Announcement of Requirements and Registration for a Prize Competition Seeking: Detecting the Movement of Soils (Internal Erosion) Within Earthen Dams, Canals, Levees, and their Foundations, 18643-18645 [2016-07275]
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 62 / Thursday, March 31, 2016 / Notices
The information to be collected
includes: Full legal name; correct
mailing address; taxpayer identifying
number; water delivery location; if
subdividing a farm unit—a copy of the
recorded plat or map of the subdivision
where water will be delivered; the time
and date of requested water delivery;
duration of water delivery; amount of
water delivered; rate of water flow;
number of acres irrigated; crop statistics;
any other agreements allowed under 25
CFR part 171; and any additional
information required by the local project
office that provides your service.
Type of Review: Extension without
change of currently approved collection.
Respondents: Water users of BIA
irrigation project—individual and
businesses.
Number of Respondents: 7,500 per
year.
Number of Responses: 34,906 per
year.
Frequency of Response: On occasion
through the irrigation season, averaging
approximately 2 times per year.
Obligation to Respond: The
information water users submit is for
the purpose of obtaining or retaining a
benefit, namely irrigation water.
Estimated Time per Response: A
range of 12 minutes to 16 hours,
depending on the specific service being
requested.
Estimated Total Annual Hour Burden:
17,943 hours.
Estimated Total Annual Non-Hour
Dollar Cost: $0.
Elizabeth K. Appel,
Director, Office of Regulatory Affairs and
Collaborative Action—Indian Affairs.
[FR Doc. 2016–07187 Filed 3–30–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4337–15–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[16X.LLAK930000.L13100000.EI0000.241A]
Bud C. Cribley,
State Director.
Call for Nominations and Comments
for the 2016 National Petroleum
Reserve in Alaska Oil and Gas Lease
Sale
[FR Doc. 2016–07272 Filed 3–30–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–JA–P
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
The Bureau of Land
Management (BLM) Alaska State Office
is issuing a call for nominations and
comments on tracts for the upcoming
2016 National Petroleum Reserve in
Alaska (NPR–A) Oil and Gas Lease Sale.
A map of the NPR–A showing areas
available for leasing is online at
https://www.blm.gov/ak.
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SUMMARY:
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BLM Alaska must receive all
nominations and comments on these
tracts for consideration on or before May
2, 2016.
ADDRESSES: Mail nominations and/or
comments to: State Director, Bureau of
Land Management, Alaska State Office,
222 West 7th Ave., Mailstop 13,
Anchorage, AK 99513–7504. Before
including your address, phone number,
email address, or other personal
identifying information in your
nominations and/or comment, you
should be aware that your entire
comment—including your personal
identifying information—may be made
publicly available at any time. While
you can ask us in your comment to
withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able to
do so.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Wayne Svejnoha, BLM Alaska Energy
and Minerals Branch Chief, 907–271–
4407. Persons who use a
telecommunications device for the deaf
(TDD) may call the Federal Information
Relay Service (FIRS) at 1–800–877–8339
to contact the above individual during
normal business hours. The FIRS is
available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week,
to leave a message or question with the
above individual. You will receive a
reply during normal business hours.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The BLM
is issuing a call for nominations and
comments on tracts for the upcoming
2016 NPR–A Oil and Gas Lease Sale,
pursuant to 43 CFR 3131.2. When
describing tracts nominated for leasing
or providing comments, please use the
NPR–A maps, legal descriptions of the
tracts, and additional information
available through the BLM Alaska Web
site at https://www.blm.gov/ak. The BLM
also requests comments on tracts which
should receive special consideration or
analysis.
DATES:
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[LLWO260000.L10600000.PC0000.
LXSIADVSBD00]
Notice of Wild Horse and Burro
Advisory Board Meeting; Correction
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Correction.
AGENCY:
PO 00000
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18643
This notice corrects two dates
that appear in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section of a notice that
published in the Federal Register on
Wednesday, March 23, 2016 (81 FR
15555).
On page 15555, column 3, line 24 of
the notice, which reads ‘‘Wednesday,
April, 13, 2015,’’ is corrected to read,
‘‘Wednesday, April 13, 2016.’’
On page 15555, column 3, line 35 of
the notice, which reads ‘‘Thursday,
September 3, 2015’’ is corrected to read,
‘‘Thursday, April 14, 2016.’’
