Deepwater Port License Application: Delfin LNG, LLC, Delfin LNG Deepwater Port, 42162-42165 [2015-17465]
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42162
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 136 / Thursday, July 16, 2015 / Notices
comment (79 FR 53510). Four
individuals and Advocates for Highway
and Auto Safety submitted comments.
All opposed the application for
exemption. On November 19, 2014,
FMCSA published notice of the IAM
application and asked for public
comment (79 FR 68958). Ten
commenters supported the application
and five opposed it.
Agency Decision
The Agency’s decision is based upon
the information provided by the
applicants, review of the comments
received in response to the Federal
Register notices, and the substantial
body of HOS research the FMCSA relied
upon to implement the 14-hour rule (68
FR 22473, April 28, 2003). The
applicants for exemption did not offer
any measures to offset the excessive
fatigue to which CMV drivers operating
beyond the 14th hour would be
subjected. Furthermore, the applications
did not limit how often the proposed
exemption could be used. The FMCSA
must therefore deny the applications for
exemption.
The Agency denied the IAM and
AMSA applications by letters dated
April 16, 2015, and June 8, 2015,
respectively. In each case, the Agency
concluded that CMV operations under
the exemption were not likely to
achieve a level of safety equivalent to or
greater than the level of safety that
would be achieved in the absence of the
exemption [49 CFR 381.310(c)(5)].
Copies of the denial letters are in the
respective dockets.
Issued on: July 9, 2015.
Larry W. Minor,
Associate Administrator for Policy.
[FR Doc. 2015–17433 Filed 7–15–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–EX–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Maritime Administration
[Docket No. USCG–2015–0472]
Deepwater Port License Application:
Delfin LNG, LLC, Delfin LNG
Deepwater Port
Maritime Administration,
Department of Transportation.
ACTION: Notice of application.
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AGENCY:
The Maritime Administration
(MARAD) and the U.S. Coast Guard
(USCG) announce they have received an
application for the licensing of a
liquefied natural gas (LNG) export
deepwater port and that the application
contains all required information. This
notice summarizes the applicant’s plans
SUMMARY:
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and the procedures that will be followed
in considering the application.
DATES: The Deepwater Port Act of 1974,
as amended, requires any public
hearing(s) on this application to be held
not later than 240 days after publication
of this notice, and a decision on the
application not later than 90 days after
the final public hearing.
ADDRESSES: The public docket for
USCG–2015–0472 is maintained by the
U.S. Department of Transportation,
Docket Management Facility, West
Building, Ground Floor, Room W12–
140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE.,
Washington, DC 20590.
The Federal Docket Management
Facility accepts hand-delivered
submissions, and makes docket contents
available for public inspection and
copying at this address between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays. The Federal
Docket Management Facility’s telephone
number is 202–366–9329, the fax
number is 202–493–2251 and the Web
site for electronic submissions or for
electronic access to docket contents is
https://www.regulations.gov. keyword
search ‘‘USCG–2015–0472’’.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Roddy Bachman, U.S. Coast Guard,
telephone: 202–372–1451, email:
Roddy.C.Bachman@uscg.mil or
Ms. Yvette M. Fields, Maritime
Administration, telephone: 202–366–
0926, email: Yvette.Fields@dot.gov. For
questions regarding viewing the Docket,
call Docket Operations, telephone: 202–
366–9826.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Receipt of Application
On May 8, 2015, MARAD and USCG
received an application from Delfin
LNG, LLC (Delfin LNG) for all Federal
authorizations required for a license to
own, construct, and operate a deepwater
port (DWP) for the export of natural gas
authorized under the Deepwater Port
Act of 1974, as amended, 33 U.S.C. 1501
et seq. (the Act), and implemented
under 33 CFR parts 148, 149, and 150.
After a coordinated completeness
review by MARAD and other
cooperating Federal agencies, it was
determined that the application
required supplemental information,
and, by letter of May 29, 2015 to Delfin
LNG, the USCG deemed the application
incomplete. On June 22, 2015, in
response to the USCG letter, Delfin LNG
submitted the requested supplemental
information entitled ‘‘Deepwater Port
License Application Delfin LNG Project
May 8, 2015—Supplemented June 19,
2015.’’ It has now been determined that
the application contains all information
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necessary to initiate processing of the
application. The USCG deemed the
application complete on June 29, 2015.
Also on May 8, 2015, Delfin LNG filed
an application with the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission (FERC)
requesting authorizations pursuant to
the Natural Gas Act and 18 CFR part
157. This application was noticed on
FERC’s Docket No. CP15–490–000 on
May 20, 2015 and in the Federal
Register (80 FR 30266–01). The
following is an excerpt from that
Federal Register Notice:
Take notice that on May 8, 2015 Delfin
LNG LLC (Delfin LNG), 1100 Louisiana
Street, Houston, Texas 77002, filed in Docket
No. CP15–490–000, an Application pursuant
to section 7(c) of the Commission’s
Regulations under the Natural Gas Act and
Parts 157 of the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission’s (Commission) regulations
requesting authorization to (1) reactivate
approximately 1.1 miles of existing 42-inch
pipeline formerly owned by U–T Offshore
System (UTOS), which runs from
Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Company
Station No. 44 (Transco Station 44) to the
mean highwater mark along the Cameron
Parish Coast; (2) install 74,000 horsepower of
new compression; (3) construct 0.25 miles of
42-inch pipeline to connect the former UTOS
line to the new meter station; and (4)
construct 0.6 miles of twin 30-inch pipelines
between Transco Station 44 and the new
compressor station in Cameron Parrish,
Louisiana that comprise the onshore portion
of Delfin LNG’s proposed deepwater port
(DWP), an offshore liquefied natural gas
facility located off the coast of Louisiana in
the Gulf of Mexico, all as more fully set forth
in the application, which is on file with the
Commission and open to public inspection.
Additionally, Delfin LNG requests a blanket
construction certificate under Part 17,
Subpart F of the Commission’s regulations.
