Equitrans, L.P.; Notice of Intent To Prepare an Environmental Impact Statement for the Planned Equitrans Expansion Project, and Request for Comments on Environmental Issues, 49217-49219 [2015-20199]
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 158 / Monday, August 17, 2015 / Notices
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VerDate Sep<11>2014
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Jkt 235001
Filed Date: 8/11/15.
Accession Number: 20150811–5172.
Comments Due: 5 p.m. ET 9/1/15.
The filings are accessible in the
Commission’s eLibrary system by
clicking on the links or querying the
docket number.
Any person desiring to intervene or
protest in any of the above proceedings
must file in accordance with Rules 211
and 214 of the Commission’s
Regulations (18 CFR 385.211 and
385.214) on or before 5:00 p.m. Eastern
time on the specified comment date.
Protests may be considered, but
intervention is necessary to become a
party to the proceeding.
eFiling is encouraged. More detailed
information relating to filing
requirements, interventions, protests,
service, and qualifying facilities filings
can be found at: https://www.ferc.gov/
docs-filing/efiling/filing-req.pdf. For
other information, call (866) 208–3676
(toll free). For TTY, call (202) 502–8659.
Dated: August 11, 2015.
Kimberly D. Bose,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2015–20195 Filed 8–14–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
[Docket No. PF15–22–000]
Equitrans, L.P.; Notice of Intent To
Prepare an Environmental Impact
Statement for the Planned Equitrans
Expansion Project, and Request for
Comments on Environmental Issues
The staff of the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission (FERC or
Commission) will discuss the potential
environmental effects of the Equitrans
Expansion Project (EEP, or Project)
involving construction and operation of
facilities by Equitrans, L.P. (Equitrans)
in Allegheny, Washington, and Green
Counties, Pennsylvania and Wetzel
County, West Virginia, in the
Commission’s environmental impact
statement (EIS) currently under
preparation for the planned Mountain
Valley Pipeline (MVP) Project (FERC
Docket No. PF15–3–000). The Project is
designed to transport natural gas from
the northern portion of Equitrans’
system south to a future interconnection
with MVP, as well as existing
interconnects on the southern portion of
Equitrans’ system with Texas Eastern
Transmission, LP and Dominion
Transmission, Inc. Because of the
interconnection with MVP, the
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
49217
Commission staff will evaluate the two
projects jointly in the EIS. This EIS will
be used by the Commission in its
decision-making process to determine
whether the MVP and EEP Projects are
in the public convenience and
necessity.
This notice announces the opening of
the scoping process the Commission
will use to gather input from the public
and interested agencies on the EEP. You
can make a difference by providing us
with your specific comments or
concerns about the Project. Your
comments should focus on the potential
environmental effects, reasonable
alternatives, and measures to avoid or
lessen environmental impacts. Your
input will help the Commission staff
determine what issues they need to
evaluate in the EIS. To ensure that your
comments are timely and properly
recorded, please send your comments so
that the Commission receives them in
Washington, DC on or before September
14, 2015.
If you sent comments on the EEP to
the Commission before the opening of
this docket on April 9, 2015, you will
need to re-file those comments in
Docket No. PF15–22–000 to ensure they
are considered as part of this
proceeding. This scoping period is
established to receive comments on the
EEP, and comments previously filed
with the FERC regarding the MVP
Project should not be refiled under the
EEP docket.
This notice is being sent to the
Commission’s current environmental
mailing list for this Project. State and
local government representatives should
notify their constituents of this planned
Project and encourage them to comment
on their areas of concern.
If you are a landowner receiving this
notice, a representative of Equitrans
may contact you about the acquisition of
an easement to construct, operate, and
maintain the planned facilities. The
company would seek to negotiate a
mutually acceptable agreement.
However, if the Commission approves
the Project, that approval conveys with
it the right of eminent domain.
Therefore, if easement negotiations fail
to produce an agreement, the pipeline
company could initiate condemnation
proceedings where compensation would
be determined in accordance with state
law.
