National Environmental Policy Act; Mars Sample Return Campaign, 66751-66754 [2022-24065]
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66751
Officer, Aeronautics Research Mission
Directorate, NASA Headquarters,
Washington, DC 20546, (202) 358–0984,
or irma.c.rodriguez@nasa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
meeting will be available to the public
online via MS Teams. Dial-in audio
teleconference and webcast details to
watch the meeting remotely will be
available on the NASA Advisory
Council Committee website at https://
www.nasa.gov/aeroresearch/aero-naccommittee. Enter as a guest and type
your name and affiliation. Note: If
dialing in, please ‘‘mute’’ your
telephone. The agenda for the meeting
includes the following topics:
—Aerosciences Evaluation and Test
Capabilities (AETC) Strategic Plan
—QueSST (Low Boom Flight
Demonstrator) Mission Status
—X–57 Progress and Outlook
—Hypersonics Portfolio and Activities
It is imperative that the meeting be
held on these dates to the scheduling
priorities of the key participants.
Carol Hamilton,
Acting Advisory Committee Management
Officer, National Aeronautics and Space
Administration.
[FR Doc. 2022–24080 Filed 11–3–22; 8:45 am]
Anjanette Suggs,
Agency Clearance Officer.
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[FR Doc. 2022–24014 Filed 11–3–22; 8:45 am]
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND
SPACE ADMINISTRATION
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NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND
SPACE ADMINISTRATION
[NOTICE: (22–083); Docket Number–NASA–
2022–0002]
[Notice: (22–088)]
National Environmental Policy Act;
Mars Sample Return Campaign
NASA Advisory Council; Aeronautics
Committee; Meeting
AGENCY:
National Aeronautics and
Space Administration.
ACTION: Notice of meeting.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
Federal Advisory Committee Act, as
amended, the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (NASA)
announces a meeting of the Aeronautics
Committee of the NASA Advisory
Council (NAC). This meeting will be
held for the purpose of soliciting, from
the aeronautics community and other
persons, research, and technical
information relevant to program
planning.
DATES: Wednesday, November 30, 2022,
9 a.m.–5 p.m., ET
ADDRESSES: NASA Headquarters, 300 E
St. SW, Room 6E40, Washington, DC
20546.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
Irma Rodriguez, Designated Federal
SUMMARY:
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National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (NASA).
ACTION: Notice of availability of the
Mars Sample Return (MSR) Campaign
Draft Programmatic Environmental
Impact Statement (PEIS); notice of
public meetings; and request for
comments.
Pursuant to the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969, as
amended (NEPA), the Executive order
regarding Environmental Effects Abroad
of Major Federal Actions, the Council
on Environmental Quality’s NEPA
implementing regulations, NASA’s
procedures for implementing NEPA,
and Department of the Air Force (DAF)
procedures for implementing NEPA,
NASA announces the availability of the
MSR Campaign Draft PEIS for public
review and comment. The Draft PEIS
provides information and analysis
related to the potential environmental
impacts associated with the proposed
action to retrieve a scientifically
SUMMARY:
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selected set of samples from Mars and
transport them to Earth for scientific
analysis and research. Cooperating
agencies for this effort include the DAF
for Hill Air Force Base, Utah, and Cape
Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida;
the Department of the Army for Dugway
Proving Ground; the U.S. Department of
Agriculture; and the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services—Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention.
DATES: The 45-day public comment
period begins on November 4, 2022 and
ends on December 19, 2022. NASA
encourages all interested parties to
provide comments concerning the
content and analysis presented in the
Draft PEIS. To be considered in the
Final PEIS, all comments must be
postmarked or received online by 11:59
p.m. Eastern Standard Time (EST) (9:59
p.m. Mountain Standard Time [MST])
on December 19, 2022. NASA will hold
four public meetings to further inform
the public on the proposed action and
solicit comments on the Draft PEIS. Two
of those meetings will be ‘‘virtual’’
public meetings that will be accessible
without geographic limitation via a
WebEx online link and audio-only callin telephone number. NASA will also
host two in-person meetings in Utah.
The public meeting schedule is as
follows:
• November 30, 2022, virtual
meetings: 1–2:30 p.m. MST (3–4:30 p.m.
EST) and 6–7:30 p.m. MST (8–9:30 p.m.
EST), meeting number/access code:
901–525–785, online at https://
jpl.webex.com/meet/msr and call-in for
audio-only at +1–510–210–8882.