This filing may be viewed on the web at
https://www.ferc.gov using the‘‘eLibrary’’ link.
Enter the docket number excluding the last
three digits in the docket number field to
access the document. For assistance, please
contact FERC at FERCOnlineSupport@
ferc.gov or call toll-free, (886) 208–3676 or
TYY, (202) 502–8659.
. . . .
Delfin LNG’s onshore facilities will
connect with the DWP facilities that are
subject to jurisdiction of the Maritime
Authority [sic] (MARAD) and the United
States Coast Guard (USCG). Additionally, as
part of Delfin LNG’s DWP, Delfin LNG
proposes to lease a segment of pipeline from
High Island Offshore System, LLC (HIOS)
that extends from the terminus of the UTOS
pipeline offshore. Delfin LNG states in its
application that HIOS will submit a separate
application with the Commission seeking
authorization to abandon by lease its
facilities to Delfin LNG.
Because the review of the DWP proposal is
the jurisdiction of MARAD and USCG, the
Commission acknowledges Delfin LNG’s
application in Docket No. CP15–490–000 on
May 8, 2015. However, the Commission will
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not begin processing Delfin LNG’s
application until such time that MARAD and
USCG accept Delfin LNG’s DWP application,
and HIOS submits an abandonment
application with the Commission.
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Background
According to the Act, a deepwater
port is a fixed or floating manmade
structure other than a vessel, or a group
of structures, including all components
and equipment, including pipelines,
pumping or compressor stations, service
platforms, buoys, mooring lines, and
similar facilities that are proposed as
part of a deepwater port, located beyond
State seaward boundaries and used or
intended for use as a port or terminal for
the transportation, storage, and further
handling of oil or natural gas for
transportation to, or from, any State.1
The Secretary of Transportation
delegated to the Maritime Administrator
authorities related to licensing
deepwater ports (49 CFR 1.93(h)).
Statutory and regulatory requirements
for licensing appear in 33 U.S.C. 1501
et seq. and 33 CFR part 148. Under
delegations from, and agreements
between, the Secretary of Transportation
and the Secretary of Homeland Security,
applications are jointly processed by
MARAD and USCG. Each application is
considered on its merits.
In accordance with 33 U.S.C. 1504(f)
for all applications, MARAD and the
USCG, working in cooperation with
other Federal agencies and departments
considering a DWP application shall
comply with the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) of
1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.). The U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA), the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
(USACE), the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
the Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management (BOEM), the Bureau of
Safety and Environmental Enforcement
(BSEE), and the Pipeline and Hazardous
Materials Safety Administration
(PHMSA), among others, are
cooperating agencies and will assist in
the NEPA process as described in 40
CFR 1501.6.; may participate in scoping
meeting(s); and will incorporate the
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS)
into their permitting processes.
Comments addressed to the EPA,
USACE, or other federal cooperating
1 On December 20, 2012, the Coast Guard and
Maritime Transportation Act of 2012 (Title III, Sec.
312) amended Section 3(9)(A) of the Deepwater Port
Act of 1974 (33 U.S.C. 1502(9)(A)) to insert the
words ‘‘or from’’ before the words ‘‘any State’’ in
the definition of Deepwater Port. This amendment
grants MARAD the authority to license the
construction of Deepwater Ports for the export of oil
and natural gas from domestic sources within the
United States to foreign markets abroad.
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agencies will be incorporated into the
Department of Transportation (DOT)
docket and considered as the EIS is
developed to ensure consistency with
the NEPA process.
All connected actions, permits,
approvals and authorizations will be
considered in the deepwater port
license application review. FERC has
jurisdiction over the onshore
components of the proposed deepwater
port as well as the change in service of
the offshore HIOS pipeline. As noted
above, these matters will be addressed
by FERC through a separate application
process. FERC has also noted they
cannot participate until such time as
HIOS submits a pipeline abandonment
application with the Commission. For
purposes of the Delfin LNG DWP license
application, MARAD and the USCG
consider both the DWP application and
the FERC application to be included in
this review. For your convenience, we
have included the Delfin LNG
application to FERC under Docket
Number USCG–2015–0472.
MARAD, in issuing this Notice of
Application pursuant to section 1504(c)
of the Act, must designate as an
‘‘Adjacent Coastal State’’ any coastal
state which (A) would be directly
connected by pipeline to a deepwater
port as proposed in an application, or
(B) would be located within 15 miles of
any such proposed deepwater port (see
33 U.S.C. 1508(a)(1)). On April 30, 2013,
MARAD issued a Notice of Policy
Clarification advising the public that
nautical miles shall be used when
determining Adjacent Coastal State
status (78 FR 25349). Pursuant to the
criteria provided in the Act, Louisiana
and Texas are the Adjacent Coastal
States for this application. Other states
may apply for Adjacent Coastal State
status in accordance with 33 U.S.C.
1508(a)(2).
The Act directs that at least one
public hearing take place in each
Adjacent Coastal State, in this case,
Louisiana and Texas. Additional public
meetings may be conducted to solicit
comments for the environmental
analysis to include public scoping
meetings, or meetings to discuss the
Draft EIS and the Final EIS.
MARAD and USCG will publish
additional Federal Register notices with
information regarding these public
meeting(s) and hearing(s) and other
procedural milestones, including the
NEPA environmental review. The
Maritime Administrator’s decision, and
other key documents, will be filed in the
public docket.
The Deepwater Port Act imposes a
strict timeline for processing an
application. When MARAD and USCG
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42163
determine that an application contains
the required information, the Act directs
that all public hearings on the
application be concluded within 240
days after publication of this Notice of
Application.
