Notice of Availability of the Plains & Eastern Clean Line Transmission Project Final Environmental Impact Statement, 70192-70194 [2015-28574]
Download as PDF
70192
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 219 / Friday, November 13, 2015 / Notices
AGENCY:
Regulatory Commission (FERC) and U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers (USACE)
aimed at improving coordination of
FERC and USACE regulatory processes
regarding non-federal development of
hydropower at USACE non-powered
dams. DOE estimates that there is a
potential for 12 gigawatts of new
hydropower capacity in the U.S. by
adding power at non-powered dams.1
Adding power at USACE non-powered
dams requires federal authorizations,
potentially including authorizations via:
The FERC licensing process 2, the
USACE 408 process 3, and the USACE
regulatory 404 process 4 (impacts to
waters of the U.S. pursuant to Section
404 of the Clean Water Act). All three
of these processes require project
proposal identification, information
gathering, and environmental and
engineering analyses to support
licensing, permitting, or agency
decisions.
DATES: The meeting will be held on
Thursday, December 10th, 2015, from
1:00–5:00 p.m. Eastern Time.
ADDRESSES: The meeting will be held at
the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission (FERC), 888 First Street
NE., Hearing Room 1, Washington, DC
20426.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Patrick Gilman, Department of Energy at
(720) 356–1420 or Patrick.Gilman@
ee.doe.gov, or Hoyt Battey, Department
of Energy, at (202) 586–0143 or
Hoyt.Battey@ee.doe.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: DOE with
the assistance of Oak Ridge National
Laboratory convened a collaborative
process with FERC and USACE staff to
develop ideas on how FERC and USACE
permitting efforts can be more
efficiently coordinated to decrease
overall process time and avoid
duplication of efforts.
The focus of the public meeting will
be for agencies to receive public input,
questions, and recommendations for
areas of potential improvement in the
coordination of FERC and USACE
regulatory processes regarding nonfederal development of hydropower at
USACE non-powered dams and provide
a forum to exchange information.
Attendees will be asked to provide these
recommendations and information
based on their personal experience,
This notice announces a
meeting to obtain individual public
input on new ideas developed
collaboratively by the Department of
Energy (DOE), Federal Energy
1 National Hydropower Asset Assessment
Program, Non-Powered Dam Resource Assessment
can be found at https://nhaap.ornl.gov/content/nonpowered-dam-potential.
2 18 U.S.C. 4, 5, and 16.
3 Section 14 of the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899
(33 U.S.C. 408).
4 Section 404 of the Clean Water Act (33 U.S.C.
1344).
Total Estimated Number of Annual
Responses: 22,123.
Total Estimated Number of Annual
Burden Hours: 7,374.
Abstract: The National Center for
Education Statistics (NCES) of the U.S.
Department of Education (Department)
is required by regulation to develop an
earnings survey to support gainful
employment (GE) program evaluations.
The regulations specify that the
Secretary of Education will publish in
the Federal Register the survey and the
standards required for its
administration. NCES has developed the
Recent Graduates Employment and
Earnings Survey (RGEES) Standards and
Survey Form. The RGEES can be used
in a debt-to-earnings (D/E) ratio appeal
under the GE regulations as an
alternative to the Social Security
administration earnings data.
Institutions that choose to submit
alternate earnings appeal information
will survey all Title IV funded students
who graduated from GE programs
during the same period that the
Department used to calculate the D/E
ratios, or a comparable period as
defined in 668.406(b)(3) of the
regulations. The survey will provide an
additional source of earnings data for
the Department to consider before
determining final D/E ratios for
programs subject to the gainful
employment regulations. Programs with
final D/E ratios that fail to meet the
minimum threshold may face sanctions,
including the possible loss of Title IV
federal student financial aid program
funds.
Dated: November 9, 2015.
Stephanie Valentine,
Acting Director, Information Collection
Clearance Division, Office of the Chief Privacy
Officer, Office of Management.
[FR Doc. 2015–28839 Filed 11–10–15; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 4000–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Notice of Public Meeting to Provide
Comments on Draft Materials to
Improve FERC–USACE Coordinated
Regulatory Processes for Non-Federal
Development of Hydropower at USACE
Non-Hydropower Dams
Office of Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy, Department of
Energy.
