Codes, Standards, Specifications, and Other Guidance for Enhancing the Resilience of Oil and Natural Gas Infrastructure Systems Against Severe Weather Events, 32731-32732 [2019-14548]
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 131 / Tuesday, July 9, 2019 / Notices
Independence Avenue SW, Washington,
DC 20585–0121. Telephone: (202) 586–
3876. Email: David.Meyer@hq.doe.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Concern
among government agencies, utilities,
and the public about the risks presented
by more frequent and more severe
weather events has led to widespread
discussion about how to make electric
infrastructure systems more resilient
against such hazards, and how to do so
effectively and at reasonable cost. This
is challenging to do, however, given the
many uncertainties and variables
associated with weather-related events.
The specific purpose of this RFI is to
gather available information on current
consensus-based codes, specifications,
standards, and other forms of guidance
for improving the resilience of electric
infrastructure systems against severe
weather events, with respect to both the
design and operation of these systems.
The information of interest ranges from
(1) specific technical design standards
or requirements for physical system
components, e.g., ‘‘transmission towers
sited in areas subject to winds between
125 mph and 150 mph should be built
to withstand wind stress of XYZ mph,
using xxx-grade steel or yyy-grade
concrete or both’’; (2) relevant corporate
business practices, e.g., ‘‘companies
should designate a senior corporate
officer responsible for the development,
implementation, and ongoing
maintenance of a company-wide
resilience strategy’’; and (3) analytic
methods and tools for estimating the
possible economic benefits from
strategies, investments, or initiatives to
enhance power system resilience.
DOE anticipates using this
information to catalogue and synthesize
a body of existing expert knowledge
about how best to enhance the weatherrelated resilience of the grid, costeffectively. Accordingly, it is important
for respondents to supplement specific
standards, requirements, or practices
with the rationale(s) relied upon in
developing them and justifying their
use.
DOE also notes that some of the
existing electric reliability standards
developed by the North American
Electric Reliability Corporation and
adopted by the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission, and those
developed by the Institute of Electrical
and Electronics Engineers, have
weather-related resilience implications
and benefits. These standards are
generally well-documented, and DOE
suggests that respondents cite them
where appropriate by reference only;
submission of more detailed
information is not needed.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:47 Jul 08, 2019
Jkt 247001
Regarding state- or locally-adopted
codes and standards that have resilience
implications, or for less welldocumented requirements or practices,
DOE has the following questions:
(a) Scope and applicability—for any
given requirement or practice, what
hazard (or hazards) is the measure
intended to mitigate or make the system
less vulnerable against, and for which
sector(s) or component(s) of the system
is the practice relevant? Does the
requirement establish a design
threshold, e.g., ‘‘design to withstand 150
mph wind stress’’, or identify
appropriate hazard maps, e.g., flood
plain maps, or maps of wind zones?
(b) Origins—how or by whom was the
requirement or practice developed, and
did the process provide for consensus,
openness, transparency, balanced
decision-making, due process, or an
appeal process? Could the chosen
development method be applied to
unmet needs in other grid resilience
contexts?
(c) Validation—has the requirement or
practice been widely tested? Note: DOE
recognizes that worthwhile practices for
improving resilience may exist that are
not presently consensus-based, and
therefore asks respondents to include
information about such practices, and
whether further testing or refinements
would make them more broadly
applicable.
(d) Are there other important caveats,
not mentioned earlier, about the
requirement or practice that should be
considered?
Interested parties are encouraged to
submit comments and information on
matters discussed in this
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section, in
writing and by the date specified in the
DATES section of this notice. All
comments received will be posted
without change to https://
www.regulations.gov.
Please do not submit to the RFI
information for which disclosure is
restricted by statute, such as trade
secrets and confidential commercial or
financial information (Confidential
Business Information (CBI)). Comments
submitted to the RFI email address
cannot be claimed as CBI, and
submission waives any such claims.
DOE plans to make all information
received in response to this RFI
available to the public.
Signed in Washington, DC, on June 28,
2019.
Bruce J. Walker,
Assistant Secretary, Office of Electricity, U.S.
Department of Energy.
[FR Doc. 2019–14547 Filed 7–8–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
32731
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Codes, Standards, Specifications, and
Other Guidance for Enhancing the
Resilience of Oil and Natural Gas
Infrastructure Systems Against Severe
Weather Events
Office of Electricity,
Department of Energy (DOE).
ACTION: Notice of request for
information (RFI).