Within 45 days after the final hearing,
the Governor(s) of the Adjacent Coastal
State(s), in this case the Governors of
Louisiana and Texas, may notify
MARAD of their approval, approval
with conditions, or disapproval of the
application. MARAD may not issue a
license without the explicit or
presumptive approval of the Governor(s)
of the Adjacent Coastal State(s). During
this 45 day time period, the Governor(s)
may also notify MARAD of
inconsistencies between the application
and State programs relating to
environmental protection, land and
water use, and coastal zone
management. In this case, MARAD may
condition the license to make it
consistent with such state programs (33
U.S.C. 1508(b)(1)). MARAD will not
consider written approvals or
disapprovals of the application from
Governors of Adjacent Coastal States
until the 45-day period after the final
public hearing.
The Maritime Administrator must
render a decision on the application
within 90 days after the final hearing.
Should a favorable record of decision
be rendered and license be issued,
MARAD may include specific
conditions related to design,
construction, operations, environmental
permitting, monitoring and mitigations,
and financial responsibilities. If a
license is issued, USCG would oversee
the review and approval of the
deepwater port’s Floating Liquefied
Natural Gas Vessels (FLNGVs) and in
coordination with other agencies as
appropriate review of engineering
design and construction; operations/
security procedures; waterways
management and regulated navigation
areas; maritime safety and security
requirements; risk assessment; and
compliance with domestic and
international laws and regulations for
vessels that may call on the port. The
deepwater port would be designed,
constructed and operated in accordance
with applicable codes and standards.
In addition, installation of pipelines
and other structures, such as the Tower
Yoke Mooring Systems (TYMSs), may
require permits under Section 404 of the
Clean Water Act and Section 10 of the
Rivers and Harbors Act, which are
administered by USACE.
Permits from the EPA may also be
required pursuant to the provisions of
the Clean Air Act, as amended, and the
Clean Water Act, as amended.
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As mentioned above, Delfin LNG has
filed an application with FERC for a
Certificate of Public Convenience and
Necessity for the Delfin LNG Project
Onshore Facilities as described in the
FERC Federal Register notice (80 FR
30266–01). In order to achieve the goals
of NEPA, this application to operate
onshore facilities is included as a
connected action for the proposed
deepwater port and the environmental
impact of its construction and operation
will be included in the MARAD/USCG
NEPA review. However, to reiterate,
FERC has stated it will not be able to
commence processing Delfin LNG’s
application for the proposed onshore
facility until such time as the HIOS
abandonment application is filed.
The Department of Energy (DOE) is
also a cooperating agency. On February
20, 2014, DOE approved Delfin LNG’s
application to export LNG by vessel
from its proposed deepwater port to
Free Trade Agreement (FTA) nations.
On November 12, 2013, Delfin LNG
applied to the DOE for a long-term
multi-contract authorization to export
domestically produced LNG to non-FTA
nations. Pursuant to DOE’s revised
procedures for LNG export decisions (79
FR 48132), the DOE will act on
applications to export LNG to non-FTA
nations only after the NEPA review is
completed by the lead Federal agency,
in this case the USCG and MARAD.
Summary of the Application
Delfin LNG is proposing to construct,
own, and operate a DWP terminal
(referred to herein as the Delfin
Terminal) in the Gulf of Mexico to
liquefy natural gas for export to FTA
and non-FTA nations.
The proposed Project has both
onshore and offshore components. The
proposed DWP would be located in
Federal waters within the Outer
Continental Shelf (OCS) West Cameron
Area, West Addition Protraction Area
(Gulf of Mexico), approximately 37.4 to
40.8 nautical miles (or 43 to 47 statute
miles) off the coast of Cameron Parish,
Louisiana, in water depths ranging from
approximately 64 to 72 feet (19.5 to 21.9
meters). The DWP would consist of four
semi-permanently moored FLNGVs
located as follows: #1 (29°8′13.1″ N./
93°32′2.2″ W.), #2 (29°6′13.6″ N./
93°32′42.4″ W.), #3 (29°6′40.7″ N./
93°30′10.1″ W.), and #4 (29°4′40.9″ N./
93°30′51.8″ W.), located in WC 319, 327,
328, and 334 blocks, respectively. It
would reuse and repurpose two existing
offshore natural gas pipelines: The
former U–T Operating System (UTOS)
pipeline, and the High Island Operating
System (HIOS) pipeline. Four new
pipeline laterals connecting the HIOS
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pipeline to each of the FLNGVs would
be constructed. The feed gas would be
supplied through these new pipeline
laterals to each of the FLNGVs where it
would be super cooled to produce LNG.
The LNG would be stored onboard the
FLNGV and transferred via ship-to-shop
transfer to properly certified LNG
trading carriers. Each of the FLNGVs
would be semi-permanently moored to
four new weather-vaning TYMSs.
The onshore components in Cameron
Parish, Louisiana consist of engineering,
constructing, and operating a new
natural gas compressor station, gas
supply header and metering station at
an existing gas facility. The proposal
would require: (1) Reactivation of
approximately 1.1 miles of existing 42inch pipeline, formerly owned by
UTOS, which runs from
Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Company
Station No. 44 (Transco Station 44) to
the mean high water mark along the
Cameron Parish Coast; (2) installation of
74,000 horsepower of new compression;
(3) construction of 0.25 miles of 42-inch
pipeline to connect the former UTOS
line to the new meter station; and (4)
construction of 0.6 miles of twin 30inch pipelines between Transco Station
44 and the new compressor station.
Onshore pipeline quality natural gas
from the interstate grid would be
compressed and sent to the existing, but
currently idled, 42-inch UTOS pipeline.
The gas would be transported through
the UTOS pipeline and would bypass
the existing manifold platform located
at West Cameron (WC) 167
approximately 24.7 nautical miles (28.4
statute miles) offshore in the Gulf of
Mexico. The bypass of WC 167 would
be a newly installed pipeline segment,
700 feet in length, connecting to the
existing 42-inch HIOS pipeline.