SUMMARY:
Kristin Bail,
Acting Assistant Director, Resources and
Planning.
[FR Doc. 2016–07273 Filed 3–30–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–84–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Reclamation
[RR08100000, 16XR0680A1,
RY.1541CH20.60IR161]
Announcement of Requirements and
Registration for a Prize Competition
Seeking: Detecting the Movement of
Soils (Internal Erosion) Within Earthen
Dams, Canals, Levees, and their
Foundations
Bureau of Reclamation,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
The Bureau of Reclamation,
in collaboration with the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers, is seeking new
methods for detecting the movement
(erosion) of soils in earthen structures
and foundations. These methods may
detect internal erosion either directly or
indirectly (detecting properties that
typically indicate internal erosion is
taking place). The goal is to detect soil
movement earlier than occurs by current
visual inspection and instrumentation
methods.
DATES: Listed below are the specific
dates pertaining to this prize
competition:
1. Submission period begins on March
31, 2016.
2. A webinar concerning this prize
competition will be held on April 7,
2016. Instructions for participating in
the webinar are included in the on-line
postings at the addresses shown below.
The webinar will also be recorded and
posted at these same addresses.
3. Submission period ends on May 10,
2016.
4. Judging period ends on July 11,
2016.
5. Winners announced by July 29,
2016.
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\31MRN1.SGM
31MRN1
18644
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 62 / Thursday, March 31, 2016 / Notices
The Detecting the
Movement of Soils (Internal Erosion)
Within Earthen Dams, Canals, Levees,
and their Foundations Prize
Competition will be posted on the
following crowd-sourcing platforms
where Solvers can register for this prize
competition:
1. The Water Pavilion located at the
InnoCentive Challenge Center: https://
www.innocentive.com/ar/challenge/
browse.
2. U.S. Federal Government Challenge
Platform: www.Challenge.gov.
InnoCentive, Inc. is administering this
challenge under a challenge support
services contract with the Bureau of
Reclamation. Challenge.gov will redirect the Solver community to the
InnoCentive Challenge Center as the
administrator for this prize competition.
Additional details for this prize
competition, including background
information, figures, and the Challenge
Agreement specific for this prize
competition, can be accessed through
either of these prize competition web
addresses. The Challenge Agreement
contains more details of the prize
competition rules and terms that Solvers
must agree with to be eligible to
compete.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Challenge Manager: Dr. David Raff,
Science Advisor, Bureau of
Reclamation, (202) 513–0516, draff@
usbr.gov; Dr. Bobbi Jo Merten, (303)
445–2380, bmerten@usbr.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Bureau of Reclamation (Reclamation) is
announcing the following prize
competition in compliance with 15 U.S.
Code 3719, Prize Competitions.
Prize Competition Summary:
According to the American Society of
Civil Engineers’ 2013 Report Card for
America’s Infrastructure, there are
nearly 160,000 kilometers of levees and
85,000 dams that provide flood
protection, water storage, and
hydropower services for millions of
people in the United States. Many of
these dams are owned and operated by
Reclamation or the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers (USACE). The USACE also
owns and manages a significant portion
of the nation’s levee inventory. There
are also thousands of kilometers of
water delivery canals in the United
States, with Reclamation owning about
13,000 kilometers of such. Some of
these structures are over one-hundred
years old, so it is important to ensure
that the structures are sound,
performing well, and able to continue
providing the critical services of storing
water, delivering water, and flood
protection.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
ADDRESSES:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:09 Mar 30, 2016
Jkt 238001
Both Reclamation and USACE
monitor, inspect, and assess the
condition and performance of dams and
other earthen embankments. While
inspection and condition assessment
programs are effective ways to protect
the public and property, these current
methods are resource intensive and
cannot reliably detect internal erosion
early in the process. Internal erosion can
take place over a long period of time,
but often remains invisible (inside or
below the structure) until serious
damage occurs, placing lives, property,
critical water supply or flood retention
capabilities at risk. The ability to
reliably detect internal erosion early in
the process would help Reclamation,
USACE, and all dam, levee, and canal
owners to reduce risks by encouraging
early-intervention.
