Small-Scale Natural Gas Exports, 35106-35119 [2018-15903]
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markets both domestically and
internationally. They are funded
through assessments paid by persons
subject to the assessment. Checkoff
programs are administered by national
boards created for that purpose and
oversight is provided by USDA.
Some checkoff programs are
authorized by their own commodityspecific Federal statutes. Others, like the
sorghum and lamb checkoff programs
addressed by this direct final rule, are
authorized by the Commodity
Promotion, Research, and Information
Act of 1996, 7 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
(Generic Act).
The Sorghum and Lamb Orders
authorize the collection of assessments
from, respectively, sorghum producers
and importers, and lamb producers,
feeders, seedstock producers, first
handlers, and exporters. Under both
Orders, payers of assessments are
entitled to vote in referenda on the
continuation, suspension, or
termination of their checkoff programs.
The Generic Act provides that two
referenda must be conducted in each
checkoff program created pursuant to its
authority. The first referendum must be
conducted either before a checkoff
program goes into effect (to ascertain
whether the Order is favored by the
persons to be covered by it) or,
alternatively, within 3 years after
assessments begin (to determine
whether a majority favors the
continuation, suspension, or
termination of the program). The second
referendum must be conducted within 7
years after assessments begin to
determine whether a majority favors the
continuation, suspension, or
termination of the program. All persons
subject to assessments are allowed to
vote in referenda.
The Sorghum and Lamb Orders each
incorporate provisions for two required
referenda, the first within 3 years and
the second within 7 years after
assessments begin. Both Orders contain
provisions for assessment payers to
obtain refunds of assessments and for
both boards to maintain escrow
accounts ahead of these referenda. All of
those referenda, two for sorghum and
two for lamb, were conducted within
the time frames defined by the Orders.
In each of the four referenda, a large
majority approved the relevant
program’s continuance. Those referenda
will not be repeated. Thus, AMS is
removing the sections and paragraphs of
the Sorghum and Lamb Orders that
relate to refunds and escrow accounts
because they are obsolete.
In the Sorghum Order, §§ 1221.112(g),
1221.112(h), 1221.118, 1221.119, and
1221.120, which provided for escrow
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accounts and refunds in connection
with required referenda, will be
removed. In § 1221.112, paragraphs (i)
through (m) will be redesignated as (g)
through (k), respectively. A conforming
change will be made to § 1221.128(a) to
correct a reference.
In the Lamb Order, §§ 1280.214,
1280.215, 1280.216, and 1280.403,
which provided for escrow accounts
and refunds in connection with required
referenda, will be removed.
AMS is issuing this direct final rule
without a preceding proposed rule
because this action is a routine,
noncontroversial regulatory change that
AMS believes will not generate adverse
comment. The rule is conditional on the
non-receipt of adverse comments. If
adverse comment is received, AMS will
withdraw the rule before the effective
date.
Only one sorghum producer
organization per State may be qualified.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 1280—LAMB PROMOTION,
RESEARCH, AND INFORMATION
ORDER
5. The authority citation for part 1280
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 7411–7425 and 7
U.S.C. 7401.
§§ 1280.214, 1280.215, 1280.216, and
1280.403 [Removed]
6. Remove §§ 1280.214, 1280.215,
1280.216, and 1280.403.
■
Dated: July 20, 2018.
Bruce Summers,
Administrator, Agricultural Marketing
Service.
[FR Doc. 2018–15893 Filed 7–24–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–02–P
List of Subjects
7 CFR Part 1221
Administrative practice and
procedure, Advertising, Agricultural
research, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Sorghum.
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
7 CFR Part 1280
RIN 1901–AB43
Administrative practice and
procedure, Advertising, Agricultural
research, Meat and meat products,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
For reasons set forth in the preamble,
AMS is amending 7 CFR parts 1221 and
1280 as follows:
Small-Scale Natural Gas Exports
PART 1221—SORGHUM PROMOTION,
RESEARCH, AND INFORMATION
ORDER
1. The authority citation for part 1221
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 7411–7425 and 7
U.S.C. 7401.
§ 1221.112
[Amended]
2. In § 1221.112 remove paragraphs (g)
and (h) and redesignate paragraphs (i)
through (m) as paragraphs (g) through
(k), respectively.
■
§§ 1221.118, 1221.119, and 1221.120
[Removed]
3. Remove §§ 1221.118, 1221.119, and
1221.120.
■ 4. Revise § 1221.128(a) to read as
follows:
■
§ 1221.128
Qualification.
(a) Organizations receiving
qualification from the Secretary will be
entitled to submit requests for funding
to the Board pursuant to § 1221.112(h).
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10 CFR Part 590
[FE Docket No. 17–86–R]
Office of Fossil Energy,
Department of Energy.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Department of Energy
(DOE or the Department) is revising its
regulations to provide that DOE will
issue an export authorization upon
receipt of any complete application that
seeks to export natural gas, including
liquefied natural gas (LNG), to countries
with which the United States has not
entered into a free trade agreement
(FTA) requiring national treatment for
trade in natural gas and with which
trade is not prohibited by U.S. law or
policy (non-FTA countries), provided
that the application satisfies the
following two criteria: The application
proposes to export natural gas in a
volume up to and including 51.75
billion cubic feet (Bcf) per year (Bcf/yr)
(equivalent to 0.14 Bcf per day (Bcf/d)),
and DOE’s approval of the application
does not require an environmental
impact statement (EIS) or an
environmental assessment (EA) under
the National Environmental Policy Act
of 1969 (NEPA). Applications that
satisfy these criteria are requesting
authorization for ‘‘small-scale natural
gas exports,’’ and DOE deems such
exports to be consistent with the public
interest under the Natural Gas Act
(NGA). DOE’s regulations regarding
SUMMARY:
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notice of applications and procedures
conducted on applications do not apply
to applications that satisfy these criteria.
This regulation is intended to expedite
DOE’s processing of these applications
and reduce administrative burdens for
the small-scale natural gas export
market.
DATES: This final rule is effective August
24, 2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Amy Sweeney, U.S. Department of
Energy (FE–34), Office of Regulation
and International Engagement, Office of
Fossil Energy Forrestal Building, Room
3E–042, 1000 Independence Avenue
SW, Washington, DC 20585; (202) 586–
2627; or Cassandra Bernstein or Ronald
(R.J.) Colwell, U.S. Department of
Energy (GC–76), Office of the Assistant
General Counsel for Electricity and
Fossil Energy, Forrestal Building, Room
6D–033, 1000 Independence Ave. SW,
Washington, DC 20585; (202) 586–9793
or (202) 586–8499.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Acronyms and Abbreviations. A
number of acronyms and abbreviations
are used in this final rule and set forth
below for reference.
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AEO Annual Energy Outlook
APA Administrative Procedure Act
Bcf/d Billion Cubic Feet per Day
Bcf/yr Billion Cubic Feet per Year
CNG Compressed Natural Gas
DOE Department of Energy
EA Environmental Assessment
EIA U.S. Energy Information
Administration
EIS Environmental Impact Statement
FE Office of Fossil Energy, U.S. Department
of Energy
FERC Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
FTA Free Trade Agreement
ISO ISO IMO7/TVAC–ASME LNG
LNG Liquefied Natural Gas
mtpa Million Metric Tons per Annum
NEPA National Environmental Policy Act
of 1969
NGA Natural Gas Act of 1938
I. Background
II. Discussion of Final Rule and Response to
Comments
A. Public Interest Determination
1. General
2. Scope of Rule
3. Public Interest Standard
4. Domestic Supply of Natural Gas
5. Cumulative Impacts
6. Economic Impacts
7. Environmental Issues
8. Administrative Procedures and Judicial
Review Under the Natural Gas Act
B. Regulatory Criteria
1. Volume Limitation
2. Categorical Exclusion From NEPA
C. Other Issues
III. Regulatory Review
A. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
B. Executive Orders 13771, 13777, and
13783
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C. National Environmental Policy Act
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
G. Treasury and General Government
Appropriations Act, 1999
H. Executive Order 13132
I. Executive Order 12988
J. Treasury and General Government
Appropriations Act, 2001
K. Executive Order 13211
L. Congressional Notification
IV. Approval of the Office of the Secretary
I. Background
The Department of Energy is
responsible for authorizing exports of
domestically produced natural gas to
foreign nations pursuant to section 3 of
the NGA, 15 U.S.C. 717b. For
applications to export natural gas to
non-FTA countries under NGA section
3(a), 15 U.S.C. 717b(a),1 DOE has
consistently interpreted section 3 of the
NGA as creating a rebuttable
presumption that a proposed export of
natural gas is in the public interest.2
Accordingly, DOE will conduct an
informal adjudication and grant a nonFTA application unless DOE finds that
the proposed exportation will not be
consistent with the public interest.3
Before reaching a final decision, DOE
must also comply with NEPA, 42 U.S.C.
4321 et seq.
In this final rule, DOE revises its
regulations to expedite the application
and approval process for ‘‘small-scale’’
exports of natural gas to non-FTA
countries, pursuant to section 3(a) of the
NGA. This emerging market involves
exports of small volumes of natural gas
from the United States to countries
primarily in, but not limited to, the
Caribbean, Central America, and South
America. The small-scale export market
has developed as a solution to the
practical and economic constraints
limiting large-scale natural gas exports
to these countries. In contrast to largescale natural gas exports, small-scale
exports typically originate from existing
facilities in the United States, are
transported shorter distances, and rely
1 This final rule does not apply to exports to FTA
countries under section 3(c) of the NGA, 15 U.S.C.
717b(c). This final rule also does not affect existing
DOE authorizations or DOE’s evaluation of any nonFTA application that does not meet the criteria for
small-scale natural gas exports.
2 See Sierra Club v. U.S. Dep’t of Energy, 867 F.3d
189, 203 (D.C. Cir. 2017) (‘‘We have construed
[NGA section 3(a)] as containing a ‘general
presumption favoring [export] authorization.’ ’’)
(quoting W. Va. Pub. Serv. Comm’n v. U.S. Dep’t
of Energy, 681 F.2d 847, 856 (D.C. Cir. 1982)).
3 See id. (‘‘there must be ‘an affirmative showing
of inconsistency with the public interest’ to deny
the application’’ under NGA section 3(a)) (quoting
Panhandle Producers & Royalty Owners Ass’n v.
Econ. Regulatory Admin., 822 F.2d 1105, 1111 (D.C.
Cir. 1987)).
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on a variety of transportation modes,
such as approved ISO IMO7/TVAC–
ASME LNG (ISO) containers loaded
onto container ships and barges. DOE
believes that facilitating small-scale
natural gas exports will allow for greater
diversity and competition in the natural
gas market, consistent with the public
interest under NGA section 3(a).
For each small-scale export
application submitted to DOE, DOE will
first determine if the application is
complete under DOE’s regulations. If the
application is complete, DOE will post
the application on DOE’s website,
consistent with DOE practice. This final
rule establishes that, upon receipt of any
complete application to export natural
gas (including LNG) to non-FTA
countries, DOE will grant the
application provided that it satisfies the
following two criteria: (1) The
application proposes to export natural
gas in a volume up to and including
51.75 Bcf/yr 4 (10 CFR 590.102(p)(1));
and (2) DOE’s approval of the
application does not require an EIS or
EA under NEPA (10 CFR
590.102(p)(2))—that is, the application
is eligible for a categorical exclusion
under DOE’s NEPA regulations.
Any non-FTA application that
satisfies these two criteria will qualify
as a ‘‘small-scale natural gas export’’ as
that term is defined under this final rule
(10 CFR 590.102(p)), and will be
deemed to be consistent with the public
interest under NGA section 3(a) (10 CFR
590.208(a)). DOE will issue an export
authorization granting the application
on an expedited basis. Specifically, DOE
will not provide notice of each
individual application nor apply other
procedures typically conducted for nonFTA export applications under DOE’s
regulations, 10 CFR 590.205 and 10 CFR
part 590, subpart C (10 CFR 590.303–10
CFR 590.317).
On September 1, 2017, DOE
published the notice of proposed
rulemaking (NOPR or proposed rule) to
revise its regulations to provide for this
expedited approval of small-scale export
applications (82 FR 41570; Sept. 1,
2017). Publication of the NOPR began a
45-day public comment period that
ended on October 16, 2017. DOE
received approximately 85 unique
4 In this final rule, DOE is changing the volume
criterion from a daily limitation of ‘‘up to and
including 0.14 Bcf/d,’’ as stated in the proposed
rule, to an annualized limitation of ‘‘up to and
including 51.75 Bcf/yr.’’ This change does not affect
the total volume, as 0.14 Bcf/d and 51.75 Bcf/yr
represent the same amount of natural gas expressed
in different terms. DOE has determined that
expressing the volume criterion in an annualized
figure is both more consistent with industry
practice and more practicable for DOE’s
administration of the small-scale export program.
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comments on the NOPR from a variety
of sources, including natural gas
industry groups, environmental
organizations, and individuals. The
NOPR and comments received on the
NOPR can be accessed through DOE’s
website at https://www.energy.gov/fe/
articles/notice-proposed-rulemakingregarding-small-scale-lng-exports.
For additional background
information on this final rule, please see
the proposed rule. In the proposed rule,
DOE provides information on DOE’s
practice of issuing non-FTA export
authorizations and the various studies
DOE has commissioned to evaluate the
reasonably foreseeable economic and
environmental impacts of natural gas
exports—including those that would
qualify as small-scale exports under this
final rule.
II. Discussion of Final Rule and
Response to Comments
DOE has evaluated the comments
received during the public comment
period. In this section, DOE discusses
the relevant, significant comments
received on the proposed rule and
provides DOE’s responses to those
comments. Some commenters raised a
variety of other concerns that are
outside the scope of the rule—including
criticizing individual LNG export
projects currently in operation or
pending before DOE and questioning the
scope of the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission’s (FERC) jurisdiction over
certain types of LNG export facilities
under NGA section 3. DOE does not
address these comments in the final
rule.
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A. Public Interest Determination
1. General
In issuing this final rule, DOE has
determined that small-scale natural gas
exports are consistent with the public
interest under NGA section 3(a). In
reaching this conclusion, DOE has
considered its obligations under NGA
section 3(a), the public comments
received on the proposed rule, and a
wide range of information bearing on
the public interest, including (but not
limited to) information on economic
impacts, international impacts, security
of domestic natural gas supply, and
environmental impacts associated with
these exports (82 FR 41573–41574; Sept.
1, 2017).
Additionally, DOE has considered the
29 final non-FTA export authorizations
issued to date,5 as well as authoritative
5 As of the date of the proposed rule, DOE had
issued 28 final authorizations to export LNG or
compressed natural gas (CNG) to non-FTA countries
(82 FR 41572). After the proposed rule was
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projections for natural gas supply,
demand, and prices set forth in the U.S.
Energy Information Administration’s
(EIA) Annual Energy Outlook 2017
(AEO 2017) 6 (discussed in the proposed
rule) and Annual Energy Outlook 2018
(AEO 2018).7 With respect to the
regulatory criteria established by this
rulemaking, DOE considered industry
sources in establishing the volume
limitation, as well as its obligations
under NEPA in establishing the NEPA
criterion.
In sum, DOE has thoroughly analyzed
the many factors affecting the export of
U.S. natural gas, as well as the unique
characteristics and minimal adverse
impacts of the emerging small-scale
natural gas market. On this basis (and as
discussed in the proposed rule), DOE
has determined that the final rule is in
accordance with section 3 of the NGA,
DOE’s interpretation of the public
interest standard set forth in NGA
section 3(a), and DOE’s long-standing
policy of minimizing federal control and
involvement in energy markets and
promoting a balanced and mixed energy
resource system. Based on this
evidence, 10 CFR 590.208 of the final
rule establishes that small-scale natural
gas exports, as defined in 10 CFR
590.102(p), are deemed to be consistent
with the public interest under NGA
section 3(a).
Many commenters expressed overall
support for DOE’s authorization of LNG
exports and, specifically, for DOE’s
efforts to expedite the approval of
applications for small-scale natural gas
exports to non-FTA countries. Several
commenters agreed that small-scale
natural gas exports are an important
emerging market that DOE should
facilitate through a streamlined
approval process for qualifying
applicants. They commented that smallscale exports will provide a variety of
benefits both to the United States and to
the anticipated importing countries
primarily located in the Caribbean,
published, DOE issued an additional non-FTA
export authorization. See Eagle LNG Partners
Jacksonville II LLC, DOE/FE Order No. 4078, FE
Docket No. 17–79–LNG, Opinion and Order
Granting Long-Term, Multi-Contract Authorization
to Export Liquefied Natural Gas in ISO Containers
Loaded at the Eagle Maxville Facility in
Jacksonville, Florida, and Exported by Vessel to
Free Trade Agreement and Non-Free Trade
Agreement Nations (Sept. 15, 2017). Thus, to date,
DOE has issued 29 final export authorizations to
non-FTA countries, bringing the cumulative total of
approved non-FTA exports of LNG and CNG to
21.35 Bcf/d of natural gas, or 7.79 trillion cubic feet
per year. See id. at 34–37.
6 U.S. Energy Info. Admin., Annual Energy
Outlook 2017 (Jan. 2017), available at: https://
www.eia.gov/outlooks/archive/aeo17/.
7 U.S. Energy Info. Admin., Annual Energy
Outlook 2018 (Feb. 2018), available at: https://
www.eia.gov/outlooks/aeo.
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Central America, and South America.
Benefits identified for the United States
include stimulating the natural gas
market, generating economic growth,
strengthening the global natural gas
market, and enhancing U.S. national
security interests abroad. Benefits
identified for the importing countries
include expanding natural gas markets
and providing access to cleaner and
more reliable sources of energy.
Commenters also expressed support for
DOE’s regulatory definition of ‘‘smallscale natural gas export,’’ such that
qualifying applications are deemed
consistent with the public interest; as
well as DOE’s efforts to reduce
regulatory burdens for these applicants.
DOE generally agrees with these
comments and recognizes the variety of
important benefits that are expected to
occur under the final rule.
2. Scope of Rule
Some commenters remarked that this
rulemaking is an important step, yet
encouraged DOE to liberalize all natural
gas exports—not just qualifying smallscale natural gas exports—to ensure that
the benefits of natural gas exports can be
fully realized.
Based on findings from The
Macroeconomic Impact of Increasing
U.S. LNG Exports (2015 LNG Export
Study),8 DOE agrees that higher natural
gas exports are associated with
marginally higher macroeconomic
benefits to the United States (82 FR
41572).9 This rulemaking focuses only
on small-scale natural gas exports to
non-FTA countries, in light of the
unique characteristics and minimal
adverse impacts associated with that
market. Insofar as the commenters are
suggesting that DOE undertake
additional deregulatory efforts under
NGA section 3(a), DOE welcomes
suggestions, data, and information on
this topic through its regulatory reform
email inbox at Regulatory.Review@
hq.doe.gov.
3. Public Interest Standard
Several commenters disagreed with
various aspects of DOE’s public interest
analysis generally. For example, some
commenters disagreed with DOE’s
position that NGA section 3(a) creates a
8 Center for Energy Studies at Rice University
Baker Institute and Oxford Economics, The
Macroeconomic Impact of Increasing U.S. LNG
Exports (Oct. 29, 2015), available at: https://
energy.gov/sites/prod/files/2015/12/f27/20151113_
macro_impact_of_lng_exports_0.pdf [hereinafter
2015 LNG Export Study].
9 On June 12, 2018, DOE published a notice of
availability of the 2018 LNG Export Study and
request for comments. See U.S. Dep’t of Energy,
Study on Macroeconomic Outcomes of LNG
Exports, 83 FR 27314 (June 12, 2018).
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rebuttable presumption that natural gas
exports are consistent with the public
interest. Some stated that Congress, not
DOE, must define ‘‘public interest’’
under section 3(a), whereas other
commenters criticized DOE for not
providing a regulatory definition of the
public interest. Another commenter
suggested that applications to export
natural gas should be subjected to the
same standard, regardless of whether
the natural gas is being exported to FTA
or non-FTA countries.
As an initial matter, section 3 of the
NGA (as amended by section 201 of the
Energy Policy Act of 1992 (Pub. L. 102–
486)) distinguishes between exports to
non-FTA countries under section 3(a)
and FTA countries under section 3(c).10
These provisions establish different
standards of review for proposed
exports to FTA and non-FTA countries,
and DOE has comported with the
appropriate standard of review for the
future non-FTA exports at issue in this
rulemaking.11
In every non-FTA authorization to
date,12 as well as in the proposed rule
(82 FR 41571–41572; Sept. 1, 2017),
DOE has explained its interpretation of
the public interest analysis under NGA
section 3(a). The commenters’ concerns
reflect a lack of familiarity with both the
statute and DOE’s long-standing practice
in evaluating non-FTA applications—a
practice that was upheld by the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit in a series of cases
decided in 2017.13 Indeed, the D.C.
Circuit has consistently affirmed DOE’s
interpretation that NGA section 3(a)
creates a rebuttable presumption
favoring authorization of applications to
import or export natural gas.14
Although section 3(a) establishes a
broad public interest standard and a
10 See
supra note 1.
id.
12 See, e.g., Eagle LNG Partners Jacksonville II
LLC, DOE/FE Order No. 4078, at 8–10, supra note
5.
13 See Sierra Club v. U.S. Dep’t of Energy, 867
F.3d 189 (D.C. Cir. 2017) (denying petition for
review challenging non-FTA export authorization);
Sierra Club v. U.S. Dep’t of Energy, Nos. 16–1186,
16–1252, 16–1253, 703 Fed. Appx. 1 (D.C. Cir. Nov.
1, 2017) (denying petitions for review challenging
three non-FTA export authorizations).
