Request for Public Engagement in the Interagency Special Report `2nd State of the Carbon Cycle Report (SOCCR-2)', 7497-7499 [2016-02927]
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Notices
Federal Register
Vol. 81, No. 29
Friday, February 12, 2016
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains documents other than rules or
proposed rules that are applicable to the
public. Notices of hearings and investigations,
committee meetings, agency decisions and
rulings, delegations of authority, filing of
petitions and applications and agency
statements of organization and functions are
examples of documents appearing in this
section.
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
National Institute of Food and
Agriculture
Request for Public Engagement in the
Interagency Special Report ‘2nd State
of the Carbon Cycle Report (SOCCR–
2)’
National Institute of Food and
Agriculture (NIFA) on behalf of the
United States Global Change Research
Program (USGCRP), Department of
Agriculture.
ACTION: Request for Public Comments on
a Draft Report. Prospectus, Technical
Input, and Nominations for Technical
Contributors.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Carbon Cycle
Science Program and the Carbon Cycle
Interagency Working Group (CCIWG),
under the auspices of the U.S. Global
Change Research Program (USGCRP),
are initiating an Interagency Special
Report entitled the 2nd State of the
Carbon Cycle Report (referred to as
‘‘SOCCR–2’’ or ‘‘the Report’’ throughout
this notice). The United States
Department of Agriculture (USDA) has
agreed to be lead agency for this report
as it is relevant to USDA and USDA has
experience in producing a similar
highly successful report of Climate
Change and Food Security. The focus of
SOCCR–2 will be on U.S. and North
American carbon cycle processes,
stocks, and flows in the context of and
interactions with global scale budgets
and climate change impacts in managed
and unmanaged systems. Carbon stocks
and fluxes in soils, water (including
oceans), vegetation, aquatic-terrestrial
interfaces (e.g., coastal, estuaries,
wetlands), human settlements,
agriculture and forestry are included.
The Report will consider relevant
carbon management science
perspectives and science-based tools for
supporting and informing decisions, as
addressed in and related to the U.S.
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SUMMARY:
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Carbon Cycle Science Plan (2011), and
other documents such as the USGCRP
Strategic Plan (2012) and the White
House Climate Action Plan (2013). The
status of, and emerging opportunities
for, improving measurements,
observations and projections of stocks
and fluxes in the carbon cycle,
including uncertainty identification,
will be part of the Report. SOCCR–2 will
be a product of the USGCRP, organized
and led by the Agency members of the
CCIWG. This request for public
engagement presents opportunities to
(1) submit comments on the Draft
Report Prospectus, (2) submit scientific/
technical information to inform the
assessment, and (3) nominate technical
contributors.
DATES: Written comments on the Draft
Prospectus, technical information, and
nominations for technical contributors
must be received by 5:00 p.m., ET on
March 14, 2016.
ADDRESSES: Comments on the Draft
Prospectus, technical information, and
nominations for technical contributors
must be submitted electronically via
https://www.globalchange.gov/notices.
Instructions: Response to this notice
is voluntary. Respondents need not
reply to all components. Responses to
this notice may be used by the
government for program planning on a
non-attribution basis. NIFA therefore
requests that no business proprietary
information or copyrighted information
be submitted in response to this notice.
Please note that the U.S. Government
will not pay for response preparation, or
for the use of any information contained
in the response.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
USGCRP Contact: Dr. Gyami Shrestha;
telephone 202–223–6262; or email:
CarbonReport@usgcrp.gov.
NIFA Contact: Dr. Nancy Cavallaro;
telephone 202–401–5176; or email:
ncavallaro@nifa.usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Request for Comments on the Draft
Prospectus
A. How To Submit Comments on the
Draft Prospectus
The Draft Prospectus describes the
proposed plans for scoping, drafting,
reviewing, producing, and
disseminating SOCCR–2. Comments are
specifically sought on the Draft Report
outline (including the draft table of
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contents), proposed topics, and process
as outlined in the Draft Prospectus. The
Draft Prospectus and instructions to
submit comments can be found at
https://www.globalchange.gov/notices.
