safety
(f) Extreme Weather and Climate Events
(g) Mental Health and Stress-Related Disorders
(h) Vulnerable Regions and Subpopulations to Health Impacts of
Climate Change
The authors will review and assess the literature in each focus area in
order to summarize the state of the science regarding observed and
projected health-related climate change impacts and associated changes
in risk. Four sections of the Special Report propose to go beyond the
assessment of literature to present additional modeling and/or
quantitative analyses of the projected health impacts from climate
change. Additional quantitative analyses conducted for the Special
Report are proposed in the areas of:
(1) Extreme Heat Mortality
(2) Air Quality Impacts (Ozone or PM 2.5)
(3) Lyme Disease
(4) Vibrio-related Illness.
The sections below provide more detail on the scope of observations and
projections that will be included in each section.
(a) Observed Climate Change Impacts on Human Health
Where possible, the Special Report will identify relationships
between global, national, and regional climate changes and associated
impacts on human health in the United States over the last century.
Each section will include a ``state of the science'' overview aimed at
understanding observed impacts and developing/maintaining climate-
health indicators. Because the impacts of climate change on health are
complex and often dependent on multiple confounding socioeconomic and
environmental factors, the methodology for developing appropriate
climate and health indicators is challenging and still emerging. The
authors of each section will leverage current efforts across multiple
agencies to begin to address methodological challenges and further
develop climate and health indicators, including the NCA indicator work
and ongoing efforts at the EPA, CDC (through the Environmental Public
Health Tracking Network), NIH (in collaboration with World Health
Organization), and others.
Though it is often difficult to attribute the exact impact of
climate on many health indicators due to confounding factors (e.g., the
ability of communities to prepare for and respond to the risks posed by
climate change; the vulnerability of different populations and
communities), such indicators will be instrumental not only in tracking
and measuring health impacts of climate change, but also in identifying
areas where public health intervention is most needed or likely to be
most effective. A more comprehensive set of indicators will
collectively demonstrate and communicate observed changes in climate
change risk to Americans.
Where quantitative national indicators are not available, or where
[[Page 7419]]
health impacts are too secondary or indirect in nature to attribute to
climate change, a qualitative examination of the state of the science
will provide context for these additional health threats and may serve
to identify areas for future research. Further investigation of the
impacts of climate change on Americans' overall well-being and welfare,
though important, is beyond the scope of this report.
(b) Projected Changes in Health Risks
While certain advances in the state of the science over the last
five years are evident, research on projected changes in future health
risk under different climate scenarios is in varying stages of
development. As such, each section of the Special Report will seek to
summarize the literature on modeling and quantification efforts
regarding climate impacts on human health. The authors will pay special
attention to research that frames risks in terms of probability-based
changes in exposure, vulnerability, and adaptive capacity.
As stated previously, four sections will include additional
quantitative analyses to evaluate a range of possible changes in future
health-related climate impacts and risks: (1) Extreme Heat Mortality;
(2) Air Quality Impacts (Ozone or PM2.5); (3) Lyme Disease;
and (4) Vibrio-related Illness. The authors will leverage existing or
ongoing research or analytical efforts to derive additional
quantitative analyses developed specifically for this report. This work
will identify areas where probabilistic changes in attributable risks
can be characterized, and where scientific uncertainty has been better
defined since the publication of SAP 4.6. Each section will utilize
established processes for determining and reporting confidence levels
and likelihood of specific impacts across a range of scenarios and
possible outcomes, and will articulate all standards or modeling
assumptions. Existing products from other agency workgroups, such as
the USGCRP's Metadata Access Tool for Climate and Health (MATCH) online
database, will be incorporated as appropriate.
For certain health outcomes, research that characterizes human
health risks in terms of probability-based changes in exposure or
vulnerability may provide a way to contextualize health risks in terms
relevant for public health officials and planners. For example, the
relationship between projected temperature increases and certain
waterborne pathogens (e.g., Vibrio bacteria) is well known, but the
link between projected changes in exposure to these pathogens and the
projected increase in disease incidence remain uncertain. Thus, a
probability-based metric of changes in vulnerability may be used to
simply and clearly communicate changes in risk into the future and
under alternative climate scenarios where a robust national projection
in the annual number of cases of such diseases is not possible to
derive at this time. Where appropriate, such risk-based framing will be
highly valuable to informing efforts aimed at preventing or responding
to climate impacts. In addition, this section may provide a framework
for conveying complex changes in risk under uncertainty by mapping
especially vulnerable populations or sites specifically related to
environmental justice concerns.