14 See Sierra Club, 867 F.3d at 203; see also, e.g.,
W. Va. Pub. Serv. Comm’n v. U.S. Dep’t of Energy,
681 F.2d 847 (D.C. Cir. 1982); Panhandle Producers
and Royalty Owners Ass’n v. Economic Regulatory
Admin., 822 F.2d 1105 (D.C. Cir. 1987); Panhandle
Producers and Royalty Owners Ass’n v. Economic
Regulatory Admin., 847 F.2d 1168 (1988).
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11 See
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presumption favoring export
authorizations, Congress has not defined
the phrase ‘‘public interest’’ or
identified specific criteria that must be
considered in issuing a non-FTA
authorization under that statute. As a
result, DOE has identified a range of
factors, described above, that it
considers when determining whether a
proposed export of natural gas is
consistent with the public interest. The
D.C. Circuit has upheld DOE’s non-FTA
export authorizations granted on the
basis of this public interest evaluation.15
In this rulemaking, DOE has followed
its established approach in interpreting
NGA section 3(a) to determine that
qualifying small-scale natural gas
exports are consistent with the public
interest after considering all relevant
factors (82 FR 41573). There is nothing
fundamentally unique about small-scale
exports that would alter DOE’s analysis
of the public interest in this context.
4. Domestic Supply of Natural Gas
Numerous commenters disagreed as
to whether the United States has
sufficient natural gas supplies to
support the expedited approval of
small-scale exports under this rule.
Some commenters asserted that the
United States has sufficient natural gas
supplies to meet both increased natural
gas exports and increased domestic
natural gas demand, as DOE set forth in
the proposed rule (82 FR 41573–41574).
Other commenters asserted that the
United States does not have sufficient
natural gas supplies to meet current
demand, much less increased demand
associated with this rulemaking. One
commenter, for example, argued that
approvals for natural gas exports to FTA
and non-FTA countries combined
already exceed 71% of domestic
demand, thereby calling into question
the sufficiency of U.S. natural gas
supplies.
First, DOE notes that the volumes
authorized for export to FTA and nonFTA countries are not additive to one
another. The 71% figure cited by the
commenter for ‘‘combined LNG
exports’’ fails to acknowledge this fact,
which is reflected in DOE’s orders.
Rather, each authorization grants
authority to export the entire volume of
a facility to FTA or non-FTA countries,
respectively, to provide the
authorization holder with maximal
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15 See
supra note 13.
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35109
flexibility in determining its export
destinations.
Next, to date DOE has issued 29 final
non-FTA authorizations in a cumulative
volume of exports totaling 21.35 Bcf/d
of natural gas.16 By comparison,
approximately 3.5 Bcf/d of capacity has
been built and is being utilized, and
approximately 7.5 Bcf/d of additional
capacity is under construction.17
Industry outlooks, including Reference
cases in the last several years of EIA’s
Annual Energy Outlook, do not foresee
long-term LNG exports from the United
States exceeding the volume currently
authorized for export from non-FTA
countries.
By DOE’s standard measures of
supply, there are adequate natural gas
resources to meet demand associated
with the final rule. EIA’s most recent
natural gas estimates of future
production, price, and other domestic
industry fundamentals set forth in AEO
2017 and AEO 2018 support this
conclusion. For example, the AEO 2017
Reference case projection of lower-48
states dry natural gas production in
2035 increased significantly (by 27.9
Bcf/d) as compared with AEO 2011,
while the AEO 2018 Reference case
projection of that figure was higher still,
an increase of 33.8 Bcf/d over AEO
2011. Projections of domestic natural
gas consumption in 2035 also increased
in both AEO 2017 and AEO 2018, as
compared to AEO 2011 (by 11.3 Bcf/d
in AEO 2017 and by 13.3 Bcf/d in AEO
2018). Even with higher production and
consumption, the 2035 projected natural
gas market price in the Reference case
declined from $8.04/MMBtu (2017$) in
AEO 2011 to $5.20/MMBtu (2017$) in
AEO 2017 and to $4.26/MMBtu (2017$)
in AEO 2018. The implication of the
latest EIA projections in AEO 2017 and
AEO 2018 is that a significantly greater
quantity of natural gas is projected to be
available at a lower cost than was
estimated seven years ago.
16 See Eagle LNG Partners Jacksonville II LLC,
DOE/FE Order No. 4078, at 34–37, supra note 5.
17 See, e.g., U.S. Energy Info. Admin., Existing
and Under Construction Large Scale U.S.
Liquefaction Facilities (June 18, 2018), available at:
https://www.eia.gov/naturalgas/U.S.liquefaction
capacity.xlsx (also see Contents tab); Cheniere
Energy, Inc., ‘‘Cheniere Makes Positive Final
Investment Decision on Train 3 at the Corpus
Christi Liquefaction Project’’ (May 22, 2018),
available at: https://phx.corporate-ir.net/
phoenix.zhtml?c=101667&p=irol-news
Article&ID=2350302.
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Proved reserves of natural gas—i.e.,
volumes of oil and natural gas that
geologic and engineering data
demonstrate with reasonable certainty
to be recoverable in future years from
known reservoirs—also have been
increasing. From 2000 to 2015, proved
reserves have increased 73% to 307,730
Bcf, while production has increased
only 41% during the same period,
demonstrating the growing supply of
natural gas available under existing
economic and operating conditions.18
EIA’s estimates of technically
recoverable reserves point to the
availability of domestic natural gas for
decades to come. These reserves are
resources in accumulations (both
proved and unproved) that are
producible using current recovery
technology but without reference to
economic profitability. EIA’s estimates
of lower-48 natural gas technically
recoverable reserves total 1,796 Tcf in
AEO 2017.19
Next, the 2014 and 2015 Studies
concluded that, for the period of the
analysis (through 2040), the United
States is projected to have ample
supplies of natural gas resources that
can meet domestic needs for natural gas
and the LNG export market. Further,
most projections of domestic natural gas
resources extend beyond 20 to 40 years.
Although not all technically recoverable
resources are currently economical to
produce, it is instructive to note that
EIA’s recent estimate of technically
recoverable resources as of January 1,
2015, equates to nearly 66 years of
natural gas supply at the 2015 domestic
consumption level of 27.24 Tcf.20
Based upon this record evidence and
the discussion in the proposed rule,
DOE finds that the small-scale exports
will not adversely affect the availability
of natural gas supplies to domestic
consumers, such as would negate the
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18 U.S.
Energy Info. Admin., U.S. Dry Natural Gas
Proved Reserves (Feb. 12, 2018), available at: https://
www.eia.gov/dnav/ng/ng_enr_dry_dcu_nus_a.htm;
U.S. Energy Info. Admin., U.S. Dry Natural Gas
Production (Feb. 12, 2018), available at: https://
www.eia.gov/dnav/ng/hist/n9070us2a.htm
(additional calculations conducted to produce
percentage change and R/P ratios).
19 See U.S. Energy Info. Admin., Assumptions to
the Annual Energy Outlook 2017 (July 2017), Table
9.2. Technically recoverable U.S. dry natural gas
resources as of January 1, 2015, at 133, available at:
https://www.eia.gov/outlooks/aeo/assumptions/
pdf/oilgas.pdf (2017).pdf, and Assumptions to the
Annual Energy Outlook 2010 (Apr. 2010), Table 9.2.
Technically recoverable U.S. natural gas resources
as of January 1, 2008, at 111, available at: https://
www.eia.gov/oiaf/aeo/assumption/pdf/
0554(2010).pdf.
20 See U.S. Energy Info. Admin., Natural Gas
Consumption by End Use (Feb. 12, 2018), available
at: https://www.eia.gov/dnav/ng/ng_cons_sum_dcu_
nus_a.htm.
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net economic benefits to the United
States.
5. Cumulative Impacts
Several commenters asserted that
DOE must account for cumulative
impacts in various ways as part of its
public interest determination for this
final rule. Some commenters urged DOE
to provide a ‘‘cap’’ or other language in
the final rule to halt automatic approval
of small-scale exports if the cumulative
volume of exports exceeds the scope of
existing cumulative impact analyses
(which the commenters acknowledge is
28 Bcf/d of exports based on the 2015
LNG Export Study, 82 FR 41572), or if
other circumstances arise that would
render these exports inconsistent with
the public interest. Commenters
suggested, for example, that DOE should
cease approval of small-scale export
applications if the United States loses
its competitive price advantage in
exporting LNG, or if exporting natural
gas above a certain volume would have
negative economic impacts or threaten
the security of domestic natural gas
supplies. Other commenters expressed
concern that U.S. natural gas production
could not meet ‘‘unlimited’’ LNG
exports as might occur under the
proposed rule, and therefore urged DOE
to implement a ‘‘safety net’’ in the rule
allowing DOE to halt approvals of smallscale applications.
DOE declines to adopt a mechanism
in the final rule that would
automatically halt approvals of smallscale applications if the cumulative
volume of approvals exceeds the scope
of DOE’s cumulative impact analyses to
date. The 2015 Study considered export
volumes ranging from 12 to 20 Bcf/d of
natural gas, as well as a high resource
recovery case examining export volumes
up to 28 Bcf/d of natural gas. By
comparison, to date DOE has issued
final non-FTA authorizations in a
cumulative volume of exports totaling
21.35 Bcf/d of natural gas 21—well
below the 28 Bcf/d case considered in
the 2015 Study. DOE already assesses
the cumulative impacts of each
succeeding request for export
authorization on the public interest with
due regard to the effect on domestic
natural gas supply and demand
fundamentals. DOE will continue to do
so for non-small-scale export
applications (i.e., applications
requesting an export volume greater
than 51.75 Bcf/yr), which constitute
both 99% of the non-FTA LNG export
volumes authorized to date and 99% of
the LNG export volumes requested in
21 See Eagle LNG Partners Jacksonville II LLC,
DOE/FE Order No. 4078, at 34–37, supra note 5.
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non-FTA applications currently pending
before DOE.22
For this final rule, DOE has
determined that domestic supplies of
natural gas will be adequate to supply
small-scale exports of natural gas while
meeting domestic demand. In so doing,
DOE considered the economic impacts
of higher natural gas prices, potential
increases in natural gas price volatility,
and the security of domestic natural gas
supplies, among other factors. DOE also
explained that the prospect of
‘‘unlimited’’ exports of U.S. natural gas
is not realistic, as discussed in the 2015
LNG Export Study.23 The authors of the
2015 Study had to include several
assumptions about the global natural gas
market for U.S. LNG exports to exceed
12 Bcf/d, and include far less likely
assumptions to reach the high resource
recovery case of 28 Bcf/d of exports.
Further, as DOE has observed in prior
orders, receiving a non-FTA
authorization from DOE does not
guarantee that a particular facility will
be financed and built; nor does it
guarantee that, if built, market
conditions would continue to favor
exports once the facility is
operational.24 For more information on
DOE’s LNG export studies and DOE’s
conclusions regarding these public
interest factors, please see the proposed
rule (82 FR 41571–41574; Sept. 1, 2017).
As to the commenter’s concern that
the global natural gas market for U.S.
LNG exports could change in the future,
DOE notes that the 2015 LNG Export
Study included several assumptions
about the global market for the time
period covering 2015 to 2040.
Nonetheless, DOE’s long-standing
policy is to minimize federal control
and involvement in energy markets (82
FR 41571, 41574), such that even a
change in the competitive status of U.S.
LNG globally would not affect DOE’s
22 U.S. Dep’t of Energy, Office of Fossil Energy,
Summary of LNG Export Applications of the Lower
48 States Annual Energy Outlook 2017 (Feb. 14,
2018), available at: https://energy.gov/fe/
downloads/summary-lng-export-applications-lower48-states.
23 The 2015 LNG Export Study included scenarios
in which LNG exports were unconstrained. These
scenarios indicated that, should the U.S. resource
base be less robust and more expensive than
anticipated, U.S. LNG exports would be less
competitive in the world market, thereby resulting
in lower export levels from the United States.
Further, in all of the unconstrained scenarios, the
supply and price response to LNG exports did not
negate the net economic benefit to the economy
from the exports.
24 See, e.g., Golden Pass Products LLC, DOE/FE
Order No. 3978, FE Docket No. 12–156–LNG,
Opinion and Order Granting Long-Term, MultiContract Authorization to Export Liquefied Natural
Gas by Vessel from the Golden Pass LNG Terminal
Located in Jefferson County, Texas, to Non-Free
Trade Agreement, at 148 (Apr. 25, 2017).
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approval of small-scale natural gas
exports as set forth in this final rule.
Next, commenters stated that the
proposed rule is deficient because DOE
has neither: (i) Attempted to predict the
potential cumulative size of the U.S.
small-scale export market, nor (ii)
identified the potential LNG demand in
the importing Caribbean, Central
American, and South American
countries that are the target of this rule.
DOE explained in the proposed rule
that foreign demand for imports of U.S.
natural gas has increased as many
countries, such as those in the
Caribbean, Central America, and South
America, seek to import cleaner sources
of energy. Based on the record evidence
and the small volumes at issue in this
rulemaking, DOE has determined that
domestic supplies of natural gas will be
adequate both to meet domestic needs
and to supply small-scale exports of
natural gas (82 FR 41572–41574). We
therefore disagree with the comment
that DOE was required to consider
projections of the potential cumulative
size of the U.S. small-scale market and/
or the market demand of the importing
regions among the many factors
evaluated as part of its public interest
determination.
6. Economic Impacts
Several commenters agreed with
DOE’s position that small-scale natural
gas exports will not lead to a detectable
impact on domestic natural gas prices
(82 FR 41574), whereas other
commenters disputed this position. The
dissenting commenters expressed
concern that this rulemaking will
increase exports of U.S. natural gas
(including LNG), leading to increases in
natural gas prices. They further argued
that even very small increases in natural
gas prices are likely to lead to the loss
of employment in energy-intensive
industries. In sum, they asserted that, if
there are any economic or job-creation
impacts associated with this final rule,
these impacts are likely to be negative.
First, as discussed in the proposed
rule, the 2014 and 2015 LNG Export
Studies 25 projected the economic
impacts of LNG exports in a range of
scenarios, including scenarios that
exceeded the current amount of LNG
exports authorized in the final non-FTA
export authorizations to date. The 2015
LNG Export Study concluded that LNG
exports at these levels (in excess of 12
Bcf/d of natural gas) would result in
higher U.S. natural gas prices, but that
these price changes would remain in a
relatively narrow range across the
scenarios studied. However, even with
these estimated price increases, the
2015 LNG Export Study found that the
United States would experience net
economic benefits from increased LNG
exports in all cases studied.26
Next, for the proposed rule, DOE
reviewed EIA’s AEO 2017. The
Reference case of this projection
includes the effects of the Clean Power
Plan (CPP) final rule,27 which was
intended to reduce carbon emissions
from the power sector. DOE assessed
AEO 2017 to evaluate any differences
from AEO 2014, which formed the basis
for the 2014 LNG Export Study.28
Comparing key results from 2040 (the
end of the projection period in
Reference case projections from AEO
2014) shows that the latest Reference
case Outlook foresees lower-48 market
conditions that would be even more
AEO 2014
reference
case
Henry Hub Prices in 2040 (in 2017$) ..............................................................
Lower-48 Production (Bcf/d) in 2040 ...............................................................
35111
supportive of LNG exports, including
higher production and demand coupled
with notably lower prices. Results from
EIA’s AEO 2017 no-CPP case, which is
the same as the Reference case but does
not include the CPP, are also more
supportive of LNG exports on the basis
of higher production with lower prices
relative to AEO 2014.
For the year 2040, the AEO 2017
Reference case anticipates 3% more
natural gas production in the lower-48
than AEO 2014. It also projects an
average Henry Hub natural gas price
that is lower than AEO 2014 by 38% in
2017$. In the AEO 2017 no-CPP case, for
the year 2040, lower-48 production is
2% higher than in AEO 2014, with the
price differential being approximately
the same. Both higher production and
lower prices in both AEO 2017 cases
illustrate a market environment
supportive of LNG exports.
On February 6, 2018, EIA issued AEO
2018. For this final rule, DOE has
considered AEO 2018 to determine
whether EIA’s most recent projections
present any material difference in terms
of price impacts. AEO 2018, which does
not include the CPP in its Reference
case, is even more supportive of exports
than AEO 2017 and AEO 2014, showing
Henry Hub prices of $4.50 in 2040,
which is 46% lower than AEO 2014 and
13% lower than AEO 2017 in 2017$.
Production levels are also increased in
2040 in AEO 2018 over AEO 2014 and
AEO 2017—with AEO 2018 showing
lower-48 dry production at 109.1 Bcf/d
over lower-48 production levels of 99.7
and 102.5 in AEO 2014 and 2017,
respectively, as shown in the table
below.
AEO 2017
reference
case
$8.27
99.7
$5.18
102.5
AEO 2017
reference
case without
clean power
plan
$5.01
101.6
AEO 2018
reference
case
$4.50
109.1
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In sum, the conclusion of the 2015
LNG Export Study is that the United
States will experience net economic
benefits from issuance of authorizations
to export domestically produced LNG.
The 2015 LNG Export Study projected
that an increase in U.S. natural gas
exports will generate small declines in
output at the margin for some energy-
25 U.S. Energy Info. Admin., Effect of Increased
Levels of Liquefied Natural Gas Exports on U.S.
Energy Markets (Oct. 2014), available at: https://
www.eia.gov/analysis/requests/fe/pdf/lng.pdf
[hereinafter 2014 LNG Export Study]; 2015 LNG
Export Study, supra note 8; see also 82 FR 41571–
41572 (Sept. 1, 2017).
26 See 2015 LNG Export Study, supra note 8, at
82.
27 U.S. Envtl. Prot. Agency, Carbon Pollution
Emission Guidelines for Existing Stationary
Sources: Electric Utility Generating Units; Final
Rule, 80 FR 64662 (Oct. 23, 2015). On February 9,
2016, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a stay of the
effectiveness of the CPP final rule pending review
by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit in consolidated cases challenging
the rule. See Chamber of Commerce, et al. v. EPA,
et al., No. 15A787, Order in Pending Case (U.S. Feb.
9, 2016). The litigation over the CPP final rule
pending in the D.C. Circuit has been held in
abeyance as the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) reviews the rule. See West Virginia,
et al. v. EPA, et al., Case Nos. 15–1363 et al., EPA
Status Report, at 3 (D.C. Cir. June 1, 2018). On
October 10, 2017, EPA issued a notice proposing to
repeal the CPP final rule. U.S. Envtl. Prot. Agency,
Repeal of Carbon Pollution Emission Guidelines for
Existing Stationary Sources: Electric Utility
Generating Units; Proposed Rule, 82 FR 48035 (Oct.
16, 2017). That rulemaking is on-going, and EPA
has asked for the consolidated cases to remain in
abeyance pending the conclusion of the rulemaking.
See EPA Status Report at 4–5.
28 See 2014 LNG Export Study, supra note 25
(discussed in the proposed rule at 82 FR 41571–
41572; Sept. 1, 2017).
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intensive, trade-exposed industries, but
that negative impacts in energyintensive sectors will be offset by
positive impacts (82 FR 41572; Sept 1,
2017).
DOE has reviewed both the evidence
in the record and relevant precedent,
and has not found evidence to support
the commenters’ claims of negative
economic impact. Nor have those
commenters presented sufficient
evidence to support their assertions of
economic harm.29 On this basis, DOE
concludes that small-scale natural gas
exports are expected to generate positive
economic benefits in the United States
through direct and indirect job creation,
increased economic activity, tax
revenues, and improved U.S. balance of
trade.
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7. Environmental Issues
In reviewing the potential
environmental impacts of the proposed
rulemaking, DOE has considered both
its obligations under NEPA (discussed
in Section II.B.2) and its obligation
under NGA section 3(a) to ensure that
the proposal is not inconsistent with the
public interest.
In the context of NGA section 3(a),
several commenters contended that this
rulemaking is inconsistent with the
public interest on environmental
grounds. According to these
commenters, expediting the approval of
small-scale natural gas exports will lead
to increased natural gas production and
transmission which, in turn, will result
in negative environmental impacts.
They cite, for example, the possibility of
accelerated climate change and
increased greenhouse gas emissions,
both in the United States and in the
importing countries, as a result of these
increased small-scale exports. These
commenters contend that, rather than
facilitating small-scale exports, DOE
should closely scrutinize or ban natural
gas exports to non-FTA countries
altogether.
As discussed in Section II.B.2 and in
the proposed rule, qualifying
29 Some commenters criticized the LNG export
studies commissioned by DOE and cited in the
proposed rule (82 FR 41571–41572; Sept. 1, 2017),
including the 2014 and 2015 LNG Export Studies.
They argued, for example, that these
macroeconomic studies are flawed in various
respects and have been refuted by peer-reviewed
evidence. DOE notes, however, that each of those
studies was published in the Federal Register. DOE
received comments on each study—including on
their models, assumptions, and design—and
responded to the comments in other proceedings.
Based upon the record evidence, DOE determined
that these studies are fundamentally sound. See,
e.g., Eagle LNG Partners Jacksonville II LLC, DOE/
FE Order No. 4078, at 27–28, supra note 5.
Accordingly, criticisms of DOE’s macroeconomic
studies are outside the scope of this rulemaking.
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applications for small-scale exports
must not require an environmental
impact statement (EIS) or an
environmental assessment (EA) under
NEPA. That is, the application must be
eligible for a categorical exclusion.
Further, DOE has determined—and the
D.C. Circuit has agreed 30—that NEPA
does not require consideration of
induced ‘‘upstream’’ natural gas
production related to increased natural
gas production, contrary to the
commenters’ assertions.
Specifically, DOE determined that the
current rapid development of natural
gas resources in the United States will
continue, with or without the export of
natural gas to non-FTA nations. DOE
also found that fundamental
uncertainties constrain its ability to
foresee and analyze with any
particularity the incremental natural gas
production that may be induced by
permitting exports of LNG (or CNG) to
non-FTA countries—whether from
unconventional shale gas formations or
otherwise. Nevertheless, a decision by
DOE to authorize exports to non-FTA
countries—including the small-scale
exports at issue here—could accelerate
that development by some increment.