There are several internal erosion
mechanisms, but all involve the
movement of soil to an exit point. If soil
movement can be detected and localized
inside the structure in the early stages
of erosion, flaws could be mitigated and
failures prevented. A solution is being
pursued through a prize competition
because the Bureau of Reclamation and
the collaborating Federal agencies view
it beneficial to seek innovative solutions
from those beyond the usual sources of
potential solvers and experts that
commonly work in the geotechnical
engineering domain. We find ourselves
often wondering if someone,
somewhere, may know a better way of
detecting internal erosion in
embankments than the methods we
currently use. The prize competition
approach enables us to reach a new
source of potential Solvers to generate
new and timely solutions that would
not likely be accomplished by standard
contractual methods.
This is an Ideation Challenge, which
has the following unique features:
• There is a guaranteed award. The
awards will be paid to the best
submission(s) as solely determined by
the Seeker. The total payout will be
$20,000, with at least one award being
no smaller than $5,000 and no award
being less than $2,500.
• All intellectual property rights, if
any, in the idea or concept
demonstrated by the proposed solution
will remain with the solver. Upon
submission of a proposed solution to
this challenge, each solver grants to the
seeker a royalty-free, perpetual,
irrevocable, non-exclusive license and
right to use, disclose, reproduce,
prepare derivative works, distribute
copies to the public, and perform
publicly and display publicly, in any
manner and for any purpose, and to
have or permit others to do so.
PO 00000
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Notwithstanding granting the seeker a
perpetula, non-exclusive license for the
proposed solution, the solver retains
ownership of the idea or concept
demonstrated by the proposed solution.
• The Seeker believes there might be
a potential for future collaboration with
awarded Solver(s), although such
collaboration is not guaranteed. The
Seeker may also encourage Solver(s) to
further develop and test their winning
submissions through subsequent
round(s) of competition. Solvers should
make it clear if they have the ability for
subsequent design and development
phases and would be willing to consider
future collaborations and/or subsequent
competitions.
Technical Requirements. Any
proposed solution should address some
or all of the following technical
requirements. You must meet
requirement No. 5 but need not meet all
other requirements to be eligible for an
award.
1. Provide a 3D spatial representation
of the earthen structure and associated
foundation (to a depth equal to the
height of the embankment), identifying
zones of active internal erosion.
a. Levees and canals are relatively
lower in height (∼1 to 3 meters), but
longer in length (1000+ meters).
b. Dams are relatively greater in
height (up to 100+ meters), but shorter
in length.
2. Detect internal erosion before it is
visible at the ground surface. A zone
(volume) of unstable moving particles
on the order of 1 cubic meter at any
location within or under the
embankment is considered significant
for the internal erosion process.
Methods that can detect the movement
of smaller volumes of particles are
preferred.
3. Allow for a time lapse monitoring
interval on the order of weeks to
months. Preferably the monitoring of the
embankment would be continuous and
provided with alarm capability based on
predefined thresholds.
4. Quantify a rate of particle
movement, preferably a rate of growth of
internal erosion features.
5. NOT compromise the structural
integrity of the embankment or
foundation materials; it must be
environmentally inert, and must adhere
to a philosophy of ‘‘do no harm’’.
Although direct measures of internal
erosion are preferred, indirect
measurements of internal erosion, such
as approaches that monitor changes to
the phreatic surface or saturation of the
embankment will be considered as well.
Project Deliverables: This is an
Ideation Challenge that requires only a
written proposal to be submitted. At
E:\FR\FM\31MRN1.SGM
31MRN1
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 62 / Thursday, March 31, 2016 / Notices
least one solution will be deemed the
winner. The submission should include:
1. Detailed description of a direct or
indirect method for detecting internal
erosion that is not widely used today.
Only significant improvements to
existing methods will be considered for
award.
2. Rationale for why the method can
meet the technical requirements above.
Note: A general concept is needed, but
is not considered a solution by itself.
The Solver must describe with ‘‘a high
level of technical detail’’ how the
system would meet or not meet each of
the attributes described above. The
Solver should expect that their
submittal will be reviewed by experts in
multiple fields of engineering and
science. Examples and literature
references of where similar techniques
are used and how they are used will be
helpful to support the validity of the
solution.
3. A list of equipment and materials
is required. Discussion should include
expected lifetime of any equipment; size
and invasiveness to the embankment
structure; detection speed, accuracy and
estimated costs.
4. The Solver needs to describe how
deployable and workable the system
would be under a wide variety of
environmental conditions such as those
found in typical dam, levee and canal
embankments.