ACTION: Announcement of meeting.
SUMMARY:
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individual advice, information, or facts
regarding this topic. The object of the
meeting is not to obtain any group
position or consensus; rather, the
agencies are seeking as many
recommendations as possible from all
individuals at this meeting. Draft
documents outlining preliminary ideas
for improving processes can be viewed
at the meeting Web site: https://
hydropower.ornl.gov/npd-publicworkshop/. The meeting is open to the
public; project developers, those
involved in adding power at non-power
dams, environmental non-governmental
organizations, tribes, and all interested
members of the public are encouraged to
attend. Pre-registration is required as
space is limited. Register at https://
hydropower.ornl.gov/npd-publicworkshop/; or contact Kelsey Rugani at
Kearns & West (krugani@
kearnswest.com, (415) 391–7900) to
RSVP.
If you are unable to attend and want
to provide written comments, please do
so by 11:59 p.m. EST on December 18th.
Please send all comments to
Hydropermitting@ee.doe.gov.
Jim Ahlgrimm,
Supervisory General Engineer, Wind and
Water Power Program, Office of Energy
Efficiency and Renewable Energy.
[FR Doc. 2015–28875 Filed 11–12–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Notice of Availability of the Plains &
Eastern Clean Line Transmission
Project Final Environmental Impact
Statement
Department of Energy.
Notice of availability.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The U.S. Department of
Energy (DOE) announces the availability
of the Plains & Eastern Clean Line
Transmission Project Final
Environmental Impact Statement (DOE/
EIS–0486; Final EIS), prepared pursuant
to the National Environmental Policy
Act (NEPA). This Final EIS considered
public comments on the Draft EIS,
which was issued in December 2014,
reports on the status of consultations
under section 106 of the National
Historic Preservation Act (NHPA) and
under section 7 of the Endangered
Species Act (ESA), and identifies DOE’s
preferred alternative. DOE has not made
a decision whether to participate in the
proposed Plains & Eastern Clean Line
Transmission Project.
DATES: DOE will publish a Record of
Decision no sooner than 30 days after
publication of the U.S. Environmental
SUMMARY:
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 219 / Friday, November 13, 2015 / Notices
Protection Agency’s (EPA) Notice of
Availability in the Federal Register.
ADDRESSES: The Final EIS is available
on the DOE NEPA Web site at https://
energy.gov/nepa and on the Plains &
Eastern EIS Web site at https://
www.plainsandeasterneis.com/. Copies
of the Final EIS also are available in the
public reading rooms listed in
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.
A printed summary and CD of the
complete Final EIS or a complete
printed copy of the Final EIS
(approximately 5,500 pages) may be
requested by sending an email to info@
PlainsandEasternEIS.com.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
information on the Plains & Eastern EIS
or the Section 106 process, contact Jane
Summerson, Ph.D., DOE NEPA
Document Manager on behalf of the
Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy
Reliability, U.S. Department of Energy,
DOE NNSA, Post Office Box 5400
Building 391, Kirtland Air Force Base
East, Albuquerque, NM 87185; email at
Jane.Summerson01@nnsa.doe.gov; or
telephone at (505) 845–4091.
For general information regarding the
DOE NEPA process, contact Carol
Borgstrom, Director, Office of NEPA
Policy and Compliance (GC–54), U.S.
Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20585; or phone at
(202) 586–4600; voicemail at (800) 472–
2756; or email at askNEPA@hq.doe.gov.
Additional information regarding DOE’s
NEPA activities is available on the DOE
NEPA Web site at https://energy.gov/
nepa.