The bypass of the WC 167 platform
would be trenched so that the top of the
pipe is a minimum of 3 feet below the
seafloor. From the bypass, the feed gas
would then be transported further
offshore using the HIOS pipeline
portion leased by the Applicant between
WC 167 and High Island A264. The
existing UTOS and HIOS pipelines
transect OCS Lease Blocks WC 314, 318,
319, 327, and 335, and would transport
feed gas from onshore to offshore (onedirectional flow). Delfin LNG proposes
to install four new lateral pipelines
along the HIOS pipeline, starting
approximately 16.0 nautical miles (18.4
statute miles) south of the WC 167
platform. Each subsea lateral pipeline
would be 30 inches in diameter and
approximately 6,400 feet in length,
extending from the HIOS pipeline to the
Delfin Terminal.
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The FLNGVs would receive pipeline
quality natural gas via the laterals and
TYMS where it would be cooled
sufficiently to totally condense the gas
to produce LNG. The produced LNG
would be stored in International
Maritime Organization (IMO) type B,
prismatic, independent LNG storage
tanks aboard each of the FLNGVs. Each
vessel would have a total LNG storage
capacity of 165,000 cubic meters (m3).
An offloading mooring system would
be provided on each FLNGV to moor an
LNG trading carrier side-by-side for
cargo transfer of LNG through loading
arms or cryogenic hoses using ship-toship transfer procedures. LNG carriers
would be moored with pilot and tug
assist. The FLNGV would be equipped
with fenders and quick-release hooks to
facilitate mooring operations. The
offloading system would be capable of
accommodating standard LNG trading
carriers with nominal cargo capacities
up to 170,000 m3. It is expected that the
typical LNG cargo transfer operation
would be carried out within 24 hours,
including LNG trading carrier berthing,
cargo transfer and sail-away.
The FLNGVs would be self-propelled
vessels and have the ability to
disconnect from the TYMS and set sail
to avoid hurricanes or to facilitate
required inspections, maintenance, and
repairs.
In the nominal design case, each of
the four FLNGVs would process
approximately 330 million standard
cubic feet per day (MMscfd), which
would total 1.32 billion standard cubic
feet per day (Bscf/d) of input feed gas
for all four of the FLNGVs. Based on an
estimated availability of 92 percent and
allowance for consumption of feed gas
during the liquefaction process, each
FLNGV would produce approximately
97.5 billion standard cubic feet per year
(Bscf/y) of gas (or approximately 2.0
million metric tonnes per annum
(MMtpa)) for export in the form of LNG.
Together, the four FLNGVs are designed
to have the capability to export 390.1
Bscf/y of gas (or approximately 8.0
MMtpa) in the form of LNG.
As detailed engineering and
equipment specification advances
during the design process, and operating
efficiencies are gained postcommissioning, the liquefaction process
could perform better than this nominal
design case. It is therefore anticipated
that LNG output, based on the high-side
design case of 375 MMscfd of input feed
gas, would be as much as approximately
110.8 Bscf/y of gas (or approximately
2.3 MMtpa) for each FLNGV. Taken
together, the four FLNGVs would be
capable of exporting the equivalent of
443.3 Bscf/y of natural gas in the form
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of LNG. Therefore, Delfin LNG is
requesting authorization to construct
and operate facilities capable of
exporting up to 443.3 Bscf/y of natural
gas in the form of LNG (which equates
to approximately 9.2 MMtpa).
The proposed Project would take a
modular implementation approach to
allow for early market entry and
accommodate market shifts. Offshore
construction activities are proposed to
begin first quarter (Q1) of 2018 and
would be completed in four stages. Each
stage corresponds to the commissioning
and operation of an FLNGV. The
anticipated commissioning of FLNGV 1
is Q3 of 2019 with start-up of
commercial operation of FLNGV 1 by
the end of 2019. It is anticipated that
FLNGVs 2 through 4 would be
commissioned 12 months apart. The
Delfin Terminal would be completed
and all four FLNGVs would be fully
operational by the summer of 2022.
Privacy Act
The electronic form of all comments
received into the Federal Docket
Management System can be searched by
the name of the individual submitting
the comment (or signing the comment,
if submitted on behalf of an association,
business, labor union, etc.). The DOT
Privacy Act Statement can be viewed in
the Federal Register published on April
11, 2000 (Volume 65, Number 70, pages
19477–78) or by visiting https://
www.regulations.gov.
Authority: 33 U.S.C. 1501, et seq.; 49 CFR
1.93(h).
Dated: July 13, 2015.
By order of the Maritime Administrator.
T. Mitchell Hudson, Jr.,
Secretary, Maritime Administration.
[FR Doc. 2015–17465 Filed 7–15–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–81–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Surface Transportation Board
[Docket No. FD 35942]
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Tunnel Hill Partners, LP—Acquisition
of Control Exemption—Hainesport
Industrial Railroad, LLC
Tunnel Hill Partners, LP (Tunnel), a
noncarrier, and two Class III carriers
(Hainesport Industrial Railroad, LLC
(HIRR) and New Amsterdam & Seneca
Railroad Company (NAS) (collectively,
Applicants)) have filed a verified notice
of exemption under 49 CFR 1180.2(d)(2)
for Tunnel, which currently owns NAS,
to acquire control of HIRR.
According to Applicants, Tunnel is an
integrated waste management firm. It
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currently owns NAS, a carrier with
authority to operate a rail line in
Fostoria, Ohio.1 Darryl Caplan and
Ronald W. Bridges currently own HIRR,
a carrier that holds authority to operate
approximately one mile of track in
Hainesport Industrial Park in Burlington
County, NJ.2 Tunnel proposes to acquire
from these individuals their ownership
interest in HIRR to serve a waste transfer
facility located on that line. Tunnel
notes that it may also use NAS to serve
a waste transfer facility it owns on that
line. Tunnel states that there are no
plans to connect the two railroads.
The transaction is expected to be
consummated on or after July 30, 2015,
the effective date of the exemption.
Applicants state that: (i) The carrier to
be controlled pursuant to this notice of
exemption (HIRR) does not connect
with Tunnel’s existing carrier (NAS); (ii)
the subject acquisition of control
proceeding is not part of a series of
anticipated transactions that would
connect the railroads with each other;
and (iii) the transaction does not involve
a Class I carrier. Therefore, the
transaction is exempt from the prior
approval requirements of 49 U.S.C.
