Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to Specified Activities; Taking Marine Mammals Incidental to Construction of Liquefied Natural Gas Platforms Off Louisiana, 17538-17553 [2023-06006]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 56 / Thursday, March 23, 2023 / Notices
• A request for renewal is received no
later than 60 days prior to the needed
renewal IHA effective date (recognizing
that the renewal IHA expiration date
cannot extend beyond one year from
expiration of the initial IHA).
• The request for renewal must
include the following:
(1) An explanation that the activities
to be conducted under the requested
renewal IHA are identical to the
activities analyzed under the initial
IHA, are a subset of the activities, or
include changes so minor (e.g.,
reduction in pile size) that the changes
do not affect the previous analyses,
mitigation and monitoring
requirements, or take estimates (with
the exception of reducing the type or
amount of take).
(2) A preliminary monitoring report
showing the results of the required
monitoring to date and an explanation
showing that the monitoring results do
not indicate impacts of a scale or nature
not previously analyzed or authorized.
Upon review of the request for
renewal, the status of the affected
species or stocks, and any other
pertinent information, NMFS
determines that there are no more than
minor changes in the activities, the
mitigation and monitoring measures
will remain the same and appropriate,
and the findings in the initial IHA
remain valid.
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; proposed incidental
harassment authorization; request for
comments on proposed authorization
and possible renewal.
construction of liquefied natural gas
platforms off Grand Isle, Louisiana.
Pursuant to the Marine Mammal
Protection Act (MMPA), NMFS is
requesting comments on its proposal to
issue an incidental harassment
authorization (IHA) to incidentally take
marine mammals during the specified
activities. NMFS is also requesting
comments on a possible one-time, oneyear renewal that could be issued under
certain circumstances and if all
requirements are met, as described in
Request for Public Comments at the end
of this notice. NMFS will consider
public comments prior to making any
final decision on the issuance of the
requested MMPA authorizations and
agency responses will be summarized in
the final notice of our decision.
DATES: Comments and information must
be received no later than April 24, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be
addressed to Jolie Harrison, Chief,
Permits and Conservation Division,
Office of Protected Resources, National
Marine Fisheries Service and should be
submitted via email to ITP.clevenstine@
noaa.gov.
Instructions: NMFS is not responsible
for comments sent by any other method,
to any other address or individual, or
received after the end of the comment
period. Comments, including all
attachments, must not exceed a 25megabyte file size. All comments
received are a part of the public record
and will generally be posted online at
https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/
national/marine-mammal-protection/
incidental-take-authorizationsconstruction-activities without change.
All personal identifying information
(e.g., name, address) voluntarily
submitted by the commenter may be
publicly accessible. Do not submit
confidential business information or
otherwise sensitive or protected
information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Alyssa Clevenstine, Office of Protected
Resources, NMFS, (301) 427–8401.
Electronic copies of the application and
supporting documents, as well as a list
of the references cited in this document,
may be obtained online at: https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/
marine-mammal-protection/incidentaltake-authorizations-constructionactivities. In case of problems accessing
these documents, please call the contact
listed above.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
NMFS has received a request
from New Fortress Energy Louisiana
FLNG LLC (NFE) for authorization to
take marine mammals incidental to
Background
The MMPA prohibits the ‘‘take’’ of
marine mammals, with certain
exceptions. Sections 101(a)(5)(A) and
Dated: March 16, 2023.
Kimberly Damon-Randall,
Director, Office of Protected Resources,
National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2023–05964 Filed 3–22–23; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
[RTID 0648–XC766]
Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to
Specified Activities; Taking Marine
Mammals Incidental to Construction of
Liquefied Natural Gas Platforms Off
Louisiana
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY:
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(D) of the MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1361 et
seq.) direct the Secretary of Commerce
(as delegated to NMFS) to allow, upon
request, the incidental, but not
intentional, taking of small numbers of
marine mammals by U.S. citizens who
engage in a specified activity (other than
commercial fishing) within a specified
geographical region if certain findings
are made and either regulations are
proposed or, if the taking is limited to
harassment, a notice of a proposed IHA
is provided to the public for review.
Authorization for incidental takings
shall be granted if NMFS finds that the
taking will have a negligible impact on
the species or stock(s) and will not have
an unmitigable adverse impact on the
availability of the species or stock(s) for
taking for subsistence uses (where
relevant). Further, NMFS must prescribe
the permissible methods of taking and
other ‘‘means of effecting the least
practicable adverse impact’’ on the
affected species or stocks and their
habitat, paying particular attention to
rookeries, mating grounds, and areas of
similar significance, and on the
availability of the species or stocks for
taking for certain subsistence uses
(referred to in shorthand as
‘‘mitigation’’); and requirements
pertaining to the mitigation, monitoring
and reporting of the takings are set forth.
The definitions of all applicable MMPA
statutory terms cited above are included
in the relevant sections below.
National Environmental Policy Act
To comply with the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969
(NEPA; 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) and
NOAA Administrative Order (NAO)
216–6A, NMFS must review our
proposed action (i.e., the issuance of an
IHA) with respect to potential impacts
on the human environment.
This action is consistent with
categories of activities identified in
Categorical Exclusion B4 (IHAs with no
anticipated serious injury or mortality)
of the Companion Manual for NOAA
Administrative Order 216–6A, which do
not individually or cumulatively have
the potential for significant impacts on
the quality of the human environment
and for which we have not identified
any extraordinary circumstances that
would preclude this categorical
exclusion. Accordingly, NMFS has
preliminarily determined that the
issuance of the proposed IHA qualifies
to be categorically excluded from
further NEPA review.
We will review all comments
submitted in response to this notice
prior to concluding our NEPA process
or making a final decision on the IHA
request.
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 56 / Thursday, March 23, 2023 / Notices
Summary of Request
On October 7, 2022, NMFS received a
request from NFE for an IHA to take
marine mammals incidental to pile
driving associated with construction off
the southeast coast of Grand Isle,
Louisiana. Following NMFS’ review of
the application, NFE submitted a
revised version on February 3, 2023,
which was deemed adequate and
complete. NFE’s request is for take of
bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus)
by Level B harassment only. Neither
NFE nor NMFS expect serious injury or
mortality to result from this activity
and, therefore, an IHA is appropriate.
Description of Proposed Activity
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Overview
NFE proposes to construct the
Louisiana FLNG Project, a deepwater
port export terminal in West Delta Lease
Block 38 approximately 12 nautical
miles (nm; 22 kilometers (km)) off the
southeast coast of Grand Isle, Louisiana,
in approx. 26–28 meters (m; 85–91 feet
(ft)) of water (Figure 1). NFE intends to
use impact pile driving to install 26
steel piles, each 108 inch (in; 2.743 m)
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in diameter, to support three fixedjacket platforms. Impact pile driving
activities would occur for a total of 9
days (three days per platform) anytime
from May through August 2023. NFE
has requested authorization to
incidentally take one species (two
stocks) of marine mammal by Level B
harassment only. Take would
potentially result from exposure to
sounds produced by impact pile driving
and is expected to produce short-term
and localized impacts in the form of
behavioral harassment of marine
mammals located in the project area. No
injury or mortality is expected and none
is proposed to be authorized.
NFE also plans the following: trench
for pipeline laterals; construct and
install two pipeline laterals (24 in, 20 in
diameter) and tie-ins to an existing
offshore natural gas pipeline; setting of
three self-elevating platforms; and
anchoring for a floating liquefied natural
gas storage unit (FSU) and service vessel
buoys. No take of marine mammals is
anticipated to occur incidental to all
other portions of the project (pipelines,
self-elevating platform installation,
anchoring for FSU construction
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17539
activities), and these activities will not
be discussed further.
Dates and Duration
This IHA would be effective from May
1, 2023 until April 30, 2024. Impact pile
driving activities would occur for a total
of 9 days from May–August 2023. NFE
plans to conduct impact pile driving
during daylight hours, with pile
installation beginning no earlier than
one hour after (civil) sunrise and no
later than 90 minutes (min) before (civil)
sunset.
Specific Geographic Region
The project will be located within the
Gulf of Mexico (GOM), approx. 12 nm
(22 km) off the southeast coast of Grand
Isle, Louisiana, at a depth of 26–28 m
(85–91 ft; Figure 1). All project activities
for which take is being requested will be
located in Outer Continental Shelf West
Delta Lease Block 38. For the immediate
project area, the sea floor is expected to
be predominantly clay with sediment
layers as follows: clay (0–19 m), clay-silt
(19–54 m), and sand (54 m).
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BILLING CODE 3510–22–C
Detailed Description of the Specified
Activity
Impact pile driving of 26 steel piles,
each 108 in (2.743 m) in diameter, to
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support three fixed-jacket platforms (P4,
P5, P6) would occur over 9 days (3 days
per platform). Piles would be driven
sequentially and the number of piles
driven per day would vary between the
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three platforms (Tables 1, 2). Hammer
blows per day are based on daylightonly operations with a single hammer,
spread evenly across the construction
window. 9 days of active pile driving
are estimated to drive all 26 piles.
Estimated hammer blows vary from
3,942 to 7,144 per day depending on
platform and pile segment being driven
(piles in P5 and P6 are assembled from
three separate segments).
TABLE 1—PILE DRIVING SPECIFICATIONS FOR THE THREE FIXED-JACKET PLATFORMS
Length
of pile
(feet)
Number
of piles
Platform
P4 .............................................................
P5 .............................................................
P6 .............................................................
12
8
6
Diameter
of pile
(inches)
385
405
345
Depth of
penetration
(feet)
108
108
108
260
280
220
Estimated
hammer
blows
(total)
17,052
19,136
14,352
Estimated
hammer
blows
(per pile)
1,421
2,392
2,392
Note: Hammer blows per pile vary with length of pile and depth of penetration.
TABLE 2—PILE DRIVING PROGRESSION SUMMARY
Platform
P4
P4
P4
P5
P5
P5
P5
P5
P5
P5
P5
P6
P6
P6
P6
P6
P6
P6
P6
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
1 Total
Hammer
energy
(percent)
Pile
segment
P1 ................................
P1 ................................
P1 ................................
Day 1: P1 .....................
Day 1: P1 .....................
Day 2: P1+P2 ..............
Day 2: P1+P2 ..............
Day 2: P1+P2 ..............
Day 3: P1+P2+P3 ........
Day 3: P1+P2+P3 ........
Day 3: P1+P2+P3 ........
Day 1: P1 .....................
Day 1: P1 .....................
Day 2: P1+P2 ..............
Day 2: P1+P2 ..............
Day 2: P1+P2 ..............
Day 3: P1+P2+P3 ........
Day 3: P1+P2+P3 ........
Day 3: P1+P2+P3 ........
Hammer
energy
(kilojoules)
20
40
60
20
40
20
40
60
20
40
60
20
40
20
40
60
20
40
60
Duration
(minutes) 2
460
920
1,380
460
920
460
920
1,380
460
920
1,380
460
920
460
920
1,380
460
920
1,380
Total
number
of blows 1
Blows per
minute
36.53
42.93
110.0
85.6
89.6
17.07
22.67
184.8
52.8
22.4
162.93
64.2
6.2
12.8
17
138.6
39.6
16.8
122.2
30
30
30
30
30
30
30
30
30
30
30
30
30
30
30
30
30
30
30
1,096
1,288
3,300
2,568
2,688
512
680
5,544
1,584
672
4,888
1,926
2,016
384
510
4,158
1,188
504
3,666
Total
number
of blows
per day
5,684
5,684
5,684
5,256
5,256
6,736
6,736
6,736
7,144
7,144
7,144
3,942
3,942
5,052
5,052
5,052
5,358
5,358
5,358
number of blows are based on the total number of piles installed per day.
provided for all piles within a 24-hour period.
2 Duration
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Proposed mitigation, monitoring, and
reporting measures are described in
detail later in this document (please see
Proposed Mitigation and Proposed
Monitoring and Reporting).
Description of Marine Mammals in the
Area of Specified Activities
Sections 3 and 4 of the application
summarize available information
regarding status and trends, distribution
and habitat preferences, and behavior
and life history of the potentially
affected species. NMFS fully considered
all of this information, and we refer the
reader to these descriptions,
incorporated here by reference, instead
of reprinting the information.
Additional information regarding
population trends and threats may be
found in NMFS’ Stock Assessment
Reports (SARs; www.fisheries.noaa.gov/
national/marine-mammal-protection/
marine-mammal-stock-assessments)
and more general information about
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these species (e.g., physical and
behavioral descriptions) may be found
on NMFS’ website (https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/find-species).
Table 3 lists all stocks for which take
is expected and proposed to be
authorized for this activity, and
summarizes information related to the
population or stock, including
regulatory status under the MMPA and
Endangered Species Act (ESA) and
potential biological removal (PBR),
where known. PBR is defined by the
MMPA as the maximum number of
animals, not including natural
mortalities, that may be removed from a
marine mammal stock while allowing
that stock to reach or maintain its
optimum sustainable population (as
described in NMFS’ SARs). While no
serious injury or mortality is anticipated
or proposed to be authorized here, PBR
and annual serious injury and mortality
from anthropogenic sources are
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included here as gross indicators of the
status of the species or stocks and other
threats.
Marine mammal abundance estimates
presented in this document represent
the total number of individuals that
make up a given stock or the total
number estimated within a particular
study or survey area. NMFS’ stock
abundance estimates for most species
represent the total estimate of
individuals within the geographic area,
if known, that comprises that stock. For
some species, this geographic area may
extend beyond U.S. waters. All managed
stocks in this region are assessed in
NMFS’ U.S. Atlantic and GOM SARs.
All values presented in Table 3 are the
most recent available at the time of
publication (including from the draft
2022 SARs) and are available online at:
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/
marine-mammal-protection/marinemammal-stock-assessments.
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TABLE 3—SPECIES AND STOCKS LIKELY IMPACTED BY THE SPECIFIED ACTIVITIES 1
Common name
Scientific name
Odontoceti (toothed whales,
dolphins, and porpoises).
Family Delphinidae.
Bottlenose dolphin .................
Tursiops truncatus ................
Bottlenose dolphin .................
Tursiops truncatus ................
ESA/
MMPA
status;
strategic
(Y/N) 2
Stock
Gulf of Mexico, Continental
Shelf.
Gulf of Mexico, Western
Coastal.
Stock abundance
(CV, Nmin, most recent
abundance survey) 3
Annual
M/SI 4
PBR
-/-; N
0.11; 57,917; 2017–2018 .....
556
65
-/-; N
0.13; 18,585; 2017–2018 .....
167
36
1 Information on the classification of marine mammal species can be found on the web page for The Society for Marine Mammalogy’s Committee on Taxonomy
(https://marinemammalscience.org/science-and-publications/list-marine-mammal-species-subspecies/; Committee on Taxonomy (2022)).
2 Endangered Species Act (ESA) status: Endangered (E), Threatened (T)/MMPA status: Depleted (D). A dash (-) indicates that the species is not listed under the
ESA or designated as depleted under the MMPA. Under the MMPA, a strategic stock is one for which the level of direct human-caused mortality exceeds PBR or
which is determined to be declining and likely to be listed under the ESA within the foreseeable future. Any species or stock listed under the ESA is automatically
designated under the MMPA as depleted and as a strategic stock.
3 NMFS marine mammal stock assessment reports online at: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/marine-mammal-stock-assessments. CV is coefficient of variation; Nmin is the minimum estimate of stock abundance.
4 These values, found in NMFS’s SARs, represent annual levels of human-caused mortality plus serious injury from all sources combined (e.g., commercial fisheries, ship strike). Annual M/SI often cannot be determined precisely and is in some cases presented as a minimum value or range.