A fact sheet prepared by the FERC
entitled ‘‘An Interstate Natural Gas
Facility On My Land? What Do I Need
To Know?’’ is available for viewing on
the FERC Web site (www.ferc.gov). This
fact sheet addresses a number of
typically asked questions, including the
use of eminent domain and how to
E:\FR\FM\17AUN1.SGM
17AUN1
49218
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 158 / Monday, August 17, 2015 / Notices
participate in the Commission’s
proceedings.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Public Participation
For your convenience, there are three
methods you can use to submit your
comments to the Commission. The
Commission encourages electronic filing
of comments and has expert staff
available to assist you at (202) 502–8258
or efiling@ferc.gov. Please carefully
follow these instructions so that your
comments are properly recorded.
(1) You can file your comments
electronically using the eComment
feature on the Commission’s Web site
(www.ferc.gov) under the link to
Documents and Filings. This is an easy
method for submitting brief, text-only
comments on a project;
(2) You can file your comments
electronically by using the eFiling
feature on the Commission’s Web site
(www.ferc.gov) under the link to
Documents and Filings. With eFiling,
you can provide comments in a variety
of formats by attaching them as a file
with your submission. New eFiling
users must first create an account by
clicking on ‘‘eRegister.’’ If you are filing
a comment on a particular project,
please select ‘‘Comment on a Filing’’ as
the filing type; or
(3) You can file a paper copy of your
comments by mailing them to the
following address. Be sure to reference
the project docket number (PF15–22–
000) with your submission: Kimberly D.
Bose, Secretary, Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission, 888 First Street
NE., Room 1A, Washington, DC 20426.
Summary of the Planned Project
According to Equitrans, the EEP is
designed to allow shippers the
flexibility of transporting up to 600,000
dekatherms per day of natural gas
produced in the Appalachian Basin to
potential markets in the Northeast, MidAtlantic, and Southeastern United
States. The EEP would consist of the
following facilities:
• A new 3.0-mile-long, 30-inchdiameter pipeline and a new 4.2-milelong, 20-inch-diameter pipeline in
Allegheny and Washington Counties
Pennsylvania (H–316 Pipeline and H–
318 Pipeline);
• a new Redhook Compressor Station,
to replace the existing Pratt Compressor
Station in Green County, Pennsylvania;
• an interconnect with the planned
MVP Project and a tap on Equitrans’
existing H–302 pipeline in Wetzel
County, West Virginia (Webster
Interconnection and Mobley Tap);
• a new extension of an existing 6inch-diameter pipeline and an existing
12-inch-diameter pipeline extending for
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:57 Aug 14, 2015
Jkt 235001
0.2-mile in Green County, Pennsylvania
(M–80 Pipeline and H–158 Pipeline);
• a new approximately 200-foot-long,
16-inch-diameter pipeline in Wetzel
County, West Virginia (H–319 Pipeline);
• a new approximately 55-foot-long
extension of an existing 12-inch
pipeline in Green County, Pennsylvania
(H–305 Pipeline);
• pig launchers and receivers; 1 and
• four meter and regulation stations.
The general location of the Project
facilities is shown in appendix 1.
Land Requirements for Construction
Construction of the planned facilities
would disturb approximately 207 acres
of land for the aboveground facilities
and the pipelines. Following
construction, Equitrans would maintain
approximately 64 acres for permanent
operation of the Project’s facilities; the
remaining acreage would be restored
and revert to former uses. The actual
acreage affected will be determined
more precisely as Project design
proceeds and likely will increase above
these preliminary estimates.
The EIS Process
The National Environmental Policy
Act (NEPA) requires the Commission to
take into account the environmental
impacts that could result from an action
whenever it considers the issuance of a
Certificate of Public Convenience and
Necessity. The NEPA also requires us 2
to discover and address concerns the
public may have about proposals. This
process is referred to as scoping. The
main goal of the scoping process is to
focus the analysis in the EIS on the
important environmental issues. By this
notice, the Commission requests public
comments on the scope of the issues to
address in the EIS. We will consider all
filed comments during the preparation
of the EIS.
In the EIS we will discuss impacts
that could occur as a result of the
construction and operation of the
planned project under these general
headings:
• Geology and soils;
• water resources and wetlands;
• cultural resources;
• vegetation and wildlife;
• cultural resources;
• land use, recreation, and visual
resources;
• air quality and noise;
• public safety; and
1 A ‘‘pig’’ is a tool that the pipeline company
inserts into and pushes through the pipeline for
cleaning the pipeline, conducting internal
inspections, or other purposes.