Section I(B) below provides a brief
summary of the prospectus.
B. Summary of the Draft Prospectus for
the Interagency Special Report ‘2nd
State of the Carbon Cycle Report
(SOCCR–2)’
1. Overview
The SOCCR–2 report is a synthesis
and assessment focusing on U.S. and
North American carbon cycle processes,
stocks, and flows in the context of and
interactions with global scale budgets
and climate change impacts in managed
and unmanaged systems.
2. Proposed Focus Areas and Table of
Contents
Current status and near-term
projections for each topic will be
included. If and where possible,
modeling and multi-model syntheses of
the carbon cycle will be included. As
appropriate, each chapter will address
cross-cutting themes such as: Land use
change, fluxes, feedbacks, historical
context, indicators and trends, societal
impacts, North American and global
scales (based on the 2014 National
Climate Assessment regions), carbon
management, impacts of decisions, and
research needs. The expanded draft
table of contents can be found on
https://www.globalchange.gov/notices.
Preface—The Preface will explain the
importance of the carbon cycle to
climate, the scope and rationale for
SOCCR–2, and key developments since
SOCCR–1.
Chapter 1: Global carbon cycle
overview—Chapter 1 will contain an
overview of major elements of the
coupled global carbon cycle (i.e., carbon
dioxide and methane) as well as discuss
key interactions with climate forcing
and feedback components from a global
perspective.
Chapter 2: Carbon cycle at scales—
Chapter 2 will provide an assessment of
the North American carbon cycle
(scaled down from the global system in
chapter 1), including updated regional,
and local perspectives on key carbon
stocks and flows.
Chapter 3: Carbon in natural and
anthropogenic systems—major stocks,
flows, uncertainties, broader social
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 29 / Friday, February 12, 2016 / Notices
drivers, carbon decisions—Chapter 3
will provide an assessment of key
carbon stocks (e.g., soils, aquatic
systems, vegetation, urban, livestock,
oceans, etc.) and the flows within and
between these pools, including key
uncertainties and social drivers.
Example Focus Areas that may be
incorporated in the above include urban
carbon, Arctic carbon, livestock and
wildlife.
Chapter 4: Interactions/disturbance:
Impacts to the carbon cycle—Chapter 4
will focus on the role of disturbances,
such as fire, ocean acidification,
pathogens, land use change, etc. on the
carbon cycle.
Chapter 5: Carbon cycle information,
management practices, tools and needs
at various scales—Chapter 5 will assess
the role of recent carbon management
practices and highlight the current state
of carbon data management, monitoring
systems, tools, and carbon relevant
modeling scenarios.
Chapter 6: Synthesis, conclusions,
gaps in knowledge, and (near) future
outlook—Chapter 6 will provide an
overarching synthesis of the current
state of the carbon cycle while
identifying key knowledge gaps/
opportunities and a near-term outlook
on the North American Carbon cycle.
C. Process
1. Audience and Communications
The audience includes scientists,
decision-makers in the public and
private sectors and the general
interested community across the U.S.,
extending to North American and global
regions. The report may ultimately be
used to inform policies but will not
prescribe or recommend them.
asabaliauskas on DSK9F6TC42PROD with NOTICES2
2. Technical Contributors and Required
Expertise
The SOCCR–2 Report will be a federal
interagency report. Technical
contributors may be federal employees,
academic scientists, private and
nonprofit sector representatives, and
others as appropriate and in alignment
with federal requirements. The
technical contributors will be selected
based on their scientific expertise;
demonstrated accomplishments;
academic interests and knowledge in
the thematic areas specified in the draft
outline; time availability; and technical
capability to work in this type of broad
interdisciplinary and cross-cutting
scientific assessment setting. The main
roles and responsibilities of the
technical contributors may include
compiling the necessary background
literature; synthesizing, analyzing and
interpreting the existing science; and
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contributing intellectual and technical
input. The process for nominating
technical contributors is provided in
Section III below.