Additional information on the Final
EIS is also available through the EIS
Web site at https://
www.plainsandeasternEIS.com/.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Background
In June 2010, DOE, acting through the
Southwestern Power Administration
and the Western Area Power
Administration, both power marketing
administrations within DOE, issued
Request for Proposals for New or
Upgraded Transmission Line Projects
Under Section 1222 of the Energy Policy
Act of 2005 (EPAct; 42 United States
Code [U.S.C.] 16421; 75 FR 32940; June
10, 2010). In response to the request for
proposals, Clean Line Energy Partners
LLC of Houston, Texas, the parent
company of Plains and Eastern Clean
Line LLC and Plains and Eastern Clean
Line Oklahoma LLC (collectively
referred to as Clean Line or the
Applicant) submitted a proposal to DOE
in July 2010 for the Plains & Eastern
Clean Line Project. In August 2011,
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15:03 Nov 12, 2015
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Clean Line modified the proposal and
subsequently submitted additional
information (referred to as the Part 2
Application) in January 2015 at DOE’s
request.
DOE is the lead federal agency for the
preparation of the Plains & Eastern EIS,
which examines the potential
environmental impacts from Clean
Line’s proposed Project (also referred to
as the Applicant Proposed Project) and
the range of reasonable alternatives.
DOE has prepared the EIS pursuant to
NEPA (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.), the
Council on Environmental Quality
NEPA regulations (40 Code of Federal
Regulations [CFR] parts 1500 through
1508), and the DOE NEPA
implementing regulations (10 CFR part
1021). DOE’s purpose and need for
agency action is to implement section
1222 of the EPAct. To that end, the
Plains & Eastern EIS will inform DOE as
it decides whether and under what
conditions it would participate in the
Project.
The Applicant Proposed Project
would include an overhead ± 600kilovolt (kV) high voltage direct current
(HVDC) electric transmission system
and associated facilities with the
capacity to deliver approximately 3,500
megawatts (MW) primarily from
renewable energy generation facilities in
the Oklahoma and Texas Panhandle
regions to load-serving entities in the
Mid-South and Southeast United States
via an interconnection with the
Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) in
Tennessee. Major facilities associated
with the Applicant Proposed Project
consist of converter stations in
Oklahoma and Tennessee; an
approximately 720-mile, ± 600kV HVDC
transmission line; an alternating current
(AC) collection system; and access
roads. Pursuant to NEPA, DOE has
identified and analyzed potential
environmental impacts for the range of
reasonable alternatives to the Applicant
Proposed Project. These alternatives
include an Arkansas converter station
and alternative routes for the HVDC
transmission line. The Arkansas
Converter Station alternative would
increase the capacity of the proposed
transmission system and facilities by
500MW (to 4,000MW) to facilitate
delivery of electricity to the grid in
Arkansas.
DOE has prepared this Final EIS in
consultation with the following
cooperating agencies: Bureau of Indian
Affairs (BIA), Natural Resources
Conservation Service (NRCS), TVA, U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers (USACE),
EPA, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service (USFWS).
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70193
BIA, NRCS, TVA, USACE, and
USFWS can, to the extent permitted by
law, rely on the Plains & Eastern EIS to
fulfill their obligations under NEPA for
any action, permit, or approval by these
agencies for the Project. Upgrades to
TVA’s transmission system would be
necessary to interconnect with the
Project while maintaining reliable
service to its customers. Additionally,
TVA would need to construct a new
500kV transmission line to enable the
injection of 3,500MW of power from the
Project. TVA would complete its own
NEPA review, tiering from this EIS, to
assess the impact of the upgrades and
the new 500kV line. The USACE may
consider the routing alternatives in
Oklahoma, Arkansas, Texas, and
Tennessee as presented in the Final EIS
when making its permit decisions and
can use the analysis contained in the
Final EIS to inform all of its permit
decisions for the Project.
DOE is the lead agency for
consultation required under section 106
of the NHPA (54 U.S.C. 300101 et seq.)
for the Project. DOE is using the NEPA
process and documentation required for
the Plains & Eastern EIS to comply with
section 106 of the NHPA in lieu of the
procedures set forth in 36 CFR 800.3
through 800.6. This approach is
consistent with the recommendations
set forth in the NHPA implementing
regulations that section 106 compliance
should be coordinated with actions
taken to meet NEPA requirements (36
CFR 800.8(a)(1)). Appendix P of the
Final EIS includes the draft
Programmatic Agreement developed
pursuant to 36 CFR 800.14(b). This draft
Programmatic Agreement was
developed consistent with DOE’s
obligations under NHPA section 106,
including government-to-government
consultation with Indian Tribes and
Nations on whose tribal lands the
undertaking may occur or that may
attach religious and cultural
significance to historic properties that
may be affected by the undertaking, and
consultation with the Arkansas,
Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Texas State
Historic Preservation Officers. DOE
intends to execute the Programmatic
Agreement prior to issuance of the
Record of Decision or otherwise comply
with procedures set forth in 36 CFR part
800.