2 The pronouns ‘‘we’’, ‘‘us’’, and ‘‘our’’ refer to the
environmental staff of the Commission’s Office of
Energy Projects.
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Fmt 4703
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• cumulative impacts.
The EIS will present our independent
analysis of the issues. We will evaluate
possible alternatives to the planned
Project or portions of the Project. For
specific resources, we would make
recommendations on how to avoid,
minimize, or mitigate impacts, in
addition to the measures proposed by
Equitrans.
Although no formal application has
been filed, we have already initiated our
environmental review under the
Commission’s pre-filing process. The
purpose of the pre-filing process is to
encourage early involvement of
interested stakeholders and to identify
and resolve issues before the FERC
receives an application. As part of our
pre-filing review, we have begun to
contact some federal and state agencies
to discuss their involvement in the
scoping process and the preparation of
the EIS.
We will publish and distribute the
draft EIS for public comment. After the
comment period, we will consider all
timely comments and revise the
document, as necessary, before issuing a
final EIS. To ensure we have the
opportunity to consider and address
your comments, please carefully follow
the instructions in the Public
Participation section of this notice.
With this notice, we are asking
agencies with jurisdiction by law and/
or special expertise with respect to the
environmental issues related to this
project to formally cooperate with us in
the preparation of the EIS.3 Agencies
that would like to request cooperating
agency status should follow the
instructions for filing comments
provided under the Public Participation
section of this notice. The U.S.
Department of Agriculture Forest
Service, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
U.S. Department of Transportation,
West Virginia Department of Natural
Resources, and the West Virginia
Department of Environment Protection
have already agreed to be cooperating
agencies in the development of the EIS
for the MVP Project.
Consultations Under Section 106 of the
National Historic Preservation Act
In accordance with the Advisory
Council on Historic Preservation’s
implementing regulations for section
106 of the National Historic
Preservation Act, we are using this
notice to initiate consultation with the
3 The Council on Environmental Quality
regulations addressing cooperating agency
responsibilities are at Title 40, Code of Federal
Regulations, part 1501.6.
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 158 / Monday, August 17, 2015 / Notices
applicable State Historic Preservation
Office(s), and to solicit their views and
those of other government agencies,
interested Indian tribes, and the public
on the Project’s potential effects on
historic properties.4 We will define the
Project-specific Area of Potential Effects
(APE) in consultation with the SHPO(s)
as the Project develops. On natural gas
facility projects, the APE at a minimum
encompasses all areas subject to ground
disturbance (examples include
construction right-of-way, contractor/
pipe storage yards, compressor stations,
and access roads). Our EIS for this
Project will document our findings on
the impacts on historic properties and
summarize the status of consultations
under section 106.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Currently Identified Environmental
Issues
We have already identified several
issues that we think deserve attention
based on a preliminary review of the
planned facilities and the
environmental information provided by
Equitrans. This preliminary list of issues
may change based on your comments
and our analysis:
• Steep slopes;
• erosion control;
• alternatives and their potential
impacts on a range of resources; and
• cumulative impacts.
Environmental Mailing List
The environmental mailing list
includes federal, state, and local
government representatives and
agencies; elected officials;
environmental and public interest
groups; Indian Tribes; other interested
parties; and local libraries and
newspapers. This list also includes all
affected landowners (as defined in the
Commission’s regulations) who are
potential right-of-way grantors, whose
property may be used temporarily for
Project purposes, or who own homes
within certain distances of aboveground
facilities, and anyone who submits
comments on the Project. We will
update the environmental mailing list as
the analysis proceeds to ensure that we
send the information related to this
environmental review to all individuals,
organizations, and government entities
interested in and/or potentially affected
by the planned Project.