3. Agency Roles
A Federal Steering Committee of the
USGCRP’s SOCCR–2 has been
established to provide guidance and
coordination to the report authors and
staff. The Committee members represent
CCIWG member departments and
agencies including National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA), National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (NASA),
Department of Energy (DOE), United
States Department of Agriculture
(USDA), U.S. Geological Survey (USGS)
and Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA).
4. Information Quality and Peer Review
The USGCRP’s 2nd State of the
Carbon Cycle Report will use referenced
materials derived primarily from the
existing, peer-reviewed scientific
literature and consistent with guidance
regarding the use of other literature.
This report will follow the USDA
Information Quality Guidelines and
administrative processes (https://
nifa.usda.gov/resource/usdainformation-quality) including the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) federal information quality,
transparency, and accessibility
guidelines appropriate for a Highly
Influential Scientific Assessment (HISA)
(https://www.cio.noaa.gov/services_
programs/pdfs/OMB_Peer_Review_
Bulletin_m05-03.pdf). The report will
undergo peer review by the National
Academy of Sciences, public review,
and final interagency clearance.
5. Process for Public Engagement
The written comments on the Draft
Prospectus, technical information, and
nominations for technical contributors
called for in this notice are the first
opportunities for public participation in
the SOCCR–2 report process. Federal
Steering committee will provide several
opportunities for public engagement
with the scientific community
throughout the report scoping, planning
and writing process via special
presentations, sessions, town hall
meetings and side-events at national
and international scientific conferences.
A public review period for the Draft
SOCCR–2 will also be announced via a
Federal Register notice, after its
completion. Updates will be provided
on https://www.carboncyclescience.us/
as available.
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6. Proposed Timing
SOCCR–2, with a likely release in
2017, is designed to inform the next
quadrennial National Climate
Assessment (due in 2018).
II. Call for Relevant Scientific
Information To Inform the Special
Report
Interested parties are invited to assist
in contributing, collecting and refining
the scientific information base for this
special report. To do so, parties are
asked to submit recent, relevant
scientific and/or technical research
studies including observed, modeled
and/or projected carbon cycle science
information that have been peer
reviewed and published or accepted for
publication in scientific journals and/or
government reports. All scientific
literature submitted in response to this
call for information must be received by
5:00 p.m., ET on March 14, 2016.
Submissions must be uploaded
electronically via the link provided on
https://www.globalchange.gov/notices.
III. Call for Nominations for Technical
Contributors
This notice seeks nominations for
technical contributors to SOCCR–2 with
pertinent subject matter expertise and
scientific background. Potential
technical contributors should be
accomplished scholarly writers and
have demonstrated scientific and
technical expertise and academic
proficiency in at least one of the carbon
cycle science topics outlined in the
prospectus (available via
www.globalchange.gov/notices),
including the human dimensions of
carbon cycle sciences. Submissions
must demonstrate that nominees have
demonstrated technical backgrounds,
such that they could contribute to the
development of a robust scientific,
technical assessment as subject matter
experts in one or more of the topics
listed under Section 2 above and in the
Draft Prospectus.
Responses to this request must be
received by 5:00 p.m., ET on March 14,
2016. Please follow instructions on
www.globalchange.gov/notices.
Interested persons may nominate
themselves or third parties, and may
nominate more than one person. Each
nomination must include: (1) The
nominee’s full name, title, institutional
affiliation, and contact information; (2)
the nominee’s area(s) of expertise; (3) a
short description of his/her
qualifications relative to contributing to
SOCCR–2; and (4) a current resume
(maximum length four [4] pages).
Nominations will be reviewed, and
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 29 / Friday, February 12, 2016 / Notices
nominees may be invited to participate
as technical contributors to SOCCR–2.
Done at Washington, DC, this 8th day of
February, 2016.
Sonny Ramaswamy,
Director, National Institute of Food and
Agriculture.
Rural Utilities Service
[FR Doc. 2016–02927 Filed 2–11–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Rural Utility Service
Submission for OMB Review;
Comment Request
asabaliauskas on DSK9F6TC42PROD with NOTICES2
February 9, 2016.