• December 6, 2022, in-person
meeting: 6–8 p.m. MST (local time) at
Wendover Community Center, 112 E
Moriah Avenue, Wendover, UT 84083.
• December 7, 2022, in-person
meeting: 6–8 p.m. MST (local time) at
Clark Planetarium, 110 S 400 W, Salt
Lake City, UT 84101.
To the maximum extent possible, inperson and virtual meetings will follow
similar formats. At every meeting,
NASA will describe the NEPA
environmental review process, provide
an overview of the proposed action and
the environmental analysis presented in
the Draft PEIS, and provide the public
an opportunity to offer comments. At
this time, NASA does not intend to
provide English-language translation
services, including American Sign
Language interpretation, unless
specifically requested at least one week
prior to the meetings.
Each virtual meeting will begin with
a brief welcome message followed by a
15-minute NASA presentation
describing the purpose of the public
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meetings, the MSR Campaign PEIS
project schedule, opportunities for
public involvement, the proposed action
and alternatives summary, discussion of
potential environmental impacts from
the proposed action, and an overview of
the programmatic approach to NEPA
compliance in general and NASA’s
proposed action specifically. The
presentation will be followed by the
official public comment submittal
portion of the meetings. The public
comment portion of the meeting is
scheduled to last one hour, during
which members of the public may
provide up to a three-minute comment.
In-person meetings will begin with
the same presentation as the virtual
meetings, but with a 45-minute open
house session before the official public
comment portion of the meeting. The
open house session will consist of
subject matter experts available onsite to
answer questions from the public on a
one-on-one basis and to discuss posters
and distribute other materials (e.g., fact
sheets, comment forms) related to the
Draft PEIS and MSR Campaign.
The public meetings, both in-person
and virtual, may end later than the
stated time depending on the number of
persons who wish to submit a comment.
To allow everyone a chance to speak at
the public meetings, NASA may extend
the meeting hours. When providing a
verbal comment, you must identify
yourself, and any organization you
represent, by name. Your remarks will
be recorded and/or transcribed for
inclusion in the public docket.
We encourage you to visit the
informational website at https://
www.nasa.gov/feature/nepa-marssample-return-campaign and attend one
of the public meetings to learn about,
and comment on, the content and
analysis of the Draft PEIS. An electronic
copy of the Draft PEIS will be made
available at https://www.nasa.gov/
feature/nepa-mars-sample-returncampaign beginning on November 4,
2022. Fact sheets and other information
to be used during the public meetings
will be made available at this same
website beginning on November 11,
2022.
Advance registration to
attend or provide a comment at the inperson or virtual public meetings is not
required. Public meeting attendees may
submit comments during the public
meeting or by other means described
below throughout the 45-day comment
period. NASA will accept comments on
the Draft PEIS until the expiration of the
comment period on December 19, 2022.
All comments received by NASA will be
considered and responded to in the
ADDRESSES:
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Final PEIS. Comments must be
identified with Docket No. NASA–
2022–0002, and may be sent to NASA
as follows:
• Federal e-Rulemaking Portal:
https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
online instructions for submitting
comments. Please note that NASA will
post all comments on the internet
without changes, including any
personal information provided.
• By mail to Steve Slaten, NASA Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, 4800 Oak Grove
Drive, M/S: 180–801, Pasadena, CA
91109–8099.
We encourage you to submit
comments electronically through the
Federal e-Rulemaking Portal at https://
www.regulations.gov. If you submit your
comments electronically, it is not
necessary to also submit a hard copy.
Regardless of the method used for
submitting comments, all submissions
will be posted without change to the
Federal Docket Management System
website (https://www.regulations.gov)
and will include any personal
information you provide. Before
including your address, phone number,
email address, or other personal
identifying information in your
comment, be advised that your entire
comment may be publicly available at
any time. While you can ask us in your
comment to withhold from public
review your personal identifying
information, we cannot guarantee that
we will be able to do so. Therefore,
submitting this information to the
Docket makes it public. You may wish
to read the Privacy and Use Notice
available on the Federal Docket
Management System website (https://
www.regulations.gov/user-notice). You
may view Docket submissions at the
Federal Docket Management System or
electronically on the Federal Docket
Management System website.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Steve Slaten, NASA Jet Propulsion
Laboratory, by electronic mail at Marssample-return-nepa@lists.nasa.gov or by
telephone at 202–358–0016. For
questions regarding viewing the Docket,
please call Docket Operations,
telephone: 202–366–9317 or 202–366–
9826.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: A Notice
of Intent to prepare the MSR PEIS was
published in the Federal Register on
April 15, 2022 (87 FR 22578). Two
virtual public scoping meetings were
held on May 4 and May 5, 2022.