Copies of the completed draft EIS will
be sent to the environmental mailing list
4 The Advisory Council on Historic Preservation
regulations are at Title 36, Code of Federal
Regulations, Part 800. Those regulations define
historic properties as any prehistoric or historic
district, site, building, structure, or object included
in or eligible for inclusion in the National Register
of Historic Places.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:57 Aug 14, 2015
Jkt 235001
for public review and comment. If you
would prefer to receive a paper copy of
the document instead of the compact
disc version or would like to remove
your name from the mailing list, please
return the attached Information Request
(appendix 2).
49219
EventsList.aspx along with other related
information.
Dated: August 11, 2015.
Kimberly D. Bose,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2015–20199 Filed 8–14–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717–01–P
Becoming an Intervenor
Once Equitrans files its application
with the Commission, you may want to
become an ‘‘intervenor,’’ which is an
official party to the Commission’s
proceeding. Intervenors play a more
formal role in the process and are able
to file briefs, appear at hearings, and be
heard by the courts if they choose to
appeal the Commission’s final ruling.
An intervenor formally participates in
the proceeding by filing a request to
intervene. Motions to intervene are
more fully described at https://
www.ferc.gov/resources/guides/how-to/
intervene.asp. Instructions for becoming
an intervenor are in the ‘‘Document-less
Intervention Guide’’ under the ‘‘e-filing’’
link on the Commission’s Web site.
Please note that the Commission will
not accept requests for intervenor status
at this time. You must wait until the
Commission receives a formal
application for the project.
Additional Information
Additional information about the
project is available from the
Commission’s Office of External Affairs,
at (866) 208–FERC, or on the FERC Web
site (www.ferc.gov) using the eLibrary
link. Click on the eLibrary link, click on
‘‘General Search’’ and enter the docket
number, excluding the last three digits
in the Docket Number field (i.e., PF15–
22). Be sure you have selected an
appropriate date range. For assistance,
please contact FERC Online Support at
FercOnlineSupport@ferc.gov or toll free
at (866) 208–3676, or for TTY, contact
(202) 502–8659. The eLibrary link also
provides access to the texts of formal
documents issued by the Commission,
such as orders, notices, and
rulemakings.
In addition, the Commission offers a
free service called eSubscription which
allows you to keep track of all formal
issuances and submittals in specific
dockets. This can reduce the amount of
time you spend researching proceedings
by automatically providing you with
notification of these filings, document
summaries, and direct links to the
documents. Go to www.ferc.gov/docsfiling/esubscription.asp.
Finally, public meetings or site visits,
if scheduled, will be posted on the
Commission’s calendar located at
www.ferc.gov/EventCalendar/
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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
[Docket No. ER15–2304–000]
Oildale Energy, LLC; Supplemental
Notice That Initial Market-Based Rate
Filing Includes Request for Blanket
Section 204 Authorization
This is a supplemental notice in the
above-referenced proceeding of Oildale
Energy LLC’s application for marketbased rate authority, with an
accompanying rate tariff, noting that
such application includes a request for
blanket authorization, under 18 CFR
part 34, of future issuances of securities
and assumptions of liability.
Any person desiring to intervene or to
protest should file with the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission, 888
First Street NE., Washington, DC 20426,
in accordance with Rules 211 and 214
of the Commission’s Rules of Practice
and Procedure (18 CFR 385.211 and
385.214). Anyone filing a motion to
intervene or protest must serve a copy
of that document on the Applicant.
Notice is hereby given that the
deadline for filing protests with regard
to the applicant’s request for blanket
authorization, under 18 CFR part 34, of
future issuances of securities and
assumptions of liability, is August 31,
2015.
The Commission encourages
electronic submission of protests and
interventions in lieu of paper, using the
FERC Online links at https://
www.ferc.gov. To facilitate electronic
service, persons with Internet access
who will eFile a document and/or be
listed as a contact for an intervenor
must create and validate an
eRegistration account using the
eRegistration link. Select the eFiling
link to log on and submit the
intervention or protests.
Persons unable to file electronically
should submit an original and 5 copies
of the intervention or protest to the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission,
888 First Street NE., Washington, DC
20426.
