Announcement of Requirements and Registration for a Prize Competition Titled: More Water Less Concentrate- Stage 1., 89974-89977 [2016-29723]
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89974
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 239 / Tuesday, December 13, 2016 / Notices
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.
Liability and Indemnification: By
participating in this Challenge, each
Solver agrees to assume any and all
risks and waive claims against the
federal government 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 Challenge, whether
the injury, death, damage, or loss arises
through negligence or otherwise. By
participating in this Challenge, each
Solver agrees to indemnify the federal
government against third party claims
for damages arising from or related to
Challenge activities
No Insurance Required: Based on the
subject matter of the Challenge, the type
of work that it will possibly require, as
well as an analysis of the likelihood of
any claims for death, bodily injury, or
property damage, or loss potentially
resulting from competition
participation, Solvers are not required to
obtain liability insurance or
demonstrate financial responsibility in
order to participate in this Challenge.
Dated: November 18, 2016.
David Raff,
Science Advisor.
[FR Doc. 2016–29722 Filed 12–12–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4332–90–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Reclamation
[RR08100000, 17XR0680A1,
RY.1541CH20.60WA161]
water supplies are trapped in
concentrate streams that are a byproduct
of desalination technologies. The cost to
manage or dispose of concentrate is
rather large and very limiting to
utilization of desalination in inland
applications. This is Stage 1 of a
planned three-stage Challenge, with the
second and third stages consisting of
prototype demonstrations in lab and
field settings and larger prize purses.
DATES: Listed below are the specific
dates pertaining to this prize
competition:
1. Submission period begins on
December 13, 2016.
2. Submission period ends on March
13, 2017.
3. Judging period ends on May 12,
2017.
4. Winners announced by June 1,
2017.
The More Water Less
Concentrate—Stage 1 Prize Competition
will be posted on the following crowdsourcing 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.
ADDRESSES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Announcement of Requirements and
Registration for a Prize Competition
Titled: More Water Less Concentrate–
Stage 1.
Bureau of Reclamation,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice.
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AGENCY:
This Challenge seeks to
identify innovative solutions to expand
usable water supplies by maximizing
fresh water production from inland
desalination systems in a cost effective
and environmentally sound manner.
Currently, significant and desirable
SUMMARY:
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Challenge Manager: Dr. David Raff,
Science Advisor, Bureau of
Reclamation, (202) 513–0516, draff@
usbr.gov; Andrew Tiffenbach, (303)
445–2393, atiffenbach@usbr.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Bureau of Reclamation (Reclamation) is
announcing the following prize
competition in compliance with 15
U.S.C. 3719, Prize Competitions.
Prize Competition Summary: In many
areas, particularly in the Western
United States, existing sources of fresh
water are fully or over-allocated. When
inland communities are evaluating
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potential sources for a new water
supply, desalination is often overlooked
or not considered due to its perceived
high cost. A major contributing factor to
the cost is the additional handling and/
or treatment required to manage
concentrate streams where significant
and desirable additional water resources
are also lost.
Desalination processes, typically
membrane or thermal based processes,
produce a concentrate stream composed
primarily of the salts in the feed and
some of the initial feed water. The cost
to manage or dispose of concentrate
streams is often prohibitive for inland
brackish desalination and is currently a
limiting factor to more widespread
utilization of desalination in inland
applications. This challenge is seeking
solutions to minimizing the concentrate
stream volume and associated handling
costs while maximizing the useable
water produced by the process.
Desalination process recovery is often
limited by capital and operational
treatment costs. Saturation levels of
sparingly soluble species such as
calcium sulfate (CaSO4), calcium
carbonate (CaCO3), and silica (SiO2) are
reached in desalination processes as the
saltwater feed is processed to fresh
water leaving behind a highly saturated
stream referred to as concentrate. Thus,
classes of solutions to the concentrate
problem might increase the quantity of
treated water recovered from
desalination processes without
incurring issues with sparingly soluble
species, therefore decreasing the volume
of concentrate generated and increasing
the overall system recovery. Other
solutions may include novel
desalination technologies or
improvements to existing technologies
that will increase the overall system
recovery of desalination processes while
also overcoming other operational and
cost hurdles. Another class of solutions
to the concentrate problem is to posttreat the concentrate stream that is
produced to reduce its concentrate
volume or to produce a solid waste
product; thereby reducing the volume
requiring disposal.