Under the proposed action, NASA, in
coordination with the European Space
Agency, proposes to conduct a
campaign to retrieve samples from Mars
and transport them to Earth. A
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scientifically selected set of samples
(i.e., Martian rocks, regolith, and
atmosphere), acquired and cached on
the surface of Mars by the Perseverance
rover, would be returned to Earth for
scientific analysis and research.
Overall, the proposed MSR Campaign
spans five elements: three flight
elements and two ground elements. The
flight elements include: (1) the
Perseverance rover (previously
addressed in the Final Supplemental
Environmental Impact Statement for the
Mars 2020 Mission); (2) a Sample
Retrieval Lander and its subcomponents
(the ‘‘Lander’’); and (3) an Earth Return
Orbiter (the ‘‘Orbiter’’), with its
subcomponents (which include the
Earth Entry System [EES] and recovery
of the EES). The two ground elements
include: (1) EES transportation after
landing; and (2) a Sample Receiving
Facility (SRF). Per the mission goals
stated in the Mars 2020 Final
Supplemental Environmental Impact
Statement, NASA’s Mars 2020 mission
launched the Perseverance rover in July
2020; the rover landed on Mars in
February 2021 and has begun collecting
and storing samples for potential return
to Earth for study.
The Lander launch would occur from
either Kennedy Space Center or Cape
Canaveral Space Force Station in
Florida and would consist of a routine
payload, which has been addressed in
previous NEPA analysis (NASA’s
Routine Payload Environmental
Assessment). Launch of the Orbiter
would be managed by the European
Space Agency and occur from French
Guiana. The launch of the Orbiter is
addressed in the Draft PEIS pursuant to
Executive Order 12114, Environmental
Effects Abroad of Major Federal Actions.
The proposed EES landing location is
the DAF-managed Utah Test and
Training Range (UTTR), located
approximately 80 miles west of Salt
Lake City. Additional proposed
activities associated with recovery team
and support equipment staging would
be conducted on the Dugway Proving
Ground. As noted earlier, additional
Earth-based ground elements associated
with sample transportation and sample
management/research (otherwise
referred to as ‘‘curation’’) involving the
development and operation of an SRF
are also part of the overall MSR
Campaign architecture.
The proposed action and a no action
alternative were evaluated in the Draft
PEIS. Under the no action alternative,
the MSR Campaign would not be
undertaken and investigation of Mars as
a planetary system would be severely
constrained due to the cost and
complexity of sending into space (and
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operating) science instruments capable
of conducting the appropriate level of
sample analysis in space or on Mars
where in situ analyses could be
performed. The environmental resource
areas analyzed in the Draft PEIS include
health and safety, cultural resources,
hazardous materials and waste, soils
and geology, biological resources, water
resources, air quality and climate, land
use, socioeconomics, environmental
justice/protection of children, noise,
and infrastructure.
NASA provided press releases to local
newspapers and distributed letters to
stakeholders, Native American tribes,
and other interested parties. In addition
to availability on the website (https://
www.nasa.gov/feature/nepa-marssample-return-campaign), hard copies
of the Draft PEIS will be made available
at the following public libraries.