For these reasons, and because DOE
previously had received comments
regarding the potential environmental
impacts associated with unconventional
production, DOE produced a document
in 2014 entitled Addendum to
Environmental Review Documents
Concerning Exports of Natural Gas from
the United States (Addendum), and
made it available for public comment.31
The Addendum takes a broad look at
unconventional natural gas production
in the United States, with chapters
covering water resources (including
water quantity and quality), air quality,
greenhouse gas emissions, induced
seismicity, and land use.
The Addendum shows that there are
potential environmental issues
associated with unconventional natural
gas production as a whole that need to
be carefully managed, especially with
respect to emissions of volatile organic
compounds and methane, and the
potential for groundwater
contamination. These environmental
concerns do not lead DOE to conclude,
however, that the proposed small-scale
30 See Sierra Club v. U.S. Dep’t of Energy, 867
F.3d 189, 201–02 (D.C. Cir. 2017).
31 U.S. Dep’t of Energy, Addendum to
Environmental Review Documents Concerning
Exports of Natural Gas From the United States, 79
FR 48132 (Aug. 15, 2014), available at: https://
energy.gov/fe/addendum-environmental-reviewdocuments-concerning-exports-natural-gas-unitedstates [hereinafter Addendum]. DOE takes
administrative notice of the Addendum in this
proceeding.
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exports of natural gas are not in the
public interest and/or should be
prohibited. Rather, DOE believes the
public interest is better served by
addressing these concerns directly—
through federal, state, or local
regulation, or through self-imposed
industry guidelines where appropriate—
rather than by prohibiting exports of
natural gas. Unlike DOE, environmental
regulators have the legal authority to
impose requirements on natural gas
production that appropriately balance
benefits and burdens, and to update
these regulations from time to time as
technological practices and scientific
understanding evolve. Declining to
approve (or to expedite) small-scale
natural gas exports would cause the
United States to forego the economic
and international benefits discussed
herein, but would have little more than
a small, incremental impact on the
environmental issues identified by these
commenters. This is particularly true
because—as the Addendum illustrates—
DOE is unable to predict at a local level
where any additional natural gas
production would occur and in what
quantity to support the small-scale
exports.32 For these reasons, we
conclude that the environmental
concerns associated with natural gas
production do not establish that the
small-scale exports at issue in this
rulemaking are inconsistent with the
public interest. We also note that DOE’s
legal analysis in this regard has been
upheld by the D.C. Circuit in the context
of four different non-FTA authorizations
together approving far more significant
volumes of U.S. LNG for export.33
Next, one commenter questioned
whether small-scale exports will, in fact,
facilitate the transition of importing
countries away from the use of diesel
and fuel oil, and argued that DOE has
not provided sufficient evidence of this
displacement to justify the final rule.
We emphasize that foreign demand for
U.S. natural gas has increased as
countries in the Caribbean, Central
America, and South America seek to
import cleaner sources of energy. DOE
further observes that many of these
countries are currently dependent on
diesel and/or fuel oil for their
generation needs. These energy needs
are challenging from both a cost- and
emissions-perspective. By importing
32 See, e.g., Golden Pass Products LLC, DOE/FE
Order No. 3978, supra note 24, at 147–49.
33 See Sierra Club, 867 F.3d at 198–200
(upholding DOE’s conclusion that, inter alia, there
was not sufficiently specific information to identify
where incremental natural gas production would
occur at the local level); Sierra Club v. U.S. Dep’t
of Energy, Nos. 16–1186, 16–1252, 16–1253, 703
Fed. Appx. 1, *2 (D.C. Cir. Nov. 1, 2017) (same).
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LNG from the United States, these
countries will have access to a more
reliable, cost-effective supply of energy
that also has emissions benefits over
current energy sources. Small-scale
natural gas exports will fulfill an
important need for natural gas in
importing countries that often lack the
customer demand, waterway
infrastructure, and transmission
infrastructure necessary to handle large
quantities of natural gas and large LNG
carriers.
Additionally, increased diversity of
fuel supplies and sources used for
generating electricity are expected to
make these importing countries more,
not less, resilient against energy outages
after hurricanes, earthquakes, and other
natural disasters. At the same time, the
United States will facilitate stronger
relationships with these importing
countries, while promoting U.S.
leadership in the global energy market.
In sum, the commenter’s argument as to
DOE’s lack of ‘‘evidence’’ of this
expected transition to U.S. natural gas
misconceives DOE’s public interest
analysis and seeks to impose a burden
of proof where none exists, although
DOE anticipates numerous
environmental benefits to the importing
countries from this rulemaking.
Finally, some commenters argued that
DOE should be focused on encouraging
renewable sources of energy, rather than
facilitating exports of natural gas
through this rulemaking. They asserted
that renewable sources of energy are
more environmentally friendly than
natural gas, whereas (in their view) the
proposed exports of natural gas are not
in the public interest. DOE notes,
however, that imports of U.S. LNG can
work in concert with the development
of renewable generation in importing
countries. Imported natural gas can
provide reliable standby energy supply
available immediately, while renewable
development is occurring. Imported
LNG also can provide continued
reliability to enhance solar or other
renewable sources once they are
developed. For these reasons, smallscale natural gas exports approved
under this rule may provide indirect
benefits to the use of renewable energy
in importing countries.
8. Administrative Procedures and
Judicial Review Under the Natural Gas
Act
Some commenters argued that DOE
cannot, in interpreting the phrase ‘‘in
the public interest’’ in NGA section 3(a),
remove public notice and comment
procedures for individual small-scale
export applications. According to these
commenters, the phrase ‘‘opportunity
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for hearing’’ in NGA section 3(a) means
that members of the public must be
afforded the opportunity to present
evidence to DOE regarding each nonFTA export application on a case-bycase basis. These commenters expressed
concern that the proposed rule would
frustrate the design of the NGA by
eliminating the opportunity for public
comment on individual small-scale
applications.
Some commenters also asserted that
the final rule is inconsistent with the
NGA’s judicial review provisions set
forth in NGA section 19 (15 U.S.C. 717r)
and the implementing regulation (10
CFR 590.501(a)). They argued that these
judicial review provisions are available
only to a ‘‘party’’ to a proceeding, yet
under the proposed rule, there would be
no clear way for a member of the public
to intervene in an individual small-scale
application proceeding and become a
party to that proceeding. In their view,
absent the availability of this remedy,
judicial review would be provided by
the Administrative Procedure Act (APA)
(5 U.S.C. 704) and thus lie in the district
courts—creating tension with the NGA’s
intent to provide for direct review in the
federal courts of appeals under NGA
section 19(b).
As to the administrative concerns, we
note that under NGA section 3(a), the
Secretary of Energy ‘‘shall’’ issue an
order upon application unless, after
‘‘opportunity for hearing,’’ DOE finds
that the proposed export will not be
consistent with the public interest.34
Section 3(a) does not require
adjudication of applications to be
determined ‘‘on the record after
opportunity for a hearing’’ under the
APA.35 That type of statutory language
imposes the need for a formal
adjudication under the APA. Section
3(a) also does not require the individual
adjudication of each application. The
statutory language in NGA section
3(a)—‘‘opportunity for hearing’’—allows
DOE to conduct an informal (rather than
a formal) adjudication and affords DOE
broad discretion to determine that the
notice and public comment period on
the proposed rule constitutes the notice
and opportunity for comment on all
prospective small-scale natural gas
export applications. In this proceeding,
DOE sought public comment on the
proposed rule for a 45-day period and
received comments from a variety of
stakeholders and interested persons.
DOE has reviewed the comments and
taken them into consideration in this
final rule. Therefore, DOE disagrees that
expediting the review and approval
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34 15
35 5
U.S.C. 717b(a).
U.S.C. 554.
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process for qualifying small-scale
natural gas applications under 10 CFR
590.208(a) would frustrate the design of
NGA section 3(a). Rather, DOE believes
it is has provided sufficient process
under the APA to determine that all
prospective small-scale natural gas
export applications—if meeting the
qualifying criteria—are in the public
interest.
As to the judicial review comments,
to the extent that small-scale export
authorizations are reviewable, NGA
section 19(b) vests exclusive jurisdiction
in the appropriate federal court of
appeals.36 A federal district court thus
would lack jurisdiction over the
dispute.37
B. Regulatory Criteria
In the final rule, DOE establishes a
regulatory definition for ‘‘small-scale
natural gas export,’’ to be codified at 10
CFR 590.102(p). Under this provision, a
small-scale natural gas export is any
export of natural gas to non-FTA
nations, provided that the application
for the export authority satisfies both
the volume and NEPA criteria identified
in 10 CFR 590.102(p)(1) and (2).
1. Volume Limitation
10 CFR 590.102(p)(1) establishes the
volume limitation for small-scale
natural gas exports. Under this criterion,
a qualifying application must propose to
export natural gas in a volume up to and
including 51.75 Bcf/yr—an annualized
figure that corresponds to the 0.14 Bcf/
d volume criterion proposed by DOE. In
the proposed rule, DOE stated that this
volume criterion is consistent with
industry practice for the emerging
small-scale export market, but invited
comment on any other appropriate
volume limitation (82 FR 41573; Sept. 1,
2017).
Some commenters generally disagreed
with this volume criterion, asserting
that exports up to and including 0.14
Bcf/d (51.75 Bcf/yr) are substantial and
cannot reasonably be considered ‘‘small
scale.’’ These commenters, however,
neither presented evidence supporting
their claims in the context of small-scale
natural gas exports nor suggested a
36 NGA section 19(b) states that ‘‘[a]ny party to a
proceeding under this chapter aggrieved by an order
issued by the Commission in such proceeding may
obtain a review of such order in the court of appeals
of the United States for any circuit wherein the
natural-gas company to which the order relates is
located or has its principal place of business, or in
the United States Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia . . . . [S]uch court shall have
jurisdiction, which upon the filing of the record
with it shall be exclusive, to affirm, modify, or set
aside such order in whole or in part.’’ 15 U.S.C.
717r(b).
37 See, e.g., Sierra Club, 867 F.3d at 202 (citing
15 U.S.C. 717r(b)).
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different volume limitation they believe
to be more appropriate. As explained in
the proposed rule, DOE based the
volume criterion on industry standards
that define ‘‘small-scale LNG’’ as 1.0
million metric tons per annum (mtpa) or
lower (82 FR 41573 note 21). Using
DOE’s conversion factor to convert mtpa
of LNG to Bcf of natural gas (82 FR
41573), this amount equates to a volume
of 0.14 Bcf/d, or 51.75 Bcf/yr, of natural
gas. On this basis, DOE believes that it
is reasonable to define small-scale
natural gas exports as any export of
natural gas up to and including a
volume of 51.75 Bcf/yr.
One commenter expressed concern
that the volume criterion is too large for
a single project. This commenter
pointed out that, of DOE’s seven nonFTA export authorizations identified in
the proposed rule as falling under this
volume threshold (82 FR 41572), the
volumes authorized in those orders
were, in fact, smaller than 0.14 Bcf/d
even if all of the volumes are combined.
Specifically, the commenter states that
the proposed volume criterion is
approximately 25% larger than the
combined total of those seven
authorizations—0.14 Bcf/d for a single
project, as opposed to a combined 0.112
Bcf/d for the seven authorizations
identified in the proposed rule.
The seven authorizations identified in
the proposed rule were not intended to
suggest a limiting parameter for this
rulemaking. Rather, they provide
context in showing small-scale LNG
export authorizations previously issued
by DOE—particularly as compared to
the large-scale LNG export
authorizations issued by DOE in
volumes up to and exceeding 2.0 Bcf/d
of natural gas for a single project.38 As
discussed above, DOE proposed the
volume criterion for this rulemaking
based on industry sources that mark the
boundary between large-scale and
small-scale exports at 1 mtpa (82 FR
41573 note 21)—equivalent to the 51.75
Bcf/yr volume criterion in this final
rule. DOE sees no basis to depart from
this volume limitation on the basis of
the information presented in the
comments.
The same commenter argued that the
proposed rule is overbroad insofar as it
may apply in export circumstances
beyond those identified by DOE as
justifying the rule. The commenter
therefore urged DOE to expand the
mandatory criteria for small-scale
exports to include specific export
38 See Eagle LNG Partners Jacksonville II LLC,
DOE/FE Order No. 4078, supra note 5, at 34–37
(identifying DOE’s 29 final non-FTA authorizations
for LNG and CNG issued to date).
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characteristics beyond the volume
criterion—such as the exporter’s use of
ISO containers or other non-traditional
transport, destination countries in
specific regions, and evidence that the
exports will displace diesel or fuel oil
in the importing markets. DOE has
considered this proposal but sees no
reason to unnecessarily confine the
development of the small-scale export
market by adding criteria that are, in
fact, already market-driven.
As explained in the proposed rule,
many of the countries in the Caribbean,
Central America, and South America do
not generate enough demand to import
the large volumes of natural gas
supplied by the large-scale natural gas
import/export market. Given these
diseconomies of scale, a gap has
emerged in the regional natural gas
import/export market, and small-scale
natural gas exports represent a marketdriven response to fill this gap. Because
the small-scale market already reflects
the specific characteristics identified by
the commenter, imposing these
characteristics as additional mandatory
criteria is unlikely to benefit the public
interest or otherwise enhance the
objectives or implementation of this
final rule. Further, imposing such
criteria would be at odds with DOE’s
long-standing practice of minimizing
regulatory impediments to a freely
operating market and promoting market
competition (82 FR 41571, 41574; Sept.
1, 2017). DOE has concluded that the
volume criterion, in addition to the
NEPA criterion discussed below, is
sufficient in defining and regulating the
small-scale export market.
Commenters asked DOE whether the
proposed rule would allow exporters to
submit multiple applications, each
below the 0.14 Bcf/d (51.75 Bcf/yr)
volume limitation, as a way to expand
the authorized export volumes for their
facilities without triggering the
jurisdiction of FERC or the U.S.
Maritime Administration (MARAD)
under NEPA. These types of
applications—commonly referred to as
‘‘design increases’’ or expansions—
typically arise from the improved
engineering of proposed or existing LNG
facilities that allows for additional LNG
production without new construction.
Some commenters asked DOE to add
language to the final rule that would
expressly allow this practice, so as to
encourage investment in and innovation
at LNG export facilities. Other
commenters suggested that this practice,
if allowed, would effectively change the
nature of this rule by encouraging
‘‘segmentation’’ of additional export
volumes at large-scale facilities, as
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opposed to the intended small-scale
facilities.
DOE declines to add the requested
language to this final rule. DOE
emphasizes that the final rule is
intended to facilitate small-scale exports
of natural gas for the reasons discussed
herein. This rule does not preclude
applicants from applying for more than
one authorization for small-scale natural
gas exports. Such flexibility may be
useful, for example, for authorization
holders seeking to export small-scale
volumes from different facilities. DOE,
however, will not accept requests by
authorization holders seeking to
combine more than one small-scale
export authorization as an indirect
means of expanding the DOE-approved
export volume from their facility,
including from large-scale facilities.
Further, DOE notes that, in the nonFTA export authorizations issued to
date, DOE has approved an applicant’s
export volume from a specific facility
(or facilities), based on the approved
production (or export) capacity of that
facility.39 Likewise, approved export
volumes for a particular facility under
this rule may not, on their own or added
together, exceed the maximum
approved production (or export)
capacity of that facility.40 Finally,
nothing in this final rule affects the
authorities exercised by FERC under the
NGA or by MARAD under the
Deepwater Port Act.41
2. Categorical Exclusion From NEPA
10 CFR 590.102(p)(2) establishes the
NEPA criterion for small-scale natural
gas exports. As the second criterion for
this final rule, DOE’s approval of the
application must not require an EIS or
EA under NEPA—that is, the
application must be eligible for a
categorical exclusion under DOE’s
NEPA regulations.
As explained in the proposed rule,
DOE’s environmental review process
under NEPA usually results in the
preparation or adoption of an EIS or EA
describing the potential environmental
impacts associated with the application.
In some cases, DOE may determine that
an application is eligible for a
categorical exclusion pursuant to DOE’s
39 See, e.g., 10 CFR 590.202(b)(1) (requiring
applicants to identify the facilities to be utilized or
constructed for the proposed export).
40 See, e.g., Dominion Cove Point LNG, LP, DOE/
FE Order No. 3331–A, FE Docket No. 11–128–LNG,
Final Opinion and Order Granting Long-Term,
Multi-Contract Authorization to Export Liquefied
Natural Gas from the Cove Point LNG Terminal in
Calvert County, Maryland, to Non-Free Trade
Agreement Nations, at 1–2 (May 7, 2015); see also
Eagle LNG Partners Jacksonville II LLC, DOE/FE
Order No. 4078, supra note 5, at 37.
41 33 U.S.C. 1501, et seq.
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regulations implementing NEPA, 10
CFR 1021.410, appendices A & B. The
categorical exclusion most commonly
used in this context is categorical
exclusion B5.7 (10 CFR part 1021,
subpart D, appendix B5.7), which
applies to natural gas import or export
activities requiring minor operational
changes to existing projects, but no new
construction.42
This NEPA criterion is very
conservative. Based on DOE’s
experience, this criterion will limit
application of this final rule to a small
subset of all export applications. For
example, of the 29 final non-FTA export
authorizations for LNG (and CNG)
issued as of the date of this final rule,
only seven would meet both the volume
and NEPA criteria to qualify as smallscale natural gas exports.43 Together,
these seven authorizations approve
exports in a combined volume of 0.074
Bcf/d—representing only 0.35% of the
cumulative volume of non-FTA exports
approved to date (21.35 Bcf/d of natural
gas).
Nonetheless, some of the comments
on the proposed rule reflected
widespread confusion about the
meaning and applicability of a
categorical exclusion under NEPA.
Several commenters expressed concern
that this criterion will result in smallscale natural gas exports that have no
environmental protections or oversight
because they are not subject to an EIS
or EA under NEPA. These commenters
asserted that an EA or EIS must be
prepared in every instance to consider
a variety of perceived risks to the
environment, public safety, and public
health posed by natural gas exports. In
their view, an export application
approved by DOE on the basis of a
categorical exclusion under NEPA will
lead to ‘‘unregulated’’ natural gas export
facilities and infrastructure.
42 This categorical exclusion states in full: ‘‘B5.7
Import or export natural gas, with operational
changes: Approvals or disapprovals of new
authorizations or amendments of existing
authorizations to import or export natural gas under
section 3 of the Natural Gas Act that involve minor
operational changes (such as changes in natural gas
throughput, transportation, and storage operations)
but not new construction.’’ 10 CFR part 1021,
subpart D, appendix B5.7.
43 Carib Energy (USA) LLC (FE Docket No. 11–
141–LNG), 0.04 Bcf/d; American LNG Marketing
LLC (FE Docket No. 14–209–LNG), 0.008 Bcf/d;
Floridian Natural Gas Storage Company, LLC (FE
Docket No. 15–38–LNG); Air Flow North American
Corp. (FE Docket No. 15–206–LNG, 0.002 Bcf/d;
Flint Hills Resources, LP (FE Docket No. 15–168–
LNG, 0.01 Bcf/d; Carib Energy (USA), LLC (FE
Docket No. 16–98–LNG), 0.004 Bcf/d; and Eagle
LNG Partners Jacksonville II LLC (FE Docket No.
17–79–LNG), 0.01 Bcf/d. The Carib and Floridian
orders are both 0.04 Bcf/d, yet are not additive to
one another because the source of LNG approved
under both orders is from the Floridian Facility.
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DOE emphasizes that its
determination that a particular
application qualifies for a DOE
categorical exclusion is the result of a
thorough NEPA assessment process. A
categorical exclusion does not
circumvent or ‘‘relax’’ the NEPA review
process (as some commenters suggest)
but, in fact, is a means to comply with
NEPA. Indeed, categorical exclusions
facilitate NEPA by allowing federal
agencies to focus their environmental
review and resources on actions that
could have significant impacts. The
Council on Environmental Quality’s
NEPA regulations provide for
categorical exclusions when an agency
has identified a ‘‘category of actions
which do not individually or
cumulatively have a significant effect on
the human environment and which
have been found to have no such effect
in procedures adopted by a federal
agency. . .’’ 44 DOE has made such a
determination with respect to
categorical exclusion B5.7, Import or
Export of Natural Gas, with Operational
Changes. Accordingly, there is no basis
to conclude that qualifying small-scale
exports would originate from
‘‘unregulated’’ LNG export facilities
lacking sufficient oversight of potential
risks to the environment, public safety,
and public health.
In determining that an export
application is eligible for a categorical
exclusion under DOE’s NEPA
regulations, DOE must not only
determine that the application fits
within a specific categorical exclusion,
but it must also determine that ‘‘there
are no extraordinary circumstances
related to the proposal that may affect
the significance of the environmental
effects of the proposal.’’ 45 For
qualifying small-scale natural gas export
applications, DOE will satisfy this
requirement by conducting an
assessment of appropriate
environmental-related documents to
determine whether there are
‘‘extraordinary circumstances’’
associated with the proposed exports.
This review includes consideration of
potential impacts to property of historic,
archeological, or architectural
significance; federally-listed threatened
or endangered species and their habitat;
and wetlands regulated under the Clean
Water Act.46 To ensure transparency, all
categorical exclusions used by DOE to
comply with NEPA are made publicly
available on DOE’s NEPA website.47
44 40
45 10
CFR 1508.4.
CFR 1021.410(b)(2).
46 Id.
47 See U.S. Dep’t of Energy, Office of NEPA Policy
and Compliance, Categorical Exclusion (CX)
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35115
DOE will follow the same practice for
qualifying small-scale natural gas export
applications.