In this prize competition, the Bureau
of Reclamation is seeking innovative
solutions to increase the amount of
usable water supplies in an affordable,
environmentally sustainable, and
efficient manner to make desalination
more accessible to communities looking
to expand water supplies. Solutions can
be novel technologies or approaches
that build upon existing technologies
and approaches for the production of
fresh water from saline sources that
increase the overall system recovery
beyond the level of what is currently
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 239 / Tuesday, December 13, 2016 / Notices
achieved. Solutions can include ideas to
reduce the large concentrate volumes by
treatment of the concentrate or by
selectively removing less soluble
species from either the feed water,
concentrate streams or at any other part
of the desalination system. Other ideas
to control or inhibit scale formation due
to sparingly soluble species are also
being sought along with any new
technologies or improvements to
existing technologies that increase the
overall system recovery of a
desalination system. This Challenge
consists of three stages:
• Stage 1 is a Theoretical Challenge
requiring a white paper submittal.
Participants are asked to submit an idea,
such as a process or equipment design,
along with anticipated impact (if
successful), detailed descriptions,
specifications, supporting data or
literature, and requirements necessary
to bring the idea to practice. Stage 1 may
award up to 6 prizes from a total prize
award pool of $150,000.
• If Stage 1 proves successful, Stage 2
is planned as a subsequent Reductionto-Practice Challenge to demonstrate
proof-of-concept data at the bench scale.
Stage 2 envisions a total prize pool of
$450,000 or more, and awarding up to
3 prizes.
• Stage 3 is envisioned as a Grand
Challenge, Reduction-to-Practice
demonstration at pilot-scale in a fieldtest setting. Stage 3 envisions a total
prize pool of $500,000 or more, and
awarding up to 2 prizes.
In addition to the direct monetary
awards for Stages 2 and 3, Reclamation
will invite industry, non-profit
organizations, and venture capital
representatives to be present at the
Stages 2 and 3 presentations and testing.
Participating industry and venture
capital representatives will also have
the ability to seek and secure potential
business deals with Solvers.
This posting only launches the Stage
1 competition. However, information on
the envisioned framework and prizes for
Stages 2 and 3 are available here: https://
www.usbr.gov/research/challenges/
current/. Subsequent stages
will be officially launched and
announced with a separate
Challenge.gov posting and a separate
Federal Register Notice.
Stage 1 is a Theoretical Challenge that
requires only a written proposal to be
submitted. The Challenge award will be
contingent upon critical analysis and
evaluation by the Seeker (Reclamation)
and the judging panel appointed by the
Seeker. The Seeker has a total prize pool
budget of $150,000 to pay the top six
submission(s) that meet or exceed the
criteria below an award of at least
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$25,000 each. No awards are guaranteed
unless they meet or exceed the criteria,
and more than one award is not
guaranteed. Full or partial awards will
be considered for solutions that meet all
or some of the criteria, respectively. If
only a single submission meets or
exceeds the criteria, the prize award
may be as high as $50,000.
To receive an award, the Solvers will
not have to transfer their intellectual
property rights to the Seeker and will
not have to grant the Seekers a nonexclusive license to practice their
solutions. Please note that any proposal
submitted will not be treated as
confidential information. Accordingly,
Solvers should take whatever steps they
deem necessary to protect their
proprietary rights in their solutions
prior to submitting their written
proposal for consideration in the
Challenge (e.g. filing provisional or full
patent applications on the solution
described in the written proposal
submitted prior to submission).
Technical Requirements. The goal of
this Challenge is to identify methods to
increase the overall system recovery in
a cost effective and environmentally
safe manner to reduce large volumes of
concentrate that requires disposal and to
increase usable water supplies. Overall
system recovery is defined as the total
product water divided by the total feed
water. This challenge is seeking
solutions to minimizing the concentrate
stream while maximizing the useable
water produced by the process.
One class of solutions to the
concentrate problem is to increase the
quantity of treated water recovered from
desalination processes, which, a priori,
decreases the volume of concentrate
generated. Desalination process
recovery is often limited when
saturation levels of sparingly soluble
species (e.g. CaSO4, CaCO3, SiO2) are
reached in the process when fresh water
is generated from the desalination
process and volume of feed water
decreases. Another class of solutions to
the concentrate problem is to treat the
concentrate stream that is produced to
reduce its volume or to produce a solid
waste product; thereby reducing the
volume requiring disposal. Other
solutions can include novel desalination
technologies with higher overall system
recovery than conventional desalination
technologies.