The discussion accompanying the
Solver’s proposal should:
5. Clearly identify detection limits of
methods, such as: What is the minimum
size of soil particle the method can
detect? Does the baseline condition of
the embankment, groundwater, or
ambient environment impact the
performance of the method?
6. Identify how and where the method
will be installed. Is the method weather
proof and tamper proof? Are there any
limitations to the method installation or
conditions required for performance?
7. Identify the temporal resolution or
temporal limitations of the solution.
How long does the method take to
deploy? What are measurement and
processing time limitations?
Submitted proposals should not
include any personally identifiable
information that the Solver does not
want to make public, or any information
that the Solver may consider as their
own Intellectual Property which they do
not want to share.
Judging: After the Challenge deadline,
the Seeker will evaluate the submissions
and make a decision with regards to the
Winning Solution(s). All Solvers that
submitted a proposal will be notified on
the status of their submissions;
however, no detailed evaluation of
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Jkt 238001
individual submissions will be
provided. Decisions by the Seeker
cannot be contested.
Submitted solutions will be evaluated
by a Judging Panel composed of
scientists, engineers, and other technical
experts. The Judging Panel will also
have consultation access to technical
experts outside of their expertise, as
deemed necessary, to evaluate specific
submissions. The Judging Panel will
assess the merits of the solution by the
degree upon which they meet the
technical requirements provided above,
by the potential utility (i.e., adaptability,
scalability, readiness for development),
and by originality (i.e., novel extension
of current knowledge).
Eligibility Rules: To be able to win a
prize under this competition, an
individual or entity must:
1. Agree to the rules of the
competition (15 U.S. Code § 3719(g)(1));
2. Be an entity that is incorporated in
and maintains a primary place of
business in the United States, or (b) in
the case of an individual, a citizen or
permanent resident of the United States
(15 U.S. Code § 3719(g)(3));
3. Not be a Federal entity or Federal
employee acting within the scope of
their employment; (15 U.S. Code
§ 3719(g)(4));
4. Assume risks and waive claims
against the Federal Government and its
related entities (15 U.S. Code
§ 3719(i)(1)(B)); and,
5. Not use Federal facilities, or
consult with Federal employees during
the competition unless the facilities and
employees are made available to all
individuals and entities participating in
the competition on an equitable basis.
The following individuals or entities
are not eligible regardless of whether
they meet the criteria set forth above:
1. Any individual who employs an
evaluator on the Judging Panel or
otherwise has a material business
relationship or affiliation with any
Judge.
2. Any individual who is a member of
any Judge’s immediate family or
household.
3. The Seeker, participating
organizations, and any advertising
agency, contractor or other individual or
organization involved with the design,
production, promotion, execution, or
distribution of the prize competition; all
employees, representatives and agents
thereof; and all members of the
immediate family or household of any
such individual, employee,
representative, or agent.
4. Any individual or entity that uses
Federal funds to develop the proposed
solution now or any time in the past,
unless such use is consistent with the
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 9990
18645
grant award, or other applicable Federal
funds awarding document. NOTE:
Submissions that propose to improve or
adapt existing federally funded
technologies for the solution sought in
this prize competition are eligible.
Consultation: Geotechnical engineers,
facility managers, and technical
specialists from across Reclamation and
USACE were consulted in identifying
and selecting the topic of this prize
competition. Direct and indirect input
from various stakeholders and partners
associated with the geotechnical
engineering program efforts by these
agencies were also considered. In
addition, the Reclamation maintains an
open invitation to the public to suggest
prize competition topics at
www.usbr.gov/research/challenges.
Public Disclosure: InnoCentive, Inc. is
administering this challenge under a
challenge support services contract with
Reclamation. Participation is
conditioned on providing the data
required on InnoCentive’s online
registration form. Personal data will be
processed in accordance with
InnoCentive’s Privacy Policy which can
be located at https://
www.innocentive.com/privacy.php.
Before including your address, phone
number, email address, or other
personal identifying information in your
proposal, you should be aware that the
Seeker is under no obligation to
withhold such information from public
disclosure, and it may be made publicly
available at any time. Neither
InnoCentive nor the Seeker is
responsible for human error, theft,
destruction, or damage to proposed
solutions, or other factors beyond its
reasonable control. Solver assumes any
and all risks and waives any and all
claims against the Seeker and its related
entities, except in the case of willful
misconduct, for any injury, death,
damage, or loss of property, revenue, or
profits, whether direct, indirect, or
consequential, arising from
participation in this competition,
whether the injury, death, damage, or
loss arises through negligence or
otherwise.