AGENCY:
Many oil and natural gas
companies, pipeline operators, fuel
distribution and delivery firms, and
other owners and operators of oil and
natural gas infrastructure, as well as the
government agencies that regulate them
in some respect, are seeking costeffective ways to make these
infrastructure systems more resilient
against cyber and physical threats as
well as severe weather events. The
purpose of this RFI is to gather ‘‘relevant
consensus-based codes, specifications,
and standards’’ 1 and other pertinent
materials to provide guidance for
enhancing the physical and operational
resilience of these systems and their
components against such events.
Gathering this information will enable
existing expert knowledge on this
subject to be synthesized and made
broadly available to interested policy
officials and other decision-makers. In
addition, this information may aid the
Federal Emergency Management Agency
in its implementation of the Disaster
Recovery Reform Act of 2018, as well as
other federal efforts to enhance
resilience. Organizing existing
knowledge in this way will also help
identify important information gaps that
can then be addressed through targeted
research and development activities and
through emergency preparedness
actions by government agencies and the
private sector.
The U.S. Department of Energy also
supports actions to enhance the
weather-related resilience of other
domestic energy infrastructure,
particularly electric grids. A parallel RFI
will be issued to gather analogous
resilience information pertinent to the
electric sector.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before August 23, 2019.
ADDRESSES:
Email: Interested persons are
encouraged to submit comments
electronically, to
SUMMARY:
1 The Disaster Recovery Reform Act, which was
signed into law on October 5, 2018 as part of the
FAA Reauthorization Act of 2018 (Pub. L. 115–254),
includes several references ‘‘to relevant consensusbased codes, specifications, and standards,’’
including in sections 1234 and 1235.
E:\FR\FM\09JYN1.SGM
09JYN1
khammond on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with NOTICES
32732
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 131 / Tuesday, July 9, 2019 / Notices
oilandgas.resilience@hq.doe.gov, with
‘‘Guidance for Enhancing Oil and
Natural Gas Resilience’’ in the subject
line. Comments, data, and other
information submitted to DOE
electronically should be provided in
PDF, Microsoft Word, Microsoft Excel,
WordPerfect, or text (ASCII) file format.
The information received in response to
this RFI may be used to structure future
DOE programs and will be available to
the public. Respondents are strongly
advised not to include any document or
information that might be considered
commercially- or business-sensitive,
proprietary, confidential, critical
electric infrastructure information, or
classified for reasons of national
security. Submissions are to be written
in English, be free of any defects or
viruses, and without special characters
or any form of encryption.
U.S. Mail to: U.S. Department of
Energy, 1000 Independence Ave. SW,
Mailstop OE–20, Washington, DC
20585, Attn: Office of Electricity,
Guidance for Enhancing Oil and Natural
Gas Resilience.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
David Meyer, U.S. Department of
Energy, Office of Electricity, 1000
Independence Avenue SW, Washington,
DC 20585–0121. Telephone: (202) 586–
3876. Email: David.Meyer@hq.doe.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Concern
among government agencies, utilities,
and the public about the risks presented
by more frequent and more severe
weather events has led to widespread
discussion about how to make oil and
natural gas infrastructure systems more
resilient against such hazards, and how
to do so effectively and at reasonable
cost. This is challenging to do. Although
these industries and agencies have been
working for several years to develop a
culture of resilience, at present there is
no settled body of expert knowledge
about requirements and practices for
enhancing the resilience of these
systems.
The specific purpose of this RFI is to
gather available information on current
consensus-based codes, specifications,
standards, and less formal forms of
guidance for improving the resilience of
all forms of oil and natural gas
infrastructure against severe weather
events, with respect to both the design
and operation of these systems. The
information of interest ranges from (1)
specific technical design standards or
requirements for physical system
components; (2) relevant corporate
business practices, e.g., ‘‘oil and natural
gas companies should designate a senior
corporate officer responsible for the
development, implementation, and
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:47 Jul 08, 2019
Jkt 247001
ongoing maintenance of a companywide resilience strategy’’; and (3)
analytic methods and tools for
estimating the possible economic
benefits from strategies, investments, or
initiatives to enhance the resilience of
relevant facilities.
DOE anticipates using this
information to catalogue and synthesize
a body of existing expert knowledge
about how best to enhance the resilience
of these systems cost-effectively.
Accordingly, it is important for
respondents to supplement specific
standards, requirements, or practices
with the rationale(s) relied on in
developing them and justifying their
use.
DOE also notes safety and reliability
standards pertinent to these systems
have been developed by the oil and
natural gas industries and promulgated
by the U.S. Department of
Transportation’s Pipeline and
Hazardous Materials Safety
Administration, and some of these
standards have implications and
benefits for system resilience. These
standards are generally welldocumented, and DOE suggests
respondents cite them where
appropriate by reference only;
submission of more detailed
information is not needed.