As indicated above, one species (two
managed stocks) in Table 3 temporally
and spatially co-occur with the activity
to the degree that take is reasonably
likely to occur. All species that could
potentially occur in the proposed
project area are included in Table 3 of
the IHA application. While Atlantic
spotted dolphin (Stenella frontalis),
bottlenose dolphin (northern GOM
Oceanic Stock), pantropical spotted
dolphin (Stenella attenuata), Rice’s
whale (Balaenoptera ricei), Risso’s
dolphin (Grampus griseus), and sperm
whale (Physeter microcephalus) have
been documented in the region (see
application Section 6—Table 6–8), the
temporal and/or spatial occurrence of
these species is such that take is not
expected to occur, and they are not
discussed further beyond the
explanation provided here.
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Bottlenose Dolphin
Bottlenose dolphins are present yearround in the nearshore waters of the
GOM and are expected to have a
common occurrence within the vicinity
of the project area. There are two
distinct bottlenose dolphin
morphotypes: migratory coastal and
offshore, and the population of
bottlenose dolphins in the GOM
consists of a complex mosaic of 38
stocks of bottlenose dolphin (Waring et
al., 2010). This includes 33 bay, sound,
and estuary stocks in the inshore waters;
three coastal stocks (western, northern,
eastern); the northern GOM Continental
Shelf Stock; and the northern GOM
Oceanic Stock (Waring et al., 2013). Of
those, only two stocks are reasonably
expected near the project area: the GOM
Western Coastal Stock and the northern
GOM Continental Shelf Stock. The
northern GOM Oceanic Stock is not
likely to occur within the project area
because the stock range is defined as
extending from the 200-m isobath of the
GOM south toward the seaward extent
of the Exclusive Economic Zone (Hayes
et al., 2022) and, therefore, is not
discussed further.
Bottlenose dolphins under the GOM
Western Coastal Stock have the
possibility to occur within the vicinity
of the project area as this stock range is
defined as the Mississippi River Delta to
the U.S.-Mexico border, in waters
typically less than 20 m (66 ft) deep
along the inner continental shelf (within
7.5 km (4.6 miles) of shore; Hayes et al.,
2022). Bottlenose dolphins under the
northern GOM Continental Shelf Stock
are likely to occur within the project
area as well, as this stock inhabits
waters from 20–200 m (66–656 ft) deep
throughout the U.S. GOM. There are two
biologically important areas for
bottlenose dolphins north of the project
area in Caminada Bay and Barataria Bay,
Louisiana, but neither project staging
nor implementation are expected to
impact these areas.
Marine Mammal Hearing
Hearing is the most important sensory
modality for marine mammals
underwater, and exposure to
anthropogenic sound can have
deleterious effects. To appropriately
assess the potential effects of exposure
to sound, it is necessary to understand
the frequency ranges marine mammals
are able to hear. Not all marine mammal
species have equal hearing capabilities
(e.g., Richardson et al., 1995; Wartzok
and Ketten, 1999; Au and Hastings,
2008). To reflect this, Southall et al.
(2007, 2019) recommended that marine
mammals be divided into hearing
groups based on directly measured
(behavioral or auditory evoked potential
techniques) or estimated hearing ranges
(behavioral response data, anatomical
modeling, etc.). Note that no direct
measurements of hearing ability have
been successfully completed for
mysticetes (i.e., low-frequency
cetaceans). Subsequently, NMFS (2018)
described generalized hearing ranges for
these marine mammal hearing groups.
Generalized hearing ranges were chosen
based on the approx. 65 dB threshold
from the normalized composite
audiograms, with the exception for
lower limits for low-frequency cetaceans
where the lower bound was deemed to
be biologically implausible and the
lower bound from Southall et al. (2007)
retained. Marine mammal hearing
groups and their associated hearing
ranges are provided in Table 4.
TABLE 4—MARINE MAMMAL HEARING GROUPS
[NMFS, 2018]
Hearing group
Generalized hearing range *
Low-frequency (LF) cetaceans (baleen whales) ...................................................................................................
Mid-frequency (MF) cetaceans (dolphins, toothed whales, beaked whales, bottlenose whales) .........................
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7 Hz to 35 kHz.
150 Hz to 160 kHz.
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TABLE 4—MARINE MAMMAL HEARING GROUPS—Continued
[NMFS, 2018]
Hearing group
Generalized hearing range *
High-frequency (HF) cetaceans (true porpoises, Kogia, river dolphins, Cephalorhynchid, Lagenorhynchus
cruciger & L. australis).
Phocid pinnipeds (PW) (underwater) (true seals) .................................................................................................
Otariid pinnipeds (OW) (underwater) (sea lions and fur seals) ............................................................................
275 Hz to 160 kHz.
50 Hz to 86 kHz.
60 Hz to 39 kHz.
* Represents the generalized hearing range for the entire group as a composite (i.e., all species within the group), where individual species’
hearing ranges are typically not as broad. Generalized hearing range chosen based on ∼65 dB threshold from normalized composite audiogram,
with the exception for lower limits for LF cetaceans (Southall et al. 2007) and PW pinniped (approximation).
The pinniped functional hearing
group was modified from Southall et al.
(2007) on the basis of data indicating
that phocid species have consistently
demonstrated an extended frequency
range of hearing compared to otariids,
especially in the higher frequency range
(Hemila¨ et al., 2006; Kastelein et al.,
2009; Reichmuth and Holt, 2013).
For more detail concerning these
groups and associated frequency ranges,
please see NMFS (2018) for a review of
available information.
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Potential Effects of Specified Activities
on Marine Mammals and Their Habitat
This section provides a discussion of
the ways in which components of the
specified activity may impact marine
mammals and their habitat. The
Estimated Take section later in this
document includes a quantitative
analysis of the number of individuals
that are expected to be taken by this
activity. The Negligible Impact Analysis
and Determination section considers the
content of this section, the Estimated
Take section, and the Proposed
Mitigation section, to draw conclusions
regarding the likely impacts of these
activities on the reproductive success or
survivorship of individuals and whether
those impacts are reasonably expected
to, or reasonably likely to, adversely
affect the species or stock through
effects on annual rates of recruitment or
survival.
Acoustic effects on marine mammals
during the specified activities can occur
from impact pile driving. The effects of
underwater noise from the NFE’s
proposed activities have the potential to
result in Level A or Level B harassment
of marine mammals in the action area.
For general information on sound, its
interaction with the marine
environment, and a description of
acoustic terminology, please see, e.g.,
ANSI (1986, 1995), Au and Hastings
(2008), Hastings and Popper (2005),
Mitson (1995), NIOSH (1998),
Richardson et al. (1995), Southall et al.
(2007), and Urick (1983). Underwater
sound from active acoustic sources can
cause one or more of the following:
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temporary or permanent hearing
impairment, behavioral disturbance,
masking, stress, and non-auditory
physical effects. The degree of effect is
intrinsically related to the signal
characteristics, received level, distance
from the source, and duration of the
sound exposure.
Threshold Shifts
Marine mammals exposed to highintensity sound, or to lower-intensity
sound for prolonged periods, can
experience hearing threshold shift (TS),
which is the loss of hearing sensitivity
at certain frequency ranges (Finneran,
2015). TS can be permanent (PTS;
permanent threshold shift), in which
case the loss of hearing sensitivity is not
fully recoverable, or temporary (TTS;
temporary threshold shift), in which
case the animal’s hearing threshold
would recover over time (Southall et al.,
2007).
When PTS occurs, there is physical
damage to the sound receptors in the ear
(i.e., tissue damage), whereas TTS
represents primarily tissue fatigue and
is reversible (Southall et al., 2007). In
addition, other investigators have
suggested that TTS is within the normal
bounds of physiological variability and
tolerance and does not represent
physical injury (e.g., Ward, 1997).
Therefore, NMFS does not consider TTS
to constitute auditory injury. Behavioral
disturbance to marine mammals from
sound may include a variety of effects,
including subtle changes in behavior
(e.g., minor or brief avoidance of an area
or changes in vocalizations), more
conspicuous changes in similar
behavioral activities, and more
sustained and/or potentially severe
reactions, such as displacement from or
abandonment of high-quality habitat.
Behavioral responses to sound are
highly variable and context-specific and
any reactions depend on numerous
intrinsic and extrinsic factors (e.g.,
species, state of maturity, experience,
current activity, reproductive state,
auditory sensitivity, time of day), as
well as the interplay between factors.
Available studies show wide variation
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in response to underwater sound;
therefore, it is difficult to predict
specifically how any given sound in a
particular instance might affect marine
mammals perceiving the signal.
Currently, TTS data only exist for four
species of cetaceans (bottlenose
dolphin, beluga whale (Delphinapterus
leucas), harbor porpoise (Phocoena
phocena), and Yangtze finless porpoise
(Neophocoena asiaeorientalis)), and five
species of pinnipeds exposed to a
limited number of sound sources (i.e.,
mostly tones and octave-band noise) in
laboratory settings (Finneran, 2015). At
low frequencies, onset-TTS exposure
levels are higher compared to those in
the region of best sensitivity (i.e., a low
frequency noise would need to be
louder to cause TTS onset when TTS
exposure level is higher), as shown for
harbor porpoises and harbor seals
(Phoca vitulina; Kastelein et al., 2019a,
2019b, 2020a, 2020b). In addition, TTS
can accumulate across multiple
exposures, but the resulting TTS would
be less than the TTS from a single,
continuous exposure with the same SEL
(Finneran et al., 2010; Kastelein et al.,
2014; Kastelein et al., 2015; Mooney et
al., 2009). This means that TTS
predictions based on the total,
cumulative SEL would overestimate the
amount of TTS from intermittent
exposures such as sonars and impulsive
sources.
The potential for TTS from impact
pile driving exists. After exposure to
playbacks of impact pile driving sounds
(rate 2,760 strikes/hr) in captivity, mean
TTS increased from 0 dB after 15 min
exposure to 5 dB after 360 min
exposure; recovery occurred within 60
min (Kastelein et al., 2016).
Additionally, the existing marine
mammal TTS data come from a limited
number of individuals within these
species. No data are available on noiseinduced hearing loss for mysticetes.
Nonetheless, what we considered herein
is the best available science. For
summaries of data on TTS in marine
mammals or for further discussion of
TTS onset thresholds, please see
Southall et al. (2007, 2019) and
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Finneran (2015), and Table 5 in NMFS
(2018).
In-water construction activities
associated with this project would
include impact pile driving to install 26
steel piles over 9 days. The sounds
produced by this activity are considered
impulsive and intermittent. Impulsive
sounds are typically transient, brief (less
than 1 second), broadband, and consist
of high peak sound pressure with rapid
rise time and rapid decay (ANSI, 1986;
NIOSH, 1998; NMFS, 2018). There
would likely be pauses in activities
producing the sound during each day.
Given these pauses and the fact that
many marine mammals are likely
moving through the project area and not
remaining for extended periods of time,
the potential for TS declines.
Behavioral Harassment
Exposure to noise from pile driving
also has the potential to behaviorally
disturb marine mammals. Available
studies show wide variation in response
to underwater sound; therefore, it is
difficult to predict specifically how any
given sound in a particular instance
might affect marine mammals
perceiving the signal. If a marine
mammal does react briefly to an
underwater sound by changing its
behavior or moving a small distance, the
impacts of the change are unlikely to be
significant to the individual, let alone
the stock or population. However, if a
sound source displaces marine
mammals from an important feeding or
breeding area for a prolonged period,
impacts on individuals and populations
could be significant (e.g., Lusseau and
Bejder, 2007; Weilgart, 2007; NRC,
2005).
Disturbance may result in changing
durations of surfacing and dives,
number of blows per surfacing, or
moving direction and/or speed;
reduced/increased vocal activities;
changing/cessation of certain behavioral
activities (such as socializing or
feeding); visible startle response or
aggressive behavior (such as tail/fluke
slapping or jaw clapping); or avoidance
of areas where sound sources are
located. Behavioral responses to sound
are highly variable and context-specific
and any reactions depend on numerous
intrinsic and extrinsic factors (e.g.,
species, state of maturity, experience,
current activity, reproductive state,
auditory sensitivity, time of day), as
well as the interplay between factors
(e.g., Richardson et al., 1995; Wartzok et
al., 2004; Southall et al., 2007; Weilgart,
2007; Archer et al., 2010; Southall et al.,
2021). Behavioral reactions can vary not
only among individuals but also within
an individual, depending on previous
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experience with a sound source,
context, and numerous other factors
(Ellison et al., 2012), and can vary
depending on characteristics associated
with the sound source (e.g., whether it
is moving or stationary, number of
sources, distance from the source).
Please see Appendices B and C of
Southall et al. (2007) as well as
Nowacek et al. (2007); Ellison et al.
(2012), and Gomez et al. (2016) for a
review of studies involving marine
mammal behavioral responses to sound.
Disruption of feeding behavior can be
difficult to correlate with anthropogenic
sound exposure, so it is usually inferred
by observed displacement from known
foraging areas, the appearance of
secondary indicators (e.g., bubble nets,
sediment plumes), or changes in dive
behavior. As for other types of
behavioral response, the frequency,
duration, and temporal pattern of signal
presentation, as well as differences in
species sensitivity, are likely
contributing factors to differences in
response in any given circumstance
(e.g., Croll et al., 2001; Nowacek et al.,
2004; Madsen et al., 2006; Yazvenko et
al., 2007; Melco´n et al., 2012). In
addition, behavioral state of the animal
plays a role in the type and severity of
a behavioral response, such as
disruption to foraging (e.g., Sivle et al.,
2016; Wensveen et al., 2017). A
determination of whether foraging
disruptions incur fitness consequences
would require information on or
estimates of the energetic requirements
of the affected individuals and the
relationship between prey availability,
foraging effort and success, and the life
history stage of the animal (Goldbogen
et al., 2013).
The likely or possible impacts of
NFE’s proposed activities on marine
mammals could be generated from both
non-acoustic and acoustic stressors.
Potential non-acoustic stressors include
the physical presence of the equipment
and vessels; however, we expect that
any animals that approach the project
site close enough to be harassed due to
the presence of equipment would be
within the Level B harassment zones for
pile driving and would already be
subject to harassment from the in-water
activities. Therefore, any impacts to
marine mammals are expected to be
primarily acoustic and generated by
heavy equipment operation during pile
installation (i.e., impact driving). Impact
hammers would be used to complete inwater construction and may act as an
acoustic stressor. Impact hammers
operate by repeatedly dropping and/or
pushing a heavy piston onto a pile to
drive the pile into the substrate. Sound
emitted by impact pile driving would be
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temporary and localized. Due to the
relatively limited area of impact
compared to the extensive available
surrounding habitat, potential impacts
from sound are anticipated to be
negligible on marine mammal habitat.
Marine Mammal Habitat Effects
NFE’s proposed construction
activities could have localized,
temporary impacts on marine mammal
habitat, including prey, by increasing
in-water sound pressure levels and
slightly decreasing water quality.
Increased noise levels may affect
acoustic habitat and adversely affect
marine mammal prey in the vicinity of
the project area (see discussion below).
During impact pile driving, elevated
levels of underwater noise would
ensonify the project area where both
fishes and mammals occur, and could
affect foraging success. Additionally,
marine mammals may avoid the area
during construction, however,
displacement due to noise is expected to
be temporary and is not expected to
result in long-term effects to the
individuals or populations.
Construction activities are expected to
be of short duration (9 days total) and
would likely have temporary impacts on
marine mammal habitat through
increases in underwater sound.
In-Water Construction Effects on
Potential Foraging Habitat
A temporary and localized increase in
turbidity near the seafloor would occur
in the immediate area surrounding the
location where piles are installed. In
general, turbidity associated with pile
installation is localized to an approx.
25-ft (7.6-m) radius around the pile
(Everitt et al., 1980). Cetaceans are not
expected to be close enough to the pile
driving areas to experience effects of
turbidity. Such impact-producing
factors may provoke mobile prey species
to leave the area of activity and/or cause
injury or mortality in less mobile
species. This may indirectly inhibit
marine mammal foraging activities
within the project area. Project impacts
to marine mammal prey species are
expected to be minor and limited to
short-term changes that may result in
potential prey avoidance of the project
area during construction. Marine
mammals and prey species impacted by
impact pile driving activities are
expected to return to normal behavior
shortly after the conclusion of pile
driving operations, and return to areas
of available habitat immediate
proximity to the area around the impact
pile driving activities; therefore, impacts
to habitat are considered negligible and
not discussed further.