The filings in the above-referenced
proceeding are accessible in the
Commission’s eLibrary system by
E:\FR\FM\17AUN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 158 (Monday, August 17, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 49217-49219]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-20199]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
[Docket No. PF15-22-000]
Equitrans, L.P.; Notice of Intent To Prepare an Environmental
Impact Statement for the Planned Equitrans Expansion Project, and
Request for Comments on Environmental Issues
The staff of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC or
Commission) will discuss the potential environmental effects of the
Equitrans Expansion Project (EEP, or Project) involving construction
and operation of facilities by Equitrans, L.P. (Equitrans) in
Allegheny, Washington, and Green Counties, Pennsylvania and Wetzel
County, West Virginia, in the Commission's environmental impact
statement (EIS) currently under preparation for the planned Mountain
Valley Pipeline (MVP) Project (FERC Docket No. PF15-3-000). The Project
is designed to transport natural gas from the northern portion of
Equitrans' system south to a future interconnection with MVP, as well
as existing interconnects on the southern portion of Equitrans' system
with Texas Eastern Transmission, LP and Dominion Transmission, Inc.
Because of the interconnection with MVP, the Commission staff will
evaluate the two projects jointly in the EIS. This EIS will be used by
the Commission in its decision-making process to determine whether the
MVP and EEP Projects are in the public convenience and necessity.
This notice announces the opening of the scoping process the
Commission will use to gather input from the public and interested
agencies on the EEP. You can make a difference by providing us with
your specific comments or concerns about the Project. Your comments
should focus on the potential environmental effects, reasonable
alternatives, and measures to avoid or lessen environmental impacts.
Your input will help the Commission staff determine what issues they
need to evaluate in the EIS. To ensure that your comments are timely
and properly recorded, please send your comments so that the Commission
receives them in Washington, DC on or before September 14, 2015.
If you sent comments on the EEP to the Commission before the
opening of this docket on April 9, 2015, you will need to re-file those
comments in Docket No. PF15-22-000 to ensure they are considered as
part of this proceeding. This scoping period is established to receive
comments on the EEP, and comments previously filed with the FERC
regarding the MVP Project should not be refiled under the EEP docket.
This notice is being sent to the Commission's current environmental
mailing list for this Project. State and local government
representatives should notify their constituents of this planned
Project and encourage them to comment on their areas of concern.
If you are a landowner receiving this notice, a representative of
Equitrans may contact you about the acquisition of an easement to
construct, operate, and maintain the planned facilities. The company
would seek to negotiate a mutually acceptable agreement. However, if
the Commission approves the Project, that approval conveys with it the
right of eminent domain. Therefore, if easement negotiations fail to
produce an agreement, the pipeline company could initiate condemnation
proceedings where compensation would be determined in accordance with
state law.
A fact sheet prepared by the FERC entitled ``An Interstate Natural
Gas Facility On My Land? What Do I Need To Know?'' is available for
viewing on the FERC Web site (www.ferc.gov). This fact sheet addresses
a number of typically asked questions, including the use of eminent
domain and how to
[[Page 49218]]
participate in the Commission's proceedings.
Public Participation
For your convenience, there are three methods you can use to submit
your comments to the Commission. The Commission encourages electronic
filing of comments and has expert staff available to assist you at
(202) 502-8258 or efiling@ferc.gov. Please carefully follow these
instructions so that your comments are properly recorded.
(1) You can file your comments electronically using the eComment
feature on the Commission's Web site (www.ferc.gov) under the link to
Documents and Filings. This is an easy method for submitting brief,
text-only comments on a project;
(2) You can file your comments electronically by using the eFiling
feature on the Commission's Web site (www.ferc.gov) under the link to
Documents and Filings. With eFiling, you can provide comments in a
variety of formats by attaching them as a file with your submission.
New eFiling users must first create an account by clicking on
``eRegister.'' If you are filing a comment on a particular project,
please select ``Comment on a Filing'' as the filing type; or
(3) You can file a paper copy of your comments by mailing them to
the following address. Be sure to reference the project docket number
(PF15-22-000) with your submission: Kimberly D. Bose, Secretary,
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 888 First Street NE., Room 1A,
Washington, DC 20426.