• Cocoa Beach Public Library, 550 N
Brevard Avenue, Cocoa Beach, FL
32931
• Central Brevard Library and Reference
Center, 308 Forrest Avenue, Cocoa, FL
32922
• Cape Canaveral Public Library, 201
Polk Avenue, Cape Canaveral, FL
32920
• Titusville Public Library, 2121 S
Hopkins Avenue, Titusville, FL 32780
• Melbourne Library, 540 E Fee
Avenue, Melbourne, FL 32901
• Merritt Island Public Library, 1195 N
Courtenay Parkway, Merritt Island, FL
32953
• NASA Headquarters Library, 300 E
Street SW, #1120, Washington, DC
20024
• Tooele City Public Library, 128 West
Vine Street, Tooele, UT 84074
• Grantsville Library, 42 Bowery Street,
Grantsville, UT 84029
• Brigham City Public Library, 26 E
Forest Street, Brigham City, UT 84302
• Tremonton Municipal Library, 210 N
Tremont Street, Tremont, UT 84337
• West Wendover Branch Library, 590
Camper Drive, West Wendover, NV
89883
• Garland Public Library, 86 W Factory
Street, Garland, UT 84312
NASA is taking a programmatic
approach to analyzing the potential
environmental consequences of the
MSR Campaign because of the
campaign’s large scope and uncertainty
regarding future timing, locations, and
environmental impacts associated with
the two ground element actions (sample
transportation and SRF). This
programmatic approach allows for nearterm focus on issues that are ripe for
decision and establishes a foundation
for follow-on tiering (sequencing) to
future actions, thus minimizing detailed
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66753
topics previously decided at the initial
programmatic level. While certain
actions related to site-specific analysis
of the ground elements are considered
programmatically in the Draft PEIS (i.e.,
likely methods of sample transportation
and representative examples of an SRF),
NASA’s NEPA approach provides the
public with information on the totality
of the MSR Campaign, thereby avoiding
possible confusion about potential
future proposed actions, which may be
analyzed further in a tiered NEPA
document. To the extent it is required,
future tiered NEPA analysis would
address specific environmental impacts
related to EES transportation (e.g., overthe-road or via aircraft) from the UTTR
complex to an SRF. The type, location,
construction (if any), and operation of
an SRF would also be analyzed in
specific detail after facility requirements
are more robustly characterized.
Planetary Protection
‘‘Planetary protection’’ is the
discipline/practice of protecting solar
system bodies (e.g., a planet, planetary
moon, or asteroid) from contamination
by Earth life and, in the case of sample
return missions, protecting Earth from
potential hazards posed by
extraterrestrial material.
NASA’s planetary protection policies
address missions involving samples
returned from various solar system
bodies as detailed in NASA Policy
Directive 8700.1F, NASA Policy for
Safety and Mission Success. NASA’s
policies are guided by the planetary
protection policies published by the
international Committee on Space
Research, which are informed by the
United Nations Outer Space Treaty.
NASA Procedural Requirement 8715.24,
Planetary Protection Provisions for
Robotic Extraterrestrial Missions,
provides guidelines for categorizing
missions according to their destination
and proposed activities. NASA
Procedural Requirement 8715.24 also
provides specific procedural
requirements for certain mission
categories. All missions returning
samples are designated as Category V.
Under Category V, there are two
subcategories: (1) Unrestricted Earth
Return—sample return missions from
solar system bodies deemed by
scientific consensus to have no
extraterrestrial life (e.g., Earth’s Moon
and Venus), and (2) Restricted Earth
Return (RER)—sample return missions
from solar system bodies deemed by
scientific opinion to have a possibility
of harboring indigenous life forms (e.g.,
Mars or Europa). RER missions have
requirements to break the chain of
physical contact with the target body as
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well as isolate and robustly contain
restricted samples during all mission
phases through safe receipt and
transport to a containment facility on
Earth. Due to the potential for ancient
life forms on Mars, the sample return
portion of the proposed MSR Campaign
is expected to be classified as a Category
V RER activity, which requires
preparation of an Environmental Impact
Statement.
Cheryl Parker,
Federal Register Liaison Officer.
[FR Doc. 2022–24065 Filed 11–3–22; 8:45 am]
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ways to minimize the burden of the
collection of information on those who
are to respond, including through the
use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology
should be addressed to the points of
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CONTACT section.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Comment: As required by 5 CFR
1320.8(d), comments on the information
collection activities as part of this study
were solicited through the publication
of a 60-Day Notice in the Federal
Register at 87 FR 53793. NCSES
received one comment requesting clarity
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collection of information that such
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Title of Collection: Standard
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OMB Control Number: 3145–NEW.
Summary of Collection: Title III of the
Foundations for Evidence-Based
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Policymaking Act of 2018 (hereafter the
Evidence Act) mandates that OMB
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accept applications for access to
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the Congressional Budget Office, State,
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This information collection request is
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[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 213 (Friday, November 4, 2022)]
[Notices]
[Pages 66751-66754]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-24065]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
[NOTICE: (22-083); Docket Number-NASA-2022-0002]
National Environmental Policy Act; Mars Sample Return Campaign
AGENCY: National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).
ACTION: Notice of availability of the Mars Sample Return (MSR) Campaign
Draft Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement (PEIS); notice of
public meetings; and request for comments.