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The area likely impacted by impact
pile driving (0.2 acres) for this project
(441.5 acres) is relatively small
compared to the total available habitat
in the waters off Louisiana in the
northern GOM. The proposed project
area is highly influenced by
anthropogenic activities, and provides
limited foraging habitat for marine
mammals. Furthermore, pile driving at
the proposed project site would not
obstruct long-term movements or
migration of marine mammals.
Avoidance by potential prey (i.e., fish)
of the immediate area due to the
temporary loss of this foraging habitat is
also possible. The duration of fish and
marine mammal avoidance of this area
after pile driving stops is unknown, but
a return to normal recruitment,
distribution, and behavior is
anticipated. Any behavioral avoidance
by prey of the disturbed area would still
leave significantly large areas of
potential foraging habitat in the nearby
vicinity.
In-Water Construction Effects on
Potential Prey
Sound may affect marine mammals
through impacts on the abundance,
behavior, or distribution of prey species
(e.g., crustaceans, cephalopods, fish,
zooplankton, other marine mammals).
Marine mammal prey varies by species,
season, and location. Here, we describe
studies regarding the effects of noise on
known marine mammal prey.
Fish utilize the soundscape and
components of sound in their
environment to perform important
functions such as foraging, predator
avoidance, mating, and spawning (e.g.,
Zelick and Mann, 1999; Fay, 2009).
Depending on their hearing anatomy
and peripheral sensory structures,
which vary among species, fishes hear
sounds using pressure and particle
motion sensitivity capabilities and
detect the motion of surrounding water
(Fay et al., 2008). The potential effects
of noise on fishes depends on the
overlapping frequency range, distance
from the sound source, water depth of
exposure, and species-specific hearing
sensitivity, anatomy, and physiology.
Key impacts to fishes may include
behavioral responses, hearing damage,
barotrauma (pressure-related injuries),
and mortality.
Fish react to sounds which are
especially strong and/or intermittent
low-frequency sounds, and behavioral
responses such as flight or avoidance
are the most likely effects. Short
duration, sharp sounds (e.g., impulsive)
can cause overt or subtle changes in fish
behavior and local distribution. The
reaction of fish to noise depends on the
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physiological state of the fish, past
exposures, motivation (e.g., feeding,
spawning, migration), and other
environmental factors. Hastings and
Popper (2005) identified several studies
that suggest fish may relocate to avoid
certain areas of sound energy.
Additional studies have documented
effects of pile driving on fish; several are
based on studies in support of large,
multiyear bridge construction projects
(e.g., Scholik and Yan, 2001, 2002;
Popper and Hastings, 2009). Many
studies have demonstrated that
impulsive sounds might affect the
distribution and behavior of some
fishes, potentially impacting foraging
opportunities or increasing energetic
costs (e.g., Fewtrell and McCauley,
2012; Pearson et al., 1992; Skalski et al.,
1992; Santulli et al., 1999; Paxton et al.,
2017). However, some studies have
shown no or slight reaction to impulse
sounds (e.g., Pena et al., 2013; Wardle
et al., 2001; Jorgenson and Gyselman,
2009; Popper et al., 2005).
Sound pressure levels (SPLs) of
sufficient strength have been known to
cause injury to fish and fish mortality.
However, in most fish species, hair cells
in the ear continuously regenerate and
loss of auditory function likely is
restored when damaged cells are
replaced with new cells. Halvorsen et al.
(2012a) showed that a TTS of 4–6 dB
was recoverable within 24 hr for one
species. Impacts would be most severe
when the individual fish is close to the
source and when the duration of
exposure is long. Injury caused by
barotrauma can range from slight to
severe and can cause death, and is most
likely for fish with swim bladders.
Barotrauma injuries have been
documented during controlled exposure
to impact pile driving (Halvorsen et al.,
2012b; Casper et al., 2013).
The most likely impact to fishes from
pile driving activities at the project area
would be temporary behavioral
avoidance of the area. In general,
impacts to marine mammal prey species
are expected to be minor and temporary.
Further, it is anticipated that
preparation activities for pile driving
and upon initial startup of equipment
would cause fish to move away from the
affected area where injuries may occur.
Therefore, relatively small portions of
the proposed project area would be
affected for short periods of time and
the potential for effects on fish to occur
would be temporary and limited to the
duration of sound-generating activities
(i.e., impact pile driving).
In summary, given the short daily
duration of sound associated with
individual pile driving events and the
relatively small areas being affected,
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17545
pile driving activities associated with
the proposed actions are not likely to
have a permanent, adverse effect on any
fish habitat or populations of fish
species. Any behavioral avoidance by
fish of the disturbed area would still
leave significantly large areas for fish
and marine mammal foraging in the
nearby vicinity. Thus, we conclude that
impacts of the specified activities are
not likely to have more than short-term
adverse effects on any prey habitat or
populations of prey species. Further,
any impacts to marine mammal habitat
are not expected to result in significant
or long-term consequences for
individual marine mammals, or to
contribute to adverse impacts on their
populations.
Estimated Take of Marine Mammals
This section provides an estimate of
the number of incidental takes proposed
for authorization through this IHA,
which will inform both NMFS’
consideration of ‘‘small numbers,’’ and
the negligible impact determinations.
Harassment is the only type of take
expected to result from these activities.
Authorized takes would be by Level B
harassment only, in the form of
disruption of behavioral patterns for
individual marine mammals resulting
from exposure to the acoustic source
(i.e., impact pile driving). Based on the
nature of the activity and the
anticipated effectiveness of the
mitigation measures (i.e., single big
bubble curtain, visual monitoring, rampup, power down, shutdown) discussed
in detail below in the Proposed
Mitigation section, Level A harassment
is neither anticipated nor proposed to be
authorized.
As described previously, no serious
injury or mortality is anticipated or
proposed to be authorized for this
activity. Below we describe how the
proposed take numbers are estimated.
For acoustic impacts, generally
speaking, we estimate take by
considering: (1) acoustic thresholds
above which NMFS believes the best
available science indicates marine
mammals will be behaviorally harassed
or incur some degree of permanent
hearing impairment; (2) the area or
volume of water that will be ensonified
above these levels in a day; (3) the
density or occurrence of marine
mammals within these ensonified areas;
and, (4) the number of days of activities.
We note that while these factors can
contribute to a basic calculation to
provide an initial prediction of potential
takes, additional information that can
qualitatively inform take estimates is
also sometimes available (e.g., previous
monitoring results or average group
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size). Below, we describe the factors
considered here in more detail and
present the proposed take estimates.
Acoustic Thresholds
NMFS recommends the use of
acoustic thresholds that identify the
received level of underwater sound
above which exposed marine mammals
would be reasonably expected to be
behaviorally harassed (equated to Level
B harassment) or to incur PTS of some
degree (equated to Level A harassment).
Level B Harassment—Though
significantly driven by received level,
the onset of behavioral disturbance from
anthropogenic noise exposure is also
informed to varying degrees by other
factors related to the source or exposure
context (e.g., frequency, predictability,
duty cycle, duration of the exposure,
signal-to-noise ratio, distance to the
source), the environment (e.g.,
bathymetry, other noises in the area,
predators in the area), and the receiving
animals (hearing, motivation,
experience, demography, life stage,
depth) and can be difficult to predict
(e.g., Southall et al., 2007, 2021, Ellison
et al., 2012). Based on what the
available science indicates and the
practical need to use a threshold based
on a metric that is both predictable and
measurable for most activities, NMFS
typically uses a generalized acoustic
threshold based on received level to
estimate the onset of behavioral
harassment. NMFS generally predicts
that marine mammals are likely to be
behaviorally harassed in a manner
considered to be Level B harassment
when exposed to underwater
anthropogenic noise above root-meansquared pressure received levels (RMS
SPL) of 120 dB (referenced to 1
microPascal (re 1 mPa)) for continuous
(e.g., vibratory pile driving, drilling) and
above RMS SPL 160 dB re 1 mPa for nonexplosive impulsive (e.g., seismic
airguns) or intermittent (e.g., scientific
sonar) sources. Generally speaking,
Level B harassment take estimates based
on these behavioral harassment
thresholds are expected to include any
likely takes by TTS as, in most cases,
the likelihood of TTS occurs at
distances from the source less than
those at which behavioral harassment is
likely. TTS of a sufficient degree can
manifest as behavioral harassment, as
reduced hearing sensitivity and the
potential reduced opportunities to
detect important signals (conspecific
communication, predators, prey) may
result in changes in behavior patterns
that would not otherwise occur.
NFE’s proposed activity includes the
use of an impulsive (i.e., impact pile
driving) source and, therefore, the RMS
SPL thresholds of 160 dB re 1 mPa is
applicable.
Level A Harassment—NMFS’
Technical Guidance for Assessing the
Effects of Anthropogenic Sound on
Marine Mammal Hearing (NMFS, 2018)
identifies dual criteria to assess auditory
injury (Level A harassment) to five
different marine mammal groups (based
on hearing sensitivity) as a result of
exposure to noise from two different
types of sources (impulsive or nonimpulsive). NFE’s proposed activity
includes the use of an impulsive (i.e.,
impact pile driving) source.
These thresholds are provided in
Table 5. The references, analysis, and
methodology used in the development
of the thresholds are described in
NMFS’ 2018 Technical Guidance, which
may be accessed at:
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/
marine-mammal-protection/marinemammal-acoustic-technical-guidance.
TABLE 5—THRESHOLDS IDENTIFYING THE ONSET OF PERMANENT THRESHOLD SHIFT
PTS onset acoustic thresholds *
(received level)
Hearing group
Impulsive
Low-Frequency (LF) Cetaceans ......................................
Mid-Frequency (MF) Cetaceans ......................................
High-Frequency (HF) Cetaceans .....................................
Phocid Pinnipeds (PW) (Underwater) .............................
Otariid Pinnipeds (OW) (Underwater) .............................
Cell
Cell
Cell
Cell
Cell
1:
3:
5:
7:
9:
Lpk,flat;
Lpk,flat:
Lpk,flat:
Lpk,flat:
Lpk,flat:
219
230
202
218
232
dB;
dB;
dB;
dB;
dB;
Non-impulsive
LE,LF,24h: 183 dB .........................
LE,MF,24h: 185 dB ........................
LE,HF,24h: 155 dB ........................
LE,PW,24h: 185 dB .......................
LE,OW,24h: 203 dB .......................
Cell
Cell
Cell
Cell
Cell
2: LE,LF,24h: 199 dB.
4: LE,MF,24h: 198 dB.
6: LE,HF,24h: 173 dB.
8: LE,PW,24h: 201 dB.
10: LE,OW,24h: 219 dB.
* Dual metric acoustic thresholds for impulsive sounds: Use whichever results in the largest isopleth for calculating PTS onset. If a non-impulsive sound has the potential of exceeding the peak sound pressure level thresholds associated with impulsive sounds, these thresholds should
also be considered.
Note: Peak sound pressure (Lpk) has a reference value of 1 μPa, and cumulative sound exposure level (LE) has a reference value of 1μPa2s.
In this Table, thresholds are abbreviated to reflect American National Standards Institute standards (ANSI 2013). However, peak sound pressure
is defined by ANSI as incorporating frequency weighting, which is not the intent for this Technical Guidance. Hence, the subscript ‘‘flat’’ is being
included to indicate peak sound pressure should be flat weighted or unweighted within the generalized hearing range. The subscript associated
with cumulative sound exposure level thresholds indicates the designated marine mammal auditory weighting function (LF, MF, and HF
cetaceans, and PW and OW pinnipeds) and that the recommended accumulation period is 24 hours. The cumulative sound exposure level
thresholds could be exceeded in a multitude of ways (i.e., varying exposure levels and durations, duty cycle). When possible, it is valuable for
action proponents to indicate the conditions under which these acoustic thresholds will be exceeded.
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Ensonified Area
Here, we describe operational and
environmental parameters of the activity
that are used in estimating the area
ensonified above the acoustic
thresholds, including empirical sound
source levels, and underwater sound
propagation modeling.
The sound field in the project area is
the existing background noise plus
additional construction noise from the
proposed project. Marine mammals are
expected to be affected by sound
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generated by the primary component of
the project (i.e., impact pile driving).
Empirical sound source modeling was
developed by Tetra Tech, Inc., based on
literature, engineering guidelines, and
underwater source measurements and
acoustic modeling assessments of
similar equipment and activities. These
data were then used in propagation
modeling completed by NFE. The
empirical model calculation
methodology is described in detail (see
Appendix C in the Underwater Acoustic
Assessment of the application) for
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impact piling, and that methodology
was used to determine the Lpk and SEL
sound source levels for the impact
piling activities. A summary of
construction scenarios included in the
acoustic modeling analysis is provided
in Table 5–1 of the Underwater Acoustic
Assessment of the application.
Underwater sound propagation
modeling was completed by NFE using
dBSea (Marshall Day Acoustics) for the
prediction of underwater noise using
bathymetry data and ‘‘placing’’ noise
sources (i.e., platform pile driving
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location) in the modeled environment
(see the Underwater Acoustic
Assessment in the application). The
scenarios modeled were ones where
potential underwater noise impacts of
impact pile driving on marine species
were assessed, and noise mitigation
methods were also included. To
examine results in more detail, levels
may be plotted in cross sections, or a
detailed spectrum may be extracted at
any point in the calculation area. Levels
were calculated in third octave bands
from 12.5 hertz (Hz) to 20 kilohertz
(kHz). The accuracy of underwater
sound propagation modeling results is
largely dependent on the sound source
characteristics and the accuracy of data
inputs and assumptions used to
describe the medium between the path
and receiver. The representative
acoustic modeling scenarios were
derived from descriptions of the
expected construction activities and
operational conditions through
consultations between the project
design and engineering teams from NFE.
The impact pile driving scenarios
were modeled using a vertical array of
point sources spaced at 1 m intervals,
distributing the sound emissions from
pile driving throughout the water
column. The vertical array was assigned
third-octave band sound characteristics
adjusted for site-specific parameters,
including expected hammer energy and
number of blows. Third octave band
center frequencies from 12.5 Hz up to 20
kHz were used in the modeling. The
scenarios modeled were impact pile
driving for a fixed-jacket design
associated with the three fixed-jacket
platforms (P4, P5, P6; Table 6). To be
conservative, it was assumed the
maximum rated hammer energy of 1,380
kJ would be employed for all of the
impact piling scenarios.
The underwater acoustic modeling
analysis used a split solver, with
dBSeaPE (Parabolic Equation Method)
evaluating the low frequency (12.5–800
Hz) range and dBSeaRay (Ray Tracing
Method) addressing the high frequency
(1–20 kHz) range. The dBSeaPE solver
uses the range-dependent acoustic
model parabolic equation method, a
versatile and robust method of marching
the sound field out in range from the
sound source. This method is widely
used in the underwater acoustics
community. The dBSeaRay solver forms
a solution by tracing rays from the
source to the receiver. Many rays leave
the source covering a range of angles,
and the sound level at each point in the
receiving field is calculated by
coherently summing the components
from each ray. This is currently the only
computationally efficient method at
high frequencies.
TABLE 6—UNDERWATER ACOUSTIC MODELING SCENARIOS—PILE INSTALLATION
Platform
P4 ...........
P5 ...........
P6 ...........
Activity description
Duration of
pile installation
(minutes)
Total hammer
blows
(based on total
piles per day)
190
5,684
238
7,144
122
5,358
4 piles per day (12
piles total).
8 pile segments per
day (8 piles total).
6 pile segments per
day (6 piles total).
Location (UTM coordinates) for modeling locations
Sound source
level
(peak sound
pressure)
Sound source
level
(cumulative
sound exposure over 24hour period)
Sound source
level
(root mean
square sound
pressure)
236
210
220
236
210
220
236
210
220
223,049 m,
3,219,466 m.