Finally, regardless of whether DOE
determines that an application is subject
to an EIS, an EA, or is eligible for a
categorical exclusion under NEPA, DOE
expressly conditions all of its non-FTA
authorizations on the authorization
holder’s ongoing compliance with all
preventative and mitigative measures at
the facility imposed by federal, state,
and/or local agencies.48 Small-scale
natural gas exports will be subject to the
same conditions and oversight.49
For these reasons, DOE does not agree
that this criterion of this rule—whereby
an application must be eligible for a
categorical exclusion under NEPA—will
lead to natural gas exports lacking in
environmental protection and/or to
unregulated LNG export facilities. DOE
is committed to a thorough NEPA
assessment process and, accordingly,
DOE is not changing this criterion in the
final rule.
C. Other Issues
Below, DOE addresses a variety of
other comments on the proposed rule.
To the extent commenters have urged
DOE to take some different type of
action with respect to natural gas
exports, DOE notes that it may consider
additional measures under section 3(a)
of the Natural Gas Act as part of its
regulatory reform efforts and welcomes
suggestions, data, and information on
this topic through its regulatory reform
email inbox at Regulatory.Review@
hq.doe.gov.
One commenter asserted that this
rulemaking is arbitrary and capricious
because it lacks substantive analysis and
viable alternatives. Under the APA, an
Determinations, available at: https://energy.gov/
nepa/categorical-exclusion-cx-determinations.
48 See, e.g., Eagle LNG Partners Jacksonville II
LLC, DOE/FE Order No. 4078, supra note 5, at 46.
49 In the context of NEPA, many commenters
discussed the environmental and health risks that,
in their view, are associated with the siting and
operation of LNG export facilities and related
transportation infrastructure near their home or
community. They asserted, for example, that they
will suffer from any accidents at nearby LNG export
facilities and pipelines, or explosions of ISO
containers loaded onto trains or trucks. They
expressed concern that such accidents could result
in harm to air, water, and other natural resources.
They also assert that natural disasters, such as
hurricanes and wildfires, in the vicinity of LNG
export facilities and infrastructure can threaten
public safety. DOE notes that these concerns
generally involve the siting of natural gas-related
infrastructure. These concerns are outside the scope
of this rulemaking, which is based on existing
facilities subject to a categorical exclusion under
NEPA. Nonetheless, as stated above, DOE requires
all authorization holders to comply with any
preventative and mitigative measures at natural gas
import and export facilities imposed by federal,
state, and/or local agencies.
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agency decision is arbitrary and
capricious only if the agency’s decision
is not based on a consideration of the
relevant factors and where there is a
clear error of judgment by the agency.50
As explained above and in the proposed
rule, DOE has determined that smallscale natural gas exports are consistent
with the public interest after
considering its obligations under NGA
section 3(a), the public comments
received on the proposed rule, and a
wide range of information bearing on
the public interest (82 FR 41573–41574;
Sept. 1, 2017). Additionally, DOE has
considered its 29 final non-FTA export
authorizations issued to date, as well
EIA’s authoritative projections for
natural gas supply, demand, and prices
set forth in both the AEO 2017 and AEO
2018. DOE has thoroughly analyzed the
many factors affecting the export of U.S.
natural gas, as well as the unique
characteristics and minimal adverse
impacts of the emerging small-scale
natural gas market. On this basis, DOE
has determined that this rule is
consistent with both NGA section 3(a)
and DOE’s established practice in
authorizing such exports.
One commenter characterized this
rulemaking as imposing redundant,
burdensome administrative
requirements and compliance costs, but
did not specify the basis for that claim.
DOE emphasizes that it is not imposing
any administrative requirements or
compliance costs through this
rulemaking. To the contrary, as
explained in the proposed rule (82 FR
41570), the regulation promulgated in
this final rule is intended to expedite
DOE’s processing of small-scale
applications, thereby reducing
administrative burdens and costs for the
small-scale natural gas market.
On the other hand, another
commenter asserted that this
rulemaking is not deregulatory because
it creates a new regulation to define
small-scale natural gas exports
according to specified criteria. This
commenter claimed that DOE is limiting
its ability to adapt to market changes,
should the parameters of the small-scale
natural gas market change. As stated
above, however, this rulemaking
qualifies as a deregulatory action
because DOE is reducing or eliminating
administrative requirements and
compliance costs for the small-scale
export market under NGA section 3(a).
DOE is satisfied that the criteria for this
rulemaking, which are based in part on
industry practice, are appropriate for
this developing market. Nonetheless,
should unforeseeable changes in the
small-scale export market require DOE
to amend this regulation, DOE retains
the regulatory authority to do so.
One commenter asserted that the 45day public comment period for the
proposed rule should be extended
because the link for submitting
comments on the Federal eRulemaking
Portal was not working when the
commenter attempted to submit
comments. In the proposed rule, DOE
identified a variety of methods that
could be used to submit comments,
including email (82 FR 41570; Sept. 1,
2017). DOE also notes that no other
commenter raised this issue and many
commenters submitted comments
through the Federal eRulemaking Portal.
DOE therefore declines to extend or reopen the public comment period in this
rulemaking.
One commenter argued that DOE
failed to provide sufficient notice of this
rule in local media outlets, print media,
and online publications. As a matter of
law, however, DOE provided sufficient
notice of this rulemaking by publishing
it in the Federal Register.51
Finally, separate from the NEPA
regulatory criterion for small-scale
natural gas exports, several commenters
disagreed with DOE’s application of
categorical exclusion A6 under NEPA
for this rulemaking itself, as discussed
in the ‘‘Regulatory Review’’ portion of
the proposed rule (82 FR 41575,
‘‘National Environmental Policy Act’’)
and set forth below. In the proposed
rule, DOE explained that neither an EIS
nor an EA was required to support this
rulemaking. These commenters
disagreed with that assessment,
asserting that DOE violated NEPA by
not preparing an EIS or an EA that
addressed all potential environmental
impacts associated with this rulemaking
and that considered reasonable
alternatives to the proposed rule.
As explained in the proposed rule (as
well as in this final rule), DOE has
determined that this regulation ‘‘fall[s]
into a class of actions that does not
individually or cumulatively have a
significant impact on the human
environment as set forth under DOE’s
regulations implementing [NEPA]’’ (82
FR 41575). Specifically, DOE has
determined that this rulemaking falls
under categorical exclusion A6 (10 CFR
part 1021, subpart D, appendix A6).
Categorical exclusion A6 applies to
‘‘rulemakings that are strictly
procedural.’’ 52 This rulemaking is
50 See, e.g., 5 U.S.C. 706; Motor Vehicle Mfr. Ass’n
v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29, 43
(1983).
51 See 44 U.S.C. 1508 (notice sufficient when
published in the Federal Register).
52 10 CFR part 1021, subpart D, appendix A6.
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strictly procedural because it establishes
expedited procedures applicable to
qualifying small-scale natural gas export
applications. Currently, DOE makes a
public interest determination for all
applications to export natural gas to
non-FTA countries under NGA section
3(a), regardless of the proposed export
volume. In making this determination,
DOE imposes certain procedural
requirements, which in turn lead to
longer processing time for applications
to export natural gas to non-FTA
countries. This rulemaking expedites
DOE’s administrative processing for
qualifying small-scale natural gas export
applications by eliminating the notice of
application and other procedures
typically required under DOE’s
regulations (82 FR 41573). For these
reasons, DOE has determined that
categorical exclusion A6 applies to this
rulemaking.
III. Regulatory Review
A. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
This regulatory action has been
determined to be an ‘‘economically
significant regulatory action’’ under
Executive Order 12866, ‘‘Regulatory
Planning and Review,’’ 58 FR 51735
(October 4, 1993). Accordingly, this
action was subject to review under that
Executive Order by the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs of
the Office of Management and Budget.
DOE has also reviewed this regulation
pursuant to Executive Order 13563,
issued on January 18, 2011. (76 FR 3281,
Jan. 21, 2011.) E.O. 13563 is
supplemental to and explicitly reaffirms
the principles, structures, and
definitions governing regulatory review
established in Executive Order 12866.
To the extent permitted by law, agencies
are required by Executive Order 13563
to: (1) Propose or adopt a regulation
only upon a reasoned determination
that its benefits justify its costs
(recognizing that some benefits and
costs are difficult to quantify); (2) tailor
regulations to impose the least burden
on society, consistent with obtaining
regulatory objectives, taking into
account, among other things, and to the
extent practicable, the costs of
cumulative regulations; (3) select, in
choosing among alternative regulatory
approaches, those approaches that
maximize net benefits (including
potential economic, environmental,
public health and safety, and other
advantages; distributive impacts; and
equity); (4) to the extent feasible, specify
performance objectives, rather than
specifying the behavior or manner of
compliance that regulated entities must
adopt; and (5) identify and assess
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available alternatives to direct
regulation, including providing
economic incentives to encourage the
desired behavior, such as user fees or
marketable permits, or providing
information upon which choices can be
made by the public.
DOE concludes that this final rule is
consistent with these principles.
Specifically, this final rule provides that
DOE will issue an export authorization
upon receipt of any complete
application that seeks to export natural
gas, including LNG, to non-FTA
countries, provided that the application
satisfies the following two criteria: (1)
The application proposes to export
natural gas in a volume up to and
including 51.75 Bcf/yr, and (2) DOE’s
approval of the application does not
require an EIS or EA under NEPA.
DOE’s regulations regarding notice of
applications, 10 CFR 590.205, and
procedures applicable to application
proceedings, 10 CFR part 590, subpart C
(10 CFR 590.303 to 10 CFR 590.317), do
not apply to small-scale natural gas
exports. The final rule is intended to
expedite DOE’s processing of these
applications, thereby reducing
administrative burdens for the smallscale natural gas export market.
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B. Executive Orders 13771, 13777, and
13783
On January 30, 2017, the President
issued Executive Order 13771,
‘‘Reducing Regulation and Controlling
Regulatory Costs.’’ That Order stated the
policy of the executive branch is to be
prudent and financially responsible in
the expenditure of funds, from both
public and private sources. The Order
stated it is essential to manage the costs
associated with the governmental
imposition of private expenditures
required to comply with Federal
regulations. This final rule is expected
to be an E.O. 13771 deregulatory action.
Additionally, on February 24, 2017,
the President issued Executive Order
13777, ‘‘Enforcing the Regulatory
Reform Agenda.’’ The Order required
the head of each agency designate an
agency official as its Regulatory Reform
Officer (RRO). Each RRO oversees the
implementation of regulatory reform
initiatives and policies to ensure that
agencies effectively carry out regulatory
reforms, consistent with applicable law.
Further, E.O. 13777 requires the
establishment of a regulatory task force
at each agency. The regulatory task force
is required to make recommendations to
the agency head regarding the repeal,
replacement, or modification of existing
regulations, consistent with applicable
law. At a minimum, each regulatory
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reform task force must attempt to
identify regulations that:
(i) Eliminate jobs, or inhibit job
creation;
(ii) Are outdated, unnecessary, or
ineffective;
(iii) Impose costs that exceed benefits;
(iv) Create a serious inconsistency or
otherwise interfere with regulatory
reform initiatives and policies;
(v) Are inconsistent with the
requirements of Information Quality
Act, or the guidance issued pursuant to
that Act, in particular those regulations
that rely in whole or in part on data,
information, or methods that are not
publicly available or that are
insufficiently transparent to meet the
standard for reproducibility; or
(vi) Derive from or implement
Executive Orders or other Presidential
directives that have been subsequently
rescinded or substantially modified.
Finally, on March 28, 2017, the
President signed Executive Order 13783,
entitled ‘‘Promoting Energy
Independence and Economic Growth.’’
Among other things, E.O. 13783 requires
the heads of agencies to review all
existing regulations, orders, guidance
documents, policies, and any other
similar agency actions (collectively,
agency actions) that potentially burden
the development or use of domestically
produced energy resources, with
particular attention to oil, natural gas,
coal, and nuclear energy resources.
Such review does not include agency
actions that are mandated by law,
necessary for the public interest, and
consistent with the policy set forth
elsewhere in that order.
Executive Order 13783 defined
burden for purposes of the review of
existing regulations to mean to
unnecessarily obstruct, delay, curtail, or
otherwise impose significant costs on
the siting, permitting, production,
utilization, transmission, or delivery of
energy resources.
DOE concludes that this final rule is
consistent with the directives set forth
in these executive orders. Specifically,
this final rule is a deregulatory action
that requires DOE to issue an export
authorization upon receipt of any
complete application that seeks to
export natural gas, including LNG, to
non-FTA countries, provided that the
application satisfies the following two
criteria: (1) The application proposes to
export natural gas in a volume up to and
including 51.75 Bcf/yr, and (2) DOE’s
approval of the application does not
require an EIS or an EA under NEPA.
Applications that satisfy these criteria
are requesting authorization for ‘‘smallscale natural gas exports’’ and, as such,
the exports are deemed to be consistent
PO 00000
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35117
with the public interest under NGA
section 3(a). DOE’s regulations regarding
notice of applications and procedures
conducted on applications do not apply
to applications that satisfy these criteria.
The final rule will expedite DOE’s
processing of these applications, thereby
reducing administrative burdens for the
small-scale natural gas export market.
C. National Environmental Policy Act
DOE has determined that adoption of
this final rule falls into a class of actions
that does not individually or
cumulatively have a significant impact
on the human environment as set forth
under DOE’s regulations implementing
the National Environmental Policy Act
of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq).
Specifically, this rulemaking is covered
under the categorical exclusion found in
the DOE’s National Environmental
Policy Act regulations at paragraph A6
of appendix A to subpart D, 10 CFR part
1021, which applies to rulemakings that
are strictly procedural. Accordingly,
neither an EIS nor an EA is required.
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.) requires preparation
of an initial regulatory flexibility
analysis for any rule that by law must
be proposed for public comment, unless
the agency certifies that the rule, if
promulgated, will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. As required by
Executive Order 13272, ‘‘Proper
Consideration of Small Entities in
Agency Rulemaking,’’ 67 FR 53461
(August 16, 2002), DOE published
procedures and policies on February 19,
2003, to ensure that the potential
impacts of its rules on small entities are
properly considered during the
rulemaking process (68 FR 7990). DOE
has made its procedures and policies
available on the Office of General
Counsel’s website: https://
www.gc.doe.gov.
DOE has reviewed this final rule
under the provisions of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act and the procedures and
policies published on February 19,
2003. This final rule will require DOE
to issue an export authorization upon
receipt of any complete application that
seeks to export natural gas, including
LNG, to non-FTA countries, provided
that the application satisfies the
following two criteria: (1) The
application proposes to export natural
gas in a volume up to and including
51.75 Bcf/yr, and (2) DOE’s approval of
the application does not require an EIS
or an EA under NEPA. DOE’s
regulations regarding notice of
applications and procedures conducted
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on applications do not apply to
applications that satisfy these criteria.
To date, DOE has received—and
granted—eight applications to export
LNG in volumes below 51.75 Bcf/yr of
natural gas to non-FTA countries.53 Of
these eight applicants, three qualify as
small businesses under the Small
Business Administration’s size
standards of 1000 employees or less
under both NAICS 221210, Natural Gas
Distribution, and NAICS 325120,
Industrial Gas Manufacturing. Because
the final rule will streamline the
application and approval process for
small-scale natural gas exports, it will
not result in a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The final rule will, however,
provide greater regulatory certainty for
applicants by eliminating the individual
application proceeding and public
interest evaluation for qualifying
applications. This, in turn, will both
reduce the administrative burden
associated with the application process
and expedite authorization of qualifying
applications, removing (at a minimum)
the opportunity cost of receiving an
application delayed by the current
procedures.
DOE received no comments on this
certification. Comments regarding the
economic impact of the proposed rule
are responded to in Section II of the
preamble, and for the reasons explained
in Section II, those comments did not
affect this certification, or result in any
changes from the proposal in this final
rule.
Therefore, DOE certifies that this
rulemaking will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Accordingly,
DOE did not prepare an IRFA for this
rulemaking. DOE’s certification and
supporting statement of factual basis
was provided to the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration for review under 5
U.S.C. 605(b).
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
The final rule does not change any
requirements subject to review and
approval by OMB pursuant to the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.) and the procedures
implementing that Act, 5 CFR 1320.1 et
seq. Current natural gas import and
export authorization holders, including
any approved under this final rule,
would be subject to the information
53 Seven of the eight applications are identified in
section I.C of the proposed rule (82 FR 41572; Sept.
1, 2017). The eighth authorization was issued on
September 15, 2017, after the NOPR was published.
See Eagle LNG Partners Jacksonville II LLC, DOE/
FE Order No. 4078, supra note 5.
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collection requirements approved by the
Office of Management and Budget under
OMB Control No. 1901–0294. Public
reporting burden for the certification is
estimated to average 3 hours per
response, including the time for
reviewing instructions, searching
existing data sources, gathering and
maintaining the data needed, and
completing and reviewing the collection
of information.
Notwithstanding any other provision
of the law, no person is required to
respond to, nor shall any person be
subject to a penalty for failure to comply
with, a collection of information subject
to the requirements of the PRA, unless
that collection of information displays a
currently valid OMB Control Number.
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4) generally
requires Federal agencies to examine
closely the impacts of regulatory actions
on tribal, state, and local governments.
Subsection 101(5) of title I of that law
defines a Federal intergovernmental
mandate to include any regulation that
would impose upon tribal, state, or local
governments an enforceable duty,
except a condition of Federal assistance
or a duty arising from participating in a
voluntary Federal program. Title II of
that law requires each Federal agency to
assess the effects of Federal regulatory
actions on tribal, state, and local
governments, in the aggregate, or to the
private sector, other than to the extent
such actions merely incorporate
requirements specifically set forth in a
statute. Section 202 of that title requires
a Federal agency to perform a detailed
assessment of the anticipated costs and
benefits of any rule that includes a
Federal mandate which may result in
costs to tribal, state, or local
governments, or to the private sector, of
$100 million or more in any one year
(adjusted annually for inflation). 2
U.S.C. 1532(a) and (b). Section 204 of
that title requires each agency that
proposes a rule containing a significant
Federal intergovernmental mandate to
develop an effective process for
obtaining meaningful and timely input
from elected officers of tribal, state, and
local governments. 2 U.S.C. 1534.
This final rule will streamline
procedures for small-scale natural gas
exports. DOE has determined that the
final rule will not result in the
expenditure by tribal, state, and local
governments in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100 million or more
in any one year. Accordingly, no
assessment or analysis is required under
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Fmt 4700
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the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995.
G. Treasury and General Government
Appropriations Act, 1999
Section 654 of the Treasury and
General Government Appropriations
Act, 1999 (Pub. L. 105–277) requires
Federal agencies to issue a Family
Policymaking Assessment for any final
rule that may affect family well-being.
The final rule will not have any impact
on the autonomy or integrity of the
family as an institution. Accordingly,
DOE has concluded that it is not
necessary to prepare a Family
Policymaking Assessment.
H. Executive Order 13132
Executive Order 13132, ‘‘Federalism,’’
64 FR 43255 (August 4, 1999) imposes
certain requirements on agencies
formulating and implementing policies
or regulations that preempt state law or
that have Federalism implications.
Agencies are required to examine the
constitutional and statutory authority
supporting any action that would limit
the policymaking discretion of the states
and carefully assess the necessity for
such actions. DOE has examined this
final rule and has determined that it
will not preempt state law and will not
have a substantial direct effect on the
states, on the relationship between the
national government and the states, or
on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. No further action
is required by Executive Order 13132.
I. Executive Order 12988
With respect to the review of existing
regulations and the promulgation of
new regulations, section 3(a) of
Executive Order 12988, ‘‘Civil Justice
Reform,’’ 61 FR 4729 (February 7, 1996),
imposes on Executive agencies the
general duty to adhere to the following
requirements: (1) Eliminate drafting
errors and ambiguity; (2) write
regulations to minimize litigation; and
(3) provide a clear legal standard for
affected conduct rather than a general
standard and promote simplification
and burden reduction. With regard to
the review required by section 3(a),
section 3(b) of Executive Order 12988
specifically requires that Executive
agencies make every reasonable effort to
ensure that the regulation: (1) Clearly
specifies the preemptive effect, if any;
(2) clearly specifies any effect on
existing Federal law or regulation; (3)
provides a clear legal standard for
affected conduct while promoting
simplification and burden reduction; (4)
specifies the retroactive effect, if any; (5)
adequately defines key terms; and (6)
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addresses other important issues
affecting clarity and general
draftsmanship under any guidelines
issued by the Attorney General. Section
3(c) of Executive Order 12988 requires
Executive agencies to review regulations
in light of applicable standards in
section 3(a) and section 3(b) to
determine whether they are met or it is
unreasonable to meet one or more of
them. DOE has completed the required
review and determined that, to the
extent permitted by law, the final rule
meets the relevant standards of
Executive Order 12988.
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with RULES
J. Treasury and General Government
Appropriations Act, 2001
The Treasury and General
Government Appropriations Act, 2001
(44 U.S.C. 3516 note) provides for
agencies to review most disseminations
of information to the public under
guidelines established by each agency
pursuant to general guidelines issued by
OMB.
OMB’s guidelines were published at
67 FR 8452 (February 22, 2002), and
DOE’s guidelines were published at 67
FR 62446 (October 7, 2002). DOE has
reviewed this final rule under the OMB
and DOE guidelines and has concluded
that it is consistent with applicable
policies in those guidelines.
K. Executive Order 13211
Executive Order 13211, ‘‘Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use,’’ 66 FR 28355 (May
22, 2001) requires Federal agencies to
prepare and submit to the OMB, a
Statement of Energy Effects for any
proposed significant energy action. A
‘‘significant energy action’’ is defined as
any action by an agency that
promulgated or is expected to lead to
promulgation of a final rule, and that:
(1) Is a significant regulatory action
under Executive Order 12866, or any
successor order; and (2) is likely to have
a significant adverse effect on the
supply, distribution, or use of energy, or
(3) is designated by the Administrator of
OIRA as a significant energy action. For
any proposed significant energy action,
the agency must give a detailed
statement of any adverse effects on
energy supply, distribution, or use
should the proposal be implemented,
and of reasonable alternatives to the
action and their expected benefits on
energy supply, distribution, and use.