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SUMMARY: Pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, as
amended (NEPA), the Executive order regarding Environmental Effects
Abroad of Major Federal Actions, the Council on Environmental Quality's
NEPA implementing regulations, NASA's procedures for implementing NEPA,
and Department of the Air Force (DAF) procedures for implementing NEPA,
NASA announces the availability of the MSR Campaign Draft PEIS for
public review and comment. The Draft PEIS provides information and
analysis related to the potential environmental impacts associated with
the proposed action to retrieve a scientifically
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selected set of samples from Mars and transport them to Earth for
scientific analysis and research. Cooperating agencies for this effort
include the DAF for Hill Air Force Base, Utah, and Cape Canaveral Space
Force Station, Florida; the Department of the Army for Dugway Proving
Ground; the U.S. Department of Agriculture; and the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services--Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
DATES: The 45-day public comment period begins on November 4, 2022 and
ends on December 19, 2022. NASA encourages all interested parties to
provide comments concerning the content and analysis presented in the
Draft PEIS. To be considered in the Final PEIS, all comments must be
postmarked or received online by 11:59 p.m. Eastern Standard Time (EST)
(9:59 p.m. Mountain Standard Time [MST]) on December 19, 2022. NASA
will hold four public meetings to further inform the public on the
proposed action and solicit comments on the Draft PEIS. Two of those
meetings will be ``virtual'' public meetings that will be accessible
without geographic limitation via a WebEx online link and audio-only
call-in telephone number. NASA will also host two in-person meetings in
Utah. The public meeting schedule is as follows:
November 30, 2022, virtual meetings: 1-2:30 p.m. MST (3-
4:30 p.m. EST) and 6-7:30 p.m. MST (8-9:30 p.m. EST), meeting number/
access code: 901-525-785, online at https://jpl.webex.com/meet/msr and
call-in for audio-only at +1-510-210-8882.
December 6, 2022, in-person meeting: 6-8 p.m. MST (local
time) at Wendover Community Center, 112 E Moriah Avenue, Wendover, UT
84083.
December 7, 2022, in-person meeting: 6-8 p.m. MST (local
time) at Clark Planetarium, 110 S 400 W, Salt Lake City, UT 84101.
To the maximum extent possible, in-person and virtual meetings will
follow similar formats. At every meeting, NASA will describe the NEPA
environmental review process, provide an overview of the proposed
action and the environmental analysis presented in the Draft PEIS, and
provide the public an opportunity to offer comments. At this time, NASA
does not intend to provide English-language translation services,
including American Sign Language interpretation, unless specifically
requested at least one week prior to the meetings.
Each virtual meeting will begin with a brief welcome message
followed by a 15-minute NASA presentation describing the purpose of the
public meetings, the MSR Campaign PEIS project schedule, opportunities
for public involvement, the proposed action and alternatives summary,
discussion of potential environmental impacts from the proposed action,
and an overview of the programmatic approach to NEPA compliance in
general and NASA's proposed action specifically. The presentation will
be followed by the official public comment submittal portion of the
meetings. The public comment portion of the meeting is scheduled to
last one hour, during which members of the public may provide up to a
three-minute comment.
In-person meetings will begin with the same presentation as the
virtual meetings, but with a 45-minute open house session before the
official public comment portion of the meeting. The open house session
will consist of subject matter experts available onsite to answer
questions from the public on a one-on-one basis and to discuss posters
and distribute other materials (e.g., fact sheets, comment forms)
related to the Draft PEIS and MSR Campaign.
The public meetings, both in-person and virtual, may end later than
the stated time depending on the number of persons who wish to submit a
comment. To allow everyone a chance to speak at the public meetings,
NASA may extend the meeting hours. When providing a verbal comment, you
must identify yourself, and any organization you represent, by name.
Your remarks will be recorded and/or transcribed for inclusion in the
public docket.
We encourage you to visit the informational website at https://www.nasa.gov/feature/nepa-mars-sample-return-campaign and attend one of
the public meetings to learn about, and comment on, the content and
analysis of the Draft PEIS. An electronic copy of the Draft PEIS will
be made available at https://www.nasa.gov/feature/nepa-mars-sample-return-campaign beginning on November 4, 2022. Fact sheets and other
information to be used during the public meetings will be made
available at this same website beginning on November 11, 2022.