DOE and the Applicant have prepared
a Biological Assessment of potential
impacts on special status species
protected under the Endangered Species
Act (ESA) as part of the section 7
consultation between DOE and the
USFWS. The section 7 consultation
review is a parallel, but separate,
process to the NEPA process, conducted
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jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
70194
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 219 / Friday, November 13, 2015 / Notices
pursuant to the requirements of ESA
and the applicable implementing
regulations. The Biological Assessment
and associated addendum are included
as Appendix O to the Final EIS. The
Biological Opinion, to be issued by the
USFWS, may identify additional
protective measures to avoid or
minimize impacts to special status
species.
In the Final EIS, DOE analyzed the
potential environmental impacts of the
Applicant Proposed Project, the range of
reasonable alternatives, and a No Action
Alternative. The potential
environmental impacts resulting from
connected actions (wind energy
generation and substation and
transmission upgrades related to the
Project) were also analyzed in the Final
EIS. The Final EIS considers comments
submitted on the Draft EIS, including
those submitted during the public
comment period that began on
December 19, 2014, and ended on April
20, 2015. Late comments have been
considered to the extent practicable.
During the comment period, DOE held
15 public hearings in Oklahoma, Texas,
Arkansas, and Tennessee.
Approximately 950 comment
documents were received from
individuals, interested groups, tribal
governments, and federal, state, and
local agencies during the public
comment period on the Draft EIS. This
total includes a single copy of
documents that were received as part of
50 email and letter campaigns (i.e.,
identical letters signed and submitted
by more than one commenter). The total
number of campaign documents was
approximately 1,700 emails or letters. In
addition to numerous comments that
provided a statement of general
opposition or support, the primary
topics raised include, but are not
limited to concern about electric and
magnetic fields from the transmission
line; concern about reductions in
property value; concern about impacts
to agricultural resources such as crop
production, irrigation, and aerial
spraying; concern about the use of
eminent domain; and concern about
visual impacts from the transmission
line.
As indicated above, DOE’s purpose
and need for agency action is to
implement section 1222 of the EPAct.
While developing the Final EIS, DOE
considered the alternatives analyzed in
the Draft EIS, the comparison of
potential impacts for each resource area,
and input received on the Draft EIS.
Based on the information presented in
the Final EIS, DOE has identified
participation in the Project as its
preferred alternative in the Final EIS.
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15:03 Nov 12, 2015
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The Project would include the
Oklahoma converter station and AC
interconnection, the AC collection
system, the Applicant Proposed Route
for the majority of the HVDC
transmission line (with the exception of
route variation Region 4, Applicant
Proposed Route Link 3, Variation 2),
and the Arkansas converter station and
AC interconnection.
Consistent with section 1222 of the
EPAct, DOE’s participation would be
limited to states in which Southwestern
operates, namely, Oklahoma, Arkansas,
and, possibly, Texas, but not Tennessee.
Consequently, DOE would not
participate in the portions of the Project
that would be sited in Tennessee.
Other Regulations
Parallel with the NEPA process, DOE
is evaluating Clean Line’s application
under section 1222 of the EPAct. This
non-NEPA evaluation includes, but is
not limited to, reviewing the application
against statutory criteria and other
factors listed in the 2010 request for
proposals (75 FR 32940). An outcome of
this evaluation could be a Participation
Agreement between Clean Line and
DOE, which would define under what
conditions DOE would participate with
Clean Line and, if applicable, would
include any stipulations or
requirements that resulted from this
environmental review under NEPA. The
DOE Office of Electricity Delivery and
Energy Reliability Web site (https://
www.energy.gov/oe/services/electricitypolicy-coordination-andimplementation/transmission-planning/
section-1222-0) provides more
information about the section 1222
evaluation.