The Department of Agriculture has
submitted the following information
collection requirement(s) to Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for
review and clearance under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995,
Public Law 104–13. Comments are
requested regarding (1) whether the
collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of the agency, including
whether the information will have
practical utility; (2) the accuracy of the
agency’s estimate of burden including
the validity of the methodology and
assumptions used; (3) ways to enhance
the quality, utility and clarity of the
information to be collected; (4) ways to
minimize the burden of the collection of
information on those who are to
respond, including through the use of
appropriate automated, electronic,
mechanical, or other technological
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology.
Comments regarding this information
collection received by March 14, 2016
will be considered. Written comments
should be addressed to: Desk Officer for
Agriculture, Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs, Office of
Management and Budget (OMB), New
Executive Office Building, 725 17th
Street NW., Washington, DC 20502.
Commenters are encouraged to submit
their comments to OMB via email to:
OIRA_Submission@OMB.EOP.GOV or
fax (202) 395–5806 and to Departmental
Clearance Office, USDA, OCIO, Mail
Stop 7602, Washington, DC 20250–
7602. Copies of the submission(s) may
be obtained by calling (202) 720–8958.
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor a collection of information
unless the collection of information
displays a currently valid OMB control
number and the agency informs
potential persons who are to respond to
the collection of information that such
persons are not required to respond to
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the collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid OMB control
number.
Title: 7 CFR 1744–C, Advance and
Disbursement of Funds—
Telecommunications.
OMB Control Number: 0572–0023.
Summary of Collection: Section 201 of
the Rural Electrification Act (RE Act) of
1936 authorizes the Administrator of the
Rural Utilities Service (RUS) to make
loans for the purpose of providing
telephone service to the widest
practicable number of rural subscribers.
A borrower requesting loan advances
must submit RUS Form 481, ‘‘Financial
Requirement Statement’’. Along with
the Form 481 the borrower must also
submit a description of the advances
and upon request copies of backup
documentation relating to the
transactions. Within a reasonable
amount of time, funds are advanced to
the borrower for the purposes specified
in the statement of purposes. The
borrower must immediately deposit all
advanced money into a Special
Construction account until disbursed.
Need and Use of the Information: The
information collected is used by RUS to
record and control transactions and
verify that the funds advanced in the
construction fund are related directly to
loan purposes. If the information were
not collected, RUS would not have any
control over how loan funds are spent
or a record of the balance to be
advanced.
Description of Respondents: Business
or other for-profit.
Number of Respondents: 177.
Frequency of Responses: Reporting:
On occasion.
Total Burden Hours: 1,223.
Charlene Parker,
Departmental Information Collection
Clearance Officer.
[FR Doc. 2016–02949 Filed 2–11–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–15–P
COMMISSION ON CIVIL RIGHTS
Sunshine Act Meeting Notice
United States Commission on
Civil Rights.
ACTION: Notice of Commission Briefing
and Business Meeting.
AGENCY:
Friday, February 19, 2016, at 9
a.m. EST.
ADDRESSES: Place: National Place
Building, 1331 Pennsylvania Ave. NW.,
11th Floor, Suite 1150, Washington, DC
20245 (Entrance on F Street NW.).
DATES:
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7499
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Gerson Gomez, Media Advisor at
telephone: (202) 376–8371, TTY: (202)
376–8116 or email: publicaffairs@
usccr.gov.
This
business meeting is open to the public.
If you would like to listen to the briefing
or business meeting, please contact the
above for the call-in information.
Hearing-impaired persons who will
attend the briefing and require the
services of a sign language interpreter
should contact Pamela Dunston at (202)
376–8105 or at signlanguage@usccr.gov
at least seven business days before the
scheduled date of the meeting. During
the briefing portion, Commissioners will
ask questions and discuss the briefing
topic with the panelists. The public may
submit written comments on the topic
of the briefing to the above address for
30 days after the briefing. Please direct
your comments to the attention of the
‘‘Staff Director’’ and clearly mark
‘‘Briefing Comments Inside’’ on the
outside of the envelope. Please note we
are unable to return any comments or
submitted materials.