Dated: March 28, 2016.
David Raff,
Science Advisor .
[FR Doc. 2016–07275 Filed 3–30–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4332–90–P
E:\FR\FM\31MRN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 62 (Thursday, March 31, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 18643-18645]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-07275]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Reclamation
[RR08100000, 16XR0680A1, RY.1541CH20.60IR161]
Announcement of Requirements and Registration for a Prize
Competition Seeking: Detecting the Movement of Soils (Internal Erosion)
Within Earthen Dams, Canals, Levees, and their Foundations
AGENCY: Bureau of Reclamation, Interior.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Bureau of Reclamation, in collaboration with the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers, is seeking new methods for detecting the movement
(erosion) of soils in earthen structures and foundations. These methods
may detect internal erosion either directly or indirectly (detecting
properties that typically indicate internal erosion is taking place).
The goal is to detect soil movement earlier than occurs by current
visual inspection and instrumentation methods.
DATES: Listed below are the specific dates pertaining to this prize
competition:
1. Submission period begins on March 31, 2016.
2. A webinar concerning this prize competition will be held on
April 7, 2016. Instructions for participating in the webinar are
included in the on-line postings at the addresses shown below. The
webinar will also be recorded and posted at these same addresses.
3. Submission period ends on May 10, 2016.
4. Judging period ends on July 11, 2016.
5. Winners announced by July 29, 2016.
[[Page 18644]]
ADDRESSES: The Detecting the Movement of Soils (Internal Erosion)
Within Earthen Dams, Canals, Levees, and their Foundations Prize
Competition will be posted on the following crowd-sourcing platforms
where Solvers can register for this prize competition:
1. The Water Pavilion located at the InnoCentive Challenge Center:
https://www.innocentive.com/ar/challenge/browse.
2. U.S. Federal Government Challenge Platform: www.Challenge.gov.
InnoCentive, Inc. is administering this challenge under a challenge
support services contract with the Bureau of Reclamation. Challenge.gov
will re-direct the Solver community to the InnoCentive Challenge Center
as the administrator for this prize competition. Additional details for
this prize competition, including background information, figures, and
the Challenge Agreement specific for this prize competition, can be
accessed through either of these prize competition web addresses. The
Challenge Agreement contains more details of the prize competition
rules and terms that Solvers must agree with to be eligible to compete.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Challenge Manager: Dr. David Raff,
Science Advisor, Bureau of Reclamation, (202) 513-0516, draff@usbr.gov;
Dr. Bobbi Jo Merten, (303) 445-2380, bmerten@usbr.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Bureau of Reclamation (Reclamation) is
announcing the following prize competition in compliance with 15 U.S.
Code 3719, Prize Competitions.
Prize Competition Summary: According to the American Society of
Civil Engineers' 2013 Report Card for America's Infrastructure, there
are nearly 160,000 kilometers of levees and 85,000 dams that provide
flood protection, water storage, and hydropower services for millions
of people in the United States. Many of these dams are owned and
operated by Reclamation or the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE).
The USACE also owns and manages a significant portion of the nation's
levee inventory. There are also thousands of kilometers of water
delivery canals in the United States, with Reclamation owning about
13,000 kilometers of such. Some of these structures are over one-
hundred years old, so it is important to ensure that the structures are
sound, performing well, and able to continue providing the critical
services of storing water, delivering water, and flood protection.
Both Reclamation and USACE monitor, inspect, and assess the
condition and performance of dams and other earthen embankments. While
inspection and condition assessment programs are effective ways to
protect the public and property, these current methods are resource
intensive and cannot reliably detect internal erosion early in the
process. Internal erosion can take place over a long period of time,
but often remains invisible (inside or below the structure) until
serious damage occurs, placing lives, property, critical water supply
or flood retention capabilities at risk. The ability to reliably detect
internal erosion early in the process would help Reclamation, USACE,
and all dam, levee, and canal owners to reduce risks by encouraging
early-intervention.