222,890 m,
3,219,450 m.
223,176 m,
3,219,585 m.
Note: All piles are 108 in (2.743 m) diameter piles. Maximum hammer energy is 1,380 kJ.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
To calculate distances to the Level A
harassment and Level B harassment
thresholds for the methods and piles
being used in this project, a maximum
received level-over-depth approach was
used by NFE. This approach uses the
maximum received level that occurs
within the water column at each
sampling point. Both the maximum
range at which the sound level was
calculated in the model (Rmax) and the
maximum range at which a sound level
was calculated excluding five percent of
the Rmax (R95%) were calculated for each
of the regulatory thresholds. The R95%
excludes major outliers or protruding
areas associated with the underwater
acoustic modeling environment.
Regardless of shape of the calculated
isopleths, the predicted range
encompasses at least 95 percent of the
area that would be exposed to sound at
or above the specified level. All
distances to injury thresholds are
presented in terms of the R95% range.
The calculated values for all three
platforms were comparable (Tables 7, 8,
9), which is expected given the similar
water depths, benthic conditions,
bathymetry, and sound speed profile
influences resulting from the sites’ close
proximity to one another.
For purposes of calculating and
requesting take, NFE used the 6 dB
attenuated isopleths associated with the
use of a single big bubble curtain with
a minimum airflow rate of 0.3 m3/
min*m (see Proposed Mitigation). A
single bubble curtain with an airflow
rate of 0.3 m3/min*m can achieve 8–14
dB reduction when deployed on the
seafloor at a depth of 30 m (98 ft;
Koschinski and Ludemann, 2020).
Available single big bubble curtains,
operating with an airflow rate of 0.5 m3/
min*m, are documented to achieve a
minimum of 10 dB reduction in sound
propagation (Bellmann et al., 2020). To
be conservative in determination of take
estimations, a 6 dB mitigation level was
chosen.
TABLE 7—MARINE MAMMAL INJURY AND BEHAVIORAL ONSET CRITERIA THRESHOLD DISTANCES (METERS) FOR PILE
DRIVING AT P4 LOCATION
Hearing group
Metric
LF cetaceans ..........................
LF cetaceans ..........................
MF cetaceans .........................
Cumulative sound exposure over 24-hour period LE,24hr .......
Peak sound pressure Lp,pk .....................................................
Cumulative sound exposure over 24-hour period LE,24hr .......
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183
219
185
23MRN1
Distance (m)
without
attenuation
3,929
39
116
Distance (m)
with 6 dB
attenuation
2,010
23
46
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TABLE 7—MARINE MAMMAL INJURY AND BEHAVIORAL ONSET CRITERIA THRESHOLD DISTANCES (METERS) FOR PILE
DRIVING AT P4 LOCATION—Continued
Hearing group
Metric
MF cetaceans .........................
Marine mammal behavior .......
Peak sound pressure Lp,pk .....................................................
Root mean square sound pressure Lp ...................................
Distance (m)
without
attenuation
Threshold (dB)
230
160
Distance (m)
with 6 dB
attenuation
11
3,208
NA *
1,560
* The threshold level is greater than the source level, therefore, distances are not generated.
TABLE 8—MARINE MAMMAL INJURY AND BEHAVIORAL ONSET CRITERIA THRESHOLD DISTANCES (METERS) FOR PILE
DRIVING AT P5 LOCATION
Distance (m)
without
attenuation
Threshold
(dB)
Hearing group
Metric
LF cetaceans ..........................
LF cetaceans ..........................
MF cetaceans .........................
MF cetaceans .........................
Marine mammal behavior .......
Cumulative sound exposure over 24-hour period LE,24hr .......
Peak sound pressure Lp,pk .....................................................
Cumulative sound exposure over 24-hour period LE,24hr .......
Peak sound pressure Lp,pk .....................................................
Root mean square sound pressure Lp ...................................
183
219
185
230
160
Distance (m)
with 6 dB
attenuation
4,558
39
132
12
3,037
2,249
24
70
NA *
1,582
* The threshold level is greater than the source level, therefore, distances are not generated.
TABLE 9—MARINE MAMMAL INJURY AND BEHAVIORAL ONSET CRITERIA THRESHOLD DISTANCES (METERS) FOR PILE
DRIVING AT P6 LOCATION
Hearing group
Metric
LF cetaceans ..........................
LF cetaceans ..........................
MF cetaceans .........................
MF cetaceans .........................
Marine mammal behavior .......
Cumulative sound exposure over 24-hour period LE,24hr .......
Peak sound pressure Lp,pk .....................................................
Cumulative sound exposure over 24-hour period LE,24hr .......
Peak sound pressure Lp,pk .....................................................
Root mean square sound pressure Lp ...................................
Distance (m)
without
attenuation
Threshold (dB)
183
219
185
230
160
Distance (m)
with 6 dB
attenuation
3,908
39
111
11
3,141
1,887
24
45
NA *
1,603
* The threshold level is greater than the source level, therefore, distances are not generated.
Marine Mammal Occurrence
In this section we provide information
about the occurrence of marine
mammals, including density or other
relevant information that will inform
the take calculations.
As discussed previously, given the
project location in relatively shallow
shelf waters in the western GOM and
brief project duration, take is expected
for only the bottlenose dolphin.
However, NFE provided quantitative
analysis for additional species that
rarely occur in shelf waters and/or ESAlisted species (Rice’s whales and sperm
whales). These analyses, shown in Table
10, confirmed that no take is reasonably
expected to occur for species other than
bottlenose dolphin.
Marine mammal density estimates are
based on the most recent marine
mammal species distribution data for
the GOM (Litz et al., 2022). While there
are multiple sources of information in
this region (e.g., Roberts et al., 2016;
Hayes et al., 2022; Maze-Foley and
Mullin, 2006)), the most recent
information (Litz et al., 2022) was used
in take estimation calculations.
Take Estimation
Here we describe how the information
provided above is synthesized to
produce a quantitative estimate of the
take that is reasonably likely to occur
and proposed for authorization.
Potential take calculations were based
on annual species density within the
project area, given the dates during
which impact pile driving would occur
(May–August). Bottlenose dolphins are
the only marine mammal species with
calculated take, and is the only marine
mammal species for which
authorization of take is proposed. No
take by Level A harassment is
anticipated during impact pile driving.
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TABLE 10—AVERAGE MARINE MAMMAL DENSITIES USED IN EXPOSURE ESTIMATES AND ESTIMATES OF CALCULATED
TAKES BY LEVEL A AND LEVEL B HARASSMENT DUE TO IMPACT PILE DRIVING
Species
Atlantic spotted dolphin .............
Bottlenose dolphin .....................
Pantropical spotted dolphin .......
Rice’s whale ...............................
Risso’s dolphin ...........................
Sperm whale ..............................
Stock
GOM
GOM
GOM
GOM
GOM
GOM
Average seasonal density
(per 100 km 2)
Take by Level
A harassment
at P4
Take by Level
B harassment
at P4
Take by Level
A harassment
at P5
Take by Level
B harassment
at P5
Take by Level
A harassment
at P6
Take by Level
B harassment
at P6
0.247
149.159
0.000
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
15
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
15
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
16
0
0
0
0
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
Note: Cetacean density values from the NOAA Southeast Fisheries Science Center (Litz et al., 2022). Bottlenose dolphin density values not identified to stock.
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Bottlenose dolphin density
information is not differentiated by
individual stock (Litz et al., 2022).
Given the difficulty of bottlenose
dolphin identification in the field, it has
been assumed that the total calculated
take of bottlenose dolphins could accrue
to either the western coastal stock or the
continental shelf stock. Take
calculations presented in Table 10
indicate that bottlenose dolphins may
be present during construction
activities, but do not account for average
group sizes. Average pod size is
assumed to be 20 individuals (MazeFoley and Mullin, 2006). Due to the
likelihood that bottlenose dolphins may
be present during construction
activities, one pod of bottlenose
dolphins was assumed to potentially be
present per each day of impact pile
driving; therefore, the total number of
days (9) was multiplied by the average
group size (20) to produce the proposed
take number for authorization (Table
11).
TABLE 11—AVERAGE MARINE MAMMAL DENSITIES USED IN EXPOSURE ESTIMATES AND ESTIMATES OF REQUESTED TAKES
BY LEVEL B HARASSMENT DUE TO IMPACT PILE DRIVING
Take by
Level B
harassment
at P4
Species
Stock
Bottlenose dolphin 2 3 ..........
Bottlenose dolphin2 3 ..........
Western Coastal .................
Continental Shelf.
Take by
Level B
harassment
at P5
60
Take by
Level B
harassment
at P6
60
Total Level B
take 3
60
Percent
population
180
0.3
Note: Given the difficulty of visual identification in the field for bottlenose dolphins, it has been assumed the calculated take could be accrued
to either the GOM Western Coastal stock or the northern GOM Continental Shelf stock.
1 Cetacean density values from Litz et al. (2022).
2 Bottlenose dolphin density value from Litz et al. (2022) reported for the entire GOM are presented. Estimated take is listed as the total over 3
days of activity at each platform (9 days total).
3 Bottlenose dolphin estimated take was adjusted to account for one group size of 20 individuals per day for 9 days of construction (MazeFoley and Mullin, 2006).
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
Proposed Mitigation
In order to issue an IHA under section
101(a)(5)(D) of the MMPA, NMFS must
set forth the permissible methods of
taking pursuant to the activity, and
other means of effecting the least
practicable impact on the species or
stock and its habitat, paying particular
attention to rookeries, mating grounds,
and areas of similar significance, and on
the availability of the species or stock
for taking for certain subsistence uses
(latter not applicable for this action).
NMFS regulations require applicants for
incidental take authorizations to include
information about the availability and
feasibility (economic and technological)
of equipment, methods, and manner of
conducting the activity or other means
of effecting the least practicable adverse
impact upon the affected species or
stocks, and their habitat (50 CFR
216.104(a)(11)).
In evaluating how mitigation may or
may not be appropriate to ensure the
least practicable adverse impact on
species or stocks and their habitat, as
well as subsistence uses where
applicable, NMFS considers two
primary factors:
(1) The manner in which, and the
degree to which, the successful
implementation of the measure(s) is
expected to reduce impacts to marine
mammals, marine mammal species or
stocks, and their habitat. This considers
the nature of the potential adverse
impact being mitigated (likelihood,
scope, range). It further considers the
likelihood that the measure will be
effective if implemented (probability of
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accomplishing the mitigating result if
implemented as planned), the
likelihood of effective implementation
(probability implemented as planned);
and,
(2) The practicability of the measures
for applicant implementation, which
may consider such things as cost, and
impact on operations.
Single Big Bubble Curtain
NFE would employ a single big
bubble curtain with a minimum airflow
rate of 0.3 m3/min*m. In a big bubble
curtain system, the entire construction
site (installation vessel and foundation
structure) is enveloped by a nozzle hose
deployed in a complete circle at a
specified distance from the site of pile
driving on the sea floor. The hose is
perforated through which air is forced
creating an air bubble curtain that
encloses the construction site (Bellmann
et al., 2020).
Pile Driving Weather and Time
Restrictions
Pile driving would commence only
during daylight hours no earlier than
one hour after (civil) sunrise. Pile
driving would not be initiated later than
1.5 hr before (civil) sunset. Pile driving
may continue after dark when the
installation of the same pile began
during daylight hours (1.5 hr before
(civil) sunset) and must proceed for
human safety or installation feasibility
reasons. Pile driving will not be
initiated in times of low visibility when
the shutdown zone for MF cetaceans
(500 m) cannot be visually monitored,
as determined by the lead PSO on duty.
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Protected Species Observers (PSOs)
The placement of four PSOs during all
pile driving activities (described in the
Proposed Monitoring and Reporting
section) would ensure the shutdown
zone is visible in good conditions.
Visual monitoring of the established
zone would be performed by qualified
and NMFS–approved third-party PSOs.
Harassment and Shutdown Zones
The harassment and shutdown zones
would be established and continuously
monitored by PSOs during impact pile
driving to minimize impacts to marine
mammals. NMFS proposes to require
the 500-m shutdown zone. This zone is
expanded from the largest estimated
Level A harassment zone (70 m) under
the 6 dB reduction scenario in order to
provide a conservative monitoring area
for purposes of potential shutdown of
activity (see below).
Ramp-Up Procedures
NFE would implement a ‘‘ramp-up’’
technique when impact pile driving
with the maximum hammer energy
limited to 60 percent. The ramp up
technique requires an initial 30 min
using a reduced hammer energy and
involves initially driving a pile using a
low hammer energy and, as the pile is
driven further into the soil, the hammer
energy is increased as necessary to
achieve desired soil penetration. A ramp
up would occur at the beginning of the
impact pile driving of each pile and at
any time following the cessation of
impact pile driving of 30 min or longer.
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Shutdown and Power-Down Procedures
The shutdown zone around the pile
driving activities would be maintained
by four PSOs, as previously described,
for the presence of marine mammals
before, during, and after pile driving
activity. For pile driving, from an
engineering standpoint, any significant
stoppage of driving progress may allow
time for displaced sediments along the
pile surface areas to consolidate and
bind. Attempts to restart the driving of
a stopped pile may be unsuccessful and
create a situation where a pile is
permanently bound in a partially driven
position. If a marine mammal is
observed entering or within the
shutdown zone after pile driving has
commenced, a shutdown of pile driving
would occur when practicable as
determined by the lead engineer on
duty, who must evaluate the following:
• Use of site-specific soil data and
real-time hammer log information to
judge whether a stoppage would risk
causing pile refusal at restart of pile;
and,
• Confirmation that pile penetration
is deep enough to secure pile stability
in the interim situation, taking into
account weather statistics for the
relevant season and the current weather
forecast.
Determination by the lead engineer on
duty would be made for each pile as the
installation progresses and not for the
site as a whole. If a shutdown is called
for but the lead engineer determines
shutdown is not practicable due to an
imminent risk of injury or loss of life to
an individual, or risk of damage to a
vessel that creates risk of injury or loss
of life for individuals, reduced hammer
energy (power-down) would be
implemented when the lead engineer
determines it is practicable.
Subsequent restart/increased power of
the equipment can be initiated if the
animal has been observed exiting the
shutdown zone within 30 min of the
shutdown, or, after an additional time
period has elapsed with no further
sighting of the animal that triggered the
shutdown (i.e., 15 min for small
odontocetes, 30 min for all other
species). If pile driving shuts down for
reasons other than mitigation (e.g.,
mechanical difficulty) for brief periods
(i.e., less than 30 min), it may be
activated again without a ramp up if
PSOs have maintained constant
observation and no detections of any
marine mammal have occurred within
the shutdown zone.
Based on our evaluation of the
applicant’s proposed measures, NMFS
has preliminarily determined that the
proposed mitigation measures provide
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the means of effecting the least
practicable impact on the affected
species or stocks and their habitat,
paying particular attention to rookeries,
mating grounds, and areas of similar
significance.
Proposed Monitoring and Reporting
In order to issue an IHA for an
activity, section 101(a)(5)(D) of the
MMPA states that NMFS must set forth
requirements pertaining to the
monitoring and reporting of such taking.
The MMPA implementing regulations at
50 CFR 216.104(a)(13) indicate that
requests for authorizations must include
the suggested means of accomplishing
the necessary monitoring and reporting
that will result in increased knowledge
of the species and of the level of taking
or impacts on populations of marine
mammals that are expected to be
present while conducting the activities.
Effective reporting is critical both to
compliance as well as ensuring that the
most value is obtained from the required
monitoring.