ADDRESSES: Advance registration to attend or provide a comment at the
in-person or virtual public meetings is not required. Public meeting
attendees may submit comments during the public meeting or by other
means described below throughout the 45-day comment period. NASA will
accept comments on the Draft PEIS until the expiration of the comment
period on December 19, 2022. All comments received by NASA will be
considered and responded to in the Final PEIS. Comments must be
identified with Docket No. NASA-2022-0002, and may be sent to NASA as
follows:
Federal e-Rulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the online instructions for submitting comments. Please note
that NASA will post all comments on the internet without changes,
including any personal information provided.
By mail to Steve Slaten, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
4800 Oak Grove Drive, M/S: 180-801, Pasadena, CA 91109-8099.
We encourage you to submit comments electronically through the
Federal e-Rulemaking Portal at https://www.regulations.gov. If you
submit your comments electronically, it is not necessary to also submit
a hard copy. Regardless of the method used for submitting comments, all
submissions will be posted without change to the Federal Docket
Management System website (https://www.regulations.gov) and will
include any personal information you provide. Before including your
address, phone number, email address, or other personal identifying
information in your comment, be advised that your entire comment may be
publicly available at any time. While you can ask us in your comment to
withhold from public review your personal identifying information, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able to do so. Therefore, submitting
this information to the Docket makes it public. You may wish to read
the Privacy and Use Notice available on the Federal Docket Management
System website (https://www.regulations.gov/user-notice). You may view
Docket submissions at the Federal Docket Management System or
electronically on the Federal Docket Management System website.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Steve Slaten, NASA Jet Propulsion
Laboratory, by electronic mail at [email protected] or by telephone at 202-358-0016. For questions
regarding viewing the Docket, please call Docket Operations, telephone:
202-366-9317 or 202-366-9826.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: A Notice of Intent to prepare the MSR PEIS
was published in the Federal Register on April 15, 2022 (87 FR 22578).
Two virtual public scoping meetings were held on May 4 and May 5, 2022.
Under the proposed action, NASA, in coordination with the European
Space Agency, proposes to conduct a campaign to retrieve samples from
Mars and transport them to Earth. A
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scientifically selected set of samples (i.e., Martian rocks, regolith,
and atmosphere), acquired and cached on the surface of Mars by the
Perseverance rover, would be returned to Earth for scientific analysis
and research.
Overall, the proposed MSR Campaign spans five elements: three
flight elements and two ground elements. The flight elements include:
(1) the Perseverance rover (previously addressed in the Final
Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement for the Mars 2020 Mission);
(2) a Sample Retrieval Lander and its subcomponents (the ``Lander'');
and (3) an Earth Return Orbiter (the ``Orbiter''), with its
subcomponents (which include the Earth Entry System [EES] and recovery
of the EES). The two ground elements include: (1) EES transportation
after landing; and (2) a Sample Receiving Facility (SRF). Per the
mission goals stated in the Mars 2020 Final Supplemental Environmental
Impact Statement, NASA's Mars 2020 mission launched the Perseverance
rover in July 2020; the rover landed on Mars in February 2021 and has
begun collecting and storing samples for potential return to Earth for
study.
The Lander launch would occur from either Kennedy Space Center or
Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida and would consist of a
routine payload, which has been addressed in previous NEPA analysis
(NASA's Routine Payload Environmental Assessment). Launch of the
Orbiter would be managed by the European Space Agency and occur from
French Guiana. The launch of the Orbiter is addressed in the Draft PEIS
pursuant to Executive Order 12114, Environmental Effects Abroad of
Major Federal Actions.
The proposed EES landing location is the DAF-managed Utah Test and
Training Range (UTTR), located approximately 80 miles west of Salt Lake
City. Additional proposed activities associated with recovery team and
support equipment staging would be conducted on the Dugway Proving
Ground. As noted earlier, additional Earth-based ground elements
associated with sample transportation and sample management/research
(otherwise referred to as ``curation'') involving the development and
operation of an SRF are also part of the overall MSR Campaign
architecture.
The proposed action and a no action alternative were evaluated in
the Draft PEIS. Under the no action alternative, the MSR Campaign would
not be undertaken and investigation of Mars as a planetary system would
be severely constrained due to the cost and complexity of sending into
space (and operating) science instruments capable of conducting the
appropriate level of sample analysis in space or on Mars where in situ
analyses could be performed. The environmental resource areas analyzed
in the Draft PEIS include health and safety, cultural resources,
hazardous materials and waste, soils and geology, biological resources,
water resources, air quality and climate, land use, socioeconomics,
environmental justice/protection of children, noise, and
infrastructure.