Summary of the Planned Project
According to Equitrans, the EEP is designed to allow shippers the
flexibility of transporting up to 600,000 dekatherms per day of natural
gas produced in the Appalachian Basin to potential markets in the
Northeast, Mid-Atlantic, and Southeastern United States. The EEP would
consist of the following facilities:
A new 3.0-mile-long, 30-inch-diameter pipeline and a new
4.2-mile-long, 20-inch-diameter pipeline in Allegheny and Washington
Counties Pennsylvania (H-316 Pipeline and H-318 Pipeline);
a new Redhook Compressor Station, to replace the existing
Pratt Compressor Station in Green County, Pennsylvania;
an interconnect with the planned MVP Project and a tap on
Equitrans' existing H-302 pipeline in Wetzel County, West Virginia
(Webster Interconnection and Mobley Tap);
a new extension of an existing 6-inch-diameter pipeline
and an existing 12-inch-diameter pipeline extending for 0.2-mile in
Green County, Pennsylvania (M-80 Pipeline and H-158 Pipeline);
a new approximately 200-foot-long, 16-inch-diameter
pipeline in Wetzel County, West Virginia (H-319 Pipeline);
a new approximately 55-foot-long extension of an existing
12-inch pipeline in Green County, Pennsylvania (H-305 Pipeline);
pig launchers and receivers; \1\ and
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ A ``pig'' is a tool that the pipeline company inserts into
and pushes through the pipeline for cleaning the pipeline,
conducting internal inspections, or other purposes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
four meter and regulation stations.
The general location of the Project facilities is shown in appendix
1.
Land Requirements for Construction
Construction of the planned facilities would disturb approximately
207 acres of land for the aboveground facilities and the pipelines.
Following construction, Equitrans would maintain approximately 64 acres
for permanent operation of the Project's facilities; the remaining
acreage would be restored and revert to former uses. The actual acreage
affected will be determined more precisely as Project design proceeds
and likely will increase above these preliminary estimates.
The EIS Process
The National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) requires the
Commission to take into account the environmental impacts that could
result from an action whenever it considers the issuance of a
Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity. The NEPA also requires
us \2\ to discover and address concerns the public may have about
proposals. This process is referred to as scoping. The main goal of the
scoping process is to focus the analysis in the EIS on the important
environmental issues. By this notice, the Commission requests public
comments on the scope of the issues to address in the EIS. We will
consider all filed comments during the preparation of the EIS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ The pronouns ``we'', ``us'', and ``our'' refer to the
environmental staff of the Commission's Office of Energy Projects.
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In the EIS we will discuss impacts that could occur as a result of
the construction and operation of the planned project under these
general headings:
Geology and soils;
water resources and wetlands;
cultural resources;
vegetation and wildlife;
cultural resources;
land use, recreation, and visual resources;
air quality and noise;
public safety; and
cumulative impacts.
The EIS will present our independent analysis of the issues. We
will evaluate possible alternatives to the planned Project or portions
of the Project. For specific resources, we would make recommendations
on how to avoid, minimize, or mitigate impacts, in addition to the
measures proposed by Equitrans.
Although no formal application has been filed, we have already
initiated our environmental review under the Commission's pre-filing
process. The purpose of the pre-filing process is to encourage early
involvement of interested stakeholders and to identify and resolve
issues before the FERC receives an application. As part of our pre-
filing review, we have begun to contact some federal and state agencies
to discuss their involvement in the scoping process and the preparation
of the EIS.
We will publish and distribute the draft EIS for public comment.
After the comment period, we will consider all timely comments and
revise the document, as necessary, before issuing a final EIS. To
ensure we have the opportunity to consider and address your comments,
please carefully follow the instructions in the Public Participation
section of this notice.
With this notice, we are asking agencies with jurisdiction by law
and/or special expertise with respect to the environmental issues
related to this project to formally cooperate with us in the
preparation of the EIS.\3\ Agencies that would like to request
cooperating agency status should follow the instructions for filing
comments provided under the Public Participation section of this
notice. The U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service, U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, U.S.
Department of Transportation, West Virginia Department of Natural
Resources, and the West Virginia Department of Environment Protection
have already agreed to be cooperating agencies in the development of
the EIS for the MVP Project.
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\3\ The Council on Environmental Quality regulations addressing
cooperating agency responsibilities are at Title 40, Code of Federal
Regulations, part 1501.6.