Comments may also be submitted by
email to qccomments@usccr.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Meeting Agenda
I. Approval of Agenda
II. Quiet Crisis Briefing Federal Funding
and the Unmet Physical and Legal
Infrastructure Needs of Indian
Country
A. Opening Remarks: 9:00 a.m.–9:10
a.m.
B. Panel 1: Native American
Advocacy Groups: 9:10 a.m.–10:30
a.m.
Speakers’ Remarks
• Jacqueline Pata, National Congress
of the American Indian
• Ahniwake Rose, National Indian
Education Association
• Stacey Bohlen, National Indian
Health Board
• Dante Desiderio, Native American
Finance Officers Association
• Sarah Deer, William Mitchell
College of Law
Questions from Commissioners
C. Panel 2: Federal Government
Officials: 10:35 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
Speakers’ Remarks
• William Mendoza, White House
Initiative on American Indian and
Alaska Native Education
• Tracy Toulou, U.S. Department of
Justice, Office of Tribal Justice
• Robert McSwain, Indian Health
Service
• Randy Akers, U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development,
Office of Native Programs
E:\FR\FM\12FEN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 29 (Friday, February 12, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 7497-7499]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-02927]
========================================================================
Notices
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains documents other than rules
or proposed rules that are applicable to the public. Notices of hearings
and investigations, committee meetings, agency decisions and rulings,
delegations of authority, filing of petitions and applications and agency
statements of organization and functions are examples of documents
appearing in this section.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 29 / Friday, February 12, 2016 /
Notices
[[Page 7497]]
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
National Institute of Food and Agriculture
Request for Public Engagement in the Interagency Special Report
`2nd State of the Carbon Cycle Report (SOCCR-2)'
AGENCY: National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) on behalf of
the United States Global Change Research Program (USGCRP), Department
of Agriculture.
ACTION: Request for Public Comments on a Draft Report. Prospectus,
Technical Input, and Nominations for Technical Contributors.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Carbon Cycle Science Program and the Carbon Cycle
Interagency Working Group (CCIWG), under the auspices of the U.S.
Global Change Research Program (USGCRP), are initiating an Interagency
Special Report entitled the 2nd State of the Carbon Cycle Report
(referred to as ``SOCCR-2'' or ``the Report'' throughout this notice).
The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) has agreed to be
lead agency for this report as it is relevant to USDA and USDA has
experience in producing a similar highly successful report of Climate
Change and Food Security. The focus of SOCCR-2 will be on U.S. and
North American carbon cycle processes, stocks, and flows in the context
of and interactions with global scale budgets and climate change
impacts in managed and unmanaged systems. Carbon stocks and fluxes in
soils, water (including oceans), vegetation, aquatic-terrestrial
interfaces (e.g., coastal, estuaries, wetlands), human settlements,
agriculture and forestry are included. The Report will consider
relevant carbon management science perspectives and science-based tools
for supporting and informing decisions, as addressed in and related to
the U.S. Carbon Cycle Science Plan (2011), and other documents such as
the USGCRP Strategic Plan (2012) and the White House Climate Action
Plan (2013). The status of, and emerging opportunities for, improving
measurements, observations and projections of stocks and fluxes in the
carbon cycle, including uncertainty identification, will be part of the
Report. SOCCR-2 will be a product of the USGCRP, organized and led by
the Agency members of the CCIWG. This request for public engagement
presents opportunities to (1) submit comments on the Draft Report
Prospectus, (2) submit scientific/technical information to inform the
assessment, and (3) nominate technical contributors.
DATES: Written comments on the Draft Prospectus, technical information,
and nominations for technical contributors must be received by 5:00
p.m., ET on March 14, 2016.
ADDRESSES: Comments on the Draft Prospectus, technical information, and
nominations for technical contributors must be submitted electronically
via https://www.globalchange.gov/notices.
Instructions: Response to this notice is voluntary. Respondents
need not reply to all components. Responses to this notice may be used
by the government for program planning on a non-attribution basis. NIFA
therefore requests that no business proprietary information or
copyrighted information be submitted in response to this notice. Please
note that the U.S. Government will not pay for response preparation, or
for the use of any information contained in the response.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: USGCRP Contact: Dr. Gyami Shrestha;
telephone 202-223-6262; or email: CarbonReport@usgcrp.gov.