Monitoring and reporting
requirements prescribed by NMFS
should contribute to improved
understanding of one or more of the
following:
• Occurrence of marine mammal
species or stocks in the area in which
take is anticipated (e.g., presence,
abundance, distribution, density);
• Nature, scope, or context of likely
marine mammal exposure to potential
stressors/impacts (individual or
cumulative, acute or chronic), through
better understanding of: (1) action or
environment (e.g., source
characterization, propagation, ambient
noise); (2) affected species (e.g., life
history, dive patterns); (3) co-occurrence
of marine mammal species with the
activity; or (4) biological or behavioral
context of exposure (e.g., age, calving or
feeding areas);
• Individual marine mammal
responses (behavioral or physiological)
to acoustic stressors (acute, chronic, or
cumulative), other stressors, or
cumulative impacts from multiple
stressors;
• How anticipated responses to
stressors impact either: (1) long-term
fitness and survival of individual
marine mammals; or (2) populations,
species, or stocks;
• Effects on marine mammal habitat
(e.g., marine mammal prey species,
acoustic habitat, or other important
physical components of marine
mammal habitat); and,
• Mitigation and monitoring
effectiveness.
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Visual Monitoring
Monitoring and reporting
requirements are provided herein.
Visual monitoring of the harassment
zones, to the extent practicable, and
established shutdown zone would be
performed by a minimum of four
qualified and NMFS–approved thirdparty PSOs. A visual observer team
comprising NMFS–approved PSOs,
operating in shifts, would be stationed
aboard both the respective project vessel
and a dedicated PSO vessel. PSO
qualifications would include a science
degree and direct field experience on a
marine mammal observation vessel and/
or aerial surveys in the Atlantic Ocean/
GOM. All PSOs would work in shifts
such that no one monitor would work
more than 4 consecutive hr without a
consecutive 2-hr break or longer than 12
hr during any 24-hr period.
PSOs would be responsible for
visually monitoring and identifying
marine mammals approaching or
entering the established harassment and
shutdown zones during survey
activities. It would be the responsibility
of a designated lead PSO on duty to
communicate the presence of marine
mammals as well as to communicate
and enforce the action(s) that are
necessary to ensure mitigation and
monitoring requirements are
implemented as appropriate.
Observations from other PSOs would be
communicated to the lead PSO on duty,
who would then be responsible for
implementing the necessary mitigation
procedures.
PSOs would be equipped with
binoculars and have the ability to
estimate distances to marine mammals
located in proximity to their established
zones using range finders. Reticulated
binoculars would also be available to
PSOs for use as appropriate based on
conditions and visibility to support the
sighting and monitoring of marine
species.
Data on all PSO observations would
be recorded based on standard PSO
collection requirements. This would
include dates and locations of survey
operations; time of observation, location
and weather; details of the sightings
(e.g., species, age classification (if
known), numbers, behavior), and details
of any observed ‘‘taking’’ (behavioral
disturbances or injury/mortality). The
data sheet would be provided to NMFS
for review and approval prior to the
start of survey activities. In addition,
prior to initiation of project activities,
all crew members would undergo
environmental training, a component of
which would focus on the procedures
for sighting and protection of marine
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mammals. A briefing would also be
conducted between the survey
supervisors and crews, the PSOs, and
NFE. The purpose of the briefing would
be to establish responsibilities of each
party, define the chains of command,
discuss communication procedures,
provide an overview of monitoring
purposes, and review operational
procedures.
During impact pile driving, visual
monitoring would occur as follows
using a minimum of four PSOs assigned
to two different locations:
• A minimum of two PSOs must be
on active duty at the pile driving vessel/
platform from 60 min before, during,
and for 30 min after all pile installation
activity; and,
• A minimum of two PSOs must be
on active duty on a dedicated PSO
vessel from 60 min before, during, and
for 30 min after all pile installation
activity. The dedicated PSO vessel must
be located at the best vantage point in
order to observe and document marine
mammal sightings in proximity to the
shutdown zone.
Reporting
NFE will provide the following
reporting as necessary during active pile
driving activities:
• The applicant will report any
observed injury or mortality as soon as
feasible and in accordance with NMFS’
standard reporting guidelines. Reports
will be made by phone (305–361–4586)
and by email (blair.mase@noaa.gov and
PR.ITP.MonitoringReports@noaa.gov)
and will include the following:
Æ Time, date, and location (latitude/
longitude) of the first discovery (and
updated location information if known
and applicable);
Æ Species identification (if known) or
description of the animal(s) involved;
Æ Condition of the animal(s)
(including carcass condition if the
animal is dead);
Æ Observed behaviors of the
animal(s), if alive;
Æ If available, photographs or video
footage of the animal(s); and,
Æ General circumstances under which
the animal was discovered.
• An annual report summarizing the
prior year’s activities will be provided
that fully documents the methods and
monitoring protocols, summarizes the
data recorded during monitoring,
estimates the number of listed marine
mammals that may have been
incidentally taken during project pile
driving, and provides an interpretation
of the results and effectiveness of all
monitoring tasks. The annual draft
report will be provided no later than 90
days following completion of
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construction activities. Any
recommendations made by NMFS will
be addressed in the final report, due
after the IHA expires and including a
summary of all monitoring activities,
prior to acceptance by NMFS. Final
reports will follow a standardized
format for PSO reporting from activities
requiring marine mammal mitigation
and monitoring.
• All PSOs will use a standardized
data entry format (see Appendix B PSO
Standardized Data Entry of application).
Negligible Impact Analysis and
Determination
NMFS has defined negligible impact
as an impact resulting from the
specified activity that cannot be
reasonably expected to, and is not
reasonably likely to, adversely affect the
species or stock through effects on
annual rates of recruitment or survival
(50 CFR 216.103). A negligible impact
finding is based on the lack of likely
adverse effects on annual rates of
recruitment or survival (i.e., populationlevel effects). An estimate of the number
of takes alone is not enough information
on which to base an impact
determination. In addition to
considering estimates of the number of
marine mammals that might be ‘‘taken’’
through harassment, NMFS considers
other factors, such as the likely nature
of any impacts or responses (e.g.,
intensity, duration), the context of any
impacts or responses (e.g., critical
reproductive time or location, foraging
impacts affecting energetics), as well as
effects on habitat, and the likely
effectiveness of the mitigation. We also
assess the number, intensity, and
context of estimated takes by evaluating
this information relative to population
status. Consistent with the 1989
preamble for NMFS’ implementing
regulations (54 FR 40338; September 29,
1989), the impacts from other past and
ongoing anthropogenic activities are
incorporated into this analysis via their
impacts on the baseline (e.g., as
reflected in the regulatory status of the
species, population size and growth rate
where known, ongoing sources of
human-caused mortality, or ambient
noise levels).
Level A harassment is extremely
unlikely given the required mitigation
measures designed to minimize the
possibility of injury to marine
mammals. No mortality is anticipated
given the nature of the activity.
Pile installation activities have the
potential to disturb or displace marine
mammals. Specifically, the project
activities may result in take, in the form
of Level B harassment only, from
underwater sounds generated from
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17551
impact pile installation activities.
Potential takes could occur if
individuals move into the ensonified
zones when these activities are
underway. The takes from Level B
harassment would be due to potential
behavioral disturbance. The potential
for harassment is minimized through
the implementation of planned
mitigation strategies.
Take would occur within a limited,
confined area of each stock’s range.
Level B harassment would be reduced to
the level of least practicable adverse
impact through use of mitigation
measures described herein. Further, the
amount of take authorized is extremely
small when compared to stock
abundance (less than one percent for
each stock).
No marine mammal stocks for which
incidental take authorization is
proposed are listed as threatened or
endangered under the ESA or
determined to be strategic or depleted
under the MMPA. The employment of a
single big bubble curtain for sound
attenuation, large shutdown zone, and
proposed monitoring make injury takes
of marine mammals unlikely. The
shutdown zone would be thoroughly
monitored before the proposed pile
installation begins and activities would
be postponed or hammer energy would
be reduced (power down) if a marine
mammal is sighted within the shutdown
zone. There is a high likelihood that
marine mammals would be detected by
trained observers under environmental
conditions described for the proposed
project. NFE’s plan to limit construction
activities to daylight hours would also
increase detectability of marine
mammals in the area. Therefore, the
proposed mitigation and monitoring
measures are expected to eliminate the
potential for Level A harassment as well
as reduce the amount and intensity for
Level B behavioral harassment.
Anticipated and authorized takes are
expected to be limited to short-term
Level B harassment (behavioral
disturbance) as construction activities
would occur over the course of 9 days.
Individual animals, even if taken
multiple times, would likely move away
from the sound source and be
temporarily displaced from the area due
to elevated noise level during pile
removal. Marine mammals could also
experience TTS if they move into the
Level B harassment zone. TTS is a
temporary loss of hearing sensitivity
when exposed to loud sound, and the
hearing threshold is expected to recover
completely within minutes to hours;
thus, it is not considered an injury.
While TTS could occur, it is not
considered a likely outcome of this
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activity. In all, there would be no
adverse impacts to the stocks as a
whole.
The proposed project is not expected
to have significant adverse effects on
marine mammal habitat. There are no
Biologically Important Areas or ESAdesignated critical habitat within the
project area. The activities may cause
fish to leave the area temporarily, which
could impact marine mammals’ foraging
opportunities in a limited portion of the
foraging range. However, due to the
short duration of activities and the
relatively small area of affected habitat,
the impacts to marine mammal habitat
are not expected to cause significant or
long-term negative consequences.
In combination, we believe that these
factors, as well as the available body of
evidence from other similar activities,
demonstrate that the potential effects of
the specified activities would have only
minor, short-term behavioral effects on
individuals. The specified activities are
not expected to impact reproduction or
survival of any individual marine
mammals, much less affect rates of
recruitment or survival, and would
therefore not result in population-level
impacts.
In summary and as described above,
the following factors primarily support
our preliminary determination that the
impacts resulting from this activity are
not expected to adversely affect either of
the stocks through effects on annual
rates of recruitment or survival:
• No serious injury or mortality is
anticipated or authorized;
• The specified activity and
associated ensonified areas are small
relative to the overall habitat ranges of
the stocks;
• The applicant is required to
implement mitigation measures to
minimize impacts, such as a single big
bubble curtain, ramp-up procedures,
and implementation of shutdown zone,
when practicable;
• Biologically important areas or
critical habitat have not been identified
within the project area; and,
• The lack of anticipated significant
or long-term effects to marine mammal
habitat.
Based on the analysis contained
herein of the likely effects of the
specified activity on marine mammals
and their habitat, and taking into
consideration the implementation of the
proposed monitoring and mitigation
measures, NMFS preliminarily finds
that the total marine mammal take from
the proposed activity would have a
negligible impact on all affected marine
mammal species or stocks.
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Small Numbers
As noted previously, only take of
small numbers of marine mammals may
be authorized under sections
101(a)(5)(A) and (D) of the MMPA for
specified activities other than military
readiness activities. The MMPA does
not define small numbers and so, in
practice, where estimated numbers are
available, NMFS compares the number
of individuals taken to the most
appropriate estimation of abundance of
the relevant species or stock in our
determination of whether an
authorization is limited to small
numbers of marine mammals. When the
predicted number of individuals to be
taken is fewer than one-third of the
species or stock abundance, the take is
considered to be of small numbers.
Additionally, other qualitative factors
may be considered in the analysis, such
as the temporal or spatial scale of the
activities.
NMFS proposes to authorize
incidental take by Level B harassment
only of one marine mammal species
with two managed stocks. The total
amount of takes proposed for
authorization relative to the best
available population abundance is
below one third of the estimated stock
abundances and less than one percent
for both stocks.
Based on the analysis contained
herein of the proposed activity
(including the proposed mitigation and
monitoring measures) and the
anticipated take of marine mammals,
NMFS preliminarily finds that small
numbers of marine mammals would be
taken relative to the population size of
the affected species or stocks.
Unmitigable Adverse Impact Analysis
and Determination
There are no relevant subsistence uses
of the affected marine mammal stocks or
species implicated by this action.
Therefore, NMFS has determined that
the total taking of affected species or
stocks would not have an unmitigable
adverse impact on the availability of
such species or stocks for taking for
subsistence purposes.
Endangered Species Act
Section 7(a)(2) of the Endangered
Species Act of 1973 (ESA: 16 U.S.C.
1531 et seq.) requires that each Federal
agency insure that any action it
authorizes, funds, or carries out is not
likely to jeopardize the continued
existence of any endangered or
threatened species or result in the
destruction or adverse modification of
designated critical habitat. To ensure
ESA compliance for the issuance of
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IHAs, NMFS consults internally
whenever we propose to authorize take
for endangered or threatened species.
No incidental take of ESA-listed
species is proposed for authorization or
expected to result from this activity.
Therefore, NMFS has determined that
formal consultation under section 7 of
the ESA is not required for this action.
Proposed Authorization
As a result of these preliminary
determinations, NMFS proposes to issue
an IHA to NFE for conducting impact
pile driving to support construction of
liquefied natural gas platforms in waters
off Grand Isle, Louisiana, from May 1,
2023, through April 30, 2024, provided
the previously mentioned mitigation,
monitoring, and reporting requirements
are incorporated. A draft of the
proposed IHA can be found at: https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/
marine-mammal-protection/incidentaltake-authorizations-constructionactivities.
Request for Public Comments
We request comment on our analyses,
the proposed authorization, and any
other aspect of this notice of proposed
IHA. We also request comment on the
potential renewal of this proposed IHA
as described in the paragraph below.
Please include with your comments any
supporting data or literature citations to
help inform decisions on the request for
this IHA or a subsequent renewal IHA.
On a case-by-case basis, NMFS may
issue a one-time, one-year renewal IHA
following notice to the public providing
an additional 15 days for public
comments when (1) up to another year
of identical or nearly identical activities
as described in the Description of
Proposed Activities section of this
notice is planned or (2) the activities as
described in the Description of
Proposed Activities section of this
notice would not be completed by the
time the IHA expires and a renewal
would allow for completion of the
activities beyond that described in the
Dates and Duration section of this
notice, provided all of the following
conditions are met:
• A request for renewal is received no
later than 60 days prior to the needed
renewal IHA effective date (recognizing
that the renewal IHA expiration date
cannot extend beyond one year from
expiration of the initial IHA).
• The request for renewal must
include the following:
(1) An explanation that the activities
to be conducted under the requested
renewal IHA are identical to the
activities analyzed under the initial
IHA, are a subset of the activities, or
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include changes so minor (e.g.,
reduction in pile size) that the changes
do not affect the previous analyses,
mitigation and monitoring
requirements, or take estimates (with
the exception of reducing the type or
amount of take).
(2) A preliminary monitoring report
showing the results of the required
monitoring to date and an explanation
showing that the monitoring results do
not indicate impacts of a scale or nature
not previously analyzed or authorized.
Upon review of the request for
renewal, the status of the affected
species or stocks, and any other
pertinent information, NMFS
determines that there are no more than
minor changes in the activities, the
mitigation and monitoring measures
will remain the same and appropriate,
and the findings in the initial IHA
remain valid.
Dated: March 20, 2023.
Kimberly Damon-Randall,
Director, Office of Protected Resources,
National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2023–06006 Filed 3–22–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
COMMITTEE FOR PURCHASE FROM
PEOPLE WHO ARE BLIND OR
SEVERELY DISABLED
Procurement List; Change
Committee for Purchase From
People Who Are Blind or Severely
Disabled.
ACTION: Change to the Procurement List.
AGENCY:
This action changes service
additions to the Procurement List that
are furnished by nonprofit agencies
employing persons who are blind or
have other severe disabilities.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before: April 21, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Committee for Purchase
From People Who Are Blind or Severely
Disabled, 355 E Street SW, Washington,
DC 20024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Michael R. Jurkowski, Telephone: (703)
785–6404, or email CMTEFedReg@
AbilityOne.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
SUMMARY:
Additions
If the Committee approves the change
to the Procurement List, the entities of
the Federal Government identified in
this notice will be required to procure
the service(s) listed below from
nonprofit agencies employing persons
who are blind or have other severe
disabilities.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
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Jkt 259001
Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification
I certify that the following action will
not have a significant impact on any
small entities. The major factors
considered for this certification were:
1. The action did not result in any
additional reporting, recordkeeping, or
other compliance requirements for small
entities other than the nonprofit
agencies furnishing the services to the
Government.