11323. See 49 CFR 1180.2(d)(2).
Under 49 U.S.C. 10502(g), the Board
may not use its exemption authority to
relieve a rail carrier of its statutory
obligation to protect the interests of its
employees. Section 11326(c), however,
does not provide for labor protection for
transactions under sections 11324 and
11325 that involve only Class III rail
carriers. Because this transaction
involves Class III rail carriers only, the
Board, under the statute, may not
impose labor protective conditions for
this transaction.
If the verified notice contains false or
misleading information, the exemption
is void ab initio. Petitions to revoke the
exemption under 49 U.S.C. 10502(d)
may be filed at any time. The filing of
a petition to revoke will not
automatically stay the effectiveness of
the exemption. Petitions to stay must be
filed no later than July 23, 2015 (at least
seven days before the exemption
becomes effective).
An original and 10 copies of all
pleadings referring to Docket No. FD
35942, must be filed with the Surface
Transportation Board, 395 E Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20423–0001. In
addition, a copy of each pleading must
be served on John D. Heffner,
Strasburger & Price, LLP, 1025
1 See New Amsterdam & Seneca R.R.—Lease &
Operation Exemption—Line in Fostoria, Ohio, FD
34811 (STB served Jan. 20, 2006).
2 See Hainesport Indus. R.R.—Acquis. &
Operation Exemption—Hainesport Indus. Park R.R.
Ass’n, FD 34695 (STB served May 18, 2005).
PO 00000
Frm 00081
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
42165
Connecticut Ave. NW., Suite 717,
Washington, DC 20036.
Board decisions and notices are
available on our Web site at
WWW.STB.DOT.GOV.
Decided: July 13, 2015.
By the Board, Joseph H. Dettmar, Acting
Director, Office of Proceedings.
Jeffrey Herzig,
Clearance Clerk.
[FR Doc. 2015–17562 Filed 7–15–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4915–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Surface Transportation Board
[Docket No. AB 1128X]
Energy Solutions, LLC, d.b.a. Heritage
Railroad Corporation—Abandonment
Exemption—in Anderson and Roane
Counties, Tenn.
On April 3, 2015, as supplemented on
June 26, 2015, Energy Solutions, LLC
(ES), d.b.a. Heritage Railroad
Corporation, filed with the Surface
Transportation Board (Board) a petition
under 49 U.S.C. 10502 for exemption
from the provisions of 49 U.S.C. 10903
to abandon a line of railroad, known as
the Blair-Oak Ridge Line, which extends
between a point of connection to
Norfolk Southern Railway Company at
or near Blair, Tenn. (milepost 0.0) and
the end of track at East Tennessee
Technology Center at or near Oak Ridge,
Tenn. (milepost 7.0), including
approximately three miles of spur tracks
in Anderson and Roane Counties, Tenn.
(the Line). The Line includes the
stations of Blair and Oak Ridge and
traverses United States Postal Service
Zip Codes 37830 and 37190.
According to ES, it owns the Line’s
track materials, and the United States
Department of Energy (DOE) owns the
real estate underlying the Line. ES states
that it operates over the Line pursuant
to an easement for right-of-way granted
by DOE to Heritage Railroad
Corporation, Inc. (HRC) in 2002, which
was assigned by HRC to ES in 2009.1 ES
proposes to abandon the Line (thus
ending its obligation to provide
common carrier service to shippers on
the Line upon reasonable request) but
continue to provide contract carriage
over it outside the Board’s jurisdiction.
ES asserts that all the shippers on the
1 See Heritage R.R.—Lease & Operation
Exemption—Rail Line of U.S. Dep’t of Energy, FD
34372 (STB served July 23, 2003); Energy
Solutions—Acquis. & Operation Exemption—
Heritage R.R., FD 35288 (STB served Sept. 3, 2009).
E:\FR\FM\16JYN1.SGM
16JYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 136 (Thursday, July 16, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 42162-42165]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-17465]
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Maritime Administration
[Docket No. USCG-2015-0472]
Deepwater Port License Application: Delfin LNG, LLC, Delfin LNG
Deepwater Port
AGENCY: Maritime Administration, Department of Transportation.
ACTION: Notice of application.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Maritime Administration (MARAD) and the U.S. Coast Guard
(USCG) announce they have received an application for the licensing of
a liquefied natural gas (LNG) export deepwater port and that the
application contains all required information. This notice summarizes
the applicant's plans and the procedures that will be followed in
considering the application.
DATES: The Deepwater Port Act of 1974, as amended, requires any public
hearing(s) on this application to be held not later than 240 days after
publication of this notice, and a decision on the application not later
than 90 days after the final public hearing.
ADDRESSES: The public docket for USCG-2015-0472 is maintained by the
U.S. Department of Transportation, Docket Management Facility, West
Building, Ground Floor, Room W12-140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE.,
Washington, DC 20590.
The Federal Docket Management Facility accepts hand-delivered
submissions, and makes docket contents available for public inspection
and copying at this address between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through
Friday, except Federal holidays. The Federal Docket Management
Facility's telephone number is 202-366-9329, the fax number is 202-493-
2251 and the Web site for electronic submissions or for electronic
access to docket contents is https://www.regulations.gov. keyword search
``USCG-2015-0472''.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Roddy Bachman, U.S. Coast Guard,
telephone: 202-372-1451, email: Roddy.C.Bachman@uscg.mil or
Ms. Yvette M. Fields, Maritime Administration, telephone: 202-366-
0926, email: Yvette.Fields@dot.gov. For questions regarding viewing the
Docket, call Docket Operations, telephone: 202-366-9826.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Receipt of Application
On May 8, 2015, MARAD and USCG received an application from Delfin
LNG, LLC (Delfin LNG) for all Federal authorizations required for a
license to own, construct, and operate a deepwater port (DWP) for the
export of natural gas authorized under the Deepwater Port Act of 1974,
as amended, 33 U.S.C. 1501 et seq. (the Act), and implemented under 33
CFR parts 148, 149, and 150. After a coordinated completeness review by
MARAD and other cooperating Federal agencies, it was determined that
the application required supplemental information, and, by letter of
May 29, 2015 to Delfin LNG, the USCG deemed the application incomplete.