NIFA Contact: Dr. Nancy Cavallaro; telephone 202-401-5176; or
email: ncavallaro@nifa.usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Request for Comments on the Draft Prospectus
A. How To Submit Comments on the Draft Prospectus
The Draft Prospectus describes the proposed plans for scoping,
drafting, reviewing, producing, and disseminating SOCCR-2. Comments are
specifically sought on the Draft Report outline (including the draft
table of contents), proposed topics, and process as outlined in the
Draft Prospectus. The Draft Prospectus and instructions to submit
comments can be found at https://www.globalchange.gov/notices. Section
I(B) below provides a brief summary of the prospectus.
B. Summary of the Draft Prospectus for the Interagency Special Report
`2nd State of the Carbon Cycle Report (SOCCR-2)'
1. Overview
The SOCCR-2 report is a synthesis and assessment focusing on U.S.
and North American carbon cycle processes, stocks, and flows in the
context of and interactions with global scale budgets and climate
change impacts in managed and unmanaged systems.
2. Proposed Focus Areas and Table of Contents
Current status and near-term projections for each topic will be
included. If and where possible, modeling and multi-model syntheses of
the carbon cycle will be included. As appropriate, each chapter will
address cross-cutting themes such as: Land use change, fluxes,
feedbacks, historical context, indicators and trends, societal impacts,
North American and global scales (based on the 2014 National Climate
Assessment regions), carbon management, impacts of decisions, and
research needs. The expanded draft table of contents can be found on
https://www.globalchange.gov/notices.
Preface--The Preface will explain the importance of the carbon
cycle to climate, the scope and rationale for SOCCR-2, and key
developments since SOCCR-1.
Chapter 1: Global carbon cycle overview--Chapter 1 will contain an
overview of major elements of the coupled global carbon cycle (i.e.,
carbon dioxide and methane) as well as discuss key interactions with
climate forcing and feedback components from a global perspective.
Chapter 2: Carbon cycle at scales--Chapter 2 will provide an
assessment of the North American carbon cycle (scaled down from the
global system in chapter 1), including updated regional, and local
perspectives on key carbon stocks and flows.
Chapter 3: Carbon in natural and anthropogenic systems--major
stocks, flows, uncertainties, broader social
[[Page 7498]]
drivers, carbon decisions--Chapter 3 will provide an assessment of key
carbon stocks (e.g., soils, aquatic systems, vegetation, urban,
livestock, oceans, etc.) and the flows within and between these pools,
including key uncertainties and social drivers. Example Focus Areas
that may be incorporated in the above include urban carbon, Arctic
carbon, livestock and wildlife.
Chapter 4: Interactions/disturbance: Impacts to the carbon cycle--
Chapter 4 will focus on the role of disturbances, such as fire, ocean
acidification, pathogens, land use change, etc. on the carbon cycle.
Chapter 5: Carbon cycle information, management practices, tools
and needs at various scales--Chapter 5 will assess the role of recent
carbon management practices and highlight the current state of carbon
data management, monitoring systems, tools, and carbon relevant
modeling scenarios.
Chapter 6: Synthesis, conclusions, gaps in knowledge, and (near)
future outlook--Chapter 6 will provide an overarching synthesis of the
current state of the carbon cycle while identifying key knowledge gaps/
opportunities and a near-term outlook on the North American Carbon
cycle.
C. Process
1. Audience and Communications
The audience includes scientists, decision-makers in the public and
private sectors and the general interested community across the U.S.,
extending to North American and global regions. The report may
ultimately be used to inform policies but will not prescribe or
recommend them.