Three sample water qualities from
different inland brackish desalination
locations with the various recoveries
that each plant is currently able to
achieve are provided in the challenge
posting available through web addresses
included under the ADDRESSES section
of this Federal Register Notice.
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Things To Avoid
The Seeker is not interested in the
following:
1. Surface and sewer discharge
solutions.
2. Known evaporation pond solutions
(improvements could be acceptable).
3. Deep well injection solutions.
4. Existing technologies without any
improvements to reduce concentrate
volume, reduce cost or operational
complexity, etc. of the existing
desalination technology, i.e. reverse
osmosis (RO), thermal or other
membrane separation. The Seeker is not
looking for a review of all known
techniques so this requires something
new/novel in your solution.
The judging panel will evaluate each
proposed solution against the following
Solution Requirements:
Must Have
1. Increase in overall system recovery:
Solution must explain how the
approach can increase overall system
recovery on one of the three water
samples provided in Table 1 for a plant
producing at least 1 million gallons of
drinking water quality per day. Solution
must be capable of treating large
volumes of at least 1 million gallons per
day. Typical desalination systems
generate large volumes of concentrate
per day that require further treatment
and/or handling.
2. Cost effective: Solutions are sought
that can improve the recovery and
reduce concentrate volume in a cost
effective manner. Solutions cannot
significantly increase life cycle (i.e.
capital, operating, and maintenance)
costs of systems.
3. Environmentally friendly: Solutions
should not create additional waste (in
volume and complexity) than what
exists today. The solution needs to be
environmentally friendly and not create
more problems than what is being
solved. Thus, the solution must provide
an assessment of life-cycle impacts
relative to existing inland desalination
approaches.
Nice to have (not as important as the
requirements above, but would add
value to a submission):
1. Solution demonstrates an increase
in Overall System Recovery on two or
more of the three water samples
provided in Table 1 producing a
minimum of 1 million gallons per day
of drinking water quality.
2. Submissions that meet the
requirements will also be judged on the
following items:
• Feasibility (technical/scientific,
economic and environmental life-cycle
considerations).
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• Flexibility to changing water
quality.
• Energy efficiency.
• Scalability.
Project Deliverables: This Theoretical
Challenge requires a written proposed
solution which describes novel new
technologies or improvements to
existing technologies to increase overall
system recovery and decrease the
volume of concentrate. Each submission
should include:
1. A one-paragraph executive
summary of the proposed solution. All
Solvers agree to allow the executive
summaries of their solutions to be
posted on Reclamation’s Web page and
used in other publications reporting the
results of this Challenge.
2. Idea description that should
include:
a. Detailed description of a method to
increase overall system recovery and
decrease the volume of concentrate. The
Solver must describe with a high level
of technical detail as to how the system
would meet or not meet each of the
‘‘must have’’ and ‘‘nice to have’’
Solution Requirements described above.
The Solver should expect that their
submittal will be reviewed by experts in
the field of water treatment, chemistry,
and multiple fields of engineering. If the
level of detail is insufficient for the
experts, it can’t be scored as feasible.
b. Rationale as to why the Solver
believes that the proposed method will
work. This rationale should address
each of the Solution Requirements and
should be supported with relevant
examples/data.
c. Drawings/sketches of the proposed
system, if applicable.
The proposal should not include any
personal identifying information (name,
username, company, address, phone,
email, personal Web site, resume, etc.)
Judging: After the Challenge
submission deadline, a Judging Panel
will evaluate the submissions and make
a decision with regards to the winning
solution(s). The Judging Panel may be
composed of Federal and/or Non
Federal scientists, engineers, and other
technical experts, including subject
matter experts from the listed
collaborators for this Challenge. All
Solvers that submit a proposal will be
notified on the status of their
submissions. Decisions by the Seeker
cannot be contested.
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.C. 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
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the case of an individual, a citizen or
permanent resident of the United States
(15 U.S.C. 3719(g)(3)).
However, submissions can be
entertained from all Solvers regardless
of whether they are U.S. citizens/
entities. Meritorious submissions from
non-eligible persons and entities, if any,
will be recognized in publications
issued by the Seeker announcing the
results of the competition, such as press
releases. Non-U.S citizens/permanent
residents or non-U.S entities can also be
included on U.S. teams. However,
prizes—whether monetary or
otherwise—will only be awarded to
eligible persons and entities under the
authority of the America COMPETES
Reauthorization Act of 2010 (15 U.S.C.