Public Reading Rooms
Copies of the Final EIS and
supporting documents are available for
inspection at the following locations:
Oklahoma
• Guymon Public Library—1718 N.
Oklahoma St., Guymon, OK 73942
• Beaver County Pioneer Library—
201 Douglas Ave., Beaver, OK
73932
• Woodward Public Library—1500 W.
Main St., Woodward, OK 73801
• Muskogee Public Library—801 W.
Okmulgee Ave., Muskogee, OK
74401
• Enid & Garfield County Public
Library—120 W. Maine St., Enid,
OK 73701
• Buffalo Public Library—11 E.
Turner St., Buffalo, OK 73834
• Fairview City Library—115 S. 6th
St., Fairview, OK 73737
• Guthrie Public Library—201 N.
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Division St., Guthrie, OK 73044
• Stillwater Public Library—1107 S.
Duck St., Stillwater, OK 74074
• Chandler Public Library—1021
Manvel Ave., Chandler, OK 74834
• Montfort and Allie B. Jones
Memorial Library—111 W. 7th
Ave., Bristow, OK 74010
• Bartlett-Carnegie Sapulpa Public
Library—27 W. Dewey Ave.,
Sapulpa, OK 74066
• Cushing Public Library—215 North
Steele Ave., Cushing, OK 74023
• Okmulgee Public Library—218 S.
Okmulgee Ave., Okmulgee, OK
74447
• Stanley Tubbs Memorial Library—
101 E. Cherokee Ave., Sallisaw, OK
74955
Arkansas
• Van Buren Public Library—1409
Main St., Van Buren, AR 72956
• Pope County Library—116 E. 3rd
St., Russellville, AR 72801
• Jackson County/W.A. Billingsley
Memorial Library—213 Walnut St.,
Newport, AR 72112
• Searcy Public Library—113 E.
Pleasure Ave., Searcy, AR 72143
• Marked Tree Public Library—102
Locust St., Marked Tree, AR 72365
• Franklin County Library—407 W.
Market St., Ozark, AR 72949
• Johnson County Library—2 Taylor
Cir., Clarksville, AR 72830
• Conway County Library—101 W.
Church St., Morrilton, AR 72110
• Conway Public Library—1900 W.
Tyler St., Conway, AR 72034
• Mary I. Wold Cleburne County
Library—1009 W. Main St., Heber
Springs, AR 72543
• Poinsett County Library—200 N.
East St., Harrisburg, AR 72432
• Blytheville Public Library—200 N.
5th St., Blytheville, AR 72315
• Osceola Public Library—320 W.
Hale Ave., Osceola, AR 72370
• Cross County Library—410 E.
Merriman Ave., Wynne, AR 72396
Tennessee
• Munford Memorial Library—1476
Munford Ave., Munford, TN 38058
Texas
• Hansford County Library—122
Main St., Spearman, TX 79081
Issued in Washington, DC, on November 2,
2015.
Patricia A. Hoffman,
Assistant Secretary, Office of Electricity
Delivery and Energy Reliability.
[FR Doc. 2015–28574 Filed 11–12–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 219 (Friday, November 13, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 70192-70194]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-28574]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Notice of Availability of the Plains & Eastern Clean Line
Transmission Project Final Environmental Impact Statement
AGENCY: Department of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announces the availability
of the Plains & Eastern Clean Line Transmission Project Final
Environmental Impact Statement (DOE/EIS-0486; Final EIS), prepared
pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). This Final
EIS considered public comments on the Draft EIS, which was issued in
December 2014, reports on the status of consultations under section 106
of the National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA) and under section 7 of
the Endangered Species Act (ESA), and identifies DOE's preferred
alternative. DOE has not made a decision whether to participate in the
proposed Plains & Eastern Clean Line Transmission Project.
DATES: DOE will publish a Record of Decision no sooner than 30 days
after publication of the U.S. Environmental
[[Page 70193]]
Protection Agency's (EPA) Notice of Availability in the Federal
Register.