2. Technical Contributors and Required Expertise
The SOCCR-2 Report will be a federal interagency report. Technical
contributors may be federal employees, academic scientists, private and
nonprofit sector representatives, and others as appropriate and in
alignment with federal requirements. The technical contributors will be
selected based on their scientific expertise; demonstrated
accomplishments; academic interests and knowledge in the thematic areas
specified in the draft outline; time availability; and technical
capability to work in this type of broad interdisciplinary and cross-
cutting scientific assessment setting. The main roles and
responsibilities of the technical contributors may include compiling
the necessary background literature; synthesizing, analyzing and
interpreting the existing science; and contributing intellectual and
technical input. The process for nominating technical contributors is
provided in Section III below.
3. Agency Roles
A Federal Steering Committee of the USGCRP's SOCCR-2 has been
established to provide guidance and coordination to the report authors
and staff. The Committee members represent CCIWG member departments and
agencies including National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA), National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA),
Department of Energy (DOE), United States Department of Agriculture
(USDA), U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
4. Information Quality and Peer Review
The USGCRP's 2nd State of the Carbon Cycle Report will use
referenced materials derived primarily from the existing, peer-reviewed
scientific literature and consistent with guidance regarding the use of
other literature. This report will follow the USDA Information Quality
Guidelines and administrative processes (https://nifa.usda.gov/resource/usda-information-quality) including the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) federal information quality, transparency, and accessibility
guidelines appropriate for a Highly Influential Scientific Assessment
(HISA) (https://www.cio.noaa.gov/services_programs/pdfs/OMB_Peer_Review_Bulletin_m05-03.pdf). The report will undergo peer
review by the National Academy of Sciences, public review, and final
interagency clearance.
5. Process for Public Engagement
The written comments on the Draft Prospectus, technical
information, and nominations for technical contributors called for in
this notice are the first opportunities for public participation in the
SOCCR-2 report process. Federal Steering committee will provide several
opportunities for public engagement with the scientific community
throughout the report scoping, planning and writing process via special
presentations, sessions, town hall meetings and side-events at national
and international scientific conferences. A public review period for
the Draft SOCCR-2 will also be announced via a Federal Register notice,
after its completion. Updates will be provided on https://www.carboncyclescience.us/ as available.
6. Proposed Timing
SOCCR-2, with a likely release in 2017, is designed to inform the
next quadrennial National Climate Assessment (due in 2018).
II. Call for Relevant Scientific Information To Inform the Special
Report
Interested parties are invited to assist in contributing,
collecting and refining the scientific information base for this
special report. To do so, parties are asked to submit recent, relevant
scientific and/or technical research studies including observed,
modeled and/or projected carbon cycle science information that have
been peer reviewed and published or accepted for publication in
scientific journals and/or government reports. All scientific
literature submitted in response to this call for information must be
received by 5:00 p.m., ET on March 14, 2016.
Submissions must be uploaded electronically via the link provided
on https://www.globalchange.gov/notices.
III. Call for Nominations for Technical Contributors
This notice seeks nominations for technical contributors to SOCCR-2
with pertinent subject matter expertise and scientific background.
Potential technical contributors should be accomplished scholarly
writers and have demonstrated scientific and technical expertise and
academic proficiency in at least one of the carbon cycle science topics
outlined in the prospectus (available via www.globalchange.gov/notices), including the human dimensions of carbon cycle sciences.
Submissions must demonstrate that nominees have demonstrated technical
backgrounds, such that they could contribute to the development of a
robust scientific, technical assessment as subject matter experts in
one or more of the topics listed under Section 2 above and in the Draft
Prospectus.
Responses to this request must be received by 5:00 p.m., ET on
March 14, 2016. Please follow instructions on www.globalchange.gov/notices. Interested persons may nominate themselves or third parties,
and may nominate more than one person. Each nomination must include:
(1) The nominee's full name, title, institutional affiliation, and
contact information; (2) the nominee's area(s) of expertise; (3) a
short description of his/her qualifications relative to contributing to
SOCCR-2; and (4) a current resume (maximum length four [4] pages).
Nominations will be reviewed, and
[[Page 7499]]
nominees may be invited to participate as technical contributors to
SOCCR-2.
Done at Washington, DC, this 8th day of February, 2016.
Sonny Ramaswamy,
Director, National Institute of Food and Agriculture.
[FR Doc. 2016-02927 Filed 2-11-16; 8:45 am]
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