Notice of Public Comment Period, 1521-1522 [2021-00148]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 5 / Friday, January 8, 2021 / Notices
must state your preference prominently
at the beginning of your comment. All
submissions from organizations or
businesses and from individuals
identifying themselves as
representatives or officials of
organizations or businesses will be
made available for public inspection in
their entirety.
Authority: This NOA was prepared under
Council on Environmental Quality NEPA
regulations, 40 CFR 1500–1508 (as in place
before July 16, 2020) and published in
accordance with 40 CFR 1506.6 and 43 CFR
46.435.
William Yancey Brown,
Chief Environmental Officer, Bureau of Ocean
Energy Management.
[FR Doc. 2021–00100 Filed 1–7–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–MR–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Safety and Environmental
Enforcement
[Docket ID BSEE–2020–0015; 21XE8370SD//
EEGG600000//ED1OS0000.ERD000]
Notice of Public Comment Period
Bureau of Safety and
Environmental Enforcement (BSEE),
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of public comment
period.
AGENCY:
tkelley on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with NOTICES
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
The U.S. Department of the
Interior (DOI), Bureau of Safety and
Environmental Enforcement (BSEE) is
conducting an independent external
peer review of a recent study titled,
OSRR 1063: Bureau of Safety and
Environmental Enforcement (BSEE)
Report: Computational Fluid Dynamics
(CFD) Model for Predicting Wellhead
Oil-Burning Efficiency at Bench and
Intermediate Scales: Interim Report
(July 30, 2020). This peer review will
aid BSEE gather input from the
scientific community on the technical
methodologies and results in this
interim final report. Background
information on BSEE’s Oil Spill
Response Research (OSRR) 1063 study
is provided in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section below. Information
regarding BSEE’s peer-review process is
available at: https://www.bsee.gov/whatwe-do/research/peer review.
DATES: Interested persons are invited to
submit comments on or before February
8, 2021.
ADDRESSES: Send your comments on
this notice by either of the following
methods listed below:
• Electronically go to https://
www.regulations.gov. In the Search box,
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
21:23 Jan 07, 2021
Jkt 253001
enter BSEE–2020–0015 then click
search. Follow the instructions to
submit public comments and view all
related materials. We will post all
comments.
Written comments should be
submitted on or before February 8, 2021.
Relevant public comments within the
BSEE Charge for the scope of this peer
review (outline below) and directly
addressing the scientific and technical
issues in BSEE’s 13 Charge Questions
(outlined below) will be provided to the
peer reviewers. BSEE may not be able to
fully consider comments submitted after
February 8, 2021.
Submit your comments, identified by
name, contact (phone, and/or email) by
one of the following methods:
• Mail: Karen N. Stone, Program
Manager, U.S. Department of the
Interior, Bureau of Safety and
Environmental Enforcement, Oil Spill
Preparedness Division, Response
Research Branch, 45600 Woodland
Road, VAE–OSPD, Sterling, VA 20166.
Email: karen.stone@bsee.gov. Do not
submit information considered to be
Confidential Business Information (CBI)
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute to BSEE
electronically through email. Please
contact the BSEE staff listed under the
section for special instructions before
submitting comments considered to be
CBI or otherwise protected.
To provide public involvement in this
peer-review process, BSEE is
announcing and inviting written public
comments on the scientific and
technical merit of the interim OSRR
1063 report. The interim OSRR 1063
report is available on BSEE’s OSRR
website located at: https://
www.bsee.gov/what-we-do/research/oilspill-preparedness/oil-spill-responseresearch.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Karen N. Stone, Program Manager, U.S.
Department of the Interior, Bureau of
Safety and Environmental Enforcement,
Oil Spill Preparedness Division,
Response Research Branch, 45600
Woodland Road, VAE–OSPD, Sterling,
VA 20166.
Telephone number: (703) 787–1810.
Email address: karen.stone@bsee.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
BSEE Charge for the Scope of This Peer
Review
In order to focus the peer-review
process effectively on the 13 Charge
Questions, BSEE has carefully defined
the scope of this peer review for the
Interim report of the BSEE Study titled,
OSRR 1063: Bureau of Safety and
PO 00000
Frm 00047
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
1521
Environmental Enforcement (BSEE)
Report: Computational Fluid Dynamics
(CFD) Model for Predicting Wellhead
Oil-Burning Efficiency at Bench and
Intermediate Scales: Interim Report
(July 30, 2020). Written comments
should stay within the BSEE Scope
defined below.