This regulatory action, which is
intended to streamline the application
and approval process for small-scale
natural gas exports, will not have a
significant adverse effect on the supply,
distribution, or use of energy, and
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therefore is not a significant energy
action. Accordingly, DOE has not
prepared a Statement of Energy Effects.
L. Congressional Notification
As required by 5 U.S.C. 801, DOE will
report to Congress on the promulgation
of this rule prior to its effective date.
The report will state that it has been
determined that the rule is not a ‘‘major
rule’’ as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
IV. Approval of the Office of the
Secretary
The Secretary of Energy has approved
the publication of this final rule.
List of Subjects in 10 CFR Part 590
Administrative practice and
procedure, Exports, Natural gas,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
Signed in Washington, DC, on July 19,
2018.
Steven E. Winberg,
Assistant Secretary, Office of Fossil Energy.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, DOE amends part 590,
chapter II of title 10, subchapter G, Code
of Federal Regulations as set forth
below:
PART 590—ADMINISTRATIVE
PROCEDURES WITH RESPECT TO
THE IMPORT AND EXPORT OF
NATURAL GAS
1. The authority citation for part 590
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Secs. 301(b), 402(f), and 644,
Pub. L. 95–91, 91 Stat. 578, 585, and 599 (42
U.S.C. 7151(b), 7172(f), and 7254), Sec. 3, Act
of June 21, 1938, c. 556, 52 Stat. 822 (15
U.S.C. 717b); E.O. 12009 (42 FR 46267,
September 15, 1977); DOE Delegation Order
Nos. 0204–111 and 0204–127 (49 FR 6684,
February 22, 1984; 54 FR 11437, March 20,
1989).
2. Section 590.102 is amended by
redesignating paragraph (p) as
paragraph (q) and adding new paragraph
(p) to read as follows:
■
§ 590.102
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(p) Small-scale natural gas export
means an export of natural gas to
nations with which there is not in effect
a free trade agreement with the United
States requiring national treatment for
trade in natural gas and with which
trade is not prohibited by U.S. law or
policy, provided that the application for
such export authority satisfies the
following two criteria:
(1) The application proposes to export
natural gas in a volume up to and
including 51.75 billion cubic feet per
year, and
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35119
(2) DOE’s approval of the application
does not require an environmental
impact statement or an environmental
assessment under the National
Environmental Policy Act, 42 U.S.C.
4321 et seq.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Section 590.208 is revised to read
as follows:
§ 590.208
Small volume exports.
(a) Small-scale natural gas exports.
Small-scale natural gas exports are
deemed to be consistent with the public
interest under section 3(a) of the Natural
Gas Act, 15 U.S.C. 717b(a). DOE will
issue an export authorization upon
receipt of any complete application to
conduct small-scale natural gas exports.
DOE’s regulations regarding notice of
applications, 10 CFR 590.205, and
procedures applicable to application
proceedings, 10 CFR part 590, subpart C
(10 CFR 590.303 to 10 CFR 590.317), are
not applicable to small-scale natural gas
exports.
(b) Scientific, experimental, or other
non-utility natural gas exports. Any
person may export up to 100,000 cubic
feet of natural gas (14.73 pounds per
square inch at 60 degrees Fahrenheit) or
the liquefied or compressed equivalent
thereof, in a single shipment for
scientific, experimental, or other nonutility gas use without prior
authorization of the Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018–15903 Filed 7–24–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 23
[Docket No. FAA–2018–0678; Special
Conditions No. 23–290–SC]
Special Conditions: TCW
Technologies, LLC; Piper Aircraft PA–
32 Series Airplanes; Installation of
Rechargeable Lithium Batteries
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Final special conditions; request
for comments.
AGENCY:
These special conditions are
issued for the Piper Aircraft Model PA–
32-series airplanes. These airplanes, as
modified by TCW Technologies, LLC,
will have a novel or unusual design
feature associated with the installation
of a rechargeable lithium battery. The
applicable airworthiness regulations do
not contain adequate or appropriate
safety standards for this design feature.
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\25JYR1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 143 (Wednesday, July 25, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 35106-35119]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-15903]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
10 CFR Part 590
[FE Docket No. 17-86-R]
RIN 1901-AB43
Small-Scale Natural Gas Exports
AGENCY: Office of Fossil Energy, Department of Energy.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Energy (DOE or the Department) is revising
its regulations to provide that DOE will issue an export authorization
upon receipt of any complete application that seeks to export natural
gas, including liquefied natural gas (LNG), to countries with which the
United States has not entered into a free trade agreement (FTA)
requiring national treatment for trade in natural gas and with which
trade is not prohibited by U.S. law or policy (non-FTA countries),
provided that the application satisfies the following two criteria: The
application proposes to export natural gas in a volume up to and
including 51.75 billion cubic feet (Bcf) per year (Bcf/yr) (equivalent
to 0.14 Bcf per day (Bcf/d)), and DOE's approval of the application
does not require an environmental impact statement (EIS) or an
environmental assessment (EA) under the National Environmental Policy
Act of 1969 (NEPA). Applications that satisfy these criteria are
requesting authorization for ``small-scale natural gas exports,'' and
DOE deems such exports to be consistent with the public interest under
the Natural Gas Act (NGA). DOE's regulations regarding
[[Page 35107]]
notice of applications and procedures conducted on applications do not
apply to applications that satisfy these criteria. This regulation is
intended to expedite DOE's processing of these applications and reduce
administrative burdens for the small-scale natural gas export market.
DATES: This final rule is effective August 24, 2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Amy Sweeney, U.S. Department of Energy
(FE-34), Office of Regulation and International Engagement, Office of
Fossil Energy Forrestal Building, Room 3E-042, 1000 Independence Avenue
SW, Washington, DC 20585; (202) 586-2627; or Cassandra Bernstein or
Ronald (R.J.) Colwell, U.S. Department of Energy (GC-76), Office of the
Assistant General Counsel for Electricity and Fossil Energy, Forrestal
Building, Room 6D-033, 1000 Independence Ave. SW, Washington, DC 20585;
(202) 586-9793 or (202) 586-8499.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Acronyms and Abbreviations. A number of acronyms and abbreviations
are used in this final rule and set forth below for reference.
AEO Annual Energy Outlook
APA Administrative Procedure Act
Bcf/d Billion Cubic Feet per Day
Bcf/yr Billion Cubic Feet per Year
CNG Compressed Natural Gas
DOE Department of Energy
EA Environmental Assessment
EIA U.S. Energy Information Administration
EIS Environmental Impact Statement
FE Office of Fossil Energy, U.S. Department of Energy
FERC Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
FTA Free Trade Agreement
ISO ISO IMO7/TVAC-ASME LNG
LNG Liquefied Natural Gas
mtpa Million Metric Tons per Annum
NEPA National Environmental Policy Act of 1969
NGA Natural Gas Act of 1938
I. Background
II. Discussion of Final Rule and Response to Comments
A. Public Interest Determination
1. General
2. Scope of Rule
3. Public Interest Standard
4. Domestic Supply of Natural Gas
5. Cumulative Impacts
6. Economic Impacts
7. Environmental Issues
8. Administrative Procedures and Judicial Review Under the
Natural Gas Act
B. Regulatory Criteria
1. Volume Limitation
2. Categorical Exclusion From NEPA
C. Other Issues
III. Regulatory Review
A. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
B. Executive Orders 13771, 13777, and 13783
C. National Environmental Policy Act
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
G. Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act, 1999
H. Executive Order 13132
I. Executive Order 12988
J. Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act, 2001
K. Executive Order 13211
L. Congressional Notification
IV. Approval of the Office of the Secretary
I. Background
The Department of Energy is responsible for authorizing exports of
domestically produced natural gas to foreign nations pursuant to
section 3 of the NGA, 15 U.S.C. 717b. For applications to export
natural gas to non-FTA countries under NGA section 3(a), 15 U.S.C.
717b(a),\1\ DOE has consistently interpreted section 3 of the NGA as
creating a rebuttable presumption that a proposed export of natural gas
is in the public interest.\2\ Accordingly, DOE will conduct an informal
adjudication and grant a non-FTA application unless DOE finds that the
proposed exportation will not be consistent with the public
interest.\3\ Before reaching a final decision, DOE must also comply
with NEPA, 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ This final rule does not apply to exports to FTA countries
under section 3(c) of the NGA, 15 U.S.C. 717b(c). This final rule
also does not affect existing DOE authorizations or DOE's evaluation
of any non-FTA application that does not meet the criteria for
small-scale natural gas exports.
\2\ See Sierra Club v. U.S. Dep't of Energy, 867 F.3d 189, 203
(D.C. Cir. 2017) (``We have construed [NGA section 3(a)] as
containing a `general presumption favoring [export] authorization.'
'') (quoting W. Va. Pub. Serv. Comm'n v. U.S. Dep't of Energy, 681
F.2d 847, 856 (D.C. Cir. 1982)).
\3\ See id. (``there must be `an affirmative showing of
inconsistency with the public interest' to deny the application''
under NGA section 3(a)) (quoting Panhandle Producers & Royalty
Owners Ass'n v. Econ. Regulatory Admin., 822 F.2d 1105, 1111 (D.C.
Cir. 1987)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In this final rule, DOE revises its regulations to expedite the
application and approval process for ``small-scale'' exports of natural
gas to non-FTA countries, pursuant to section 3(a) of the NGA. This
emerging market involves exports of small volumes of natural gas from
the United States to countries primarily in, but not limited to, the
Caribbean, Central America, and South America. The small-scale export
market has developed as a solution to the practical and economic
constraints limiting large-scale natural gas exports to these
countries. In contrast to large-scale natural gas exports, small-scale
exports typically originate from existing facilities in the United
States, are transported shorter distances, and rely on a variety of
transportation modes, such as approved ISO IMO7/TVAC-ASME LNG (ISO)
containers loaded onto container ships and barges. DOE believes that
facilitating small-scale natural gas exports will allow for greater
diversity and competition in the natural gas market, consistent with
the public interest under NGA section 3(a).
For each small-scale export application submitted to DOE, DOE will
first determine if the application is complete under DOE's regulations.
If the application is complete, DOE will post the application on DOE's
website, consistent with DOE practice. This final rule establishes
that, upon receipt of any complete application to export natural gas
(including LNG) to non-FTA countries, DOE will grant the application
provided that it satisfies the following two criteria: (1) The
application proposes to export natural gas in a volume up to and
including 51.75 Bcf/yr \4\ (10 CFR 590.102(p)(1)); and (2) DOE's
approval of the application does not require an EIS or EA under NEPA
(10 CFR 590.102(p)(2))--that is, the application is eligible for a
categorical exclusion under DOE's NEPA regulations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ In this final rule, DOE is changing the volume criterion
from a daily limitation of ``up to and including 0.14 Bcf/d,'' as
stated in the proposed rule, to an annualized limitation of ``up to
and including 51.75 Bcf/yr.'' This change does not affect the total
volume, as 0.14 Bcf/d and 51.75 Bcf/yr represent the same amount of
natural gas expressed in different terms. DOE has determined that
expressing the volume criterion in an annualized figure is both more
consistent with industry practice and more practicable for DOE's
administration of the small-scale export program.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Any non-FTA application that satisfies these two criteria will
qualify as a ``small-scale natural gas export'' as that term is defined
under this final rule (10 CFR 590.102(p)), and will be deemed to be
consistent with the public interest under NGA section 3(a) (10 CFR
590.208(a)). DOE will issue an export authorization granting the
application on an expedited basis. Specifically, DOE will not provide
notice of each individual application nor apply other procedures
typically conducted for non-FTA export applications under DOE's
regulations, 10 CFR 590.205 and 10 CFR part 590, subpart C (10 CFR
590.303-10 CFR 590.317).
On September 1, 2017, DOE published the notice of proposed
rulemaking (NOPR or proposed rule) to revise its regulations to provide
for this expedited approval of small-scale export applications (82 FR
41570; Sept. 1, 2017). Publication of the NOPR began a 45-day public
comment period that ended on October 16, 2017. DOE received
approximately 85 unique
[[Page 35108]]
comments on the NOPR from a variety of sources, including natural gas
industry groups, environmental organizations, and individuals. The NOPR
and comments received on the NOPR can be accessed through DOE's website
at https://www.energy.gov/fe/articles/notice-proposed-rulemaking-regarding-small-scale-lng-exports.
For additional background information on this final rule, please
see the proposed rule. In the proposed rule, DOE provides information
on DOE's practice of issuing non-FTA export authorizations and the
various studies DOE has commissioned to evaluate the reasonably
foreseeable economic and environmental impacts of natural gas exports--
including those that would qualify as small-scale exports under this
final rule.
II. Discussion of Final Rule and Response to Comments
DOE has evaluated the comments received during the public comment
period. In this section, DOE discusses the relevant, significant
comments received on the proposed rule and provides DOE's responses to
those comments. Some commenters raised a variety of other concerns that
are outside the scope of the rule--including criticizing individual LNG
export projects currently in operation or pending before DOE and
questioning the scope of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission's
(FERC) jurisdiction over certain types of LNG export facilities under
NGA section 3. DOE does not address these comments in the final rule.
A. Public Interest Determination
1. General
In issuing this final rule, DOE has determined that small-scale
natural gas exports are consistent with the public interest under NGA
section 3(a). In reaching this conclusion, DOE has considered its
obligations under NGA section 3(a), the public comments received on the
proposed rule, and a wide range of information bearing on the public
interest, including (but not limited to) information on economic
impacts, international impacts, security of domestic natural gas
supply, and environmental impacts associated with these exports (82 FR
41573-41574; Sept. 1, 2017).
Additionally, DOE has considered the 29 final non-FTA export
authorizations issued to date,\5\ as well as authoritative projections
for natural gas supply, demand, and prices set forth in the U.S. Energy
Information Administration's (EIA) Annual Energy Outlook 2017 (AEO
2017) \6\ (discussed in the proposed rule) and Annual Energy Outlook
2018 (AEO 2018).\7\ With respect to the regulatory criteria established
by this rulemaking, DOE considered industry sources in establishing the
volume limitation, as well as its obligations under NEPA in
establishing the NEPA criterion.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ As of the date of the proposed rule, DOE had issued 28 final
authorizations to export LNG or compressed natural gas (CNG) to non-
FTA countries (82 FR 41572). After the proposed rule was published,
DOE issued an additional non-FTA export authorization. See Eagle LNG
Partners Jacksonville II LLC, DOE/FE Order No. 4078, FE Docket No.
17-79-LNG, Opinion and Order Granting Long-Term, Multi-Contract
Authorization to Export Liquefied Natural Gas in ISO Containers
Loaded at the Eagle Maxville Facility in Jacksonville, Florida, and
Exported by Vessel to Free Trade Agreement and Non-Free Trade
Agreement Nations (Sept. 15, 2017). Thus, to date, DOE has issued 29
final export authorizations to non-FTA countries, bringing the
cumulative total of approved non-FTA exports of LNG and CNG to 21.35
Bcf/d of natural gas, or 7.79 trillion cubic feet per year. See id.
at 34-37.
\6\ U.S. Energy Info. Admin., Annual Energy Outlook 2017 (Jan.
2017), available at: https://www.eia.gov/outlooks/archive/aeo17/.
\7\ U.S. Energy Info. Admin., Annual Energy Outlook 2018 (Feb.
2018), available at: https://www.eia.gov/outlooks/aeo.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In sum, DOE has thoroughly analyzed the many factors affecting the
export of U.S. natural gas, as well as the unique characteristics and
minimal adverse impacts of the emerging small-scale natural gas market.
On this basis (and as discussed in the proposed rule), DOE has
determined that the final rule is in accordance with section 3 of the
NGA, DOE's interpretation of the public interest standard set forth in
NGA section 3(a), and DOE's long-standing policy of minimizing federal
control and involvement in energy markets and promoting a balanced and
mixed energy resource system. Based on this evidence, 10 CFR 590.208 of
the final rule establishes that small-scale natural gas exports, as
defined in 10 CFR 590.102(p), are deemed to be consistent with the
public interest under NGA section 3(a).
Many commenters expressed overall support for DOE's authorization
of LNG exports and, specifically, for DOE's efforts to expedite the
approval of applications for small-scale natural gas exports to non-FTA
countries. Several commenters agreed that small-scale natural gas
exports are an important emerging market that DOE should facilitate
through a streamlined approval process for qualifying applicants. They
commented that small-scale exports will provide a variety of benefits
both to the United States and to the anticipated importing countries
primarily located in the Caribbean, Central America, and South America.
Benefits identified for the United States include stimulating the
natural gas market, generating economic growth, strengthening the
global natural gas market, and enhancing U.S. national security
interests abroad. Benefits identified for the importing countries
include expanding natural gas markets and providing access to cleaner
and more reliable sources of energy. Commenters also expressed support
for DOE's regulatory definition of ``small-scale natural gas export,''
such that qualifying applications are deemed consistent with the public
interest; as well as DOE's efforts to reduce regulatory burdens for
these applicants. DOE generally agrees with these comments and
recognizes the variety of important benefits that are expected to occur
under the final rule.
2. Scope of Rule
Some commenters remarked that this rulemaking is an important step,
yet encouraged DOE to liberalize all natural gas exports--not just
qualifying small-scale natural gas exports--to ensure that the benefits
of natural gas exports can be fully realized.
Based on findings from The Macroeconomic Impact of Increasing U.S.
LNG Exports (2015 LNG Export Study),\8\ DOE agrees that higher natural
gas exports are associated with marginally higher macroeconomic
benefits to the United States (82 FR 41572).\9\ This rulemaking focuses
only on small-scale natural gas exports to non-FTA countries, in light
of the unique characteristics and minimal adverse impacts associated
with that market. Insofar as the commenters are suggesting that DOE
undertake additional deregulatory efforts under NGA section 3(a), DOE
welcomes suggestions, data, and information on this topic through its
regulatory reform email inbox at [email protected].
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Center for Energy Studies at Rice University Baker Institute
and Oxford Economics, The Macroeconomic Impact of Increasing U.S.
LNG Exports (Oct. 29, 2015), available at: https://energy.gov/sites/prod/files/2015/12/f27/20151113_macro_impact_of_lng_exports_0.pdf
[hereinafter 2015 LNG Export Study].
\9\ On June 12, 2018, DOE published a notice of availability of
the 2018 LNG Export Study and request for comments. See U.S. Dep't
of Energy, Study on Macroeconomic Outcomes of LNG Exports, 83 FR
27314 (June 12, 2018).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Public Interest Standard
Several commenters disagreed with various aspects of DOE's public
interest analysis generally. For example, some commenters disagreed
with DOE's position that NGA section 3(a) creates a
[[Page 35109]]
rebuttable presumption that natural gas exports are consistent with the
public interest. Some stated that Congress, not DOE, must define
``public interest'' under section 3(a), whereas other commenters
criticized DOE for not providing a regulatory definition of the public
interest. Another commenter suggested that applications to export
natural gas should be subjected to the same standard, regardless of
whether the natural gas is being exported to FTA or non-FTA countries.
As an initial matter, section 3 of the NGA (as amended by section
201 of the Energy Policy Act of 1992 (Pub. L. 102-486)) distinguishes
between exports to non-FTA countries under section 3(a) and FTA
countries under section 3(c).\10\ These provisions establish different
standards of review for proposed exports to FTA and non-FTA countries,
and DOE has comported with the appropriate standard of review for the
future non-FTA exports at issue in this rulemaking.\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ See supra note 1.
\11\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In every non-FTA authorization to date,\12\ as well as in the
proposed rule (82 FR 41571-41572; Sept. 1, 2017), DOE has explained its
interpretation of the public interest analysis under NGA section 3(a).
The commenters' concerns reflect a lack of familiarity with both the
statute and DOE's long-standing practice in evaluating non-FTA
applications--a practice that was upheld by the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the District of Columbia Circuit in a series of cases decided in
2017.\13\ Indeed, the D.C. Circuit has consistently affirmed DOE's
interpretation that NGA section 3(a) creates a rebuttable presumption
favoring authorization of applications to import or export natural
gas.\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ See, e.g., Eagle LNG Partners Jacksonville II LLC, DOE/FE
Order No. 4078, at 8-10, supra note 5.
\13\ See Sierra Club v. U.S. Dep't of Energy, 867 F.3d 189 (D.C.
Cir. 2017) (denying petition for review challenging non-FTA export
authorization); Sierra Club v. U.S. Dep't of Energy, Nos. 16-1186,
16-1252, 16-1253, 703 Fed. Appx. 1 (D.C. Cir. Nov. 1, 2017) (denying
petitions for review challenging three non-FTA export
authorizations).
\14\ See Sierra Club, 867 F.3d at 203; see also, e.g., W. Va.
Pub. Serv. Comm'n v. U.S. Dep't of Energy, 681 F.2d 847 (D.C. Cir.
1982); Panhandle Producers and Royalty Owners Ass'n v. Economic
Regulatory Admin., 822 F.2d 1105 (D.C. Cir. 1987); Panhandle
Producers and Royalty Owners Ass'n v. Economic Regulatory Admin.,
847 F.2d 1168 (1988).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Although section 3(a) establishes a broad public interest standard
and a presumption favoring export authorizations, Congress has not
defined the phrase ``public interest'' or identified specific criteria
that must be considered in issuing a non-FTA authorization under that
statute. As a result, DOE has identified a range of factors, described
above, that it considers when determining whether a proposed export of
natural gas is consistent with the public interest. The D.C. Circuit
has upheld DOE's non-FTA export authorizations granted on the basis of
this public interest evaluation.\15\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ See supra note 13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In this rulemaking, DOE has followed its established approach in
interpreting NGA section 3(a) to determine that qualifying small-scale
natural gas exports are consistent with the public interest after
considering all relevant factors (82 FR 41573). There is nothing
fundamentally unique about small-scale exports that would alter DOE's
analysis of the public interest in this context.