(c) Other Report Scope Considerations
Geographical Scope: The focus of the Special Report is on impacts
within the United States. The report may consider global linkages and
implications where appropriate. For instance, global studies may be
considered for certain impact areas where there is a lack of long-term,
consistent historical monitoring, such as the health impacts of extreme
weather events. In some instances, regional studies may be more
appropriate in geographic areas where risk is not homogenous across the
nation, such as the spread of Lyme Disease.
Timescales: While climate change is observed and measured on long-
term (30+ years) time scales, decision frameworks for public health
officials and regional planners are often based on much shorter time
scales, determined by epidemiological, political, and/or budgeting
factors. This Special Report will quantify the implications of
overlaying impact trends that occur on typical climatological time
frames (e.g., from changes in extreme weather events to end-of-century
projections of impacts such as sea level rise) on data from
epidemiological time frames (e.g., from immediate or episodic health
threats to cumulative exposure or the appearance of developmental
effects).
Uncertainty: Uncertainty will be characterized as qualitative
confidence levels and, where possible, quantitative probabilistic
likelihoods of specific impacts across a range of scenarios and
possible outcomes. Measures of uncertainty expressed in the Special
Report will be based on scientific evidence, statistical analysis of
observations or model results, and expert judgment. The Special Report
will follow NCA guidelines for transparent reporting of likelihood,
confidence, and uncertainty findings.
Complex Linkages and Potentially Confounding Factors: Many factors
will affect the impact of climate change on human health; not all of
these factors will be addressed in the Special Report. For example, a
population's vulnerability (1) may be affected by direct climate
changes or by non-climate factors (e.g., changes in population
dynamics, economic development, education, infrastructure, behavior,
technology, and ecosystems); (2) may differ across regions and in
urban, rural, and coastal communities; and (3) may be influenced by
individual vulnerability factors such as age, socioeconomic status, and
existing physical and/or mental illness or disability. In addition,
climate change or other non-climate factors will cause changes in
adaptive capacity, ranging from an individual's ability to acclimatize
to different meteorological conditions to a community's ability to
prepare for and recover from damage, injuries, and lives lost due to
extreme weather events. Attribution and detection considerations will
be discussed in the introductory section(s) of the Special Report.
However, projections of many of the factors listed above, and many
other compounding, secondary, or indirect climate effects, though
important to consider as part of a comprehensive assessment of changes
in risks, may be beyond the scope of this report.
Research Needs: While the goal of the Special Report is to
highlight the current state of the science regarding climate impacts on
health, research needs identified through the development of this
assessment will be briefly summarized in the concluding section(s), as
they may serve to inform ongoing gap analyses being conducted outside
the scope of this Special Report.
(3) Process
(a) Audience, and Communicating Health Risks Associated With Climate
Change
The Special Report will be designed to inform public health
officials, urban planners, decision makers, and other stakeholders at
multiple levels of government who are interested in better
understanding the risks climate change presents to human health. The
goal of this Special Report is to provide these groups with updated
information on the observed and projected impacts of climate change on
human health and changes in risk to health. Though the report will not
include policy recommendations, this information may help inform
adaptation decisions and other strategies in the public health
[[Page 7420]]
arena. Better definitions of health risk and uncertainty will improve
hazard identification and allow for better-coordinated responses to the
impacts of climate change on human health. To that end, the Special
Report will also highlight ongoing research focused on quantifying the
risks to health associated with climate change.
(b) Lead Authors, Contributing Authors, and Required Expertise
Authors will be selected based on their demonstrated subject matter
expertise, their relevant publications and knowledge of specific topics
designated in the draft outline, their demonstrated writing abilities
and accomplishments, and their availability, such that they can aid in
the development of a robust scientific, technical assessment. As a
federal interagency report, the selection of lead authors will be
limited to Federal employees and their contractors. Lead Authors may
include a selection of CCHHG members, attendees of an initial scoping
workshop, and other federal colleagues and contractors with relevant
expertise. There is potential for additional cooperation with existing
efforts, including the NCA indicators team, NIH literature review
workgroup, and other agency collaborations.