The scope of this peer review focuses
only on the scientific and technical
merit of the assumptions, inputs,
methodologies, modeling with
experimental validation, and results for
the BSEE study titled, OSRR 1063: BSEE
Report: Computational Fluid Dynamics
(CFD) Model for Predicting Wellhead
Oil-Burning Efficiency at Bench and
Intermediate Scales: Interim Report
(July 30, 2020). This peer review is
scientific and technical in nature and
includes reviewing the methods,
assumptions, data quality, the strengths
of any inferences made, and the overall
strengths and limitations of the study.
The peer-review scope includes the
material, fabrication, computations,
testing, engineering factors, modeling
with experimental validation, results,
and final recommendations generated
from the OSRR 1063 study.
The following are considered Out-ofScope for this peer review and will not
be considered during this peer-review
process:
• General comments related to
intentional wellhead ignition as a
primary response method, because this
peer review is focused only on the
methods and approach for predicting
wellhead burn efficiency at the bench
and intermediate scales.
• Comments on, or suggestions for,
alternate modeling methods to predict
wellhead burn efficiencies except for
comments on any omissions or errors
identified in the specific methods used
for modeling and experimental
validations of the model in the OSRR
1063 study referenced above because
this peer review focuses on the research
already completed for this OSRR 1063
study.
• Comments related to BSEE policies,
decisions, or current or proposed BSEE
regulations.
Public comments should focus on the
scientific and technical merit of the
OSRR 1063 study and be organized
under BSEE’s 13 Charge Questions.
BSEE Charge Questions
1. Were the objectives of the study
clearly defined? If not, what are your
recommendations for improving the
description of this study’s objectives?
2. Were the assumptions regarding
wellhead conditions and two-phase
wellbore flow (including film thickness
and instability, liquid entrainment, and
E:\FR\FM\08JAN1.SGM
08JAN1
tkelley on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with NOTICES
1522
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 5 / Friday, January 8, 2021 / Notices
droplet diameter and its influence on
wellhead ejection behavior) adequately
characterized? Were there any apparent
strengths, weaknesses, omissions, or
errors? Provide an explanation for your
answers.
3. Was the physical model for multiphase flow adequately developed to
capture the liquid droplet phase and the
gas-phase flow field? Were the soot and
radiation models adequately
characterized? Were Lagrangian droplet
dynamics and thermophysics
adequately incorporated into the model?
Were there any apparent strengths,
weaknesses, omissions, or errors?
Provide an explanation for your
answers.
4. Does the droplet injection model
adequately simulate realistic diameters
and velocities of two-phase, high-speed
flows that would occur during a
wellhead blowout event? Were there
any apparent strengths, weaknesses,
omissions, or errors? Provide an
explanation for your answers.
5. Does the validation process capture
the controlling physical properties to a
sufficient level of accuracy, including
transport and boundary conditions at
the bench- and intermediate-scales for
both gas-phase and two-phase turbulent
spray? Were there any apparent
strengths, weaknesses, omissions, or
errors? Provide an explanation for your
answers.
6. Were the phase doppler
anemometry and diffuse back-light
illumination imaging diagnostic
methods (6.1.1 and 6.1.2 below) for the
droplet behavior measurements
appropriately designed, clearly
described, and adequate to capture
droplet behavior for the Gas Phase and
Two-Phase Spray Flame? Were there
any apparent strengths, weaknesses,
omissions, or errors? Provide an
explanation for your answers.
6.1.1. Phase Doppler Anemometry
6.1.2. Diffuse Back-Illumination Imaging
7. Were the diagnostic methods (7.1.1
and 7.1.2 below) for the temperature
measurements appropriately designed,
clearly described, and adequate to
capture temperature for the Gas Phase
and Two-Phase Spray Flame? Were
there any apparent strengths,
weaknesses, omissions, or errors?
Provide an explanation for your
answers.
7.1.1. Coherent Anti-Stokes Raman
Spectrometry-based Thermometry
(CARS)
7.1.2. 3-Color High-Speed Pyrometry
8. Do the results adequately
characterize evidence of the droplet
characteristics, including droplet
breakup, the droplet size (diameter),
VerDate Sep<11>2014
21:23 Jan 07, 2021
Jkt 253001
droplet speed, and the duration of a
droplet in fire (bench- and intermediatescales)? Does the research product
accurately expand predictions of droplet
diameters beyond current limited
validated ranges? Were there any
apparent strengths, weaknesses,
omissions, or errors? Provide an
explanation for your answers.
9. Does the research product
accurately characterize the impact of
two-phase flow regimes (bubble, slug,
and churn) on the effluent plume
(bench- and intermediate-scales)? Were
there any apparent strengths,
weaknesses, omissions, or errors?