4. Domestic Supply of Natural Gas
Numerous commenters disagreed as to whether the United States has
sufficient natural gas supplies to support the expedited approval of
small-scale exports under this rule. Some commenters asserted that the
United States has sufficient natural gas supplies to meet both
increased natural gas exports and increased domestic natural gas
demand, as DOE set forth in the proposed rule (82 FR 41573-41574).
Other commenters asserted that the United States does not have
sufficient natural gas supplies to meet current demand, much less
increased demand associated with this rulemaking. One commenter, for
example, argued that approvals for natural gas exports to FTA and non-
FTA countries combined already exceed 71% of domestic demand, thereby
calling into question the sufficiency of U.S. natural gas supplies.
First, DOE notes that the volumes authorized for export to FTA and
non-FTA countries are not additive to one another. The 71% figure cited
by the commenter for ``combined LNG exports'' fails to acknowledge this
fact, which is reflected in DOE's orders. Rather, each authorization
grants authority to export the entire volume of a facility to FTA or
non-FTA countries, respectively, to provide the authorization holder
with maximal flexibility in determining its export destinations.
Next, to date DOE has issued 29 final non-FTA authorizations in a
cumulative volume of exports totaling 21.35 Bcf/d of natural gas.\16\
By comparison, approximately 3.5 Bcf/d of capacity has been built and
is being utilized, and approximately 7.5 Bcf/d of additional capacity
is under construction.\17\ Industry outlooks, including Reference cases
in the last several years of EIA's Annual Energy Outlook, do not
foresee long-term LNG exports from the United States exceeding the
volume currently authorized for export from non-FTA countries.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ See Eagle LNG Partners Jacksonville II LLC, DOE/FE Order
No. 4078, at 34-37, supra note 5.
\17\ See, e.g., U.S. Energy Info. Admin., Existing and Under
Construction Large Scale U.S. Liquefaction Facilities (June 18,
2018), available at: https://www.eia.gov/naturalgas/U.S.liquefactioncapacity.xlsx (also see Contents tab); Cheniere
Energy, Inc., ``Cheniere Makes Positive Final Investment Decision on
Train 3 at the Corpus Christi Liquefaction Project'' (May 22, 2018),
available at: https://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=101667&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=2350302.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
By DOE's standard measures of supply, there are adequate natural
gas resources to meet demand associated with the final rule. EIA's most
recent natural gas estimates of future production, price, and other
domestic industry fundamentals set forth in AEO 2017 and AEO 2018
support this conclusion. For example, the AEO 2017 Reference case
projection of lower-48 states dry natural gas production in 2035
increased significantly (by 27.9 Bcf/d) as compared with AEO 2011,
while the AEO 2018 Reference case projection of that figure was higher
still, an increase of 33.8 Bcf/d over AEO 2011. Projections of domestic
natural gas consumption in 2035 also increased in both AEO 2017 and AEO
2018, as compared to AEO 2011 (by 11.3 Bcf/d in AEO 2017 and by 13.3
Bcf/d in AEO 2018). Even with higher production and consumption, the
2035 projected natural gas market price in the Reference case declined
from $8.04/MMBtu (2017$) in AEO 2011 to $5.20/MMBtu (2017$) in AEO 2017
and to $4.26/MMBtu (2017$) in AEO 2018. The implication of the latest
EIA projections in AEO 2017 and AEO 2018 is that a significantly
greater quantity of natural gas is projected to be available at a lower
cost than was estimated seven years ago.
[[Page 35110]]
Proved reserves of natural gas--i.e., volumes of oil and natural
gas that geologic and engineering data demonstrate with reasonable
certainty to be recoverable in future years from known reservoirs--also
have been increasing. From 2000 to 2015, proved reserves have increased
73% to 307,730 Bcf, while production has increased only 41% during the
same period, demonstrating the growing supply of natural gas available
under existing economic and operating conditions.\18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ U.S. Energy Info. Admin., U.S. Dry Natural Gas Proved
Reserves (Feb. 12, 2018), available at: https://www.eia.gov/dnav/ng/ng_enr_dry_dcu_nus_a.htm; U.S. Energy Info. Admin., U.S. Dry Natural
Gas Production (Feb. 12, 2018), available at: https://www.eia.gov/dnav/ng/hist/n9070us2a.htm (additional calculations conducted to
produce percentage change and R/P ratios).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
EIA's estimates of technically recoverable reserves point to the
availability of domestic natural gas for decades to come. These
reserves are resources in accumulations (both proved and unproved) that
are producible using current recovery technology but without reference
to economic profitability. EIA's estimates of lower-48 natural gas
technically recoverable reserves total 1,796 Tcf in AEO 2017.\19\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ See U.S. Energy Info. Admin., Assumptions to the Annual
Energy Outlook 2017 (July 2017), Table 9.2. Technically recoverable
U.S. dry natural gas resources as of January 1, 2015, at 133,
available at: https://www.eia.gov/outlooks/aeo/assumptions/pdf/oilgas.pdf (2017).pdf, and Assumptions to the Annual Energy Outlook
2010 (Apr. 2010), Table 9.2. Technically recoverable U.S. natural
gas resources as of January 1, 2008, at 111, available at: https://www.eia.gov/oiaf/aeo/assumption/pdf/0554(2010).pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Next, the 2014 and 2015 Studies concluded that, for the period of
the analysis (through 2040), the United States is projected to have
ample supplies of natural gas resources that can meet domestic needs
for natural gas and the LNG export market. Further, most projections of
domestic natural gas resources extend beyond 20 to 40 years. Although
not all technically recoverable resources are currently economical to
produce, it is instructive to note that EIA's recent estimate of
technically recoverable resources as of January 1, 2015, equates to
nearly 66 years of natural gas supply at the 2015 domestic consumption
level of 27.24 Tcf.\20\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ See U.S. Energy Info. Admin., Natural Gas Consumption by
End Use (Feb. 12, 2018), available at: https://www.eia.gov/dnav/ng/ng_cons_sum_dcu_nus_a.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based upon this record evidence and the discussion in the proposed
rule, DOE finds that the small-scale exports will not adversely affect
the availability of natural gas supplies to domestic consumers, such as
would negate the net economic benefits to the United States.
5. Cumulative Impacts
Several commenters asserted that DOE must account for cumulative
impacts in various ways as part of its public interest determination
for this final rule. Some commenters urged DOE to provide a ``cap'' or
other language in the final rule to halt automatic approval of small-
scale exports if the cumulative volume of exports exceeds the scope of
existing cumulative impact analyses (which the commenters acknowledge
is 28 Bcf/d of exports based on the 2015 LNG Export Study, 82 FR
41572), or if other circumstances arise that would render these exports
inconsistent with the public interest. Commenters suggested, for
example, that DOE should cease approval of small-scale export
applications if the United States loses its competitive price advantage
in exporting LNG, or if exporting natural gas above a certain volume
would have negative economic impacts or threaten the security of
domestic natural gas supplies. Other commenters expressed concern that
U.S. natural gas production could not meet ``unlimited'' LNG exports as
might occur under the proposed rule, and therefore urged DOE to
implement a ``safety net'' in the rule allowing DOE to halt approvals
of small-scale applications.
DOE declines to adopt a mechanism in the final rule that would
automatically halt approvals of small-scale applications if the
cumulative volume of approvals exceeds the scope of DOE's cumulative
impact analyses to date. The 2015 Study considered export volumes
ranging from 12 to 20 Bcf/d of natural gas, as well as a high resource
recovery case examining export volumes up to 28 Bcf/d of natural gas.
By comparison, to date DOE has issued final non-FTA authorizations in a
cumulative volume of exports totaling 21.35 Bcf/d of natural gas \21\--
well below the 28 Bcf/d case considered in the 2015 Study. DOE already
assesses the cumulative impacts of each succeeding request for export
authorization on the public interest with due regard to the effect on
domestic natural gas supply and demand fundamentals. DOE will continue
to do so for non-small-scale export applications (i.e., applications
requesting an export volume greater than 51.75 Bcf/yr), which
constitute both 99% of the non-FTA LNG export volumes authorized to
date and 99% of the LNG export volumes requested in non-FTA
applications currently pending before DOE.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ See Eagle LNG Partners Jacksonville II LLC, DOE/FE Order
No. 4078, at 34-37, supra note 5.
\22\ U.S. Dep't of Energy, Office of Fossil Energy, Summary of
LNG Export Applications of the Lower 48 States Annual Energy Outlook
2017 (Feb. 14, 2018), available at: https://energy.gov/fe/downloads/summary-lng-export-applications-lower-48-states.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For this final rule, DOE has determined that domestic supplies of
natural gas will be adequate to supply small-scale exports of natural
gas while meeting domestic demand. In so doing, DOE considered the
economic impacts of higher natural gas prices, potential increases in
natural gas price volatility, and the security of domestic natural gas
supplies, among other factors. DOE also explained that the prospect of
``unlimited'' exports of U.S. natural gas is not realistic, as
discussed in the 2015 LNG Export Study.\23\ The authors of the 2015
Study had to include several assumptions about the global natural gas
market for U.S. LNG exports to exceed 12 Bcf/d, and include far less
likely assumptions to reach the high resource recovery case of 28 Bcf/d
of exports. Further, as DOE has observed in prior orders, receiving a
non-FTA authorization from DOE does not guarantee that a particular
facility will be financed and built; nor does it guarantee that, if
built, market conditions would continue to favor exports once the
facility is operational.\24\ For more information on DOE's LNG export
studies and DOE's conclusions regarding these public interest factors,
please see the proposed rule (82 FR 41571-41574; Sept. 1, 2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ The 2015 LNG Export Study included scenarios in which LNG
exports were unconstrained. These scenarios indicated that, should
the U.S. resource base be less robust and more expensive than
anticipated, U.S. LNG exports would be less competitive in the world
market, thereby resulting in lower export levels from the United
States. Further, in all of the unconstrained scenarios, the supply
and price response to LNG exports did not negate the net economic
benefit to the economy from the exports.
\24\ See, e.g., Golden Pass Products LLC, DOE/FE Order No. 3978,
FE Docket No. 12-156-LNG, Opinion and Order Granting Long-Term,
Multi-Contract Authorization to Export Liquefied Natural Gas by
Vessel from the Golden Pass LNG Terminal Located in Jefferson
County, Texas, to Non-Free Trade Agreement, at 148 (Apr. 25, 2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As to the commenter's concern that the global natural gas market
for U.S. LNG exports could change in the future, DOE notes that the
2015 LNG Export Study included several assumptions about the global
market for the time period covering 2015 to 2040. Nonetheless, DOE's
long-standing policy is to minimize federal control and involvement in
energy markets (82 FR 41571, 41574), such that even a change in the
competitive status of U.S. LNG globally would not affect DOE's
[[Page 35111]]
approval of small-scale natural gas exports as set forth in this final
rule.
Next, commenters stated that the proposed rule is deficient because
DOE has neither: (i) Attempted to predict the potential cumulative size
of the U.S. small-scale export market, nor (ii) identified the
potential LNG demand in the importing Caribbean, Central American, and
South American countries that are the target of this rule.
DOE explained in the proposed rule that foreign demand for imports
of U.S. natural gas has increased as many countries, such as those in
the Caribbean, Central America, and South America, seek to import
cleaner sources of energy. Based on the record evidence and the small
volumes at issue in this rulemaking, DOE has determined that domestic
supplies of natural gas will be adequate both to meet domestic needs
and to supply small-scale exports of natural gas (82 FR 41572-41574).
We therefore disagree with the comment that DOE was required to
consider projections of the potential cumulative size of the U.S.
small-scale market and/or the market demand of the importing regions
among the many factors evaluated as part of its public interest
determination.
6. Economic Impacts
Several commenters agreed with DOE's position that small-scale
natural gas exports will not lead to a detectable impact on domestic
natural gas prices (82 FR 41574), whereas other commenters disputed
this position. The dissenting commenters expressed concern that this
rulemaking will increase exports of U.S. natural gas (including LNG),
leading to increases in natural gas prices. They further argued that
even very small increases in natural gas prices are likely to lead to
the loss of employment in energy-intensive industries. In sum, they
asserted that, if there are any economic or job-creation impacts
associated with this final rule, these impacts are likely to be
negative.
First, as discussed in the proposed rule, the 2014 and 2015 LNG
Export Studies \25\ projected the economic impacts of LNG exports in a
range of scenarios, including scenarios that exceeded the current
amount of LNG exports authorized in the final non-FTA export
authorizations to date. The 2015 LNG Export Study concluded that LNG
exports at these levels (in excess of 12 Bcf/d of natural gas) would
result in higher U.S. natural gas prices, but that these price changes
would remain in a relatively narrow range across the scenarios studied.
However, even with these estimated price increases, the 2015 LNG Export
Study found that the United States would experience net economic
benefits from increased LNG exports in all cases studied.\26\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ U.S. Energy Info. Admin., Effect of Increased Levels of
Liquefied Natural Gas Exports on U.S. Energy Markets (Oct. 2014),
available at: https://www.eia.gov/analysis/requests/fe/pdf/lng.pdf
[hereinafter 2014 LNG Export Study]; 2015 LNG Export Study, supra
note 8; see also 82 FR 41571-41572 (Sept. 1, 2017).
\26\ See 2015 LNG Export Study, supra note 8, at 82.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Next, for the proposed rule, DOE reviewed EIA's AEO 2017. The
Reference case of this projection includes the effects of the Clean
Power Plan (CPP) final rule,\27\ which was intended to reduce carbon
emissions from the power sector. DOE assessed AEO 2017 to evaluate any
differences from AEO 2014, which formed the basis for the 2014 LNG
Export Study.\28\ Comparing key results from 2040 (the end of the
projection period in Reference case projections from AEO 2014) shows
that the latest Reference case Outlook foresees lower-48 market
conditions that would be even more supportive of LNG exports, including
higher production and demand coupled with notably lower prices. Results
from EIA's AEO 2017 no-CPP case, which is the same as the Reference
case but does not include the CPP, are also more supportive of LNG
exports on the basis of higher production with lower prices relative to
AEO 2014.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ U.S. Envtl. Prot. Agency, Carbon Pollution Emission
Guidelines for Existing Stationary Sources: Electric Utility
Generating Units; Final Rule, 80 FR 64662 (Oct. 23, 2015). On
February 9, 2016, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a stay of the
effectiveness of the CPP final rule pending review by the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in consolidated
cases challenging the rule. See Chamber of Commerce, et al. v. EPA,
et al., No. 15A787, Order in Pending Case (U.S. Feb. 9, 2016). The
litigation over the CPP final rule pending in the D.C. Circuit has
been held in abeyance as the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) reviews the rule. See West Virginia, et al. v. EPA, et al.,
Case Nos. 15-1363 et al., EPA Status Report, at 3 (D.C. Cir. June 1,
2018). On October 10, 2017, EPA issued a notice proposing to repeal
the CPP final rule. U.S. Envtl. Prot. Agency, Repeal of Carbon
Pollution Emission Guidelines for Existing Stationary Sources:
Electric Utility Generating Units; Proposed Rule, 82 FR 48035 (Oct.
16, 2017). That rulemaking is on-going, and EPA has asked for the
consolidated cases to remain in abeyance pending the conclusion of
the rulemaking. See EPA Status Report at 4-5.
\28\ See 2014 LNG Export Study, supra note 25 (discussed in the
proposed rule at 82 FR 41571-41572; Sept. 1, 2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For the year 2040, the AEO 2017 Reference case anticipates 3% more
natural gas production in the lower-48 than AEO 2014. It also projects
an average Henry Hub natural gas price that is lower than AEO 2014 by
38% in 2017$. In the AEO 2017 no-CPP case, for the year 2040, lower-48
production is 2% higher than in AEO 2014, with the price differential
being approximately the same. Both higher production and lower prices
in both AEO 2017 cases illustrate a market environment supportive of
LNG exports.
On February 6, 2018, EIA issued AEO 2018. For this final rule, DOE
has considered AEO 2018 to determine whether EIA's most recent
projections present any material difference in terms of price impacts.
AEO 2018, which does not include the CPP in its Reference case, is even
more supportive of exports than AEO 2017 and AEO 2014, showing Henry
Hub prices of $4.50 in 2040, which is 46% lower than AEO 2014 and 13%
lower than AEO 2017 in 2017$. Production levels are also increased in
2040 in AEO 2018 over AEO 2014 and AEO 2017--with AEO 2018 showing
lower-48 dry production at 109.1 Bcf/d over lower-48 production levels
of 99.7 and 102.5 in AEO 2014 and 2017, respectively, as shown in the
table below.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AEO 2017
AEO 2014 AEO 2017 reference case AEO 2018
reference case reference case without clean reference case
power plan
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Henry Hub Prices in 2040 (in 2017$)............. $8.27 $5.18 $5.01 $4.50
Lower-48 Production (Bcf/d) in 2040............. 99.7 102.5 101.6 109.1
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In sum, the conclusion of the 2015 LNG Export Study is that the
United States will experience net economic benefits from issuance of
authorizations to export domestically produced LNG. The 2015 LNG Export
Study projected that an increase in U.S. natural gas exports will
generate small declines in output at the margin for some energy-
[[Page 35112]]
intensive, trade-exposed industries, but that negative impacts in
energy-intensive sectors will be offset by positive impacts (82 FR
41572; Sept 1, 2017).
DOE has reviewed both the evidence in the record and relevant
precedent, and has not found evidence to support the commenters' claims
of negative economic impact. Nor have those commenters presented
sufficient evidence to support their assertions of economic harm.\29\
On this basis, DOE concludes that small-scale natural gas exports are
expected to generate positive economic benefits in the United States
through direct and indirect job creation, increased economic activity,
tax revenues, and improved U.S. balance of trade.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ Some commenters criticized the LNG export studies
commissioned by DOE and cited in the proposed rule (82 FR 41571-
41572; Sept. 1, 2017), including the 2014 and 2015 LNG Export
Studies. They argued, for example, that these macroeconomic studies
are flawed in various respects and have been refuted by peer-
reviewed evidence. DOE notes, however, that each of those studies
was published in the Federal Register. DOE received comments on each
study--including on their models, assumptions, and design--and
responded to the comments in other proceedings. Based upon the
record evidence, DOE determined that these studies are fundamentally
sound. See, e.g., Eagle LNG Partners Jacksonville II LLC, DOE/FE
Order No. 4078, at 27-28, supra note 5. Accordingly, criticisms of
DOE's macroeconomic studies are outside the scope of this
rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
7. Environmental Issues
In reviewing the potential environmental impacts of the proposed
rulemaking, DOE has considered both its obligations under NEPA
(discussed in Section II.B.2) and its obligation under NGA section 3(a)
to ensure that the proposal is not inconsistent with the public
interest.
In the context of NGA section 3(a), several commenters contended
that this rulemaking is inconsistent with the public interest on
environmental grounds. According to these commenters, expediting the
approval of small-scale natural gas exports will lead to increased
natural gas production and transmission which, in turn, will result in
negative environmental impacts. They cite, for example, the possibility
of accelerated climate change and increased greenhouse gas emissions,
both in the United States and in the importing countries, as a result
of these increased small-scale exports. These commenters contend that,
rather than facilitating small-scale exports, DOE should closely
scrutinize or ban natural gas exports to non-FTA countries altogether.
As discussed in Section II.B.2 and in the proposed rule, qualifying
applications for small-scale exports must not require an environmental
impact statement (EIS) or an environmental assessment (EA) under NEPA.
That is, the application must be eligible for a categorical exclusion.
Further, DOE has determined--and the D.C. Circuit has agreed \30\--that
NEPA does not require consideration of induced ``upstream'' natural gas
production related to increased natural gas production, contrary to the
commenters' assertions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ See Sierra Club v. U.S. Dep't of Energy, 867 F.3d 189, 201-
02 (D.C. Cir. 2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Specifically, DOE determined that the current rapid development of
natural gas resources in the United States will continue, with or
without the export of natural gas to non-FTA nations. DOE also found
that fundamental uncertainties constrain its ability to foresee and
analyze with any particularity the incremental natural gas production
that may be induced by permitting exports of LNG (or CNG) to non-FTA
countries--whether from unconventional shale gas formations or
otherwise. Nevertheless, a decision by DOE to authorize exports to non-
FTA countries--including the small-scale exports at issue here--could
accelerate that development by some increment.
For these reasons, and because DOE previously had received comments
regarding the potential environmental impacts associated with
unconventional production, DOE produced a document in 2014 entitled
Addendum to Environmental Review Documents Concerning Exports of
Natural Gas from the United States (Addendum), and made it available
for public comment.\31\ The Addendum takes a broad look at
unconventional natural gas production in the United States, with
chapters covering water resources (including water quantity and
quality), air quality, greenhouse gas emissions, induced seismicity,
and land use.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ U.S. Dep't of Energy, Addendum to Environmental Review
Documents Concerning Exports of Natural Gas From the United States,
79 FR 48132 (Aug. 15, 2014), available at: https://energy.gov/fe/addendum-environmental-review-documents-concerning-exports-natural-gas-united-states [hereinafter Addendum]. DOE takes administrative
notice of the Addendum in this proceeding.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Addendum shows that there are potential environmental issues
associated with unconventional natural gas production as a whole that
need to be carefully managed, especially with respect to emissions of
volatile organic compounds and methane, and the potential for
groundwater contamination. These environmental concerns do not lead DOE
to conclude, however, that the proposed small-scale exports of natural
gas are not in the public interest and/or should be prohibited. Rather,
DOE believes the public interest is better served by addressing these
concerns directly--through federal, state, or local regulation, or
through self-imposed industry guidelines where appropriate--rather than
by prohibiting exports of natural gas. Unlike DOE, environmental
regulators have the legal authority to impose requirements on natural
gas production that appropriately balance benefits and burdens, and to
update these regulations from time to time as technological practices
and scientific understanding evolve. Declining to approve (or to
expedite) small-scale natural gas exports would cause the United States
to forego the economic and international benefits discussed herein, but
would have little more than a small, incremental impact on the
environmental issues identified by these commenters. This is
particularly true because--as the Addendum illustrates--DOE is unable
to predict at a local level where any additional natural gas production
would occur and in what quantity to support the small-scale
exports.\32\ For these reasons, we conclude that the environmental
concerns associated with natural gas production do not establish that
the small-scale exports at issue in this rulemaking are inconsistent
with the public interest. We also note that DOE's legal analysis in
this regard has been upheld by the D.C. Circuit in the context of four
different non-FTA authorizations together approving far more
significant volumes of U.S. LNG for export.\33\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ See, e.g., Golden Pass Products LLC, DOE/FE Order No. 3978,
supra note 24, at 147-49.