3719).
3. Not be a Federal entity or Federal
employee acting within the scope of
their employment (15 U.S.C. 3719(g)(4)).
A Federal entity is defined by 5 U.S.C.
Appendix 8G with a list of current
Federal entities periodically posted on
the Federal Register.
4. Assume risks and waive claims
against the Federal Government and its
related entities (15 U.S.C. 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 or organization 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;
and all employees, and all members of
the immediate family or household of
any such individual or organization.
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:
Individuals or entities that have been
funded by the Federal Government in
the past to work within the technical
domain of the competition are eligible
provided their specific submission was
not developed by them with Federal
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funds. Submissions that propose to
improve or adapt existing federally
funded technologies for the solution
sought in this prize competition are also
eligible. Individuals are also encouraged
to consult with their employer Ethics
Officer for additional guidance and
considerations.
Consultation: Reclamation and
collaborator scientists, engineers, and
technical specialists were consulted in
identifying and selecting the topic of
this prize competition. Direct and
indirect input from various stakeholders
and partners were also considered. The
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
the U.S. Army, U.S Army Corps of
Engineers, the Water Environment and
Reuse Foundation, and the Water
Research Foundation are collaborating
with Reclamation on various aspects of
this Challenge.
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.
Liability and Indemnification: By
participating in this Challenge, each
Solver agrees to assume any and all
risks and waive claims against the
federal government 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 Challenge, whether
the injury, death, damage, or loss arises
through negligence or otherwise. By
participating in this Challenge, each
Solver agrees to indemnify the federal
government against third party claims
for damages arising from or related to
Challenge activities.
No Insurance Required: Based on the
subject matter of the Challenge, the type
of work that it will possibly require, as
well as an analysis of the likelihood of
any claims for death, bodily injury, or
E:\FR\FM\13DEN1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 239 / Tuesday, December 13, 2016 / Notices
property damage, or loss potentially
resulting from competition
participation, Solvers are not required to
obtain liability insurance or
demonstrate financial responsibility in
order to participate in this Challenge.
Dated: November 18, 2016.
David Raff,
Science Advisor.
[FR Doc. 2016–29723 Filed 12–12–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4332–90–P
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
COMMISSION
[Investigation No. 337–TA–007;
Investigation No. 337–TA–1021
(Consolidated)]
Certain Personal Transporters,
Components Thereof, and Packaging
and Manuals Therefor and Certain
Personal Transporters and
Components Thereof; Commission
Determination Not To Review an Initial
Determination Granting Complainants’
Motion To Amend the Complaint and
Notice of Investigation
U.S. International Trade
Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
Notice is hereby given that
the U.S. International Trade
Commission has determined not to
review an initial determination (‘‘ID’’)
(Order No. 17) of the presiding
administrative law judge (‘‘ALJ’’)
granting complainants’ motion to amend
the complaint and notice of
investigation.
SUMMARY:
pmangrum on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Michael Liberman, Esq., Office of the
General Counsel, U.S. International
Trade Commission, 500 E Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20436, telephone (202)
205–3115. Copies of non-confidential
documents filed in connection with this
investigation are or will be available for
inspection during official business
hours (8:45 a.m. to 5:15 p.m.) in the
Office of the Secretary, U.S.
International Trade Commission, 500 E
Street SW., Washington, DC 20436,
telephone (202) 205–2000. General
information concerning the Commission
may also be obtained by accessing its
Internet server at https://www.usitc.gov.
The public record for this investigation
may be viewed on the Commission’s
electronic docket (EDIS) at https://
edis.usitc.gov. Hearing-impaired
persons are advised that information on
this matter can be obtained by
contacting the Commission’s TDD
terminal on (202) 205–1810.