On June 22, 2015, in response to the USCG letter, Delfin LNG submitted
the requested supplemental information entitled ``Deepwater Port
License Application Delfin LNG Project May 8, 2015--Supplemented June
19, 2015.'' It has now been determined that the application contains
all information necessary to initiate processing of the application.
The USCG deemed the application complete on June 29, 2015.
Also on May 8, 2015, Delfin LNG filed an application with the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) requesting authorizations
pursuant to the Natural Gas Act and 18 CFR part 157. This application
was noticed on FERC's Docket No. CP15-490-000 on May 20, 2015 and in
the Federal Register (80 FR 30266-01). The following is an excerpt from
that Federal Register Notice:
Take notice that on May 8, 2015 Delfin LNG LLC (Delfin LNG),
1100 Louisiana Street, Houston, Texas 77002, filed in Docket No.
CP15-490-000, an Application pursuant to section 7(c) of the
Commission's Regulations under the Natural Gas Act and Parts 157 of
the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission's (Commission) regulations
requesting authorization to (1) reactivate approximately 1.1 miles
of existing 42-inch pipeline formerly owned by U-T Offshore System
(UTOS), which runs from Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Company
Station No. 44 (Transco Station 44) to the mean highwater mark along
the Cameron Parish Coast; (2) install 74,000 horsepower of new
compression; (3) construct 0.25 miles of 42-inch pipeline to connect
the former UTOS line to the new meter station; and (4) construct 0.6
miles of twin 30-inch pipelines between Transco Station 44 and the
new compressor station in Cameron Parrish, Louisiana that comprise
the onshore portion of Delfin LNG's proposed deepwater port (DWP),
an offshore liquefied natural gas facility located off the coast of
Louisiana in the Gulf of Mexico, all as more fully set forth in the
application, which is on file with the Commission and open to public
inspection. Additionally, Delfin LNG requests a blanket construction
certificate under Part 17, Subpart F of the Commission's
regulations. This filing may be viewed on the web at https://www.ferc.gov using the``eLibrary'' link. Enter the docket number
excluding the last three digits in the docket number field to access
the document. For assistance, please contact FERC at
FERCOnlineSupport@ferc.gov or call toll-free, (886) 208-3676 or TYY,
(202) 502-8659.
. . . .
Delfin LNG's onshore facilities will connect with the DWP
facilities that are subject to jurisdiction of the Maritime
Authority [sic] (MARAD) and the United States Coast Guard (USCG).
Additionally, as part of Delfin LNG's DWP, Delfin LNG proposes to
lease a segment of pipeline from High Island Offshore System, LLC
(HIOS) that extends from the terminus of the UTOS pipeline offshore.
Delfin LNG states in its application that HIOS will submit a
separate application with the Commission seeking authorization to
abandon by lease its facilities to Delfin LNG.
Because the review of the DWP proposal is the jurisdiction of
MARAD and USCG, the Commission acknowledges Delfin LNG's application
in Docket No. CP15-490-000 on May 8, 2015. However, the Commission
will
[[Page 42163]]
not begin processing Delfin LNG's application until such time that
MARAD and USCG accept Delfin LNG's DWP application, and HIOS submits
an abandonment application with the Commission.
Background
According to the Act, a deepwater port is a fixed or floating
manmade structure other than a vessel, or a group of structures,
including all components and equipment, including pipelines, pumping or
compressor stations, service platforms, buoys, mooring lines, and
similar facilities that are proposed as part of a deepwater port,
located beyond State seaward boundaries and used or intended for use as
a port or terminal for the transportation, storage, and further
handling of oil or natural gas for transportation to, or from, any
State.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ On December 20, 2012, the Coast Guard and Maritime
Transportation Act of 2012 (Title III, Sec. 312) amended Section
3(9)(A) of the Deepwater Port Act of 1974 (33 U.S.C. 1502(9)(A)) to
insert the words ``or from'' before the words ``any State'' in the
definition of Deepwater Port. This amendment grants MARAD the
authority to license the construction of Deepwater Ports for the
export of oil and natural gas from domestic sources within the
United States to foreign markets abroad.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Secretary of Transportation delegated to the Maritime
Administrator authorities related to licensing deepwater ports (49 CFR
1.93(h)). Statutory and regulatory requirements for licensing appear in
33 U.S.C. 1501 et seq. and 33 CFR part 148. Under delegations from, and
agreements between, the Secretary of Transportation and the Secretary
of Homeland Security, applications are jointly processed by MARAD and
USCG. Each application is considered on its merits.
In accordance with 33 U.S.C. 1504(f) for all applications, MARAD
and the USCG, working in cooperation with other Federal agencies and
departments considering a DWP application shall comply with the
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et
seq.). The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers (USACE), the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA), the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM),
the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE), and the
Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA), among
others, are cooperating agencies and will assist in the NEPA process as
described in 40 CFR 1501.6.; may participate in scoping meeting(s); and
will incorporate the Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) into their
permitting processes. Comments addressed to the EPA, USACE, or other
federal cooperating agencies will be incorporated into the Department
of Transportation (DOT) docket and considered as the EIS is developed
to ensure consistency with the NEPA process.
All connected actions, permits, approvals and authorizations will
be considered in the deepwater port license application review. FERC
has jurisdiction over the onshore components of the proposed deepwater
port as well as the change in service of the offshore HIOS pipeline. As
noted above, these matters will be addressed by FERC through a separate
application process. FERC has also noted they cannot participate until
such time as HIOS submits a pipeline abandonment application with the
Commission. For purposes of the Delfin LNG DWP license application,
MARAD and the USCG consider both the DWP application and the FERC
application to be included in this review. For your convenience, we
have included the Delfin LNG application to FERC under Docket Number
USCG-2015-0472.