\33\ See Sierra Club, 867 F.3d at 198-200 (upholding DOE's
conclusion that, inter alia, there was not sufficiently specific
information to identify where incremental natural gas production
would occur at the local level); Sierra Club v. U.S. Dep't of
Energy, Nos. 16-1186, 16-1252, 16-1253, 703 Fed. Appx. 1, *2 (D.C.
Cir. Nov. 1, 2017) (same).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Next, one commenter questioned whether small-scale exports will, in
fact, facilitate the transition of importing countries away from the
use of diesel and fuel oil, and argued that DOE has not provided
sufficient evidence of this displacement to justify the final rule. We
emphasize that foreign demand for U.S. natural gas has increased as
countries in the Caribbean, Central America, and South America seek to
import cleaner sources of energy. DOE further observes that many of
these countries are currently dependent on diesel and/or fuel oil for
their generation needs. These energy needs are challenging from both a
cost- and emissions-perspective. By importing
[[Page 35113]]
LNG from the United States, these countries will have access to a more
reliable, cost-effective supply of energy that also has emissions
benefits over current energy sources. Small-scale natural gas exports
will fulfill an important need for natural gas in importing countries
that often lack the customer demand, waterway infrastructure, and
transmission infrastructure necessary to handle large quantities of
natural gas and large LNG carriers.
Additionally, increased diversity of fuel supplies and sources used
for generating electricity are expected to make these importing
countries more, not less, resilient against energy outages after
hurricanes, earthquakes, and other natural disasters. At the same time,
the United States will facilitate stronger relationships with these
importing countries, while promoting U.S. leadership in the global
energy market. In sum, the commenter's argument as to DOE's lack of
``evidence'' of this expected transition to U.S. natural gas
misconceives DOE's public interest analysis and seeks to impose a
burden of proof where none exists, although DOE anticipates numerous
environmental benefits to the importing countries from this rulemaking.
Finally, some commenters argued that DOE should be focused on
encouraging renewable sources of energy, rather than facilitating
exports of natural gas through this rulemaking. They asserted that
renewable sources of energy are more environmentally friendly than
natural gas, whereas (in their view) the proposed exports of natural
gas are not in the public interest. DOE notes, however, that imports of
U.S. LNG can work in concert with the development of renewable
generation in importing countries. Imported natural gas can provide
reliable standby energy supply available immediately, while renewable
development is occurring. Imported LNG also can provide continued
reliability to enhance solar or other renewable sources once they are
developed. For these reasons, small-scale natural gas exports approved
under this rule may provide indirect benefits to the use of renewable
energy in importing countries.
8. Administrative Procedures and Judicial Review Under the Natural Gas
Act
Some commenters argued that DOE cannot, in interpreting the phrase
``in the public interest'' in NGA section 3(a), remove public notice
and comment procedures for individual small-scale export applications.
According to these commenters, the phrase ``opportunity for hearing''
in NGA section 3(a) means that members of the public must be afforded
the opportunity to present evidence to DOE regarding each non-FTA
export application on a case-by-case basis. These commenters expressed
concern that the proposed rule would frustrate the design of the NGA by
eliminating the opportunity for public comment on individual small-
scale applications.
Some commenters also asserted that the final rule is inconsistent
with the NGA's judicial review provisions set forth in NGA section 19
(15 U.S.C. 717r) and the implementing regulation (10 CFR 590.501(a)).
They argued that these judicial review provisions are available only to
a ``party'' to a proceeding, yet under the proposed rule, there would
be no clear way for a member of the public to intervene in an
individual small-scale application proceeding and become a party to
that proceeding. In their view, absent the availability of this remedy,
judicial review would be provided by the Administrative Procedure Act
(APA) (5 U.S.C. 704) and thus lie in the district courts--creating
tension with the NGA's intent to provide for direct review in the
federal courts of appeals under NGA section 19(b).
As to the administrative concerns, we note that under NGA section
3(a), the Secretary of Energy ``shall'' issue an order upon application
unless, after ``opportunity for hearing,'' DOE finds that the proposed
export will not be consistent with the public interest.\34\ Section
3(a) does not require adjudication of applications to be determined
``on the record after opportunity for a hearing'' under the APA.\35\
That type of statutory language imposes the need for a formal
adjudication under the APA. Section 3(a) also does not require the
individual adjudication of each application. The statutory language in
NGA section 3(a)--``opportunity for hearing''--allows DOE to conduct an
informal (rather than a formal) adjudication and affords DOE broad
discretion to determine that the notice and public comment period on
the proposed rule constitutes the notice and opportunity for comment on
all prospective small-scale natural gas export applications. In this
proceeding, DOE sought public comment on the proposed rule for a 45-day
period and received comments from a variety of stakeholders and
interested persons. DOE has reviewed the comments and taken them into
consideration in this final rule. Therefore, DOE disagrees that
expediting the review and approval process for qualifying small-scale
natural gas applications under 10 CFR 590.208(a) would frustrate the
design of NGA section 3(a). Rather, DOE believes it is has provided
sufficient process under the APA to determine that all prospective
small-scale natural gas export applications--if meeting the qualifying
criteria--are in the public interest.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ 15 U.S.C. 717b(a).
\35\ 5 U.S.C. 554.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As to the judicial review comments, to the extent that small-scale
export authorizations are reviewable, NGA section 19(b) vests exclusive
jurisdiction in the appropriate federal court of appeals.\36\ A federal
district court thus would lack jurisdiction over the dispute.\37\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ NGA section 19(b) states that ``[a]ny party to a proceeding
under this chapter aggrieved by an order issued by the Commission in
such proceeding may obtain a review of such order in the court of
appeals of the United States for any circuit wherein the natural-gas
company to which the order relates is located or has its principal
place of business, or in the United States Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia . . . . [S]uch court shall have jurisdiction,
which upon the filing of the record with it shall be exclusive, to
affirm, modify, or set aside such order in whole or in part.'' 15
U.S.C. 717r(b).
\37\ See, e.g., Sierra Club, 867 F.3d at 202 (citing 15 U.S.C.
717r(b)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Regulatory Criteria
In the final rule, DOE establishes a regulatory definition for
``small-scale natural gas export,'' to be codified at 10 CFR
590.102(p). Under this provision, a small-scale natural gas export is
any export of natural gas to non-FTA nations, provided that the
application for the export authority satisfies both the volume and NEPA
criteria identified in 10 CFR 590.102(p)(1) and (2).
1. Volume Limitation
10 CFR 590.102(p)(1) establishes the volume limitation for small-
scale natural gas exports. Under this criterion, a qualifying
application must propose to export natural gas in a volume up to and
including 51.75 Bcf/yr--an annualized figure that corresponds to the
0.14 Bcf/d volume criterion proposed by DOE. In the proposed rule, DOE
stated that this volume criterion is consistent with industry practice
for the emerging small-scale export market, but invited comment on any
other appropriate volume limitation (82 FR 41573; Sept. 1, 2017).
Some commenters generally disagreed with this volume criterion,
asserting that exports up to and including 0.14 Bcf/d (51.75 Bcf/yr)
are substantial and cannot reasonably be considered ``small scale.''
These commenters, however, neither presented evidence supporting their
claims in the context of small-scale natural gas exports nor suggested
a
[[Page 35114]]
different volume limitation they believe to be more appropriate. As
explained in the proposed rule, DOE based the volume criterion on
industry standards that define ``small-scale LNG'' as 1.0 million
metric tons per annum (mtpa) or lower (82 FR 41573 note 21). Using
DOE's conversion factor to convert mtpa of LNG to Bcf of natural gas
(82 FR 41573), this amount equates to a volume of 0.14 Bcf/d, or 51.75
Bcf/yr, of natural gas. On this basis, DOE believes that it is
reasonable to define small-scale natural gas exports as any export of
natural gas up to and including a volume of 51.75 Bcf/yr.
One commenter expressed concern that the volume criterion is too
large for a single project. This commenter pointed out that, of DOE's
seven non-FTA export authorizations identified in the proposed rule as
falling under this volume threshold (82 FR 41572), the volumes
authorized in those orders were, in fact, smaller than 0.14 Bcf/d even
if all of the volumes are combined. Specifically, the commenter states
that the proposed volume criterion is approximately 25% larger than the
combined total of those seven authorizations--0.14 Bcf/d for a single
project, as opposed to a combined 0.112 Bcf/d for the seven
authorizations identified in the proposed rule.
The seven authorizations identified in the proposed rule were not
intended to suggest a limiting parameter for this rulemaking. Rather,
they provide context in showing small-scale LNG export authorizations
previously issued by DOE--particularly as compared to the large-scale
LNG export authorizations issued by DOE in volumes up to and exceeding
2.0 Bcf/d of natural gas for a single project.\38\ As discussed above,
DOE proposed the volume criterion for this rulemaking based on industry
sources that mark the boundary between large-scale and small-scale
exports at 1 mtpa (82 FR 41573 note 21)--equivalent to the 51.75 Bcf/yr
volume criterion in this final rule. DOE sees no basis to depart from
this volume limitation on the basis of the information presented in the
comments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ See Eagle LNG Partners Jacksonville II LLC, DOE/FE Order
No. 4078, supra note 5, at 34-37 (identifying DOE's 29 final non-FTA
authorizations for LNG and CNG issued to date).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The same commenter argued that the proposed rule is overbroad
insofar as it may apply in export circumstances beyond those identified
by DOE as justifying the rule. The commenter therefore urged DOE to
expand the mandatory criteria for small-scale exports to include
specific export characteristics beyond the volume criterion--such as
the exporter's use of ISO containers or other non-traditional
transport, destination countries in specific regions, and evidence that
the exports will displace diesel or fuel oil in the importing markets.
DOE has considered this proposal but sees no reason to unnecessarily
confine the development of the small-scale export market by adding
criteria that are, in fact, already market-driven.
As explained in the proposed rule, many of the countries in the
Caribbean, Central America, and South America do not generate enough
demand to import the large volumes of natural gas supplied by the
large-scale natural gas import/export market. Given these diseconomies
of scale, a gap has emerged in the regional natural gas import/export
market, and small-scale natural gas exports represent a market-driven
response to fill this gap. Because the small-scale market already
reflects the specific characteristics identified by the commenter,
imposing these characteristics as additional mandatory criteria is
unlikely to benefit the public interest or otherwise enhance the
objectives or implementation of this final rule. Further, imposing such
criteria would be at odds with DOE's long-standing practice of
minimizing regulatory impediments to a freely operating market and
promoting market competition (82 FR 41571, 41574; Sept. 1, 2017). DOE
has concluded that the volume criterion, in addition to the NEPA
criterion discussed below, is sufficient in defining and regulating the
small-scale export market.
Commenters asked DOE whether the proposed rule would allow
exporters to submit multiple applications, each below the 0.14 Bcf/d
(51.75 Bcf/yr) volume limitation, as a way to expand the authorized
export volumes for their facilities without triggering the jurisdiction
of FERC or the U.S. Maritime Administration (MARAD) under NEPA. These
types of applications--commonly referred to as ``design increases'' or
expansions--typically arise from the improved engineering of proposed
or existing LNG facilities that allows for additional LNG production
without new construction. Some commenters asked DOE to add language to
the final rule that would expressly allow this practice, so as to
encourage investment in and innovation at LNG export facilities. Other
commenters suggested that this practice, if allowed, would effectively
change the nature of this rule by encouraging ``segmentation'' of
additional export volumes at large-scale facilities, as opposed to the
intended small-scale facilities.
DOE declines to add the requested language to this final rule. DOE
emphasizes that the final rule is intended to facilitate small-scale
exports of natural gas for the reasons discussed herein. This rule does
not preclude applicants from applying for more than one authorization
for small-scale natural gas exports. Such flexibility may be useful,
for example, for authorization holders seeking to export small-scale
volumes from different facilities. DOE, however, will not accept
requests by authorization holders seeking to combine more than one
small-scale export authorization as an indirect means of expanding the
DOE-approved export volume from their facility, including from large-
scale facilities.
Further, DOE notes that, in the non-FTA export authorizations
issued to date, DOE has approved an applicant's export volume from a
specific facility (or facilities), based on the approved production (or
export) capacity of that facility.\39\ Likewise, approved export
volumes for a particular facility under this rule may not, on their own
or added together, exceed the maximum approved production (or export)
capacity of that facility.\40\ Finally, nothing in this final rule
affects the authorities exercised by FERC under the NGA or by MARAD
under the Deepwater Port Act.\41\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ See, e.g., 10 CFR 590.202(b)(1) (requiring applicants to
identify the facilities to be utilized or constructed for the
proposed export).
\40\ See, e.g., Dominion Cove Point LNG, LP, DOE/FE Order No.
3331-A, FE Docket No. 11-128-LNG, Final Opinion and Order Granting
Long-Term, Multi-Contract Authorization to Export Liquefied Natural
Gas from the Cove Point LNG Terminal in Calvert County, Maryland, to
Non-Free Trade Agreement Nations, at 1-2 (May 7, 2015); see also
Eagle LNG Partners Jacksonville II LLC, DOE/FE Order No. 4078, supra
note 5, at 37.
\41\ 33 U.S.C. 1501, et seq.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Categorical Exclusion From NEPA
10 CFR 590.102(p)(2) establishes the NEPA criterion for small-scale
natural gas exports. As the second criterion for this final rule, DOE's
approval of the application must not require an EIS or EA under NEPA--
that is, the application must be eligible for a categorical exclusion
under DOE's NEPA regulations.
As explained in the proposed rule, DOE's environmental review
process under NEPA usually results in the preparation or adoption of an
EIS or EA describing the potential environmental impacts associated
with the application. In some cases, DOE may determine that an
application is eligible for a categorical exclusion pursuant to DOE's
[[Page 35115]]
regulations implementing NEPA, 10 CFR 1021.410, appendices A & B. The
categorical exclusion most commonly used in this context is categorical
exclusion B5.7 (10 CFR part 1021, subpart D, appendix B5.7), which
applies to natural gas import or export activities requiring minor
operational changes to existing projects, but no new construction.\42\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ This categorical exclusion states in full: ``B5.7 Import or
export natural gas, with operational changes: Approvals or
disapprovals of new authorizations or amendments of existing
authorizations to import or export natural gas under section 3 of
the Natural Gas Act that involve minor operational changes (such as
changes in natural gas throughput, transportation, and storage
operations) but not new construction.'' 10 CFR part 1021, subpart D,
appendix B5.7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This NEPA criterion is very conservative. Based on DOE's
experience, this criterion will limit application of this final rule to
a small subset of all export applications. For example, of the 29 final
non-FTA export authorizations for LNG (and CNG) issued as of the date
of this final rule, only seven would meet both the volume and NEPA
criteria to qualify as small-scale natural gas exports.\43\ Together,
these seven authorizations approve exports in a combined volume of
0.074 Bcf/d--representing only 0.35% of the cumulative volume of non-
FTA exports approved to date (21.35 Bcf/d of natural gas).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ Carib Energy (USA) LLC (FE Docket No. 11-141-LNG), 0.04
Bcf/d; American LNG Marketing LLC (FE Docket No. 14-209-LNG), 0.008
Bcf/d; Floridian Natural Gas Storage Company, LLC (FE Docket No. 15-
38-LNG); Air Flow North American Corp. (FE Docket No. 15-206-LNG,
0.002 Bcf/d; Flint Hills Resources, LP (FE Docket No. 15-168-LNG,
0.01 Bcf/d; Carib Energy (USA), LLC (FE Docket No. 16-98-LNG), 0.004
Bcf/d; and Eagle LNG Partners Jacksonville II LLC (FE Docket No. 17-
79-LNG), 0.01 Bcf/d. The Carib and Floridian orders are both 0.04
Bcf/d, yet are not additive to one another because the source of LNG
approved under both orders is from the Floridian Facility.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nonetheless, some of the comments on the proposed rule reflected
widespread confusion about the meaning and applicability of a
categorical exclusion under NEPA. Several commenters expressed concern
that this criterion will result in small-scale natural gas exports that
have no environmental protections or oversight because they are not
subject to an EIS or EA under NEPA. These commenters asserted that an
EA or EIS must be prepared in every instance to consider a variety of
perceived risks to the environment, public safety, and public health
posed by natural gas exports. In their view, an export application
approved by DOE on the basis of a categorical exclusion under NEPA will
lead to ``unregulated'' natural gas export facilities and
infrastructure.
DOE emphasizes that its determination that a particular application
qualifies for a DOE categorical exclusion is the result of a thorough
NEPA assessment process. A categorical exclusion does not circumvent or
``relax'' the NEPA review process (as some commenters suggest) but, in
fact, is a means to comply with NEPA. Indeed, categorical exclusions
facilitate NEPA by allowing federal agencies to focus their
environmental review and resources on actions that could have
significant impacts. The Council on Environmental Quality's NEPA
regulations provide for categorical exclusions when an agency has
identified a ``category of actions which do not individually or
cumulatively have a significant effect on the human environment and
which have been found to have no such effect in procedures adopted by a
federal agency. . .'' \44\ DOE has made such a determination with
respect to categorical exclusion B5.7, Import or Export of Natural Gas,
with Operational Changes. Accordingly, there is no basis to conclude
that qualifying small-scale exports would originate from
``unregulated'' LNG export facilities lacking sufficient oversight of
potential risks to the environment, public safety, and public health.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ 40 CFR 1508.4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In determining that an export application is eligible for a
categorical exclusion under DOE's NEPA regulations, DOE must not only
determine that the application fits within a specific categorical
exclusion, but it must also determine that ``there are no extraordinary
circumstances related to the proposal that may affect the significance
of the environmental effects of the proposal.'' \45\ For qualifying
small-scale natural gas export applications, DOE will satisfy this
requirement by conducting an assessment of appropriate environmental-
related documents to determine whether there are ``extraordinary
circumstances'' associated with the proposed exports. This review
includes consideration of potential impacts to property of historic,
archeological, or architectural significance; federally-listed
threatened or endangered species and their habitat; and wetlands
regulated under the Clean Water Act.\46\ To ensure transparency, all
categorical exclusions used by DOE to comply with NEPA are made
publicly available on DOE's NEPA website.\47\ DOE will follow the same
practice for qualifying small-scale natural gas export applications.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ 10 CFR 1021.410(b)(2).
\46\ Id.
\47\ See U.S. Dep't of Energy, Office of NEPA Policy and
Compliance, Categorical Exclusion (CX) Determinations, available at:
https://energy.gov/nepa/categorical-exclusion-cx-determinations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, regardless of whether DOE determines that an application
is subject to an EIS, an EA, or is eligible for a categorical exclusion
under NEPA, DOE expressly conditions all of its non-FTA authorizations
on the authorization holder's ongoing compliance with all preventative
and mitigative measures at the facility imposed by federal, state, and/
or local agencies.\48\ Small-scale natural gas exports will be subject
to the same conditions and oversight.\49\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\48\ See, e.g., Eagle LNG Partners Jacksonville II LLC, DOE/FE
Order No. 4078, supra note 5, at 46.
\49\ In the context of NEPA, many commenters discussed the
environmental and health risks that, in their view, are associated
with the siting and operation of LNG export facilities and related
transportation infrastructure near their home or community. They
asserted, for example, that they will suffer from any accidents at
nearby LNG export facilities and pipelines, or explosions of ISO
containers loaded onto trains or trucks. They expressed concern that
such accidents could result in harm to air, water, and other natural
resources. They also assert that natural disasters, such as
hurricanes and wildfires, in the vicinity of LNG export facilities
and infrastructure can threaten public safety. DOE notes that these
concerns generally involve the siting of natural gas-related
infrastructure. These concerns are outside the scope of this
rulemaking, which is based on existing facilities subject to a
categorical exclusion under NEPA. Nonetheless, as stated above, DOE
requires all authorization holders to comply with any preventative
and mitigative measures at natural gas import and export facilities
imposed by federal, state, and/or local agencies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For these reasons, DOE does not agree that this criterion of this
rule--whereby an application must be eligible for a categorical
exclusion under NEPA--will lead to natural gas exports lacking in
environmental protection and/or to unregulated LNG export facilities.
DOE is committed to a thorough NEPA assessment process and,
accordingly, DOE is not changing this criterion in the final rule.
C. Other Issues
Below, DOE addresses a variety of other comments on the proposed
rule. To the extent commenters have urged DOE to take some different
type of action with respect to natural gas exports, DOE notes that it
may consider additional measures under section 3(a) of the Natural Gas
Act as part of its regulatory reform efforts and welcomes suggestions,
data, and information on this topic through its regulatory reform email
inbox at [email protected].
One commenter asserted that this rulemaking is arbitrary and
capricious because it lacks substantive analysis and viable
alternatives. Under the APA, an
[[Page 35116]]
agency decision is arbitrary and capricious only if the agency's
decision is not based on a consideration of the relevant factors and
where there is a clear error of judgment by the agency.\50\ As
explained above and in the proposed rule, DOE has determined that
small-scale natural gas exports are consistent with the public interest
after considering its obligations under NGA section 3(a), the public
comments received on the proposed rule, and a wide range of information
bearing on the public interest (82 FR 41573-41574; Sept. 1, 2017).