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The
Commission instituted Inv. No. 337–
TA–1007, Certain Personal
Transporters, Components Thereof, and
Packaging and Manuals Therefor under
section 337 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as
amended, 19 U.S.C. § 1337 (‘‘section
337’’), on June 24, 2016, based on a
complaint filed by Segway, Inc. of
Bedford, New Hampshire; DEKA
Products Limited Partnership of
Manchester, New Hampshire; and
Ninebot (Tianjin) Technology Co., Ltd.
of Tianjin, China (collectively,
‘‘Complainants’’). 81 Fed. Reg. 41342–
43 (Jun. 24, 2016). The complaint
alleges a violation of section 337 by
reason of infringement of certain claims
of U.S. Patent Nos. 6,302,230; 6,651,763
(‘‘the ’763 patent’’); 7,023,330 (‘‘the ’330
patent’’); 7,275,607; 7,479,872 (‘‘the ’872
patent’’); and 9,188,984 (‘‘the ’984
patent’’); and U.S. Trademark
Registration Nos. 2,727,948 and
2,769,942. The complaint named
numerous respondents. The
Commission’s Office of Unfair Import
Investigations (‘‘OUII’’) was named as a
party.
On September 21, 2016, the
Commission instituted Inv. No. 337–
TA–1021, Certain Personal Transporters
and Components Thereof, based on a
complaint filed by the same
Complainants. 81 Fed. Reg. 64936–37
(Sept. 21, 2016). The complaint alleges
a violation of section 337 by reason of
infringement of certain claims of U.S.
Patent Nos. 6,302,230 and 7,275,607.
The complaint named numerous
respondents. OUII was also named as a
party. The Commission assigned
Investigation No. 337–TA–1021 to ALJ
Shaw, the presiding ALJ in Investigation
No. 337–TA–1007, and directed him to
consolidate these investigations. See id.
at 64937.
On November 14, 2016, the ALJ
issued an ID (Order No. 17) in which he
granted complainants’ motion to amend
the complaint and notice of
investigation to assert the ’763, ’330,
and ’872 patents against respondent
Jetson Electric Bikes LLC, and to
terminate all asserted claims of the ’984
patent as to all respondents. No party
petitioned for review of the subject ID,
and the Commission has determined not
to review it.
The authority for the Commission’s
determination is contained in section
337 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as
amended (19 U.S.C. § 1337), and in Part
210 of the Commission’s Rules of
Practice and Procedure (19 CFR part
210).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
By order of the Commission.
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89977
Issued: December 7, 2016.
Lisa R. Barton,
Secretary to the Commission.
[FR Doc. 2016–29781 Filed 12–12–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7020–02–P
JUDICIAL CONFERENCE OF THE
UNITED STATES
Hearings of the Judicial Conference
Advisory Committee on the Federal
Rules of Criminal Procedure
Advisory Committee on the
Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure,
Judicial Conference of the United States.
ACTION: Notice of cancellation of public
hearing.
AGENCY:
The following public hearing
on proposed amendments to the Federal
Rules of Criminal Procedure has been
canceled: Criminal Rules Hearing on
January 4, 2017 in Phoenix, Arizona.
The announcement for this meeting was
previously published in 81 FR 52713.
The public hearing on proposed
amendments to the Federal Rules of
Criminal Procedure scheduled for
February 24, 2017, in Washington, DC,
remains scheduled, subject to sufficient
expressions of interest.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Rebecca A. Womeldorf, Rules
Committee Secretary, Rules Committee
Support Office, Administrative Office of
the United States Courts, Washington,
DC 20544, telephone (202) 502–1820.
SUMMARY:
Dated: December 6, 2016.
Rebecca A. Womeldorf,
Rules Committee Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2016–29812 Filed 12–12–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 2210–55–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Antitrust Division
Notice Pursuant to the National
Cooperative Research and Production
Act of 1993—Cooperative Research
Group on Automotive Consortium for
Embedded SecurityTM
Notice is hereby given that, on
November 4, 2016, pursuant to Section
6(a) of the National Cooperative
Research and Production Act of 1993,
15 U.S.C. 4301 et seq. (‘‘the Act’’),
Southwest Research Institute—
Cooperative Research Group on
Automotive Consortium for Embedded
SecurityTM (‘‘ACES’’) has filed written
notifications simultaneously with the
Attorney General and the Federal Trade
Commission disclosing changes in its
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 239 (Tuesday, December 13, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 89974-89977]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-29723]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Reclamation
[RR08100000, 17XR0680A1, RY.1541CH20.60WA161]
Announcement of Requirements and Registration for a Prize
Competition Titled: More Water Less Concentrate- Stage 1.