There are several internal erosion mechanisms, but all involve the
movement of soil to an exit point. If soil movement can be detected and
localized inside the structure in the early stages of erosion, flaws
could be mitigated and failures prevented. A solution is being pursued
through a prize competition because the Bureau of Reclamation and the
collaborating Federal agencies view it beneficial to seek innovative
solutions from those beyond the usual sources of potential solvers and
experts that commonly work in the geotechnical engineering domain. We
find ourselves often wondering if someone, somewhere, may know a better
way of detecting internal erosion in embankments than the methods we
currently use. The prize competition approach enables us to reach a new
source of potential Solvers to generate new and timely solutions that
would not likely be accomplished by standard contractual methods.
This is an Ideation Challenge, which has the following unique
features:
There is a guaranteed award. The awards will be paid to
the best submission(s) as solely determined by the Seeker. The total
payout will be $20,000, with at least one award being no smaller than
$5,000 and no award being less than $2,500.
All intellectual property rights, if any, in the idea or
concept demonstrated by the proposed solution will remain with the
solver. Upon submission of a proposed solution to this challenge, each
solver grants to the seeker a royalty-free, perpetual, irrevocable,
non-exclusive license and right to use, disclose, reproduce, prepare
derivative works, distribute copies to the public, and perform publicly
and display publicly, in any manner and for any purpose, and to have or
permit others to do so. Notwithstanding granting the seeker a
perpetula, non-exclusive license for the proposed solution, the solver
retains ownership of the idea or concept demonstrated by the proposed
solution.
The Seeker believes there might be a potential for future
collaboration with awarded Solver(s), although such collaboration is
not guaranteed. The Seeker may also encourage Solver(s) to further
develop and test their winning submissions through subsequent round(s)
of competition. Solvers should make it clear if they have the ability
for subsequent design and development phases and would be willing to
consider future collaborations and/or subsequent competitions.
Technical Requirements. Any proposed solution should address some
or all of the following technical requirements. You must meet
requirement No. 5 but need not meet all other requirements to be
eligible for an award.
1. Provide a 3D spatial representation of the earthen structure and
associated foundation (to a depth equal to the height of the
embankment), identifying zones of active internal erosion.
a. Levees and canals are relatively lower in height (~1 to 3
meters), but longer in length (1000+ meters).
b. Dams are relatively greater in height (up to 100+ meters), but
shorter in length.
2. Detect internal erosion before it is visible at the ground
surface. A zone (volume) of unstable moving particles on the order of 1
cubic meter at any location within or under the embankment is
considered significant for the internal erosion process. Methods that
can detect the movement of smaller volumes of particles are preferred.
3. Allow for a time lapse monitoring interval on the order of weeks
to months. Preferably the monitoring of the embankment would be
continuous and provided with alarm capability based on predefined
thresholds.
4. Quantify a rate of particle movement, preferably a rate of
growth of internal erosion features.
5. NOT compromise the structural integrity of the embankment or
foundation materials; it must be environmentally inert, and must adhere
to a philosophy of ``do no harm''.
Although direct measures of internal erosion are preferred,
indirect measurements of internal erosion, such as approaches that
monitor changes to the phreatic surface or saturation of the embankment
will be considered as well.
Project Deliverables: This is an Ideation Challenge that requires
only a written proposal to be submitted. At
[[Page 18645]]
least one solution will be deemed the winner. The submission should
include:
1. Detailed description of a direct or indirect method for
detecting internal erosion that is not widely used today. Only
significant improvements to existing methods will be considered for
award.
2. Rationale for why the method can meet the technical requirements
above. Note: A general concept is needed, but is not considered a
solution by itself. The Solver must describe with ``a high level of
technical detail'' how the system would meet or not meet each of the
attributes described above. The Solver should expect that their
submittal will be reviewed by experts in multiple fields of engineering
and science. Examples and literature references of where similar
techniques are used and how they are used will be helpful to support
the validity of the solution.
3. A list of equipment and materials is required. Discussion should
include expected lifetime of any equipment; size and invasiveness to
the embankment structure; detection speed, accuracy and estimated
costs.
4. The Solver needs to describe how deployable and workable the
system would be under a wide variety of environmental conditions such
as those found in typical dam, levee and canal embankments.
The discussion accompanying the Solver's proposal should:
5. Clearly identify detection limits of methods, such as: What is
the minimum size of soil particle the method can detect? Does the
baseline condition of the embankment, groundwater, or ambient
environment impact the performance of the method?