Additionally, DOE has considered its 29 final non-FTA export
authorizations issued to date, as well EIA's authoritative projections
for natural gas supply, demand, and prices set forth in both the AEO
2017 and AEO 2018. DOE has thoroughly analyzed the many factors
affecting the export of U.S. natural gas, as well as the unique
characteristics and minimal adverse impacts of the emerging small-scale
natural gas market. On this basis, DOE has determined that this rule is
consistent with both NGA section 3(a) and DOE's established practice in
authorizing such exports.
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\50\ See, e.g., 5 U.S.C. 706; Motor Vehicle Mfr. Ass'n v. State
Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29, 43 (1983).
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One commenter characterized this rulemaking as imposing redundant,
burdensome administrative requirements and compliance costs, but did
not specify the basis for that claim. DOE emphasizes that it is not
imposing any administrative requirements or compliance costs through
this rulemaking. To the contrary, as explained in the proposed rule (82
FR 41570), the regulation promulgated in this final rule is intended to
expedite DOE's processing of small-scale applications, thereby reducing
administrative burdens and costs for the small-scale natural gas
market.
On the other hand, another commenter asserted that this rulemaking
is not deregulatory because it creates a new regulation to define
small-scale natural gas exports according to specified criteria. This
commenter claimed that DOE is limiting its ability to adapt to market
changes, should the parameters of the small-scale natural gas market
change. As stated above, however, this rulemaking qualifies as a
deregulatory action because DOE is reducing or eliminating
administrative requirements and compliance costs for the small-scale
export market under NGA section 3(a). DOE is satisfied that the
criteria for this rulemaking, which are based in part on industry
practice, are appropriate for this developing market. Nonetheless,
should unforeseeable changes in the small-scale export market require
DOE to amend this regulation, DOE retains the regulatory authority to
do so.
One commenter asserted that the 45-day public comment period for
the proposed rule should be extended because the link for submitting
comments on the Federal eRulemaking Portal was not working when the
commenter attempted to submit comments. In the proposed rule, DOE
identified a variety of methods that could be used to submit comments,
including email (82 FR 41570; Sept. 1, 2017). DOE also notes that no
other commenter raised this issue and many commenters submitted
comments through the Federal eRulemaking Portal. DOE therefore declines
to extend or re-open the public comment period in this rulemaking.
One commenter argued that DOE failed to provide sufficient notice
of this rule in local media outlets, print media, and online
publications. As a matter of law, however, DOE provided sufficient
notice of this rulemaking by publishing it in the Federal Register.\51\
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\51\ See 44 U.S.C. 1508 (notice sufficient when published in the
Federal Register).
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Finally, separate from the NEPA regulatory criterion for small-
scale natural gas exports, several commenters disagreed with DOE's
application of categorical exclusion A6 under NEPA for this rulemaking
itself, as discussed in the ``Regulatory Review'' portion of the
proposed rule (82 FR 41575, ``National Environmental Policy Act'') and
set forth below. In the proposed rule, DOE explained that neither an
EIS nor an EA was required to support this rulemaking. These commenters
disagreed with that assessment, asserting that DOE violated NEPA by not
preparing an EIS or an EA that addressed all potential environmental
impacts associated with this rulemaking and that considered reasonable
alternatives to the proposed rule.
As explained in the proposed rule (as well as in this final rule),
DOE has determined that this regulation ``fall[s] into a class of
actions that does not individually or cumulatively have a significant
impact on the human environment as set forth under DOE's regulations
implementing [NEPA]'' (82 FR 41575). Specifically, DOE has determined
that this rulemaking falls under categorical exclusion A6 (10 CFR part
1021, subpart D, appendix A6).
Categorical exclusion A6 applies to ``rulemakings that are strictly
procedural.'' \52\ This rulemaking is strictly procedural because it
establishes expedited procedures applicable to qualifying small-scale
natural gas export applications. Currently, DOE makes a public interest
determination for all applications to export natural gas to non-FTA
countries under NGA section 3(a), regardless of the proposed export
volume. In making this determination, DOE imposes certain procedural
requirements, which in turn lead to longer processing time for
applications to export natural gas to non-FTA countries. This
rulemaking expedites DOE's administrative processing for qualifying
small-scale natural gas export applications by eliminating the notice
of application and other procedures typically required under DOE's
regulations (82 FR 41573). For these reasons, DOE has determined that
categorical exclusion A6 applies to this rulemaking.
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\52\ 10 CFR part 1021, subpart D, appendix A6.
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III. Regulatory Review
A. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
This regulatory action has been determined to be an ``economically
significant regulatory action'' under Executive Order 12866,
``Regulatory Planning and Review,'' 58 FR 51735 (October 4, 1993).
Accordingly, this action was subject to review under that Executive
Order by the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs of the Office
of Management and Budget.
DOE has also reviewed this regulation pursuant to Executive Order
13563, issued on January 18, 2011. (76 FR 3281, Jan. 21, 2011.) E.O.
13563 is supplemental to and explicitly reaffirms the principles,
structures, and definitions governing regulatory review established in
Executive Order 12866. To the extent permitted by law, agencies are
required by Executive Order 13563 to: (1) Propose or adopt a regulation
only upon a reasoned determination that its benefits justify its costs
(recognizing that some benefits and costs are difficult to quantify);
(2) tailor regulations to impose the least burden on society,
consistent with obtaining regulatory objectives, taking into account,
among other things, and to the extent practicable, the costs of
cumulative regulations; (3) select, in choosing among alternative
regulatory approaches, those approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic, environmental, public health and safety,
and other advantages; distributive impacts; and equity); (4) to the
extent feasible, specify performance objectives, rather than specifying
the behavior or manner of compliance that regulated entities must
adopt; and (5) identify and assess
[[Page 35117]]
available alternatives to direct regulation, including providing
economic incentives to encourage the desired behavior, such as user
fees or marketable permits, or providing information upon which choices
can be made by the public.
DOE concludes that this final rule is consistent with these
principles. Specifically, this final rule provides that DOE will issue
an export authorization upon receipt of any complete application that
seeks to export natural gas, including LNG, to non-FTA countries,
provided that the application satisfies the following two criteria: (1)
The application proposes to export natural gas in a volume up to and
including 51.75 Bcf/yr, and (2) DOE's approval of the application does
not require an EIS or EA under NEPA. DOE's regulations regarding notice
of applications, 10 CFR 590.205, and procedures applicable to
application proceedings, 10 CFR part 590, subpart C (10 CFR 590.303 to
10 CFR 590.317), do not apply to small-scale natural gas exports. The
final rule is intended to expedite DOE's processing of these
applications, thereby reducing administrative burdens for the small-
scale natural gas export market.
B. Executive Orders 13771, 13777, and 13783
On January 30, 2017, the President issued Executive Order 13771,
``Reducing Regulation and Controlling Regulatory Costs.'' That Order
stated the policy of the executive branch is to be prudent and
financially responsible in the expenditure of funds, from both public
and private sources. The Order stated it is essential to manage the
costs associated with the governmental imposition of private
expenditures required to comply with Federal regulations. This final
rule is expected to be an E.O. 13771 deregulatory action.
Additionally, on February 24, 2017, the President issued Executive
Order 13777, ``Enforcing the Regulatory Reform Agenda.'' The Order
required the head of each agency designate an agency official as its
Regulatory Reform Officer (RRO). Each RRO oversees the implementation
of regulatory reform initiatives and policies to ensure that agencies
effectively carry out regulatory reforms, consistent with applicable
law. Further, E.O. 13777 requires the establishment of a regulatory
task force at each agency. The regulatory task force is required to
make recommendations to the agency head regarding the repeal,
replacement, or modification of existing regulations, consistent with
applicable law. At a minimum, each regulatory reform task force must
attempt to identify regulations that:
(i) Eliminate jobs, or inhibit job creation;
(ii) Are outdated, unnecessary, or ineffective;
(iii) Impose costs that exceed benefits;
(iv) Create a serious inconsistency or otherwise interfere with
regulatory reform initiatives and policies;
(v) Are inconsistent with the requirements of Information Quality
Act, or the guidance issued pursuant to that Act, in particular those
regulations that rely in whole or in part on data, information, or
methods that are not publicly available or that are insufficiently
transparent to meet the standard for reproducibility; or
(vi) Derive from or implement Executive Orders or other
Presidential directives that have been subsequently rescinded or
substantially modified.
Finally, on March 28, 2017, the President signed Executive Order
13783, entitled ``Promoting Energy Independence and Economic Growth.''
Among other things, E.O. 13783 requires the heads of agencies to review
all existing regulations, orders, guidance documents, policies, and any
other similar agency actions (collectively, agency actions) that
potentially burden the development or use of domestically produced
energy resources, with particular attention to oil, natural gas, coal,
and nuclear energy resources. Such review does not include agency
actions that are mandated by law, necessary for the public interest,
and consistent with the policy set forth elsewhere in that order.
Executive Order 13783 defined burden for purposes of the review of
existing regulations to mean to unnecessarily obstruct, delay, curtail,
or otherwise impose significant costs on the siting, permitting,
production, utilization, transmission, or delivery of energy resources.
DOE concludes that this final rule is consistent with the
directives set forth in these executive orders. Specifically, this
final rule is a deregulatory action that requires DOE to issue an
export authorization upon receipt of any complete application that
seeks to export natural gas, including LNG, to non-FTA countries,
provided that the application satisfies the following two criteria: (1)
The application proposes to export natural gas in a volume up to and
including 51.75 Bcf/yr, and (2) DOE's approval of the application does
not require an EIS or an EA under NEPA. Applications that satisfy these
criteria are requesting authorization for ``small-scale natural gas
exports'' and, as such, the exports are deemed to be consistent with
the public interest under NGA section 3(a). DOE's regulations regarding
notice of applications and procedures conducted on applications do not
apply to applications that satisfy these criteria. The final rule will
expedite DOE's processing of these applications, thereby reducing
administrative burdens for the small-scale natural gas export market.
C. National Environmental Policy Act
DOE has determined that adoption of this final rule falls into a
class of actions that does not individually or cumulatively have a
significant impact on the human environment as set forth under DOE's
regulations implementing the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969
(42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq). Specifically, this rulemaking is covered under
the categorical exclusion found in the DOE's National Environmental
Policy Act regulations at paragraph A6 of appendix A to subpart D, 10
CFR part 1021, which applies to rulemakings that are strictly
procedural. Accordingly, neither an EIS nor an EA is required.
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) requires
preparation of an initial regulatory flexibility analysis for any rule
that by law must be proposed for public comment, unless the agency
certifies that the rule, if promulgated, will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. As required
by Executive Order 13272, ``Proper Consideration of Small Entities in
Agency Rulemaking,'' 67 FR 53461 (August 16, 2002), DOE published
procedures and policies on February 19, 2003, to ensure that the
potential impacts of its rules on small entities are properly
considered during the rulemaking process (68 FR 7990). DOE has made its
procedures and policies available on the Office of General Counsel's
website: https://www.gc.doe.gov.
DOE has reviewed this final rule under the provisions of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act and the procedures and policies published on
February 19, 2003. This final rule will require DOE to issue an export
authorization upon receipt of any complete application that seeks to
export natural gas, including LNG, to non-FTA countries, provided that
the application satisfies the following two criteria: (1) The
application proposes to export natural gas in a volume up to and
including 51.75 Bcf/yr, and (2) DOE's approval of the application does
not require an EIS or an EA under NEPA. DOE's regulations regarding
notice of applications and procedures conducted
[[Page 35118]]
on applications do not apply to applications that satisfy these
criteria.
To date, DOE has received--and granted--eight applications to
export LNG in volumes below 51.75 Bcf/yr of natural gas to non-FTA
countries.\53\ Of these eight applicants, three qualify as small
businesses under the Small Business Administration's size standards of
1000 employees or less under both NAICS 221210, Natural Gas
Distribution, and NAICS 325120, Industrial Gas Manufacturing. Because
the final rule will streamline the application and approval process for
small-scale natural gas exports, it will not result in a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. The final
rule will, however, provide greater regulatory certainty for applicants
by eliminating the individual application proceeding and public
interest evaluation for qualifying applications. This, in turn, will
both reduce the administrative burden associated with the application
process and expedite authorization of qualifying applications, removing
(at a minimum) the opportunity cost of receiving an application delayed
by the current procedures.
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\53\ Seven of the eight applications are identified in section
I.C of the proposed rule (82 FR 41572; Sept. 1, 2017). The eighth
authorization was issued on September 15, 2017, after the NOPR was
published. See Eagle LNG Partners Jacksonville II LLC, DOE/FE Order
No. 4078, supra note 5.
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DOE received no comments on this certification. Comments regarding
the economic impact of the proposed rule are responded to in Section II
of the preamble, and for the reasons explained in Section II, those
comments did not affect this certification, or result in any changes
from the proposal in this final rule.
Therefore, DOE certifies that this rulemaking will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
Accordingly, DOE did not prepare an IRFA for this rulemaking. DOE's
certification and supporting statement of factual basis was provided to
the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration for
review under 5 U.S.C. 605(b).
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
The final rule does not change any requirements subject to review
and approval by OMB pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.) and the procedures implementing that Act, 5 CFR
1320.1 et seq. Current natural gas import and export authorization
holders, including any approved under this final rule, would be subject
to the information collection requirements approved by the Office of
Management and Budget under OMB Control No. 1901-0294. Public reporting
burden for the certification is estimated to average 3 hours per
response, including the time for reviewing instructions, searching
existing data sources, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and
completing and reviewing the collection of information.
Notwithstanding any other provision of the law, no person is
required to respond to, nor shall any person be subject to a penalty
for failure to comply with, a collection of information subject to the
requirements of the PRA, unless that collection of information displays
a currently valid OMB Control Number.
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-4) generally
requires Federal agencies to examine closely the impacts of regulatory
actions on tribal, state, and local governments. Subsection 101(5) of
title I of that law defines a Federal intergovernmental mandate to
include any regulation that would impose upon tribal, state, or local
governments an enforceable duty, except a condition of Federal
assistance or a duty arising from participating in a voluntary Federal
program. Title II of that law requires each Federal agency to assess
the effects of Federal regulatory actions on tribal, state, and local
governments, in the aggregate, or to the private sector, other than to
the extent such actions merely incorporate requirements specifically
set forth in a statute. Section 202 of that title requires a Federal
agency to perform a detailed assessment of the anticipated costs and
benefits of any rule that includes a Federal mandate which may result
in costs to tribal, state, or local governments, or to the private
sector, of $100 million or more in any one year (adjusted annually for
inflation). 2 U.S.C. 1532(a) and (b). Section 204 of that title
requires each agency that proposes a rule containing a significant
Federal intergovernmental mandate to develop an effective process for
obtaining meaningful and timely input from elected officers of tribal,
state, and local governments. 2 U.S.C. 1534.
This final rule will streamline procedures for small-scale natural
gas exports. DOE has determined that the final rule will not result in
the expenditure by tribal, state, and local governments in the
aggregate, or by the private sector, of $100 million or more in any one
year. Accordingly, no assessment or analysis is required under the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995.
G. Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act, 1999
Section 654 of the Treasury and General Government Appropriations
Act, 1999 (Pub. L. 105-277) requires Federal agencies to issue a Family
Policymaking Assessment for any final rule that may affect family well-
being. The final rule will not have any impact on the autonomy or
integrity of the family as an institution. Accordingly, DOE has
concluded that it is not necessary to prepare a Family Policymaking
Assessment.
H. Executive Order 13132
Executive Order 13132, ``Federalism,'' 64 FR 43255 (August 4, 1999)
imposes certain requirements on agencies formulating and implementing
policies or regulations that preempt state law or that have Federalism
implications. Agencies are required to examine the constitutional and
statutory authority supporting any action that would limit the
policymaking discretion of the states and carefully assess the
necessity for such actions. DOE has examined this final rule and has
determined that it will not preempt state law and will not have a
substantial direct effect on the states, on the relationship between
the national government and the states, or on the distribution of power
and responsibilities among the various levels of government. No further
action is required by Executive Order 13132.
I. Executive Order 12988
With respect to the review of existing regulations and the
promulgation of new regulations, section 3(a) of Executive Order 12988,
``Civil Justice Reform,'' 61 FR 4729 (February 7, 1996), imposes on
Executive agencies the general duty to adhere to the following
requirements: (1) Eliminate drafting errors and ambiguity; (2) write
regulations to minimize litigation; and (3) provide a clear legal
standard for affected conduct rather than a general standard and
promote simplification and burden reduction. With regard to the review
required by section 3(a), section 3(b) of Executive Order 12988
specifically requires that Executive agencies make every reasonable
effort to ensure that the regulation: (1) Clearly specifies the
preemptive effect, if any; (2) clearly specifies any effect on existing
Federal law or regulation; (3) provides a clear legal standard for
affected conduct while promoting simplification and burden reduction;
(4) specifies the retroactive effect, if any; (5) adequately defines
key terms; and (6)
[[Page 35119]]
addresses other important issues affecting clarity and general
draftsmanship under any guidelines issued by the Attorney General.
Section 3(c) of Executive Order 12988 requires Executive agencies to
review regulations in light of applicable standards in section 3(a) and
section 3(b) to determine whether they are met or it is unreasonable to
meet one or more of them. DOE has completed the required review and
determined that, to the extent permitted by law, the final rule meets
the relevant standards of Executive Order 12988.
J. Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act, 2001
The Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act, 2001 (44
U.S.C. 3516 note) provides for agencies to review most disseminations
of information to the public under guidelines established by each
agency pursuant to general guidelines issued by OMB.
OMB's guidelines were published at 67 FR 8452 (February 22, 2002),
and DOE's guidelines were published at 67 FR 62446 (October 7, 2002).
DOE has reviewed this final rule under the OMB and DOE guidelines and
has concluded that it is consistent with applicable policies in those
guidelines.
K. Executive Order 13211
Executive Order 13211, ``Actions Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use,'' 66 FR 28355
(May 22, 2001) requires Federal agencies to prepare and submit to the
OMB, a Statement of Energy Effects for any proposed significant energy
action. A ``significant energy action'' is defined as any action by an
agency that promulgated or is expected to lead to promulgation of a
final rule, and that: (1) Is a significant regulatory action under
Executive Order 12866, or any successor order; and (2) is likely to
have a significant adverse effect on the supply, distribution, or use
of energy, or (3) is designated by the Administrator of OIRA as a
significant energy action. For any proposed significant energy action,
the agency must give a detailed statement of any adverse effects on
energy supply, distribution, or use should the proposal be implemented,
and of reasonable alternatives to the action and their expected
benefits on energy supply, distribution, and use. This regulatory
action, which is intended to streamline the application and approval
process for small-scale natural gas exports, will not have a
significant adverse effect on the supply, distribution, or use of
energy, and therefore is not a significant energy action. Accordingly,
DOE has not prepared a Statement of Energy Effects.
L. Congressional Notification
As required by 5 U.S.C. 801, DOE will report to Congress on the
promulgation of this rule prior to its effective date. The report will
state that it has been determined that the rule is not a ``major rule''
as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
IV. Approval of the Office of the Secretary
The Secretary of Energy has approved the publication of this final
rule.
List of Subjects in 10 CFR Part 590
Administrative practice and procedure, Exports, Natural gas,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Signed in Washington, DC, on July 19, 2018.
Steven E. Winberg,
Assistant Secretary, Office of Fossil Energy.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, DOE amends part 590,
chapter II of title 10, subchapter G, Code of Federal Regulations as
set forth below:
PART 590--ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURES WITH RESPECT TO THE IMPORT AND
EXPORT OF NATURAL GAS
0
1. The authority citation for part 590 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 301(b), 402(f), and 644, Pub. L. 95-91, 91
Stat. 578, 585, and 599 (42 U.S.C. 7151(b), 7172(f), and 7254), Sec.
3, Act of June 21, 1938, c. 556, 52 Stat. 822 (15 U.S.C. 717b); E.O.
12009 (42 FR 46267, September 15, 1977); DOE Delegation Order Nos.
0204-111 and 0204-127 (49 FR 6684, February 22, 1984; 54 FR 11437,
March 20, 1989).
0
2. Section 590.102 is amended by redesignating paragraph (p) as
paragraph (q) and adding new paragraph (p) to read as follows:
Sec. 590.102 Definitions.
* * * * *
(p) Small-scale natural gas export means an export of natural gas
to nations with which there is not in effect a free trade agreement
with the United States requiring national treatment for trade in
natural gas and with which trade is not prohibited by U.S. law or
policy, provided that the application for such export authority
satisfies the following two criteria:
(1) The application proposes to export natural gas in a volume up
to and including 51.75 billion cubic feet per year, and
(2) DOE's approval of the application does not require an
environmental impact statement or an environmental assessment under the
National Environmental Policy Act, 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.
* * * * *
0
3. Section 590.208 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 590.208 Small volume exports.
(a) Small-scale natural gas exports. Small-scale natural gas
exports are deemed to be consistent with the public interest under
section 3(a) of the Natural Gas Act, 15 U.S.C. 717b(a). DOE will issue
an export authorization upon receipt of any complete application to
conduct small-scale natural gas exports. DOE's regulations regarding
notice of applications, 10 CFR 590.205, and procedures applicable to
application proceedings, 10 CFR part 590, subpart C (10 CFR 590.303 to
10 CFR 590.317), are not applicable to small-scale natural gas exports.
(b) Scientific, experimental, or other non-utility natural gas
exports. Any person may export up to 100,000 cubic feet of natural gas
(14.73 pounds per square inch at 60 degrees Fahrenheit) or the
liquefied or compressed equivalent thereof, in a single shipment for
scientific, experimental, or other non-utility gas use without prior
authorization of the Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018-15903 Filed 7-24-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P