AGENCY: Bureau of Reclamation, Interior.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This Challenge seeks to identify innovative solutions to
expand usable water supplies by maximizing fresh water production from
inland desalination systems in a cost effective and environmentally
sound manner. Currently, significant and desirable water supplies are
trapped in concentrate streams that are a byproduct of desalination
technologies. The cost to manage or dispose of concentrate is rather
large and very limiting to utilization of desalination in inland
applications. This is Stage 1 of a planned three-stage Challenge, with
the second and third stages consisting of prototype demonstrations in
lab and field settings and larger prize purses.
DATES: Listed below are the specific dates pertaining to this prize
competition:
1. Submission period begins on December 13, 2016.
2. Submission period ends on March 13, 2017.
3. Judging period ends on May 12, 2017.
4. Winners announced by June 1, 2017.
ADDRESSES: The More Water Less Concentrate--Stage 1 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;
Andrew Tiffenbach, (303) 445-2393, atiffenbach@usbr.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Bureau of Reclamation (Reclamation) is
announcing the following prize competition in compliance with 15 U.S.C.
3719, Prize Competitions.
Prize Competition Summary: In many areas, particularly in the
Western United States, existing sources of fresh water are fully or
over-allocated. When inland communities are evaluating potential
sources for a new water supply, desalination is often overlooked or not
considered due to its perceived high cost. A major contributing factor
to the cost is the additional handling and/or treatment required to
manage concentrate streams where significant and desirable additional
water resources are also lost.
Desalination processes, typically membrane or thermal based
processes, produce a concentrate stream composed primarily of the salts
in the feed and some of the initial feed water. The cost to manage or
dispose of concentrate streams is often prohibitive for inland brackish
desalination and is currently a limiting factor to more widespread
utilization of desalination in inland applications. This challenge is
seeking solutions to minimizing the concentrate stream volume and
associated handling costs while maximizing the useable water produced
by the process.
Desalination process recovery is often limited by capital and
operational treatment costs. Saturation levels of sparingly soluble
species such as calcium sulfate (CaSO4), calcium carbonate
(CaCO3), and silica (SiO2) are reached in
desalination processes as the saltwater feed is processed to fresh
water leaving behind a highly saturated stream referred to as
concentrate. Thus, classes of solutions to the concentrate problem
might increase the quantity of treated water recovered from
desalination processes without incurring issues with sparingly soluble
species, therefore decreasing the volume of concentrate generated and
increasing the overall system recovery. Other solutions may include
novel desalination technologies or improvements to existing
technologies that will increase the overall system recovery of
desalination processes while also overcoming other operational and cost
hurdles. Another class of solutions to the concentrate problem is to
post-treat the concentrate stream that is produced to reduce its
concentrate volume or to produce a solid waste product; thereby
reducing the volume requiring disposal.
In this prize competition, the Bureau of Reclamation is seeking
innovative solutions to increase the amount of usable water supplies in
an affordable, environmentally sustainable, and efficient manner to
make desalination more accessible to communities looking to expand
water supplies. Solutions can be novel technologies or approaches that
build upon existing technologies and approaches for the production of
fresh water from saline sources that increase the overall system
recovery beyond the level of what is currently
[[Page 89975]]
achieved. Solutions can include ideas to reduce the large concentrate
volumes by treatment of the concentrate or by selectively removing less
soluble species from either the feed water, concentrate streams or at
any other part of the desalination system. Other ideas to control or
inhibit scale formation due to sparingly soluble species are also being
sought along with any new technologies or improvements to existing
technologies that increase the overall system recovery of a
desalination system. This Challenge consists of three stages:
Stage 1 is a Theoretical Challenge requiring a white paper
submittal. Participants are asked to submit an idea, such as a process
or equipment design, along with anticipated impact (if successful),
detailed descriptions, specifications, supporting data or literature,
and requirements necessary to bring the idea to practice. Stage 1 may
award up to 6 prizes from a total prize award pool of $150,000.
If Stage 1 proves successful, Stage 2 is planned as a
subsequent Reduction-to-Practice Challenge to demonstrate proof-of-
concept data at the bench scale. Stage 2 envisions a total prize pool
of $450,000 or more, and awarding up to 3 prizes.
Stage 3 is envisioned as a Grand Challenge, Reduction-to-
Practice demonstration at pilot-scale in a field-test setting. Stage 3
envisions a total prize pool of $500,000 or more, and awarding up to 2
prizes.