2. The action did result in authorizing
nonprofit agencies to furnish the
products to the Government.
3. There were no known regulatory
alternatives which would have
accomplished the objectives of the
Javits-Wagner-O’Day Act (41 U.S.C.
8501–8506) in connection with the
products added to the Procurement List.
End of Certification
The following is the intended change
to the service currently on the
Procurement List:
Service(s)
Service Type: Facilities Maintenance
Services
Mandatory for: U.S. Army, Department of
Public Works, Fort Knox, KY
The Committee for Purchase From People
Who Are Blind or Severely Disabled
(Committee), is announcing that Skookum
Contract Services and Professional Contract
Services, Inc. were recommended to the
Committee to serve as mandatory sources for
the Total Facilities Maintenance (TFM) Pilot
Project at Ft. Knox, KY. The short-term goal
of this Pilot is to allocate the TFM
requirement, utilizing enhanced competitive
procedures. The long-term goal is to
incorporate lessons learned from the Pilot
into the Committee’s regulatory and policy
framework to promote greater Program
transparency, spur innovation, and enhance
employment opportunities for blind and
other significantly disabled individuals.
The TFM requirement consists of
approximately 109,054 acres and 2,326
buildings and covers several functional areas,
such as building and structure maintenance,
snow and ice removal, landscaping services,
utility system maintenance, and others. The
current requirement also includes custodial
services, which is excluded from the Pilot
and will become a separate, stand-alone
addition for the currently performing NPA.
SourceAmerica is the incumbent TFM
contractor, but the follow-on requirement
will transition from SourceAmerica to one of
the recommended NPAs, using a two-phase
evaluation process.
Phase I began mid-January 2023 with
SourceAmerica’s issuance of an Opportunity
Notice, which established the criteria to
participate in the competition. After
responses were received, SourceAmerica
assessed and recommend two NPAs to the
Committee for further considerations. If the
Committee determines this requirement is
suitable for transfer in accordance with 41
CFR 51–2.4, the Committee will authorize
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17553
one or both NPAs for addition to the
Procurement List as mandatory sources, and
conclude Phase I. After which, the
Committee will publish a final notice
formally identifying the NPA(s) authorized to
compete in Phase II.
The Phase II evaluation will assess the
NPAs on technical capability, past
performance, and price. The SourceAmerica
Phase II Evaluation Team will assess the
NPAs against the stated evaluation factors.
The U.S. Army’s Installation Management
Command and the Army’s Mission and
Installation Contracting Command will
provide technical support to SourceAmerica
throughout the Phase II evaluation process.
SourceAmerica will select the NPA that can
provide the best overall solution to the Army
at the conclusion of Phase II.
Michael R. Jurkowski,
Acting Director, Business Operations.
[FR Doc. 2023–05937 Filed 3–22–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6353–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Department of the Army, Corps of
Engineers
Notice of Intent To Prepare a General
Reevaluation Report/Supplemental
Environmental Impact Statement for
the Ala Wai Canal Flood Risk
Management Study, Honolulu, HI
Department of the Army, U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers, DoD.
ACTION: Notice of Intent; extension of
public comment period.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers, Pittsburgh District, is
extending the public comment period
for the Notice of Intent (NOI) to Prepare
a General Reevaluation Report/
Supplemental Environmental Impact
Statement for the Ala Wai Canal Flood
Risk Management Study, Honolulu, HI.
The NOI was published in the Federal
Register on Wednesday, February 22,
2023. The public comment period for
the NOI was originally scheduled to end
on Friday, March 24, 2023. The U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers is extending
the public comment period by 45 days
and will consider comments received
through Monday, May 8, 2023.
DATES: The deadline for receipt of
comments on the NOI published in the
Federal Register on February 22, 2023
(88 FR 10880) is extended to May 8,
2023.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
related to development of the General
Reevaluation Report/Supplemental
Environmental Impact Statement by any
of the following methods:
• Website: https://www.honolulu.gov/
alawai/contact.html.
SUMMARY:
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[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 56 (Thursday, March 23, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 17538-17553]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-06006]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
[RTID 0648-XC766]
Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to Specified Activities;
Taking Marine Mammals Incidental to Construction of Liquefied Natural
Gas Platforms Off Louisiana
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; proposed incidental harassment authorization; request
for comments on proposed authorization and possible renewal.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS has received a request from New Fortress Energy Louisiana
FLNG LLC (NFE) for authorization to take marine mammals incidental to
construction of liquefied natural gas platforms off Grand Isle,
Louisiana. Pursuant to the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA), NMFS is
requesting comments on its proposal to issue an incidental harassment
authorization (IHA) to incidentally take marine mammals during the
specified activities. NMFS is also requesting comments on a possible
one-time, one-year renewal that could be issued under certain
circumstances and if all requirements are met, as described in Request
for Public Comments at the end of this notice. NMFS will consider
public comments prior to making any final decision on the issuance of
the requested MMPA authorizations and agency responses will be
summarized in the final notice of our decision.
DATES: Comments and information must be received no later than April
24, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be addressed to Jolie Harrison, Chief,
Permits and Conservation Division, Office of Protected Resources,
National Marine Fisheries Service and should be submitted via email to
[email protected].
Instructions: NMFS is not responsible for comments sent by any
other method, to any other address or individual, or received after the
end of the comment period. Comments, including all attachments, must
not exceed a 25-megabyte file size. All comments received are a part of
the public record and will generally be posted online at https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/incidental-take-authorizations-construction-activities without change. All
personal identifying information (e.g., name, address) voluntarily
submitted by the commenter may be publicly accessible. Do not submit
confidential business information or otherwise sensitive or protected
information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Alyssa Clevenstine, Office of
Protected Resources, NMFS, (301) 427-8401. Electronic copies of the
application and supporting documents, as well as a list of the
references cited in this document, may be obtained online at: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/incidental-take-authorizations-construction-activities. In case of problems
accessing these documents, please call the contact listed above.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The MMPA prohibits the ``take'' of marine mammals, with certain
exceptions. Sections 101(a)(5)(A) and (D) of the MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1361
et seq.) direct the Secretary of Commerce (as delegated to NMFS) to
allow, upon request, the incidental, but not intentional, taking of
small numbers of marine mammals by U.S. citizens who engage in a
specified activity (other than commercial fishing) within a specified
geographical region if certain findings are made and either regulations
are proposed or, if the taking is limited to harassment, a notice of a
proposed IHA is provided to the public for review.
Authorization for incidental takings shall be granted if NMFS finds
that the taking will have a negligible impact on the species or
stock(s) and will not have an unmitigable adverse impact on the
availability of the species or stock(s) for taking for subsistence uses
(where relevant). Further, NMFS must prescribe the permissible methods
of taking and other ``means of effecting the least practicable adverse
impact'' on the affected species or stocks and their habitat, paying
particular attention to rookeries, mating grounds, and areas of similar
significance, and on the availability of the species or stocks for
taking for certain subsistence uses (referred to in shorthand as
``mitigation''); and requirements pertaining to the mitigation,
monitoring and reporting of the takings are set forth. The definitions
of all applicable MMPA statutory terms cited above are included in the
relevant sections below.
National Environmental Policy Act
To comply with the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA;
42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) and NOAA Administrative Order (NAO) 216-6A,
NMFS must review our proposed action (i.e., the issuance of an IHA)
with respect to potential impacts on the human environment.
This action is consistent with categories of activities identified
in Categorical Exclusion B4 (IHAs with no anticipated serious injury or
mortality) of the Companion Manual for NOAA Administrative Order 216-
6A, which do not individually or cumulatively have the potential for
significant impacts on the quality of the human environment and for
which we have not identified any extraordinary circumstances that would
preclude this categorical exclusion. Accordingly, NMFS has
preliminarily determined that the issuance of the proposed IHA
qualifies to be categorically excluded from further NEPA review.
We will review all comments submitted in response to this notice
prior to concluding our NEPA process or making a final decision on the
IHA request.
[[Page 17539]]
Summary of Request
On October 7, 2022, NMFS received a request from NFE for an IHA to
take marine mammals incidental to pile driving associated with
construction off the southeast coast of Grand Isle, Louisiana.
Following NMFS' review of the application, NFE submitted a revised
version on February 3, 2023, which was deemed adequate and complete.
NFE's request is for take of bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) by
Level B harassment only. Neither NFE nor NMFS expect serious injury or
mortality to result from this activity and, therefore, an IHA is
appropriate.
Description of Proposed Activity
Overview
NFE proposes to construct the Louisiana FLNG Project, a deepwater
port export terminal in West Delta Lease Block 38 approximately 12
nautical miles (nm; 22 kilometers (km)) off the southeast coast of
Grand Isle, Louisiana, in approx. 26-28 meters (m; 85-91 feet (ft)) of
water (Figure 1). NFE intends to use impact pile driving to install 26
steel piles, each 108 inch (in; 2.743 m) in diameter, to support three
fixed-jacket platforms. Impact pile driving activities would occur for
a total of 9 days (three days per platform) anytime from May through
August 2023. NFE has requested authorization to incidentally take one
species (two stocks) of marine mammal by Level B harassment only. Take
would potentially result from exposure to sounds produced by impact
pile driving and is expected to produce short-term and localized
impacts in the form of behavioral harassment of marine mammals located
in the project area. No injury or mortality is expected and none is
proposed to be authorized.
NFE also plans the following: trench for pipeline laterals;
construct and install two pipeline laterals (24 in, 20 in diameter) and
tie-ins to an existing offshore natural gas pipeline; setting of three
self-elevating platforms; and anchoring for a floating liquefied
natural gas storage unit (FSU) and service vessel buoys. No take of
marine mammals is anticipated to occur incidental to all other portions
of the project (pipelines, self-elevating platform installation,
anchoring for FSU construction activities), and these activities will
not be discussed further.
Dates and Duration
This IHA would be effective from May 1, 2023 until April 30, 2024.
Impact pile driving activities would occur for a total of 9 days from
May-August 2023. NFE plans to conduct impact pile driving during
daylight hours, with pile installation beginning no earlier than one
hour after (civil) sunrise and no later than 90 minutes (min) before
(civil) sunset.
Specific Geographic Region
The project will be located within the Gulf of Mexico (GOM),
approx. 12 nm (22 km) off the southeast coast of Grand Isle, Louisiana,
at a depth of 26-28 m (85-91 ft; Figure 1). All project activities for
which take is being requested will be located in Outer Continental
Shelf West Delta Lease Block 38. For the immediate project area, the
sea floor is expected to be predominantly clay with sediment layers as
follows: clay (0-19 m), clay-silt (19-54 m), and sand (54 m).
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P
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BILLING CODE 3510-22-C
Detailed Description of the Specified Activity
Impact pile driving of 26 steel piles, each 108 in (2.743 m) in
diameter, to support three fixed-jacket platforms (P4, P5, P6) would
occur over 9 days (3 days per platform). Piles would be driven
sequentially and the number of piles driven per day would vary between
the
[[Page 17541]]
three platforms (Tables 1, 2). Hammer blows per day are based on
daylight-only operations with a single hammer, spread evenly across the
construction window. 9 days of active pile driving are estimated to
drive all 26 piles. Estimated hammer blows vary from 3,942 to 7,144 per
day depending on platform and pile segment being driven (piles in P5
and P6 are assembled from three separate segments).
Table 1--Pile Driving Specifications for the Three Fixed-Jacket Platforms
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Depth of Estimated Estimated
Platform Number of Length of Diameter of penetration hammer blows hammer blows
piles pile (feet) pile (inches) (feet) (total) (per pile)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
P4...................................................... 12 385 108 260 17,052 1,421
P5...................................................... 8 405 108 280 19,136 2,392
P6...................................................... 6 345 108 220 14,352 2,392
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: Hammer blows per pile vary with length of pile and depth of penetration.
Table 2--Pile Driving Progression Summary
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total number
Platform Pile segment Hammer energy Hammer energy Duration Blows per Total number of blows per
(percent) (kilojoules) (minutes) \2\ minute of blows \1\ day
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
P4........................... P1....................... 20 460 36.53 30 1,096 5,684
P4........................... P1....................... 40 920 42.93 30 1,288 5,684
P4........................... P1....................... 60 1,380 110.0 30 3,300 5,684
P5........................... Day 1: P1................ 20 460 85.6 30 2,568 5,256
P5........................... Day 1: P1................ 40 920 89.6 30 2,688 5,256
P5........................... Day 2: P1+P2............. 20 460 17.07 30 512 6,736
P5........................... Day 2: P1+P2............. 40 920 22.67 30 680 6,736
P5........................... Day 2: P1+P2............. 60 1,380 184.8 30 5,544 6,736
P5........................... Day 3: P1+P2+P3.......... 20 460 52.8 30 1,584 7,144
P5........................... Day 3: P1+P2+P3.......... 40 920 22.4 30 672 7,144
P5........................... Day 3: P1+P2+P3.......... 60 1,380 162.93 30 4,888 7,144
P6........................... Day 1: P1................ 20 460 64.2 30 1,926 3,942
P6........................... Day 1: P1................ 40 920 6.2 30 2,016 3,942
P6........................... Day 2: P1+P2............. 20 460 12.8 30 384 5,052
P6........................... Day 2: P1+P2............. 40 920 17 30 510 5,052
P6........................... Day 2: P1+P2............. 60 1,380 138.6 30 4,158 5,052
P6........................... Day 3: P1+P2+P3.......... 20 460 39.6 30 1,188 5,358
P6........................... Day 3: P1+P2+P3.......... 40 920 16.8 30 504 5,358
P6........................... Day 3: P1+P2+P3.......... 60 1,380 122.2 30 3,666 5,358
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Total number of blows are based on the total number of piles installed per day.
\2\ Duration provided for all piles within a 24-hour period.
Proposed mitigation, monitoring, and reporting measures are
described in detail later in this document (please see Proposed
Mitigation and Proposed Monitoring and Reporting).
Description of Marine Mammals in the Area of Specified Activities
Sections 3 and 4 of the application summarize available information
regarding status and trends, distribution and habitat preferences, and
behavior and life history of the potentially affected species. NMFS
fully considered all of this information, and we refer the reader to
these descriptions, incorporated here by reference, instead of
reprinting the information. Additional information regarding population
trends and threats may be found in NMFS' Stock Assessment Reports
(SARs; www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/marine-mammal-stock-assessments) and more general information about these
species (e.g., physical and behavioral descriptions) may be found on
NMFS' website (https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/find-species).
Table 3 lists all stocks for which take is expected and proposed to
be authorized for this activity, and summarizes information related to
the population or stock, including regulatory status under the MMPA and
Endangered Species Act (ESA) and potential biological removal (PBR),
where known. PBR is defined by the MMPA as the maximum number of
animals, not including natural mortalities, that may be removed from a
marine mammal stock while allowing that stock to reach or maintain its
optimum sustainable population (as described in NMFS' SARs). While no
serious injury or mortality is anticipated or proposed to be authorized
here, PBR and annual serious injury and mortality from anthropogenic
sources are included here as gross indicators of the status of the
species or stocks and other threats.
Marine mammal abundance estimates presented in this document
represent the total number of individuals that make up a given stock or
the total number estimated within a particular study or survey area.
NMFS' stock abundance estimates for most species represent the total
estimate of individuals within the geographic area, if known, that
comprises that stock. For some species, this geographic area may extend
beyond U.S. waters. All managed stocks in this region are assessed in
NMFS' U.S. Atlantic and GOM SARs. All values presented in Table 3 are
the most recent available at the time of publication (including from
the draft 2022 SARs) and are available online at:
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/marine-mammal-stock-assessments.
[[Page 17542]]
Table 3--Species and Stocks Likely Impacted by the Specified Activities \1\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ESA/MMPA status; Stock abundance (CV,
Common name Scientific name Stock strategic (Y/N) Nmin, most recent PBR Annual M/SI
\2\ abundance survey) \3\ \4\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Odontoceti (toothed whales,
dolphins, and porpoises).