MARAD, in issuing this Notice of Application pursuant to section
1504(c) of the Act, must designate as an ``Adjacent Coastal State'' any
coastal state which (A) would be directly connected by pipeline to a
deepwater port as proposed in an application, or (B) would be located
within 15 miles of any such proposed deepwater port (see 33 U.S.C.
1508(a)(1)). On April 30, 2013, MARAD issued a Notice of Policy
Clarification advising the public that nautical miles shall be used
when determining Adjacent Coastal State status (78 FR 25349). Pursuant
to the criteria provided in the Act, Louisiana and Texas are the
Adjacent Coastal States for this application. Other states may apply
for Adjacent Coastal State status in accordance with 33 U.S.C.
1508(a)(2).
The Act directs that at least one public hearing take place in each
Adjacent Coastal State, in this case, Louisiana and Texas. Additional
public meetings may be conducted to solicit comments for the
environmental analysis to include public scoping meetings, or meetings
to discuss the Draft EIS and the Final EIS.
MARAD and USCG will publish additional Federal Register notices
with information regarding these public meeting(s) and hearing(s) and
other procedural milestones, including the NEPA environmental review.
The Maritime Administrator's decision, and other key documents, will be
filed in the public docket.
The Deepwater Port Act imposes a strict timeline for processing an
application. When MARAD and USCG determine that an application contains
the required information, the Act directs that all public hearings on
the application be concluded within 240 days after publication of this
Notice of Application.
Within 45 days after the final hearing, the Governor(s) of the
Adjacent Coastal State(s), in this case the Governors of Louisiana and
Texas, may notify MARAD of their approval, approval with conditions, or
disapproval of the application. MARAD may not issue a license without
the explicit or presumptive approval of the Governor(s) of the Adjacent
Coastal State(s). During this 45 day time period, the Governor(s) may
also notify MARAD of inconsistencies between the application and State
programs relating to environmental protection, land and water use, and
coastal zone management. In this case, MARAD may condition the license
to make it consistent with such state programs (33 U.S.C. 1508(b)(1)).
MARAD will not consider written approvals or disapprovals of the
application from Governors of Adjacent Coastal States until the 45-day
period after the final public hearing.
The Maritime Administrator must render a decision on the
application within 90 days after the final hearing.
Should a favorable record of decision be rendered and license be
issued, MARAD may include specific conditions related to design,
construction, operations, environmental permitting, monitoring and
mitigations, and financial responsibilities. If a license is issued,
USCG would oversee the review and approval of the deepwater port's
Floating Liquefied Natural Gas Vessels (FLNGVs) and in coordination
with other agencies as appropriate review of engineering design and
construction; operations/security procedures; waterways management and
regulated navigation areas; maritime safety and security requirements;
risk assessment; and compliance with domestic and international laws
and regulations for vessels that may call on the port. The deepwater
port would be designed, constructed and operated in accordance with
applicable codes and standards.
In addition, installation of pipelines and other structures, such
as the Tower Yoke Mooring Systems (TYMSs), may require permits under
Section 404 of the Clean Water Act and Section 10 of the Rivers and
Harbors Act, which are administered by USACE.
Permits from the EPA may also be required pursuant to the
provisions of the Clean Air Act, as amended, and the Clean Water Act,
as amended.
[[Page 42164]]
As mentioned above, Delfin LNG has filed an application with FERC
for a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity for the Delfin
LNG Project Onshore Facilities as described in the FERC Federal
Register notice (80 FR 30266-01). In order to achieve the goals of
NEPA, this application to operate onshore facilities is included as a
connected action for the proposed deepwater port and the environmental
impact of its construction and operation will be included in the MARAD/
USCG NEPA review. However, to reiterate, FERC has stated it will not be
able to commence processing Delfin LNG's application for the proposed
onshore facility until such time as the HIOS abandonment application is
filed.
The Department of Energy (DOE) is also a cooperating agency. On
February 20, 2014, DOE approved Delfin LNG's application to export LNG
by vessel from its proposed deepwater port to Free Trade Agreement
(FTA) nations. On November 12, 2013, Delfin LNG applied to the DOE for
a long-term multi-contract authorization to export domestically
produced LNG to non-FTA nations. Pursuant to DOE's revised procedures
for LNG export decisions (79 FR 48132), the DOE will act on
applications to export LNG to non-FTA nations only after the NEPA
review is completed by the lead Federal agency, in this case the USCG
and MARAD.
Summary of the Application
Delfin LNG is proposing to construct, own, and operate a DWP
terminal (referred to herein as the Delfin Terminal) in the Gulf of
Mexico to liquefy natural gas for export to FTA and non-FTA nations.
The proposed Project has both onshore and offshore components. The
proposed DWP would be located in Federal waters within the Outer
Continental Shelf (OCS) West Cameron Area, West Addition Protraction
Area (Gulf of Mexico), approximately 37.4 to 40.8 nautical miles (or 43
to 47 statute miles) off the coast of Cameron Parish, Louisiana, in
water depths ranging from approximately 64 to 72 feet (19.5 to 21.9
meters). The DWP would consist of four semi-permanently moored FLNGVs
located as follows: #1 (29[deg]8'13.1'' N./93[deg]32'2.2'' W.), #2
(29[deg]6'13.6'' N./93[deg]32'42.4'' W.), #3 (29[deg]6'40.7'' N./
93[deg]30'10.1'' W.), and #4 (29[deg]4'40.9'' N./93[deg]30'51.8'' W.),
located in WC 319, 327, 328, and 334 blocks, respectively. It would
reuse and repurpose two existing offshore natural gas pipelines: The
former U-T Operating System (UTOS) pipeline, and the High Island
Operating System (HIOS) pipeline. Four new pipeline laterals connecting
the HIOS pipeline to each of the FLNGVs would be constructed. The feed
gas would be supplied through these new pipeline laterals to each of
the FLNGVs where it would be super cooled to produce LNG. The LNG would
be stored onboard the FLNGV and transferred via ship-to-shop transfer
to properly certified LNG trading carriers. Each of the FLNGVs would be
semi-permanently moored to four new weather-vaning TYMSs.