In addition to the direct monetary awards for Stages 2 and 3,
Reclamation will invite industry, non-profit organizations, and venture
capital representatives to be present at the Stages 2 and 3
presentations and testing. Participating industry and venture capital
representatives will also have the ability to seek and secure potential
business deals with Solvers.
This posting only launches the Stage 1 competition. However,
information on the envisioned framework and prizes for Stages 2 and 3
are available here: https://www.usbr.gov/research/challenges/current/. Subsequent stages will be officially launched and announced
with a separate Challenge.gov posting and a separate Federal Register
Notice.
Stage 1 is a Theoretical Challenge that requires only a written
proposal to be submitted. The Challenge award will be contingent upon
critical analysis and evaluation by the Seeker (Reclamation) and the
judging panel appointed by the Seeker. The Seeker has a total prize
pool budget of $150,000 to pay the top six submission(s) that meet or
exceed the criteria below an award of at least $25,000 each. No awards
are guaranteed unless they meet or exceed the criteria, and more than
one award is not guaranteed. Full or partial awards will be considered
for solutions that meet all or some of the criteria, respectively. If
only a single submission meets or exceeds the criteria, the prize award
may be as high as $50,000.
To receive an award, the Solvers will not have to transfer their
intellectual property rights to the Seeker and will not have to grant
the Seekers a non-exclusive license to practice their solutions. Please
note that any proposal submitted will not be treated as confidential
information. Accordingly, Solvers should take whatever steps they deem
necessary to protect their proprietary rights in their solutions prior
to submitting their written proposal for consideration in the Challenge
(e.g. filing provisional or full patent applications on the solution
described in the written proposal submitted prior to submission).
Technical Requirements. The goal of this Challenge is to identify
methods to increase the overall system recovery in a cost effective and
environmentally safe manner to reduce large volumes of concentrate that
requires disposal and to increase usable water supplies. Overall system
recovery is defined as the total product water divided by the total
feed water. This challenge is seeking solutions to minimizing the
concentrate stream while maximizing the useable water produced by the
process.
One class of solutions to the concentrate problem is to increase
the quantity of treated water recovered from desalination processes,
which, a priori, decreases the volume of concentrate generated.
Desalination process recovery is often limited when saturation levels
of sparingly soluble species (e.g. CaSO4, CaCO3,
SiO2) are reached in the process when fresh water is
generated from the desalination process and volume of feed water
decreases. Another class of solutions to the concentrate problem is to
treat the concentrate stream that is produced to reduce its volume or
to produce a solid waste product; thereby reducing the volume requiring
disposal. Other solutions can include novel desalination technologies
with higher overall system recovery than conventional desalination
technologies.
Three sample water qualities from different inland brackish
desalination locations with the various recoveries that each plant is
currently able to achieve are provided in the challenge posting
available through web addresses included under the Addresses section of
this Federal Register Notice.
Things To Avoid
The Seeker is not interested in the following:
1. Surface and sewer discharge solutions.
2. Known evaporation pond solutions (improvements could be
acceptable).
3. Deep well injection solutions.
4. Existing technologies without any improvements to reduce
concentrate volume, reduce cost or operational complexity, etc. of the
existing desalination technology, i.e. reverse osmosis (RO), thermal or
other membrane separation. The Seeker is not looking for a review of
all known techniques so this requires something new/novel in your
solution.
The judging panel will evaluate each proposed solution against the
following Solution Requirements:
Must Have
1. Increase in overall system recovery: Solution must explain how
the approach can increase overall system recovery on one of the three
water samples provided in Table 1 for a plant producing at least 1
million gallons of drinking water quality per day. Solution must be
capable of treating large volumes of at least 1 million gallons per
day. Typical desalination systems generate large volumes of concentrate
per day that require further treatment and/or handling.
2. Cost effective: Solutions are sought that can improve the
recovery and reduce concentrate volume in a cost effective manner.
Solutions cannot significantly increase life cycle (i.e. capital,
operating, and maintenance) costs of systems.
3. Environmentally friendly: Solutions should not create additional
waste (in volume and complexity) than what exists today. The solution
needs to be environmentally friendly and not create more problems than
what is being solved. Thus, the solution must provide an assessment of
life-cycle impacts relative to existing inland desalination approaches.
Nice to have (not as important as the requirements above, but would
add value to a submission):
1. Solution demonstrates an increase in Overall System Recovery on
two or more of the three water samples provided in Table 1 producing a
minimum of 1 million gallons per day of drinking water quality.