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Consultations Under Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation
Act
In accordance with the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation's
implementing regulations for section 106 of the National Historic
Preservation Act, we are using this notice to initiate consultation
with the
[[Page 49219]]
applicable State Historic Preservation Office(s), and to solicit their
views and those of other government agencies, interested Indian tribes,
and the public on the Project's potential effects on historic
properties.\4\ We will define the Project-specific Area of Potential
Effects (APE) in consultation with the SHPO(s) as the Project develops.
On natural gas facility projects, the APE at a minimum encompasses all
areas subject to ground disturbance (examples include construction
right-of-way, contractor/pipe storage yards, compressor stations, and
access roads). Our EIS for this Project will document our findings on
the impacts on historic properties and summarize the status of
consultations under section 106.
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\4\ The Advisory Council on Historic Preservation regulations
are at Title 36, Code of Federal Regulations, Part 800. Those
regulations define historic properties as any prehistoric or
historic district, site, building, structure, or object included in
or eligible for inclusion in the National Register of Historic
Places.
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Currently Identified Environmental Issues
We have already identified several issues that we think deserve
attention based on a preliminary review of the planned facilities and
the environmental information provided by Equitrans. This preliminary
list of issues may change based on your comments and our analysis:
Steep slopes;
erosion control;
alternatives and their potential impacts on a range of
resources; and
cumulative impacts.
Environmental Mailing List
The environmental mailing list includes federal, state, and local
government representatives and agencies; elected officials;
environmental and public interest groups; Indian Tribes; other
interested parties; and local libraries and newspapers. This list also
includes all affected landowners (as defined in the Commission's
regulations) who are potential right-of-way grantors, whose property
may be used temporarily for Project purposes, or who own homes within
certain distances of aboveground facilities, and anyone who submits
comments on the Project. We will update the environmental mailing list
as the analysis proceeds to ensure that we send the information related
to this environmental review to all individuals, organizations, and
government entities interested in and/or potentially affected by the
planned Project.
Copies of the completed draft EIS will be sent to the environmental
mailing list for public review and comment. If you would prefer to
receive a paper copy of the document instead of the compact disc
version or would like to remove your name from the mailing list, please
return the attached Information Request (appendix 2).
Becoming an Intervenor
Once Equitrans files its application with the Commission, you may
want to become an ``intervenor,'' which is an official party to the
Commission's proceeding. Intervenors play a more formal role in the
process and are able to file briefs, appear at hearings, and be heard
by the courts if they choose to appeal the Commission's final ruling.
An intervenor formally participates in the proceeding by filing a
request to intervene. Motions to intervene are more fully described at
https://www.ferc.gov/resources/guides/how-to/intervene.asp. Instructions
for becoming an intervenor are in the ``Document-less Intervention
Guide'' under the ``e-filing'' link on the Commission's Web site.
Please note that the Commission will not accept requests for intervenor
status at this time. You must wait until the Commission receives a
formal application for the project.
Additional Information
Additional information about the project is available from the
Commission's Office of External Affairs, at (866) 208-FERC, or on the
FERC Web site (www.ferc.gov) using the eLibrary link. Click on the
eLibrary link, click on ``General Search'' and enter the docket number,
excluding the last three digits in the Docket Number field (i.e., PF15-
22). Be sure you have selected an appropriate date range. For
assistance, please contact FERC Online Support at
FercOnlineSupport@ferc.gov or toll free at (866) 208-3676, or for TTY,
contact (202) 502-8659. The eLibrary link also provides access to the
texts of formal documents issued by the Commission, such as orders,
notices, and rulemakings.
In addition, the Commission offers a free service called
eSubscription which allows you to keep track of all formal issuances
and submittals in specific dockets. This can reduce the amount of time
you spend researching proceedings by automatically providing you with
notification of these filings, document summaries, and direct links to
the documents. Go to www.ferc.gov/docs-filing/esubscription.asp.
Finally, public meetings or site visits, if scheduled, will be
posted on the Commission's calendar located at www.ferc.gov/EventCalendar/EventsList.aspx along with other related information.
Dated: August 11, 2015.
Kimberly D. Bose,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2015-20199 Filed 8-14-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717-01-P