Family Delphinidae.................
Bottlenose dolphin................. Tursiops truncatus.... Gulf of Mexico, -/-; N 0.11; 57,917; 2017- 556 65
Continental Shelf. 2018.
Bottlenose dolphin................. Tursiops truncatus.... Gulf of Mexico, -/-; N 0.13; 18,585; 2017- 167 36
Western Coastal. 2018.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Information on the classification of marine mammal species can be found on the web page for The Society for Marine Mammalogy's Committee on Taxonomy
(https://marinemammalscience.org/science-and-publications/list-marine-mammal-species-subspecies/; Committee on Taxonomy (2022)).
\2\ Endangered Species Act (ESA) status: Endangered (E), Threatened (T)/MMPA status: Depleted (D). A dash (-) indicates that the species is not listed
under the ESA or designated as depleted under the MMPA. Under the MMPA, a strategic stock is one for which the level of direct human-caused mortality
exceeds PBR or which is determined to be declining and likely to be listed under the ESA within the foreseeable future. Any species or stock listed
under the ESA is automatically designated under the MMPA as depleted and as a strategic stock.
\3\ NMFS marine mammal stock assessment reports online at: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/marine-mammal-stock-assessments assessments. CV is coefficient of variation; Nmin is the minimum estimate of stock abundance.
\4\ These values, found in NMFS's SARs, represent annual levels of human-caused mortality plus serious injury from all sources combined (e.g.,
commercial fisheries, ship strike). Annual M/SI often cannot be determined precisely and is in some cases presented as a minimum value or range.
As indicated above, one species (two managed stocks) in Table 3
temporally and spatially co-occur with the activity to the degree that
take is reasonably likely to occur. All species that could potentially
occur in the proposed project area are included in Table 3 of the IHA
application. While Atlantic spotted dolphin (Stenella frontalis),
bottlenose dolphin (northern GOM Oceanic Stock), pantropical spotted
dolphin (Stenella attenuata), Rice's whale (Balaenoptera ricei),
Risso's dolphin (Grampus griseus), and sperm whale (Physeter
microcephalus) have been documented in the region (see application
Section 6--Table 6-8), the temporal and/or spatial occurrence of these
species is such that take is not expected to occur, and they are not
discussed further beyond the explanation provided here.
Bottlenose Dolphin
Bottlenose dolphins are present year-round in the nearshore waters
of the GOM and are expected to have a common occurrence within the
vicinity of the project area. There are two distinct bottlenose dolphin
morphotypes: migratory coastal and offshore, and the population of
bottlenose dolphins in the GOM consists of a complex mosaic of 38
stocks of bottlenose dolphin (Waring et al., 2010). This includes 33
bay, sound, and estuary stocks in the inshore waters; three coastal
stocks (western, northern, eastern); the northern GOM Continental Shelf
Stock; and the northern GOM Oceanic Stock (Waring et al., 2013). Of
those, only two stocks are reasonably expected near the project area:
the GOM Western Coastal Stock and the northern GOM Continental Shelf
Stock. The northern GOM Oceanic Stock is not likely to occur within the
project area because the stock range is defined as extending from the
200-m isobath of the GOM south toward the seaward extent of the
Exclusive Economic Zone (Hayes et al., 2022) and, therefore, is not
discussed further.
Bottlenose dolphins under the GOM Western Coastal Stock have the
possibility to occur within the vicinity of the project area as this
stock range is defined as the Mississippi River Delta to the U.S.-
Mexico border, in waters typically less than 20 m (66 ft) deep along
the inner continental shelf (within 7.5 km (4.6 miles) of shore; Hayes
et al., 2022). Bottlenose dolphins under the northern GOM Continental
Shelf Stock are likely to occur within the project area as well, as
this stock inhabits waters from 20-200 m (66-656 ft) deep throughout
the U.S. GOM. There are two biologically important areas for bottlenose
dolphins north of the project area in Caminada Bay and Barataria Bay,
Louisiana, but neither project staging nor implementation are expected
to impact these areas.
Marine Mammal Hearing
Hearing is the most important sensory modality for marine mammals
underwater, and exposure to anthropogenic sound can have deleterious
effects. To appropriately assess the potential effects of exposure to
sound, it is necessary to understand the frequency ranges marine
mammals are able to hear. Not all marine mammal species have equal
hearing capabilities (e.g., Richardson et al., 1995; Wartzok and
Ketten, 1999; Au and Hastings, 2008). To reflect this, Southall et al.
(2007, 2019) recommended that marine mammals be divided into hearing
groups based on directly measured (behavioral or auditory evoked
potential techniques) or estimated hearing ranges (behavioral response
data, anatomical modeling, etc.). Note that no direct measurements of
hearing ability have been successfully completed for mysticetes (i.e.,
low-frequency cetaceans). Subsequently, NMFS (2018) described
generalized hearing ranges for these marine mammal hearing groups.
Generalized hearing ranges were chosen based on the approx. 65 dB
threshold from the normalized composite audiograms, with the exception
for lower limits for low-frequency cetaceans where the lower bound was
deemed to be biologically implausible and the lower bound from Southall
et al. (2007) retained. Marine mammal hearing groups and their
associated hearing ranges are provided in Table 4.
Table 4--Marine Mammal Hearing Groups
[NMFS, 2018]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hearing group Generalized hearing range *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Low-frequency (LF) cetaceans 7 Hz to 35 kHz.
(baleen whales).
Mid-frequency (MF) cetaceans 150 Hz to 160 kHz.
(dolphins, toothed whales,
beaked whales, bottlenose
whales).
[[Page 17543]]
High-frequency (HF) cetaceans 275 Hz to 160 kHz.
(true porpoises, Kogia, river
dolphins, Cephalorhynchid,
Lagenorhynchus cruciger & L.
australis).
Phocid pinnipeds (PW) 50 Hz to 86 kHz.
(underwater) (true seals).
Otariid pinnipeds (OW) 60 Hz to 39 kHz.
(underwater) (sea lions and
fur seals).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Represents the generalized hearing range for the entire group as a
composite (i.e., all species within the group), where individual
species' hearing ranges are typically not as broad. Generalized
hearing range chosen based on ~65 dB threshold from normalized
composite audiogram, with the exception for lower limits for LF
cetaceans (Southall et al. 2007) and PW pinniped (approximation).
The pinniped functional hearing group was modified from Southall et
al. (2007) on the basis of data indicating that phocid species have
consistently demonstrated an extended frequency range of hearing
compared to otariids, especially in the higher frequency range
(Hemil[auml] et al., 2006; Kastelein et al., 2009; Reichmuth and Holt,
2013).
For more detail concerning these groups and associated frequency
ranges, please see NMFS (2018) for a review of available information.
Potential Effects of Specified Activities on Marine Mammals and Their
Habitat
This section provides a discussion of the ways in which components
of the specified activity may impact marine mammals and their habitat.
The Estimated Take section later in this document includes a
quantitative analysis of the number of individuals that are expected to
be taken by this activity. The Negligible Impact Analysis and
Determination section considers the content of this section, the
Estimated Take section, and the Proposed Mitigation section, to draw
conclusions regarding the likely impacts of these activities on the
reproductive success or survivorship of individuals and whether those
impacts are reasonably expected to, or reasonably likely to, adversely
affect the species or stock through effects on annual rates of
recruitment or survival.
Acoustic effects on marine mammals during the specified activities
can occur from impact pile driving. The effects of underwater noise
from the NFE's proposed activities have the potential to result in
Level A or Level B harassment of marine mammals in the action area.
For general information on sound, its interaction with the marine
environment, and a description of acoustic terminology, please see,
e.g., ANSI (1986, 1995), Au and Hastings (2008), Hastings and Popper
(2005), Mitson (1995), NIOSH (1998), Richardson et al. (1995), Southall
et al. (2007), and Urick (1983). Underwater sound from active acoustic
sources can cause one or more of the following: temporary or permanent
hearing impairment, behavioral disturbance, masking, stress, and non-
auditory physical effects. The degree of effect is intrinsically
related to the signal characteristics, received level, distance from
the source, and duration of the sound exposure.
Threshold Shifts
Marine mammals exposed to high-intensity sound, or to lower-
intensity sound for prolonged periods, can experience hearing threshold
shift (TS), which is the loss of hearing sensitivity at certain
frequency ranges (Finneran, 2015). TS can be permanent (PTS; permanent
threshold shift), in which case the loss of hearing sensitivity is not
fully recoverable, or temporary (TTS; temporary threshold shift), in
which case the animal's hearing threshold would recover over time
(Southall et al., 2007).
When PTS occurs, there is physical damage to the sound receptors in
the ear (i.e., tissue damage), whereas TTS represents primarily tissue
fatigue and is reversible (Southall et al., 2007). In addition, other
investigators have suggested that TTS is within the normal bounds of
physiological variability and tolerance and does not represent physical
injury (e.g., Ward, 1997). Therefore, NMFS does not consider TTS to
constitute auditory injury. Behavioral disturbance to marine mammals
from sound may include a variety of effects, including subtle changes
in behavior (e.g., minor or brief avoidance of an area or changes in
vocalizations), more conspicuous changes in similar behavioral
activities, and more sustained and/or potentially severe reactions,
such as displacement from or abandonment of high-quality habitat.
Behavioral responses to sound are highly variable and context-specific
and any reactions depend on numerous intrinsic and extrinsic factors
(e.g., species, state of maturity, experience, current activity,
reproductive state, auditory sensitivity, time of day), as well as the
interplay between factors. Available studies show wide variation in
response to underwater sound; therefore, it is difficult to predict
specifically how any given sound in a particular instance might affect
marine mammals perceiving the signal.
Currently, TTS data only exist for four species of cetaceans
(bottlenose dolphin, beluga whale (Delphinapterus leucas), harbor
porpoise (Phocoena phocena), and Yangtze finless porpoise (Neophocoena
asiaeorientalis)), and five species of pinnipeds exposed to a limited
number of sound sources (i.e., mostly tones and octave-band noise) in
laboratory settings (Finneran, 2015). At low frequencies, onset-TTS
exposure levels are higher compared to those in the region of best
sensitivity (i.e., a low frequency noise would need to be louder to
cause TTS onset when TTS exposure level is higher), as shown for harbor
porpoises and harbor seals (Phoca vitulina; Kastelein et al., 2019a,
2019b, 2020a, 2020b). In addition, TTS can accumulate across multiple
exposures, but the resulting TTS would be less than the TTS from a
single, continuous exposure with the same SEL (Finneran et al., 2010;
Kastelein et al., 2014; Kastelein et al., 2015; Mooney et al., 2009).
This means that TTS predictions based on the total, cumulative SEL
would overestimate the amount of TTS from intermittent exposures such
as sonars and impulsive sources.
The potential for TTS from impact pile driving exists. After
exposure to playbacks of impact pile driving sounds (rate 2,760
strikes/hr) in captivity, mean TTS increased from 0 dB after 15 min
exposure to 5 dB after 360 min exposure; recovery occurred within 60
min (Kastelein et al., 2016). Additionally, the existing marine mammal
TTS data come from a limited number of individuals within these
species. No data are available on noise-induced hearing loss for
mysticetes. Nonetheless, what we considered herein is the best
available science. For summaries of data on TTS in marine mammals or
for further discussion of TTS onset thresholds, please see Southall et
al. (2007, 2019) and
[[Page 17544]]
Finneran (2015), and Table 5 in NMFS (2018).
In-water construction activities associated with this project would
include impact pile driving to install 26 steel piles over 9 days. The
sounds produced by this activity are considered impulsive and
intermittent. Impulsive sounds are typically transient, brief (less
than 1 second), broadband, and consist of high peak sound pressure with
rapid rise time and rapid decay (ANSI, 1986; NIOSH, 1998; NMFS, 2018).
There would likely be pauses in activities producing the sound during
each day. Given these pauses and the fact that many marine mammals are
likely moving through the project area and not remaining for extended
periods of time, the potential for TS declines.
Behavioral Harassment
Exposure to noise from pile driving also has the potential to
behaviorally disturb marine mammals. Available studies show wide
variation in response to underwater sound; therefore, it is difficult
to predict specifically how any given sound in a particular instance
might affect marine mammals perceiving the signal. If a marine mammal
does react briefly to an underwater sound by changing its behavior or
moving a small distance, the impacts of the change are unlikely to be
significant to the individual, let alone the stock or population.
However, if a sound source displaces marine mammals from an important
feeding or breeding area for a prolonged period, impacts on individuals
and populations could be significant (e.g., Lusseau and Bejder, 2007;
Weilgart, 2007; NRC, 2005).
Disturbance may result in changing durations of surfacing and
dives, number of blows per surfacing, or moving direction and/or speed;
reduced/increased vocal activities; changing/cessation of certain
behavioral activities (such as socializing or feeding); visible startle
response or aggressive behavior (such as tail/fluke slapping or jaw
clapping); or avoidance of areas where sound sources are located.
Behavioral responses to sound are highly variable and context-specific
and any reactions depend on numerous intrinsic and extrinsic factors
(e.g., species, state of maturity, experience, current activity,
reproductive state, auditory sensitivity, time of day), as well as the
interplay between factors (e.g., Richardson et al., 1995; Wartzok et
al., 2004; Southall et al., 2007; Weilgart, 2007; Archer et al., 2010;
Southall et al., 2021). Behavioral reactions can vary not only among
individuals but also within an individual, depending on previous
experience with a sound source, context, and numerous other factors
(Ellison et al., 2012), and can vary depending on characteristics
associated with the sound source (e.g., whether it is moving or
stationary, number of sources, distance from the source). Please see
Appendices B and C of Southall et al. (2007) as well as Nowacek et al.
(2007); Ellison et al. (2012), and Gomez et al. (2016) for a review of
studies involving marine mammal behavioral responses to sound.
Disruption of feeding behavior can be difficult to correlate with
anthropogenic sound exposure, so it is usually inferred by observed
displacement from known foraging areas, the appearance of secondary
indicators (e.g., bubble nets, sediment plumes), or changes in dive
behavior. As for other types of behavioral response, the frequency,
duration, and temporal pattern of signal presentation, as well as
differences in species sensitivity, are likely contributing factors to
differences in response in any given circumstance (e.g., Croll et al.,
2001; Nowacek et al., 2004; Madsen et al., 2006; Yazvenko et al., 2007;
Melc[oacute]n et al., 2012). In addition, behavioral state of the
animal plays a role in the type and severity of a behavioral response,
such as disruption to foraging (e.g., Sivle et al., 2016; Wensveen et
al., 2017). A determination of whether foraging disruptions incur
fitness consequences would require information on or estimates of the
energetic requirements of the affected individuals and the relationship
between prey availability, foraging effort and success, and the life
history stage of the animal (Goldbogen et al., 2013).
The likely or possible impacts of NFE's proposed activities on
marine mammals could be generated from both non-acoustic and acoustic
stressors. Potential non-acoustic stressors include the physical
presence of the equipment and vessels; however, we expect that any
animals that approach the project site close enough to be harassed due
to the presence of equipment would be within the Level B harassment
zones for pile driving and would already be subject to harassment from
the in-water activities. Therefore, any impacts to marine mammals are
expected to be primarily acoustic and generated by heavy equipment
operation during pile installation (i.e., impact driving). Impact
hammers would be used to complete in-water construction and may act as
an acoustic stressor. Impact hammers operate by repeatedly dropping
and/or pushing a heavy piston onto a pile to drive the pile into the
substrate. Sound emitted by impact pile driving would be temporary and
localized. Due to the relatively limited area of impact compared to the
extensive available surrounding habitat, potential impacts from sound
are anticipated to be negligible on marine mammal habitat.