2. Submissions that meet the requirements will also be judged on
the following items:
Feasibility (technical/scientific, economic and
environmental life-cycle considerations).
[[Page 89976]]
Flexibility to changing water quality.
Energy efficiency.
Scalability.
Project Deliverables: This Theoretical Challenge requires a written
proposed solution which describes novel new technologies or
improvements to existing technologies to increase overall system
recovery and decrease the volume of concentrate. Each submission should
include:
1. A one-paragraph executive summary of the proposed solution. All
Solvers agree to allow the executive summaries of their solutions to be
posted on Reclamation's Web page and used in other publications
reporting the results of this Challenge.
2. Idea description that should include:
a. Detailed description of a method to increase overall system
recovery and decrease the volume of concentrate. The Solver must
describe with a high level of technical detail as to how the system
would meet or not meet each of the ``must have'' and ``nice to have''
Solution Requirements described above. The Solver should expect that
their submittal will be reviewed by experts in the field of water
treatment, chemistry, and multiple fields of engineering. If the level
of detail is insufficient for the experts, it can't be scored as
feasible.
b. Rationale as to why the Solver believes that the proposed method
will work. This rationale should address each of the Solution
Requirements and should be supported with relevant examples/data.
c. Drawings/sketches of the proposed system, if applicable.
The proposal should not include any personal identifying
information (name, username, company, address, phone, email, personal
Web site, resume, etc.)
Judging: After the Challenge submission deadline, a Judging Panel
will evaluate the submissions and make a decision with regards to the
winning solution(s). The Judging Panel may be composed of Federal and/
or Non Federal scientists, engineers, and other technical experts,
including subject matter experts from the listed collaborators for this
Challenge. All Solvers that submit a proposal will be notified on the
status of their submissions. Decisions by the Seeker cannot be
contested.
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.C. 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.C. 3719(g)(3)).
However, submissions can be entertained from all Solvers regardless
of whether they are U.S. citizens/entities. Meritorious submissions
from non-eligible persons and entities, if any, will be recognized in
publications issued by the Seeker announcing the results of the
competition, such as press releases. Non-U.S citizens/permanent
residents or non-U.S entities can also be included on U.S. teams.
However, prizes--whether monetary or otherwise--will only be awarded to
eligible persons and entities under the authority of the America
COMPETES Reauthorization Act of 2010 (15 U.S.C. 3719).
3. Not be a Federal entity or Federal employee acting within the
scope of their employment (15 U.S.C. 3719(g)(4)). A Federal entity is
defined by 5 U.S.C. Appendix 8G with a list of current Federal entities
periodically posted on the Federal Register.
4. Assume risks and waive claims against the Federal Government and
its related entities (15 U.S.C. 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 or organization 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; and all employees, and all members of the immediate
family or household of any such individual or organization.
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: Individuals or entities that have been funded
by the Federal Government in the past to work within the technical
domain of the competition are eligible provided their specific
submission was not developed by them with Federal funds. Submissions
that propose to improve or adapt existing federally funded technologies
for the solution sought in this prize competition are also eligible.
Individuals are also encouraged to consult with their employer Ethics
Officer for additional guidance and considerations.
Consultation: Reclamation and collaborator scientists, engineers,
and technical specialists were consulted in identifying and selecting
the topic of this prize competition. Direct and indirect input from
various stakeholders and partners were also considered. The U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. Army, U.S Army Corps of
Engineers, the Water Environment and Reuse Foundation, and the Water
Research Foundation are collaborating with Reclamation on various
aspects of this Challenge.
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.
Liability and Indemnification: By participating in this Challenge,
each Solver agrees to assume any and all risks and waive claims against
the federal government 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 Challenge, whether the injury,
death, damage, or loss arises through negligence or otherwise. By
participating in this Challenge, each Solver agrees to indemnify the
federal government against third party claims for damages arising from
or related to Challenge activities.
No Insurance Required: Based on the subject matter of the
Challenge, the type of work that it will possibly require, as well as
an analysis of the likelihood of any claims for death, bodily injury,
or
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property damage, or loss potentially resulting from competition
participation, Solvers are not required to obtain liability insurance
or demonstrate financial responsibility in order to participate in this
Challenge.
Dated: November 18, 2016.
David Raff,
Science Advisor.
[FR Doc. 2016-29723 Filed 12-12-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4332-90-P