NASA provided press releases to local newspapers and distributed
letters to stakeholders, Native American tribes, and other interested
parties. In addition to availability on the website (https://www.nasa.gov/feature/nepa-mars-sample-return-campaign), hard copies of
the Draft PEIS will be made available at the following public
libraries.
Cocoa Beach Public Library, 550 N Brevard Avenue, Cocoa Beach,
FL 32931
Central Brevard Library and Reference Center, 308 Forrest
Avenue, Cocoa, FL 32922
Cape Canaveral Public Library, 201 Polk Avenue, Cape
Canaveral, FL 32920
Titusville Public Library, 2121 S Hopkins Avenue, Titusville,
FL 32780
Melbourne Library, 540 E Fee Avenue, Melbourne, FL 32901
Merritt Island Public Library, 1195 N Courtenay Parkway,
Merritt Island, FL 32953
NASA Headquarters Library, 300 E Street SW, #1120, Washington,
DC 20024
Tooele City Public Library, 128 West Vine Street, Tooele, UT
84074
Grantsville Library, 42 Bowery Street, Grantsville, UT 84029
Brigham City Public Library, 26 E Forest Street, Brigham City,
UT 84302
Tremonton Municipal Library, 210 N Tremont Street, Tremont, UT
84337
West Wendover Branch Library, 590 Camper Drive, West Wendover,
NV 89883
Garland Public Library, 86 W Factory Street, Garland, UT 84312
NASA is taking a programmatic approach to analyzing the potential
environmental consequences of the MSR Campaign because of the
campaign's large scope and uncertainty regarding future timing,
locations, and environmental impacts associated with the two ground
element actions (sample transportation and SRF). This programmatic
approach allows for near-term focus on issues that are ripe for
decision and establishes a foundation for follow-on tiering
(sequencing) to future actions, thus minimizing detailed topics
previously decided at the initial programmatic level. While certain
actions related to site-specific analysis of the ground elements are
considered programmatically in the Draft PEIS (i.e., likely methods of
sample transportation and representative examples of an SRF), NASA's
NEPA approach provides the public with information on the totality of
the MSR Campaign, thereby avoiding possible confusion about potential
future proposed actions, which may be analyzed further in a tiered NEPA
document. To the extent it is required, future tiered NEPA analysis
would address specific environmental impacts related to EES
transportation (e.g., over-the-road or via aircraft) from the UTTR
complex to an SRF. The type, location, construction (if any), and
operation of an SRF would also be analyzed in specific detail after
facility requirements are more robustly characterized.
Planetary Protection
``Planetary protection'' is the discipline/practice of protecting
solar system bodies (e.g., a planet, planetary moon, or asteroid) from
contamination by Earth life and, in the case of sample return missions,
protecting Earth from potential hazards posed by extraterrestrial
material.
NASA's planetary protection policies address missions involving
samples returned from various solar system bodies as detailed in NASA
Policy Directive 8700.1F, NASA Policy for Safety and Mission Success.
NASA's policies are guided by the planetary protection policies
published by the international Committee on Space Research, which are
informed by the United Nations Outer Space Treaty. NASA Procedural
Requirement 8715.24, Planetary Protection Provisions for Robotic
Extraterrestrial Missions, provides guidelines for categorizing
missions according to their destination and proposed activities. NASA
Procedural Requirement 8715.24 also provides specific procedural
requirements for certain mission categories. All missions returning
samples are designated as Category V. Under Category V, there are two
subcategories: (1) Unrestricted Earth Return--sample return missions
from solar system bodies deemed by scientific consensus to have no
extraterrestrial life (e.g., Earth's Moon and Venus), and (2)
Restricted Earth Return (RER)--sample return missions from solar system
bodies deemed by scientific opinion to have a possibility of harboring
indigenous life forms (e.g., Mars or Europa). RER missions have
requirements to break the chain of physical contact with the target
body as
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well as isolate and robustly contain restricted samples during all
mission phases through safe receipt and transport to a containment
facility on Earth. Due to the potential for ancient life forms on Mars,
the sample return portion of the proposed MSR Campaign is expected to
be classified as a Category V RER activity, which requires preparation
of an Environmental Impact Statement.
Cheryl Parker,
Federal Register Liaison Officer.
[FR Doc. 2022-24065 Filed 11-3-22; 8:45 am]
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