ADDRESSES: The Final EIS is available on the DOE NEPA Web site at
https://energy.gov/nepa and on the Plains & Eastern EIS Web site at
https://www.plainsandeasterneis.com/. Copies of the Final EIS also are
available in the public reading rooms listed in SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION.
A printed summary and CD of the complete Final EIS or a complete
printed copy of the Final EIS (approximately 5,500 pages) may be
requested by sending an email to info@PlainsandEasternEIS.com.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For information on the Plains &
Eastern EIS or the Section 106 process, contact Jane Summerson, Ph.D.,
DOE NEPA Document Manager on behalf of the Office of Electricity
Delivery and Energy Reliability, U.S. Department of Energy, DOE NNSA,
Post Office Box 5400 Building 391, Kirtland Air Force Base East,
Albuquerque, NM 87185; email at Jane.Summerson01@nnsa.doe.gov; or
telephone at (505) 845-4091.
For general information regarding the DOE NEPA process, contact
Carol Borgstrom, Director, Office of NEPA Policy and Compliance (GC-
54), U.S. Department of Energy, 1000 Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20585; or phone at (202) 586-4600; voicemail at (800)
472-2756; or email at askNEPA@hq.doe.gov. Additional information
regarding DOE's NEPA activities is available on the DOE NEPA Web site
at https://energy.gov/nepa.
Additional information on the Final EIS is also available through
the EIS Web site at https://www.plainsandeasternEIS.com/.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
In June 2010, DOE, acting through the Southwestern Power
Administration and the Western Area Power Administration, both power
marketing administrations within DOE, issued Request for Proposals for
New or Upgraded Transmission Line Projects Under Section 1222 of the
Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPAct; 42 United States Code [U.S.C.] 16421;
75 FR 32940; June 10, 2010). In response to the request for proposals,
Clean Line Energy Partners LLC of Houston, Texas, the parent company of
Plains and Eastern Clean Line LLC and Plains and Eastern Clean Line
Oklahoma LLC (collectively referred to as Clean Line or the Applicant)
submitted a proposal to DOE in July 2010 for the Plains & Eastern Clean
Line Project. In August 2011, Clean Line modified the proposal and
subsequently submitted additional information (referred to as the Part
2 Application) in January 2015 at DOE's request.
DOE is the lead federal agency for the preparation of the Plains &
Eastern EIS, which examines the potential environmental impacts from
Clean Line's proposed Project (also referred to as the Applicant
Proposed Project) and the range of reasonable alternatives. DOE has
prepared the EIS pursuant to NEPA (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.), the Council
on Environmental Quality NEPA regulations (40 Code of Federal
Regulations [CFR] parts 1500 through 1508), and the DOE NEPA
implementing regulations (10 CFR part 1021). DOE's purpose and need for
agency action is to implement section 1222 of the EPAct. To that end,
the Plains & Eastern EIS will inform DOE as it decides whether and
under what conditions it would participate in the Project.
The Applicant Proposed Project would include an overhead 600-kilovolt (kV) high voltage direct current (HVDC) electric
transmission system and associated facilities with the capacity to
deliver approximately 3,500 megawatts (MW) primarily from renewable
energy generation facilities in the Oklahoma and Texas Panhandle
regions to load-serving entities in the Mid-South and Southeast United
States via an interconnection with the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)
in Tennessee. Major facilities associated with the Applicant Proposed
Project consist of converter stations in Oklahoma and Tennessee; an
approximately 720-mile, 600kV HVDC transmission line; an
alternating current (AC) collection system; and access roads. Pursuant
to NEPA, DOE has identified and analyzed potential environmental
impacts for the range of reasonable alternatives to the Applicant
Proposed Project. These alternatives include an Arkansas converter
station and alternative routes for the HVDC transmission line. The
Arkansas Converter Station alternative would increase the capacity of
the proposed transmission system and facilities by 500MW (to 4,000MW)
to facilitate delivery of electricity to the grid in Arkansas.
DOE has prepared this Final EIS in consultation with the following
cooperating agencies: Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), Natural Resources
Conservation Service (NRCS), TVA, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE),
EPA, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS).