Contributing Authors with relevant subject matter expertise may be
nominated by lead authors, CCHHG or other interagency members, and the
general public (through this public Federal Register notice calling for
contributing author nominations). Contributing Authors may be federal
employees or non-federal subject experts. If needed to fill gaps in
expertise, Contributing Authors will be selected through an independent
process led by an EPA contractor based on expertise (e.g., scholarly
publications, etc.) and other criteria.
Collectively, the Lead and Contributing Authors will be responsible
for preparing the initial draft of the report, including the text and
any analysis required to synthesize the underlying studies on which the
Special Report is based. Authors will rely on existing peer-reviewed
literature as a basis for the report. Lead Authors will decide how best
to organize their respective teams, including division of
responsibility and time requirements among the Contributing and Lead
Authors. In addition, Lead Authors and Contributing Authors will be
responsible for reviewing relevant literature submissions made through
this Federal Register Notice call for information to inform the Special
Report, and for responding to public comments on the Draft Special
Report. All authors should be accomplished writers and have
demonstrated technical backgrounds in at least one field relevant to
the implications of climate change on human health in the United
States.
(c) Agency Roles
The CCHHG will be responsible for compiling and synthesizing
contributions from all authors. From within the CCHHG, a steering
committee for the Special Report has been established to provide
guidance and coordination to staff/authors. Lead agencies (EPA, NOAA,
CDC, NIH) will provide staff support including, where appropriate,
contractor support. EPA will serve a coordinating function to include
providing support and facilitation of two planning workshops to bring
together CCHHG members, federal agency experts, and supporting
contractors, as appropriate. The workshops will serve to facilitate the
scoping and development of report outlines and drafts, and to identify
any model analyses or data retrieval needed for the assessment. EPA
will work closely with the CCHHG Steering Committee to provide others
(e.g., USGCRP) with regular progress updates.
(d) Information Quality and Peer Review
The Special Report will be a federal interagency USGCRP product. As
such, the process for preparation will be consistent with the
guidelines for preparing USGCRP products, with referenced materials
derived primarily from the existing peer-reviewed scientific literature
and consistent with USGCRP guidance regarding use of grey literature.
The report will follow federal information quality, transparency, and
accessibility guidelines, and will undergo peer review, public review,
and final interagency review.
(e) Process for Public Engagement and Publication
The CCHHG Steering Committee plans to provide a number of
opportunities for public engagement in scoping, informing, and
reviewing the Special Report. During the initial scoping phase, the
following opportunities will be available as described in this Federal
Register Notice:
(i) Notice of Request for Comments on Draft Report Prospectus: A
30-day call for comments on the Special Report objectives, proposed
topics, and process as outlined in the Draft Prospectus.
(ii) Call for Information: A 30-day call for submissions of recent,
relevant, scientific and/or technical research studies on observed and/
or projected climate change impacts on human health in the United
States that have been peer-reviewed and published or accepted for
publication.
(iii) Nominations for Contributing Authors: A 30-day call for
nominations of Contributing Authors to assist chapter author teams in
the development of the Special Report chapters or sections. Interested
parties are invited to submit nominations of subject matter experts,
with descriptions of relevant expertise and publications
(iv) Notice of Public Forum to Inform the Interagency Special
Report on the Impacts of Climate Change on Human Health in the United
States: A free and open public forum to be convened March 13, 2014 at a
federal facility in Washington, DC to facilitate engagement with
stakeholders, non-federal subject matter experts, and interested
public.
After completion of a Public Review Draft of the Special Report, EPA on
behalf of the USGCRP will issue a second Federal Register Notice to
announce a 45-day public comment period for the draft report. The
public will be able to view the Draft Special Report and submit
comments to an online docket available on the USGCRP's Web site. The
CCHHG Steering Committee will also work to schedule side events,
presentations at relevant conferences, and webinars to further engage
the community of experts and the general public. Public comments
received on the Draft Special Report will be evaluated and used to
inform the final report.