Provide an explanation for your
answers.
10. Does the research product
adequately address how the wellbore
flow would influence the ejected spray
plume behavior, which directly
influences how the oil and gas burns
and how much will either fall back to
the surface or remain vapor? Were there
any apparent strengths, weaknesses,
omissions, or errors? Explain your
answers.
11. Does the research product
accurately predict the length of fire
plume, location of flame anchoring,
height of flame, width/angle, expansion,
etc.? Were there any apparent strengths,
weaknesses, omissions, or errors?
Explain your answers.
12. Does the research product
determine the primary mechanism
driving burn efficiency?
13. Were the conclusions based on the
OSRR 1063 study findings in the report
logical and appropriate based on the
results? What other conclusions related
to the study were made and are
appropriate? Are there any additional
study findings or conclusions that could
be drawn from the study? Provide an
explanation for your answers.
Background on OSRR 1063 Study
BSEE oversees oil spill planning and
preparedness for oil and gas
exploration, development, and
production facilities in both state and
Federal offshore waters of the United
States. BSEE’s Oil Spill Preparedness
Division (OSPD) is responsible for
promulgating regulations pursuant to
BSEE’s delegated authority under the
Clean Water Act, as amended by the Oil
Pollution Act of 1990 (33 U.S.C. 1321),
and implementing those regulations (30
CFR part 254).
To receive the necessary approvals
under 30 CFR part 254, operators of oil
and gas facilities operating seaward of
the coastline must demonstrate that they
are prepared to respond to a loss of well
control event and a ‘‘worst case’’
discharge release (30 CFR 254.26;
PO 00000
Frm 00048
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
254.51–.53). For decades, intentional
wellhead ignition has been viewed as a
possible source control method for wellhead blowouts in ice-bound
environments. BSEE is researching this
response method to better understand
its efficiencies and limitations in the
North Slope area of Alaska. As part of
this review process, BSEE contracted
the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory
(NRL) to first conduct a review of an
interested party’s report and related
scientific literature and provide
preliminary technical guidance on the
feasibility of wellhead burning as a
mitigation method. The review suggests
scientific evidence is lacking to fully
support claims that wellhead burning
would be highly efficient and would
result in little to no unburned oil fallout
for the proposed project. BSEE then
contracted NRL to conduct a scientific
research project. The research project’s
primary objective was to develop a CFD
model of wellhead burning validated
with experimental data at multiple
scales. BSEE is seeking an independent
peer review of the interim final NRL
report for this research program titled
OSRR 1063: BSEE Report: CFD Model
for Predicting Wellhead Oil-Burning
Efficiency at Bench and Intermediate
Scales: Interim Report (July 30, 2020).
BSEE considers this study to be a
highly influential scientific assessment.
Scott A. Angelle,
Director, Bureau of Safety and Environmental
Enforcement.
[FR Doc. 2021–00148 Filed 1–7–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–VH–P
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
COMMISSION
[Investigation No. 731–TA–1469 (Final)]
Wood Mouldings and Millwork
Products From Brazil; Termination of
Investigation
United States International
Trade Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
On January 4, 2021, the
Department of Commerce published
notice in the Federal Register of a
negative final determination of sales at
less than fair value in connection with
the subject investigation concerning
Brazil (86 FR 70). Accordingly, the
antidumping duty investigation
concerning wood mouldings and
millwork products from Brazil
(Investigation No. 731–TA–1469 (Final))
is terminated.
DATES: January 4, 2021.
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\08JAN1.SGM
08JAN1
Agencies
- DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
- Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 5 (Friday, January 8, 2021)]
[Notices]
[Pages 1521-1522]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-00148]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement
[Docket ID BSEE-2020-0015; 21XE8370SD//EEGG600000//ED1OS0000.ERD000]
Notice of Public Comment Period
AGENCY: Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE),
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of public comment period.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Department of the Interior (DOI), Bureau of Safety
and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE) is conducting an independent
external peer review of a recent study titled, OSRR 1063: Bureau of
Safety and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE) Report: Computational Fluid
Dynamics (CFD) Model for Predicting Wellhead Oil-Burning Efficiency at
Bench and Intermediate Scales: Interim Report (July 30, 2020). This
peer review will aid BSEE gather input from the scientific community on
the technical methodologies and results in this interim final report.
Background information on BSEE's Oil Spill Response Research (OSRR)
1063 study is provided in the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section below.
Information regarding BSEE's peer-review process is available at:
https://www.bsee.gov/what-we-do/research/peer review.
DATES: Interested persons are invited to submit comments on or before
February 8, 2021.