6. Identify how and where the method will be installed. Is the
method weather proof and tamper proof? Are there any limitations to the
method installation or conditions required for performance?
7. Identify the temporal resolution or temporal limitations of the
solution. How long does the method take to deploy? What are measurement
and processing time limitations?
Submitted proposals should not include any personally identifiable
information that the Solver does not want to make public, or any
information that the Solver may consider as their own Intellectual
Property which they do not want to share.
Judging: After the Challenge deadline, the Seeker will evaluate the
submissions and make a decision with regards to the Winning
Solution(s). All Solvers that submitted a proposal will be notified on
the status of their submissions; however, no detailed evaluation of
individual submissions will be provided. Decisions by the Seeker cannot
be contested.
Submitted solutions will be evaluated by a Judging Panel composed
of scientists, engineers, and other technical experts. The Judging
Panel will also have consultation access to technical experts outside
of their expertise, as deemed necessary, to evaluate specific
submissions. The Judging Panel will assess the merits of the solution
by the degree upon which they meet the technical requirements provided
above, by the potential utility (i.e., adaptability, scalability,
readiness for development), and by originality (i.e., novel extension
of current knowledge).
Eligibility Rules: To be able to win a prize under this
competition, an individual or entity must:
1. Agree to the rules of the competition (15 U.S. Code Sec.
3719(g)(1));
2. Be an entity that is incorporated in and maintains a primary
place of business in the United States, or (b) in the case of an
individual, a citizen or permanent resident of the United States (15
U.S. Code Sec. 3719(g)(3));
3. Not be a Federal entity or Federal employee acting within the
scope of their employment; (15 U.S. Code Sec. 3719(g)(4));
4. Assume risks and waive claims against the Federal Government and
its related entities (15 U.S. Code Sec. 3719(i)(1)(B)); and,
5. Not use Federal facilities, or consult with Federal employees
during the competition unless the facilities and employees are made
available to all individuals and entities participating in the
competition on an equitable basis.
The following individuals or entities are not eligible regardless
of whether they meet the criteria set forth above:
1. Any individual who employs an evaluator on the Judging Panel or
otherwise has a material business relationship or affiliation with any
Judge.
2. Any individual who is a member of any Judge's immediate family
or household.
3. The Seeker, participating organizations, and any advertising
agency, contractor or other individual or organization involved with
the design, production, promotion, execution, or distribution of the
prize competition; all employees, representatives and agents thereof;
and all members of the immediate family or household of any such
individual, employee, representative, or agent.
4. Any individual or entity that uses Federal funds to develop the
proposed solution now or any time in the past, unless such use is
consistent with the grant award, or other applicable Federal funds
awarding document. NOTE: Submissions that propose to improve or adapt
existing federally funded technologies for the solution sought in this
prize competition are eligible.
Consultation: Geotechnical engineers, facility managers, and
technical specialists from across Reclamation and USACE were consulted
in identifying and selecting the topic of this prize competition.
Direct and indirect input from various stakeholders and partners
associated with the geotechnical engineering program efforts by these
agencies were also considered. In addition, the Reclamation maintains
an open invitation to the public to suggest prize competition topics at
www.usbr.gov/research/challenges.
Public Disclosure: InnoCentive, Inc. is administering this
challenge under a challenge support services contract with Reclamation.
Participation is conditioned on providing the data required on
InnoCentive's online registration form. Personal data will be processed
in accordance with InnoCentive's Privacy Policy which can be located at
https://www.innocentive.com/privacy.php. Before including your address,
phone number, email address, or other personal identifying information
in your proposal, you should be aware that the Seeker is under no
obligation to withhold such information from public disclosure, and it
may be made publicly available at any time. Neither InnoCentive nor the
Seeker is responsible for human error, theft, destruction, or damage to
proposed solutions, or other factors beyond its reasonable control.
Solver assumes any and all risks and waives any and all claims against
the Seeker and its related entities, except in the case of willful
misconduct, for any injury, death, damage, or loss of property,
revenue, or profits, whether direct, indirect, or consequential,
arising from participation in this competition, whether the injury,
death, damage, or loss arises through negligence or otherwise.
Dated: March 28, 2016.
David Raff,
Science Advisor .
[FR Doc. 2016-07275 Filed 3-30-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4332-90-P