BIA, NRCS, TVA, USACE, and USFWS can, to the extent permitted by
law, rely on the Plains & Eastern EIS to fulfill their obligations
under NEPA for any action, permit, or approval by these agencies for
the Project. Upgrades to TVA's transmission system would be necessary
to interconnect with the Project while maintaining reliable service to
its customers. Additionally, TVA would need to construct a new 500kV
transmission line to enable the injection of 3,500MW of power from the
Project. TVA would complete its own NEPA review, tiering from this EIS,
to assess the impact of the upgrades and the new 500kV line. The USACE
may consider the routing alternatives in Oklahoma, Arkansas, Texas, and
Tennessee as presented in the Final EIS when making its permit
decisions and can use the analysis contained in the Final EIS to inform
all of its permit decisions for the Project.
DOE is the lead agency for consultation required under section 106
of the NHPA (54 U.S.C. 300101 et seq.) for the Project. DOE is using
the NEPA process and documentation required for the Plains & Eastern
EIS to comply with section 106 of the NHPA in lieu of the procedures
set forth in 36 CFR 800.3 through 800.6. This approach is consistent
with the recommendations set forth in the NHPA implementing regulations
that section 106 compliance should be coordinated with actions taken to
meet NEPA requirements (36 CFR 800.8(a)(1)). Appendix P of the Final
EIS includes the draft Programmatic Agreement developed pursuant to 36
CFR 800.14(b). This draft Programmatic Agreement was developed
consistent with DOE's obligations under NHPA section 106, including
government-to-government consultation with Indian Tribes and Nations on
whose tribal lands the undertaking may occur or that may attach
religious and cultural significance to historic properties that may be
affected by the undertaking, and consultation with the Arkansas,
Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Texas State Historic Preservation Officers.
DOE intends to execute the Programmatic Agreement prior to issuance of
the Record of Decision or otherwise comply with procedures set forth in
36 CFR part 800.
DOE and the Applicant have prepared a Biological Assessment of
potential impacts on special status species protected under the
Endangered Species Act (ESA) as part of the section 7 consultation
between DOE and the USFWS. The section 7 consultation review is a
parallel, but separate, process to the NEPA process, conducted
[[Page 70194]]
pursuant to the requirements of ESA and the applicable implementing
regulations. The Biological Assessment and associated addendum are
included as Appendix O to the Final EIS. The Biological Opinion, to be
issued by the USFWS, may identify additional protective measures to
avoid or minimize impacts to special status species.
In the Final EIS, DOE analyzed the potential environmental impacts
of the Applicant Proposed Project, the range of reasonable
alternatives, and a No Action Alternative. The potential environmental
impacts resulting from connected actions (wind energy generation and
substation and transmission upgrades related to the Project) were also
analyzed in the Final EIS. The Final EIS considers comments submitted
on the Draft EIS, including those submitted during the public comment
period that began on December 19, 2014, and ended on April 20, 2015.
Late comments have been considered to the extent practicable. During
the comment period, DOE held 15 public hearings in Oklahoma, Texas,
Arkansas, and Tennessee. Approximately 950 comment documents were
received from individuals, interested groups, tribal governments, and
federal, state, and local agencies during the public comment period on
the Draft EIS. This total includes a single copy of documents that were
received as part of 50 email and letter campaigns (i.e., identical
letters signed and submitted by more than one commenter). The total
number of campaign documents was approximately 1,700 emails or letters.
In addition to numerous comments that provided a statement of general
opposition or support, the primary topics raised include, but are not
limited to concern about electric and magnetic fields from the
transmission line; concern about reductions in property value; concern
about impacts to agricultural resources such as crop production,
irrigation, and aerial spraying; concern about the use of eminent
domain; and concern about visual impacts from the transmission line.
As indicated above, DOE's purpose and need for agency action is to
implement section 1222 of the EPAct. While developing the Final EIS,
DOE considered the alternatives analyzed in the Draft EIS, the
comparison of potential impacts for each resource area, and input
received on the Draft EIS. Based on the information presented in the
Final EIS, DOE has identified participation in the Project as its
preferred alternative in the Final EIS. The Project would include the
Oklahoma converter station and AC interconnection, the AC collection
system, the Applicant Proposed Route for the majority of the HVDC
transmission line (with the exception of route variation Region 4,
Applicant Proposed Route Link 3, Variation 2), and the Arkansas
converter station and AC interconnection.