ADDRESSES: Send your comments on this notice by either of the following
methods listed below:
Electronically go to https://www.regulations.gov. In the
Search box, enter BSEE-2020-0015 then click search. Follow the
instructions to submit public comments and view all related materials.
We will post all comments.
Written comments should be submitted on or before February 8, 2021.
Relevant public comments within the BSEE Charge for the scope of this
peer review (outline below) and directly addressing the scientific and
technical issues in BSEE's 13 Charge Questions (outlined below) will be
provided to the peer reviewers. BSEE may not be able to fully consider
comments submitted after February 8, 2021.
Submit your comments, identified by name, contact (phone, and/or
email) by one of the following methods:
Mail: Karen N. Stone, Program Manager, U.S. Department of
the Interior, Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement, Oil Spill
Preparedness Division, Response Research Branch, 45600 Woodland Road,
VAE-OSPD, Sterling, VA 20166.
Email: [email protected]. Do not submit information considered
to be Confidential Business Information (CBI) or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute to BSEE electronically
through email. Please contact the BSEE staff listed under the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section for special instructions before
submitting comments considered to be CBI or otherwise protected.
To provide public involvement in this peer-review process, BSEE is
announcing and inviting written public comments on the scientific and
technical merit of the interim OSRR 1063 report. The interim OSRR 1063
report is available on BSEE's OSRR website located at: https://www.bsee.gov/what-we-do/research/oil-spill-preparedness/oil-spill-response-research.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Karen N. Stone, Program Manager, U.S.
Department of the Interior, Bureau of Safety and Environmental
Enforcement, Oil Spill Preparedness Division, Response Research Branch,
45600 Woodland Road, VAE-OSPD, Sterling, VA 20166.
Telephone number: (703) 787-1810.
Email address: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
BSEE Charge for the Scope of This Peer Review
In order to focus the peer-review process effectively on the 13
Charge Questions, BSEE has carefully defined the scope of this peer
review for the Interim report of the BSEE Study titled, OSRR 1063:
Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE) Report:
Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) Model for Predicting Wellhead Oil-
Burning Efficiency at Bench and Intermediate Scales: Interim Report
(July 30, 2020). Written comments should stay within the BSEE Scope
defined below.
The scope of this peer review focuses only on the scientific and
technical merit of the assumptions, inputs, methodologies, modeling
with experimental validation, and results for the BSEE study titled,
OSRR 1063: BSEE Report: Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) Model for
Predicting Wellhead Oil-Burning Efficiency at Bench and Intermediate
Scales: Interim Report (July 30, 2020). This peer review is scientific
and technical in nature and includes reviewing the methods,
assumptions, data quality, the strengths of any inferences made, and
the overall strengths and limitations of the study. The peer-review
scope includes the material, fabrication, computations, testing,
engineering factors, modeling with experimental validation, results,
and final recommendations generated from the OSRR 1063 study.
The following are considered Out-of-Scope for this peer review and
will not be considered during this peer-review process:
General comments related to intentional wellhead ignition
as a primary response method, because this peer review is focused only
on the methods and approach for predicting wellhead burn efficiency at
the bench and intermediate scales.
Comments on, or suggestions for, alternate modeling
methods to predict wellhead burn efficiencies except for comments on
any omissions or errors identified in the specific methods used for
modeling and experimental validations of the model in the OSRR 1063
study referenced above because this peer review focuses on the research
already completed for this OSRR 1063 study.
Comments related to BSEE policies, decisions, or current
or proposed BSEE regulations.
Public comments should focus on the scientific and technical merit
of the OSRR 1063 study and be organized under BSEE's 13 Charge
Questions.
BSEE Charge Questions
1. Were the objectives of the study clearly defined? If not, what
are your recommendations for improving the description of this study's
objectives?
2. Were the assumptions regarding wellhead conditions and two-phase
wellbore flow (including film thickness and instability, liquid
entrainment, and
[[Page 1522]]
droplet diameter and its influence on wellhead ejection behavior)
adequately characterized? Were there any apparent strengths,
weaknesses, omissions, or errors? Provide an explanation for your
answers.
3. Was the physical model for multi-phase flow adequately developed
to capture the liquid droplet phase and the gas-phase flow field? Were
the soot and radiation models adequately characterized? Were Lagrangian
droplet dynamics and thermophysics adequately incorporated into the
model? Were there any apparent strengths, weaknesses, omissions, or
errors? Provide an explanation for your answers.
4. Does the droplet injection model adequately simulate realistic
diameters and velocities of two-phase, high-speed flows that would
occur during a wellhead blowout event? Were there any apparent
strengths, weaknesses, omissions, or errors? Provide an explanation for
your answers.