The onshore components in Cameron Parish, Louisiana consist of
engineering, constructing, and operating a new natural gas compressor
station, gas supply header and metering station at an existing gas
facility. The proposal would require: (1) Reactivation of approximately
1.1 miles of existing 42-inch pipeline, formerly owned by UTOS, which
runs from Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Company Station No. 44 (Transco
Station 44) to the mean high water mark along the Cameron Parish Coast;
(2) installation of 74,000 horsepower of new compression; (3)
construction of 0.25 miles of 42-inch pipeline to connect the former
UTOS line to the new meter station; and (4) construction of 0.6 miles
of twin 30-inch pipelines between Transco Station 44 and the new
compressor station.
Onshore pipeline quality natural gas from the interstate grid would
be compressed and sent to the existing, but currently idled, 42-inch
UTOS pipeline. The gas would be transported through the UTOS pipeline
and would bypass the existing manifold platform located at West Cameron
(WC) 167 approximately 24.7 nautical miles (28.4 statute miles)
offshore in the Gulf of Mexico. The bypass of WC 167 would be a newly
installed pipeline segment, 700 feet in length, connecting to the
existing 42-inch HIOS pipeline.
The bypass of the WC 167 platform would be trenched so that the top
of the pipe is a minimum of 3 feet below the seafloor. From the bypass,
the feed gas would then be transported further offshore using the HIOS
pipeline portion leased by the Applicant between WC 167 and High Island
A264. The existing UTOS and HIOS pipelines transect OCS Lease Blocks WC
314, 318, 319, 327, and 335, and would transport feed gas from onshore
to offshore (one-directional flow). Delfin LNG proposes to install four
new lateral pipelines along the HIOS pipeline, starting approximately
16.0 nautical miles (18.4 statute miles) south of the WC 167 platform.
Each subsea lateral pipeline would be 30 inches in diameter and
approximately 6,400 feet in length, extending from the HIOS pipeline to
the Delfin Terminal.
The FLNGVs would receive pipeline quality natural gas via the
laterals and TYMS where it would be cooled sufficiently to totally
condense the gas to produce LNG. The produced LNG would be stored in
International Maritime Organization (IMO) type B, prismatic,
independent LNG storage tanks aboard each of the FLNGVs. Each vessel
would have a total LNG storage capacity of 165,000 cubic meters
(m3).
An offloading mooring system would be provided on each FLNGV to
moor an LNG trading carrier side-by-side for cargo transfer of LNG
through loading arms or cryogenic hoses using ship-to-ship transfer
procedures. LNG carriers would be moored with pilot and tug assist. The
FLNGV would be equipped with fenders and quick-release hooks to
facilitate mooring operations. The offloading system would be capable
of accommodating standard LNG trading carriers with nominal cargo
capacities up to 170,000 m3. It is expected that the typical
LNG cargo transfer operation would be carried out within 24 hours,
including LNG trading carrier berthing, cargo transfer and sail-away.
The FLNGVs would be self-propelled vessels and have the ability to
disconnect from the TYMS and set sail to avoid hurricanes or to
facilitate required inspections, maintenance, and repairs.
In the nominal design case, each of the four FLNGVs would process
approximately 330 million standard cubic feet per day (MMscfd), which
would total 1.32 billion standard cubic feet per day (Bscf/d) of input
feed gas for all four of the FLNGVs. Based on an estimated availability
of 92 percent and allowance for consumption of feed gas during the
liquefaction process, each FLNGV would produce approximately 97.5
billion standard cubic feet per year (Bscf/y) of gas (or approximately
2.0 million metric tonnes per annum (MMtpa)) for export in the form of
LNG. Together, the four FLNGVs are designed to have the capability to
export 390.1 Bscf/y of gas (or approximately 8.0 MMtpa) in the form of
LNG.
As detailed engineering and equipment specification advances during
the design process, and operating efficiencies are gained post-
commissioning, the liquefaction process could perform better than this
nominal design case. It is therefore anticipated that LNG output, based
on the high-side design case of 375 MMscfd of input feed gas, would be
as much as approximately 110.8 Bscf/y of gas (or approximately 2.3
MMtpa) for each FLNGV. Taken together, the four FLNGVs would be capable
of exporting the equivalent of 443.3 Bscf/y of natural gas in the form
[[Page 42165]]
of LNG. Therefore, Delfin LNG is requesting authorization to construct
and operate facilities capable of exporting up to 443.3 Bscf/y of
natural gas in the form of LNG (which equates to approximately 9.2
MMtpa).
The proposed Project would take a modular implementation approach
to allow for early market entry and accommodate market shifts. Offshore
construction activities are proposed to begin first quarter (Q1) of
2018 and would be completed in four stages. Each stage corresponds to
the commissioning and operation of an FLNGV. The anticipated
commissioning of FLNGV 1 is Q3 of 2019 with start-up of commercial
operation of FLNGV 1 by the end of 2019. It is anticipated that FLNGVs
2 through 4 would be commissioned 12 months apart. The Delfin Terminal
would be completed and all four FLNGVs would be fully operational by
the summer of 2022.
Privacy Act
The electronic form of all comments received into the Federal
Docket Management System can be searched by the name of the individual
submitting the comment (or signing the comment, if submitted on behalf
of an association, business, labor union, etc.). The DOT Privacy Act
Statement can be viewed in the Federal Register published on April 11,
2000 (Volume 65, Number 70, pages 19477-78) or by visiting https://www.regulations.gov.
Authority: 33 U.S.C. 1501, et seq.; 49 CFR 1.93(h).
Dated: July 13, 2015.
By order of the Maritime Administrator.
T. Mitchell Hudson, Jr.,
Secretary, Maritime Administration.
[FR Doc. 2015-17465 Filed 7-15-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-81-P