Consistent with section 1222 of the EPAct, DOE's participation
would be limited to states in which Southwestern operates, namely,
Oklahoma, Arkansas, and, possibly, Texas, but not Tennessee.
Consequently, DOE would not participate in the portions of the Project
that would be sited in Tennessee.
Other Regulations
Parallel with the NEPA process, DOE is evaluating Clean Line's
application under section 1222 of the EPAct. This non-NEPA evaluation
includes, but is not limited to, reviewing the application against
statutory criteria and other factors listed in the 2010 request for
proposals (75 FR 32940). An outcome of this evaluation could be a
Participation Agreement between Clean Line and DOE, which would define
under what conditions DOE would participate with Clean Line and, if
applicable, would include any stipulations or requirements that
resulted from this environmental review under NEPA. The DOE Office of
Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability Web site (https://www.energy.gov/oe/services/electricity-policy-coordination-and-implementation/transmission-planning/section-1222-0) provides more
information about the section 1222 evaluation.
Public Reading Rooms
Copies of the Final EIS and supporting documents are available for
inspection at the following locations:
Oklahoma
Guymon Public Library--1718 N. Oklahoma St., Guymon, OK
73942
Beaver County Pioneer Library--201 Douglas Ave., Beaver,
OK 73932
Woodward Public Library--1500 W. Main St., Woodward, OK
73801
Muskogee Public Library--801 W. Okmulgee Ave., Muskogee,
OK 74401
Enid & Garfield County Public Library--120 W. Maine St.,
Enid, OK 73701
Buffalo Public Library--11 E. Turner St., Buffalo, OK
73834
Fairview City Library--115 S. 6th St., Fairview, OK 73737
Guthrie Public Library--201 N. Division St., Guthrie, OK
73044
Stillwater Public Library--1107 S. Duck St., Stillwater,
OK 74074
Chandler Public Library--1021 Manvel Ave., Chandler, OK
74834
Montfort and Allie B. Jones Memorial Library--111 W. 7th
Ave., Bristow, OK 74010
Bartlett-Carnegie Sapulpa Public Library--27 W. Dewey
Ave., Sapulpa, OK 74066
Cushing Public Library--215 North Steele Ave., Cushing, OK
74023
Okmulgee Public Library--218 S. Okmulgee Ave., Okmulgee,
OK 74447
Stanley Tubbs Memorial Library--101 E. Cherokee Ave.,
Sallisaw, OK 74955
Arkansas
Van Buren Public Library--1409 Main St., Van Buren, AR
72956
Pope County Library--116 E. 3rd St., Russellville, AR
72801
Jackson County/W.A. Billingsley Memorial Library--213
Walnut St., Newport, AR 72112
Searcy Public Library--113 E. Pleasure Ave., Searcy, AR
72143
Marked Tree Public Library--102 Locust St., Marked Tree,
AR 72365
Franklin County Library--407 W. Market St., Ozark, AR
72949
Johnson County Library--2 Taylor Cir., Clarksville, AR
72830
Conway County Library--101 W. Church St., Morrilton, AR
72110
Conway Public Library--1900 W. Tyler St., Conway, AR 72034
Mary I. Wold Cleburne County Library--1009 W. Main St.,
Heber Springs, AR 72543
Poinsett County Library--200 N. East St., Harrisburg, AR
72432
Blytheville Public Library--200 N. 5th St., Blytheville,
AR 72315
Osceola Public Library--320 W. Hale Ave., Osceola, AR
72370
Cross County Library--410 E. Merriman Ave., Wynne, AR
72396
Tennessee
Munford Memorial Library--1476 Munford Ave., Munford, TN
38058
Texas
Hansford County Library--122 Main St., Spearman, TX 79081
Issued in Washington, DC, on November 2, 2015.
Patricia A. Hoffman,
Assistant Secretary, Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy
Reliability.
[FR Doc. 2015-28574 Filed 11-12-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P