5. Does the validation process capture the controlling physical
properties to a sufficient level of accuracy, including transport and
boundary conditions at the bench- and intermediate-scales for both gas-
phase and two-phase turbulent spray? Were there any apparent strengths,
weaknesses, omissions, or errors? Provide an explanation for your
answers.
6. Were the phase doppler anemometry and diffuse back-light
illumination imaging diagnostic methods (6.1.1 and 6.1.2 below) for the
droplet behavior measurements appropriately designed, clearly
described, and adequate to capture droplet behavior for the Gas Phase
and Two-Phase Spray Flame? Were there any apparent strengths,
weaknesses, omissions, or errors? Provide an explanation for your
answers.
6.1.1. Phase Doppler Anemometry
6.1.2. Diffuse Back-Illumination Imaging
7. Were the diagnostic methods (7.1.1 and 7.1.2 below) for the
temperature measurements appropriately designed, clearly described, and
adequate to capture temperature for the Gas Phase and Two-Phase Spray
Flame? Were there any apparent strengths, weaknesses, omissions, or
errors? Provide an explanation for your answers.
7.1.1. Coherent Anti-Stokes Raman Spectrometry-based Thermometry (CARS)
7.1.2. 3-Color High-Speed Pyrometry
8. Do the results adequately characterize evidence of the droplet
characteristics, including droplet breakup, the droplet size
(diameter), droplet speed, and the duration of a droplet in fire
(bench- and intermediate-scales)? Does the research product accurately
expand predictions of droplet diameters beyond current limited
validated ranges? Were there any apparent strengths, weaknesses,
omissions, or errors? Provide an explanation for your answers.
9. Does the research product accurately characterize the impact of
two-phase flow regimes (bubble, slug, and churn) on the effluent plume
(bench- and intermediate-scales)? Were there any apparent strengths,
weaknesses, omissions, or errors? Provide an explanation for your
answers.
10. Does the research product adequately address how the wellbore
flow would influence the ejected spray plume behavior, which directly
influences how the oil and gas burns and how much will either fall back
to the surface or remain vapor? Were there any apparent strengths,
weaknesses, omissions, or errors? Explain your answers.
11. Does the research product accurately predict the length of fire
plume, location of flame anchoring, height of flame, width/angle,
expansion, etc.? Were there any apparent strengths, weaknesses,
omissions, or errors? Explain your answers.
12. Does the research product determine the primary mechanism
driving burn efficiency?
13. Were the conclusions based on the OSRR 1063 study findings in
the report logical and appropriate based on the results? What other
conclusions related to the study were made and are appropriate? Are
there any additional study findings or conclusions that could be drawn
from the study? Provide an explanation for your answers.
Background on OSRR 1063 Study
BSEE oversees oil spill planning and preparedness for oil and gas
exploration, development, and production facilities in both state and
Federal offshore waters of the United States. BSEE's Oil Spill
Preparedness Division (OSPD) is responsible for promulgating
regulations pursuant to BSEE's delegated authority under the Clean
Water Act, as amended by the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 (33 U.S.C.
1321), and implementing those regulations (30 CFR part 254).
To receive the necessary approvals under 30 CFR part 254, operators
of oil and gas facilities operating seaward of the coastline must
demonstrate that they are prepared to respond to a loss of well control
event and a ``worst case'' discharge release (30 CFR 254.26;
254.51-.53). For decades, intentional wellhead ignition has been viewed
as a possible source control method for well-head blowouts in ice-bound
environments. BSEE is researching this response method to better
understand its efficiencies and limitations in the North Slope area of
Alaska. As part of this review process, BSEE contracted the U.S. Naval
Research Laboratory (NRL) to first conduct a review of an interested
party's report and related scientific literature and provide
preliminary technical guidance on the feasibility of wellhead burning
as a mitigation method. The review suggests scientific evidence is
lacking to fully support claims that wellhead burning would be highly
efficient and would result in little to no unburned oil fallout for the
proposed project. BSEE then contracted NRL to conduct a scientific
research project. The research project's primary objective was to
develop a CFD model of wellhead burning validated with experimental
data at multiple scales. BSEE is seeking an independent peer review of
the interim final NRL report for this research program titled OSRR
1063: BSEE Report: CFD Model for Predicting Wellhead Oil-Burning
Efficiency at Bench and Intermediate Scales: Interim Report (July 30,
2020).
BSEE considers this study to be a highly influential scientific
assessment.
Scott A. Angelle,
Director, Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement.
[FR Doc. 2021-00148 Filed 1-7-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-VH-P