Regarding state- or locally-adopted
codes and standards that have resilience
implications, or for less welldocumented requirements or practices,
DOE has the following questions:
(a) Scope and applicability—for any
given requirement or practice, what
hazard (or hazards) is the measure
intended to mitigate or make the system
less vulnerable against, and for which
sector(s) or component(s) of the system
is the practice relevant? Does the
requirement establish a design
threshold, e.g., ‘‘design to withstand 150
mph wind stress,’’ or identify
appropriate hazard maps, e.g., flood
plain maps, or maps of wind zones?
(b) Origins—how or by whom was the
requirement or practice developed, and
did the process provide for consensus,
openness, transparency, balanced
decision-making, due process, or an
appeal process? Could the chosen
development used be applied to unmet
needs in other oil or natural gas
resilience contexts?
(c) Validation—has the requirement or
practice been widely tested? Note: DOE
recognizes that worthwhile practices for
improving resilience may exist that are
not presently consensus-based, and
therefore asks respondents to include
information about such practices, and
whether further testing or refinements
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
would make them more broadly
applicable.
(d) Are there other important caveats,
not mentioned earlier, about the
requirement or practice that should be
considered?
Interested parties are encouraged to
submit comments and information on
matters discussed in this
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section, in
writing and by the date specified in the
DATES section of this notice. All
comments received will be posted
without change to https://
www.regulations.gov.
Please do not submit to the RFI
information for which disclosure is
restricted by statute, such as trade
secrets and commercial or financial
information (Confidential Business
Information (CBI)). Comments
submitted to the RFI email address
cannot be claimed as CBI, and
submission waives any such claims.
DOE plans to make all information
received in response to this RFI
available to the public.
Signed in Washington, DC, on June 28,
2019.
Bruce J. Walker,
Assistant Secretary, Office of Electricity, U.S.
Department of Energy.
[FR Doc. 2019–14548 Filed 7–8–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[EPA–HQ–OPPT–2019–0075; FRL–9992–79]
Certain New Chemicals; Receipt and
Status Information for May 2019
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
EPA is required under the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA),
as amended by the Frank R. Lautenberg
Chemical Safety for the 21st Century
Act, to make information publicly
available and to publish information in
the Federal Register pertaining to
submissions under TSCA Section 5,
including notice of receipt of a
Premanufacture notice (PMN),
Significant New Use Notice (SNUN) or
Microbial Commercial Activity Notice
(MCAN), including an amended notice
or test information; an exemption
application (Biotech exemption); an
application for a test marketing
exemption (TME), both pending and/or
concluded; a notice of commencement
(NOC) of manufacture (including
import) for new chemical substances;
and a periodic status report on new
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\09JYN1.SGM
09JYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 131 (Tuesday, July 9, 2019)]
[Notices]
[Pages 32731-32732]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-14548]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Codes, Standards, Specifications, and Other Guidance for
Enhancing the Resilience of Oil and Natural Gas Infrastructure Systems
Against Severe Weather Events
AGENCY: Office of Electricity, Department of Energy (DOE).
ACTION: Notice of request for information (RFI).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Many oil and natural gas companies, pipeline operators, fuel
distribution and delivery firms, and other owners and operators of oil
and natural gas infrastructure, as well as the government agencies that
regulate them in some respect, are seeking cost-effective ways to make
these infrastructure systems more resilient against cyber and physical
threats as well as severe weather events. The purpose of this RFI is to
gather ``relevant consensus-based codes, specifications, and
standards'' \1\ and other pertinent materials to provide guidance for
enhancing the physical and operational resilience of these systems and
their components against such events. Gathering this information will
enable existing expert knowledge on this subject to be synthesized and
made broadly available to interested policy officials and other
decision-makers. In addition, this information may aid the Federal
Emergency Management Agency in its implementation of the Disaster
Recovery Reform Act of 2018, as well as other federal efforts to
enhance resilience. Organizing existing knowledge in this way will also
help identify important information gaps that can then be addressed
through targeted research and development activities and through
emergency preparedness actions by government agencies and the private
sector.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The Disaster Recovery Reform Act, which was signed into law
on October 5, 2018 as part of the FAA Reauthorization Act of 2018
(Pub. L. 115-254), includes several references ``to relevant
consensus-based codes, specifications, and standards,'' including in
sections 1234 and 1235.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Department of Energy also supports actions to enhance the
weather-related resilience of other domestic energy infrastructure,
particularly electric grids. A parallel RFI will be issued to gather
analogous resilience information pertinent to the electric sector.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before August 23, 2019.