The CCHHG and USGCRP will publish the final Special Report
electronically and consider options for hard copy publication. They
will also explore options for online integration with future phases of
the USGCRP's Global Change Information System. A full communications
plan will be developed by the lead and supporting agencies along with
designated authors, with input and assistance from the USGCRP
communications team.
(f) Proposed Timing
The Special Report is an interim report, designed to be released
after the third and before the fourth National Climate Assessments. A
draft of the Special Report is expected to be made available for public
comment early in 2015, with final publication expected in late 2015.
II. Call for Relevant Scientific Information To Inform the Special
Report
Interested parties are invited to assist the EPA and USGCRP in
collecting and
[[Page 7421]]
refining the scientific information base for the assessment. To do so,
parties are asked to submit recent, relevant, scientific and/or
technical research studies on observed and/or projected climate change
impacts on human health in the United States that have been peer-
reviewed and/or published or accepted for publication in the peer
reviewed literature.
All scientific literature submitted in response to this call for
information must be received within the 30-day call for information
period, beginning March 1, 2014 and ending 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on
March 31, 2014. Submissions must be uploaded electronically at: https://globalchange.gov/component/content/article/990.
III. Call for Contributing Authors Nominations
EPA and the CCHHG are also calling for nominations for Contributing
Authors to assist specific chapter author teams in the development of
the Special Report chapters or sections. Interested parties are invited
to submit nominations of subject matter experts, with descriptions of
relevant expertise and publications. Contributing authors will assist
in the preparation of specific sections of the report, working closely
with chapter author leads and teams. Submissions must demonstrate that
nominees are accomplished English-speaking writers with demonstrated
technical backgrounds, such that they can aid in the development of a
robust scientific, technical assessment as subject matter experts in
one or more of the following areas of climate-related health impacts:
(a) Thermal Extremes: Heat and Cold Waves
(b) Air Quality Impacts
(c) Vectorborne and Zoonotic Disease
(d) Waterborne and Foodborne Diseases
(e) Food Safety
(f) Extreme Weather and Climate Events
(g) Mental Health and Stress-Related Disorders related to Climate
Change
(h) Vulnerable Regions and Subpopulations to Health Impacts of
Climate Change
Responses to this request must be made within the 30-day call for
Contributing Author nominations period, beginning March 1, 2014 and
ending 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on March 31, 2014. A completed
nomination form, including a curriculum vitae or resume for each
nominee that demonstrates the nominee's relevant area of expertise,
must be submitted electronically at: https://globalchange.gov/component/content/article/990. The curriculum vitae or resume must be in English
and preferably no more than 5 pages, identifying topical expertise and
relevant publications. The nomination form will also ask for a brief
statement of primary expertise (e.g., projected climate impacts on air
quality, climate-related vectorborne diseases, waterborne diseases in
the U.S.). Please also ensure that curriculum vitae or resume include
address, phone number, email address, education, and the following
information, if applicable: professional association membership,
committee involvement, involvement in the development of other
scientific assessments, scientific publications in this field, and
relevant leadership activities.
IV. How To Register for the Public Forum To Inform the Interagency
Special Report on the Impacts of Climate Change on Human Health in the
United States
The Public Forum will be held on March 13, 2014, at the EPA William
Jefferson Clinton East building, Room 1153, 1301 Constitution Avenue
NW., Washington, DC 20460. It is open and free to the public, but with
limited space available. The first 120 people to register may attend.
Registration will be available beginning February 13, 2014. Please
register by going to https://globalchange.gov/component/content/article/990. Because this Public Forum is being held at a U.S. government
facility, individuals planning to attend the hearing should be prepared
to show valid picture identification to the security staff in order to
gain access to the meeting room. The forum is an opportunity for public
engagement, but since the event will not be formally recorded, it does
not replace the Call for Information request in Section II or the Call
for Contributing Author Nominations in Section III of this Notice; all
submissions of relevant scientific information and Contributing Author
nominees must be made to the USGCRP Web site as described above.
Dated: January 28, 2014.
Sarah Dunham,
Director, Office of Atmospheric Programs.
[FR Doc. 2014-02304 Filed 2-6-14; 8:45 am]
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