ADDRESSES:
Email: Interested persons are encouraged to submit comments
electronically, to
[[Page 32732]]
[email protected], with ``Guidance for Enhancing Oil and
Natural Gas Resilience'' in the subject line. Comments, data, and other
information submitted to DOE electronically should be provided in PDF,
Microsoft Word, Microsoft Excel, WordPerfect, or text (ASCII) file
format. The information received in response to this RFI may be used to
structure future DOE programs and will be available to the public.
Respondents are strongly advised not to include any document or
information that might be considered commercially- or business-
sensitive, proprietary, confidential, critical electric infrastructure
information, or classified for reasons of national security.
Submissions are to be written in English, be free of any defects or
viruses, and without special characters or any form of encryption.
U.S. Mail to: U.S. Department of Energy, 1000 Independence Ave. SW,
Mailstop OE-20, Washington, DC 20585, Attn: Office of Electricity,
Guidance for Enhancing Oil and Natural Gas Resilience.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: David Meyer, U.S. Department of
Energy, Office of Electricity, 1000 Independence Avenue SW, Washington,
DC 20585-0121. Telephone: (202) 586-3876. Email:
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Concern among government agencies,
utilities, and the public about the risks presented by more frequent
and more severe weather events has led to widespread discussion about
how to make oil and natural gas infrastructure systems more resilient
against such hazards, and how to do so effectively and at reasonable
cost. This is challenging to do. Although these industries and agencies
have been working for several years to develop a culture of resilience,
at present there is no settled body of expert knowledge about
requirements and practices for enhancing the resilience of these
systems.
The specific purpose of this RFI is to gather available information
on current consensus-based codes, specifications, standards, and less
formal forms of guidance for improving the resilience of all forms of
oil and natural gas infrastructure against severe weather events, with
respect to both the design and operation of these systems. The
information of interest ranges from (1) specific technical design
standards or requirements for physical system components; (2) relevant
corporate business practices, e.g., ``oil and natural gas companies
should designate a senior corporate officer responsible for the
development, implementation, and ongoing maintenance of a company-wide
resilience strategy''; and (3) analytic methods and tools for
estimating the possible economic benefits from strategies, investments,
or initiatives to enhance the resilience of relevant facilities.
DOE anticipates using this information to catalogue and synthesize
a body of existing expert knowledge about how best to enhance the
resilience of these systems cost-effectively. Accordingly, it is
important for respondents to supplement specific standards,
requirements, or practices with the rationale(s) relied on in
developing them and justifying their use.
DOE also notes safety and reliability standards pertinent to these
systems have been developed by the oil and natural gas industries and
promulgated by the U.S. Department of Transportation's Pipeline and
Hazardous Materials Safety Administration, and some of these standards
have implications and benefits for system resilience. These standards
are generally well-documented, and DOE suggests respondents cite them
where appropriate by reference only; submission of more detailed
information is not needed.
Regarding state- or locally-adopted codes and standards that have
resilience implications, or for less well-documented requirements or
practices, DOE has the following questions:
(a) Scope and applicability--for any given requirement or practice,
what hazard (or hazards) is the measure intended to mitigate or make
the system less vulnerable against, and for which sector(s) or
component(s) of the system is the practice relevant? Does the
requirement establish a design threshold, e.g., ``design to withstand
150 mph wind stress,'' or identify appropriate hazard maps, e.g., flood
plain maps, or maps of wind zones?
(b) Origins--how or by whom was the requirement or practice
developed, and did the process provide for consensus, openness,
transparency, balanced decision-making, due process, or an appeal
process? Could the chosen development used be applied to unmet needs in
other oil or natural gas resilience contexts?
(c) Validation--has the requirement or practice been widely tested?
Note: DOE recognizes that worthwhile practices for improving resilience
may exist that are not presently consensus-based, and therefore asks
respondents to include information about such practices, and whether
further testing or refinements would make them more broadly applicable.
(d) Are there other important caveats, not mentioned earlier, about
the requirement or practice that should be considered?
Interested parties are encouraged to submit comments and
information on matters discussed in this SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section, in writing and by the date specified in the DATES section of
this notice. All comments received will be posted without change to
https://www.regulations.gov.
Please do not submit to the RFI information for which disclosure is
restricted by statute, such as trade secrets and commercial or
financial information (Confidential Business Information (CBI)).
Comments submitted to the RFI email address cannot be claimed as CBI,
and submission waives any such claims. DOE plans to make all
information received in response to this RFI available to the public.
Signed in Washington, DC, on June 28, 2019.
Bruce J. Walker,
Assistant Secretary, Office of Electricity, U.S. Department of Energy.
[FR Doc. 2019-14548 Filed 7-8-19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P