Marine Mammal Habitat Effects
NFE's proposed construction activities could have localized,
temporary impacts on marine mammal habitat, including prey, by
increasing in-water sound pressure levels and slightly decreasing water
quality. Increased noise levels may affect acoustic habitat and
adversely affect marine mammal prey in the vicinity of the project area
(see discussion below). During impact pile driving, elevated levels of
underwater noise would ensonify the project area where both fishes and
mammals occur, and could affect foraging success. Additionally, marine
mammals may avoid the area during construction, however, displacement
due to noise is expected to be temporary and is not expected to result
in long-term effects to the individuals or populations. Construction
activities are expected to be of short duration (9 days total) and
would likely have temporary impacts on marine mammal habitat through
increases in underwater sound.
In-Water Construction Effects on Potential Foraging Habitat
A temporary and localized increase in turbidity near the seafloor
would occur in the immediate area surrounding the location where piles
are installed. In general, turbidity associated with pile installation
is localized to an approx. 25-ft (7.6-m) radius around the pile
(Everitt et al., 1980). Cetaceans are not expected to be close enough
to the pile driving areas to experience effects of turbidity. Such
impact-producing factors may provoke mobile prey species to leave the
area of activity and/or cause injury or mortality in less mobile
species. This may indirectly inhibit marine mammal foraging activities
within the project area. Project impacts to marine mammal prey species
are expected to be minor and limited to short-term changes that may
result in potential prey avoidance of the project area during
construction. Marine mammals and prey species impacted by impact pile
driving activities are expected to return to normal behavior shortly
after the conclusion of pile driving operations, and return to areas of
available habitat immediate proximity to the area around the impact
pile driving activities; therefore, impacts to habitat are considered
negligible and not discussed further.
[[Page 17545]]
The area likely impacted by impact pile driving (0.2 acres) for
this project (441.5 acres) is relatively small compared to the total
available habitat in the waters off Louisiana in the northern GOM. The
proposed project area is highly influenced by anthropogenic activities,
and provides limited foraging habitat for marine mammals. Furthermore,
pile driving at the proposed project site would not obstruct long-term
movements or migration of marine mammals.
Avoidance by potential prey (i.e., fish) of the immediate area due
to the temporary loss of this foraging habitat is also possible. The
duration of fish and marine mammal avoidance of this area after pile
driving stops is unknown, but a return to normal recruitment,
distribution, and behavior is anticipated. Any behavioral avoidance by
prey of the disturbed area would still leave significantly large areas
of potential foraging habitat in the nearby vicinity.
In-Water Construction Effects on Potential Prey
Sound may affect marine mammals through impacts on the abundance,
behavior, or distribution of prey species (e.g., crustaceans,
cephalopods, fish, zooplankton, other marine mammals). Marine mammal
prey varies by species, season, and location. Here, we describe studies
regarding the effects of noise on known marine mammal prey.
Fish utilize the soundscape and components of sound in their
environment to perform important functions such as foraging, predator
avoidance, mating, and spawning (e.g., Zelick and Mann, 1999; Fay,
2009). Depending on their hearing anatomy and peripheral sensory
structures, which vary among species, fishes hear sounds using pressure
and particle motion sensitivity capabilities and detect the motion of
surrounding water (Fay et al., 2008). The potential effects of noise on
fishes depends on the overlapping frequency range, distance from the
sound source, water depth of exposure, and species-specific hearing
sensitivity, anatomy, and physiology. Key impacts to fishes may include
behavioral responses, hearing damage, barotrauma (pressure-related
injuries), and mortality.
Fish react to sounds which are especially strong and/or
intermittent low-frequency sounds, and behavioral responses such as
flight or avoidance are the most likely effects. Short duration, sharp
sounds (e.g., impulsive) can cause overt or subtle changes in fish
behavior and local distribution. The reaction of fish to noise depends
on the physiological state of the fish, past exposures, motivation
(e.g., feeding, spawning, migration), and other environmental factors.
Hastings and Popper (2005) identified several studies that suggest fish
may relocate to avoid certain areas of sound energy. Additional studies
have documented effects of pile driving on fish; several are based on
studies in support of large, multiyear bridge construction projects
(e.g., Scholik and Yan, 2001, 2002; Popper and Hastings, 2009). Many
studies have demonstrated that impulsive sounds might affect the
distribution and behavior of some fishes, potentially impacting
foraging opportunities or increasing energetic costs (e.g., Fewtrell
and McCauley, 2012; Pearson et al., 1992; Skalski et al., 1992;
Santulli et al., 1999; Paxton et al., 2017). However, some studies have
shown no or slight reaction to impulse sounds (e.g., Pena et al., 2013;
Wardle et al., 2001; Jorgenson and Gyselman, 2009; Popper et al.,
2005).
Sound pressure levels (SPLs) of sufficient strength have been known
to cause injury to fish and fish mortality. However, in most fish
species, hair cells in the ear continuously regenerate and loss of
auditory function likely is restored when damaged cells are replaced
with new cells. Halvorsen et al. (2012a) showed that a TTS of 4-6 dB
was recoverable within 24 hr for one species. Impacts would be most
severe when the individual fish is close to the source and when the
duration of exposure is long. Injury caused by barotrauma can range
from slight to severe and can cause death, and is most likely for fish
with swim bladders. Barotrauma injuries have been documented during
controlled exposure to impact pile driving (Halvorsen et al., 2012b;
Casper et al., 2013).
The most likely impact to fishes from pile driving activities at
the project area would be temporary behavioral avoidance of the area.
In general, impacts to marine mammal prey species are expected to be
minor and temporary. Further, it is anticipated that preparation
activities for pile driving and upon initial startup of equipment would
cause fish to move away from the affected area where injuries may
occur. Therefore, relatively small portions of the proposed project
area would be affected for short periods of time and the potential for
effects on fish to occur would be temporary and limited to the duration
of sound[hyphen]generating activities (i.e., impact pile driving).
In summary, given the short daily duration of sound associated with
individual pile driving events and the relatively small areas being
affected, pile driving activities associated with the proposed actions
are not likely to have a permanent, adverse effect on any fish habitat
or populations of fish species. Any behavioral avoidance by fish of the
disturbed area would still leave significantly large areas for fish and
marine mammal foraging in the nearby vicinity. Thus, we conclude that
impacts of the specified activities are not likely to have more than
short-term adverse effects on any prey habitat or populations of prey
species. Further, any impacts to marine mammal habitat are not expected
to result in significant or long-term consequences for individual
marine mammals, or to contribute to adverse impacts on their
populations.
Estimated Take of Marine Mammals
This section provides an estimate of the number of incidental takes
proposed for authorization through this IHA, which will inform both
NMFS' consideration of ``small numbers,'' and the negligible impact
determinations.
Harassment is the only type of take expected to result from these
activities. Authorized takes would be by Level B harassment only, in
the form of disruption of behavioral patterns for individual marine
mammals resulting from exposure to the acoustic source (i.e., impact
pile driving). Based on the nature of the activity and the anticipated
effectiveness of the mitigation measures (i.e., single big bubble
curtain, visual monitoring, ramp-up, power down, shutdown) discussed in
detail below in the Proposed Mitigation section, Level A harassment is
neither anticipated nor proposed to be authorized.
As described previously, no serious injury or mortality is
anticipated or proposed to be authorized for this activity. Below we
describe how the proposed take numbers are estimated.
For acoustic impacts, generally speaking, we estimate take by
considering: (1) acoustic thresholds above which NMFS believes the best
available science indicates marine mammals will be behaviorally
harassed or incur some degree of permanent hearing impairment; (2) the
area or volume of water that will be ensonified above these levels in a
day; (3) the density or occurrence of marine mammals within these
ensonified areas; and, (4) the number of days of activities. We note
that while these factors can contribute to a basic calculation to
provide an initial prediction of potential takes, additional
information that can qualitatively inform take estimates is also
sometimes available (e.g., previous monitoring results or average group
[[Page 17546]]
size). Below, we describe the factors considered here in more detail
and present the proposed take estimates.
Acoustic Thresholds
NMFS recommends the use of acoustic thresholds that identify the
received level of underwater sound above which exposed marine mammals
would be reasonably expected to be behaviorally harassed (equated to
Level B harassment) or to incur PTS of some degree (equated to Level A
harassment).
Level B Harassment--Though significantly driven by received level,
the onset of behavioral disturbance from anthropogenic noise exposure
is also informed to varying degrees by other factors related to the
source or exposure context (e.g., frequency, predictability, duty
cycle, duration of the exposure, signal-to-noise ratio, distance to the
source), the environment (e.g., bathymetry, other noises in the area,
predators in the area), and the receiving animals (hearing, motivation,
experience, demography, life stage, depth) and can be difficult to
predict (e.g., Southall et al., 2007, 2021, Ellison et al., 2012).
Based on what the available science indicates and the practical need to
use a threshold based on a metric that is both predictable and
measurable for most activities, NMFS typically uses a generalized
acoustic threshold based on received level to estimate the onset of
behavioral harassment. NMFS generally predicts that marine mammals are
likely to be behaviorally harassed in a manner considered to be Level B
harassment when exposed to underwater anthropogenic noise above root-
mean-squared pressure received levels (RMS SPL) of 120 dB (referenced
to 1 microPascal (re 1 [mu]Pa)) for continuous (e.g., vibratory pile
driving, drilling) and above RMS SPL 160 dB re 1 [mu]Pa for non-
explosive impulsive (e.g., seismic airguns) or intermittent (e.g.,
scientific sonar) sources. Generally speaking, Level B harassment take
estimates based on these behavioral harassment thresholds are expected
to include any likely takes by TTS as, in most cases, the likelihood of
TTS occurs at distances from the source less than those at which
behavioral harassment is likely. TTS of a sufficient degree can
manifest as behavioral harassment, as reduced hearing sensitivity and
the potential reduced opportunities to detect important signals
(conspecific communication, predators, prey) may result in changes in
behavior patterns that would not otherwise occur.
NFE's proposed activity includes the use of an impulsive (i.e.,
impact pile driving) source and, therefore, the RMS SPL thresholds of
160 dB re 1 [mu]Pa is applicable.
Level A Harassment--NMFS' Technical Guidance for Assessing the
Effects of Anthropogenic Sound on Marine Mammal Hearing (NMFS, 2018)
identifies dual criteria to assess auditory injury (Level A harassment)
to five different marine mammal groups (based on hearing sensitivity)
as a result of exposure to noise from two different types of sources
(impulsive or non-impulsive). NFE's proposed activity includes the use
of an impulsive (i.e., impact pile driving) source.
These thresholds are provided in Table 5. The references, analysis,
and methodology used in the development of the thresholds are described
in NMFS' 2018 Technical Guidance, which may be accessed at:
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/marine-mammal-acoustic-technical-guidance.
Table 5--Thresholds Identifying the Onset of Permanent Threshold Shift
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PTS onset acoustic thresholds * (received level)
Hearing group ------------------------------------------------------------------------
Impulsive Non-impulsive
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Low-Frequency (LF) Cetaceans........... Cell 1: Lpk,flat; 219 dB; Cell 2: LE,LF,24h: 199 dB.
LE,LF,24h: 183 dB.
Mid-Frequency (MF) Cetaceans........... Cell 3: Lpk,flat: 230 dB; Cell 4: LE,MF,24h: 198 dB.
LE,MF,24h: 185 dB.
High-Frequency (HF) Cetaceans.......... Cell 5: Lpk,flat: 202 dB; Cell 6: LE,HF,24h: 173 dB.
LE,HF,24h: 155 dB.
Phocid Pinnipeds (PW) (Underwater)..... Cell 7: Lpk,flat: 218 dB; Cell 8: LE,PW,24h: 201 dB.
LE,PW,24h: 185 dB.
Otariid Pinnipeds (OW) (Underwater).... Cell 9: Lpk,flat: 232 dB; Cell 10: LE,OW,24h: 219 dB.
LE,OW,24h: 203 dB.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Dual metric acoustic thresholds for impulsive sounds: Use whichever results in the largest isopleth for
calculating PTS onset. If a non-impulsive sound has the potential of exceeding the peak sound pressure level
thresholds associated with impulsive sounds, these thresholds should also be considered.
Note: Peak sound pressure (Lpk) has a reference value of 1 [micro]Pa, and cumulative sound exposure level (LE)
has a reference value of 1[micro]Pa\2\s. In this Table, thresholds are abbreviated to reflect American
National Standards Institute standards (ANSI 2013). However, peak sound pressure is defined by ANSI as
incorporating frequency weighting, which is not the intent for this Technical Guidance. Hence, the subscript
``flat'' is being included to indicate peak sound pressure should be flat weighted or unweighted within the
generalized hearing range. The subscript associated with cumulative sound exposure level thresholds indicates
the designated marine mammal auditory weighting function (LF, MF, and HF cetaceans, and PW and OW pinnipeds)
and that the recommended accumulation period is 24 hours. The cumulative sound exposure level thresholds could
be exceeded in a multitude of ways (i.e., varying exposure levels and durations, duty cycle). When possible,
it is valuable for action proponents to indicate the conditions under which these acoustic thresholds will be
exceeded.
Ensonified Area
Here, we describe operational and environmental parameters of the
activity that are used in estimating the area ensonified above the
acoustic thresholds, including empirical sound source levels, and
underwater sound propagation modeling.
The sound field in the project area is the existing background
noise plus additional construction noise from the proposed project.
Marine mammals are expected to be affected by sound generated by the
primary component of the project (i.e., impact pile driving).
Empirical sound source modeling was developed by Tetra Tech, Inc.,
based on literature, engineering guidelines, and underwater source
measurements and acoustic modeling assessments of similar equipment and
activities. These data were then used in propagation modeling completed
by NFE. The empirical model calculation methodology is described in
detail (see Appendix C in the Underwater Acoustic Assessment of the
application) for impact piling, and that methodology was used to
determine the Lpk and SEL sound source levels for the impact
piling activities. A summary of construction scenarios included in the
acoustic modeling analysis is provided in Table 5-1 of the Underwater
Acoustic Assessment of the application.
Underwater sound propagation modeling was completed by NFE using
dBSea (Marshall Day Acoustics) for the prediction of underwater noise
using bathymetry data and ``placing'' noise sources (i.e., platform
pile driving
[[Page 17547]]
location) in the modeled environment (see the Underwater Acoustic
Assessment in the application). The scenarios modeled were ones where
potential underwater noise impacts of impact pile driving on marine
species were assessed, and noise mitigation methods were also included.
To examine results in more detail, levels may be plotted in cross
sections, or a detailed spectrum may be extracted at any point in the
calculation area. Levels were calculated in third octave bands from
12.5 hertz (Hz) to 20 kilohertz (kHz). The accuracy of underwater sound
propagation modeling results is largely dependent on the sound source
characteristics and the accuracy of data inputs and assumptions used to
describe the medium between the path and receiver. The representative
acoustic modeling scenarios were derived from descriptions of the
expected construction activities and operational conditions through
consultations between the project design and engineering teams from
NFE.
The impact pile driving scenarios were modeled using a vertical
array of point sources spaced at 1 m intervals, distributing the sound
emissions from pile driving throughout the water column. The vertical
array was assigned third-octave band sound characteristics adjusted for
site-specific parameters, including expected hammer energy and number
of blows. Third octave band center frequencies from 12.5 Hz up to 20
kHz were used in the modeling. The scenarios modeled were impact pile
driving for a fixed-jacket design associated with the three fixed-
jacket platforms (P4, P5, P6; Table 6). To be conservative, it was
assumed the maximum rated hammer energy of 1,380 kJ would be employed
for all of the impact piling scenarios.
The underwater acoustic modeling analysis used a split solver, with
dBSeaPE (Parabolic Equation Method) evaluating the low frequency (12.5-
800 Hz) range and dBSeaRay (Ray Tracing Method) addressing the high
frequency (1-20 kHz) range. The dBSeaPE solver uses the range-dependent
acoustic model parabolic equation method, a versatile and robust method
of marching the sound field out in range from the sound source. This
method is widely used in the underwater acoustics community. The
dBSeaRay solver forms a solution by tracing rays from the source to the
receiver. Many rays leave the source covering a range of angles, and
the sound level at each point in the receiving field is calculated by
coherently summing the components from each ray. This is currently the
only computationally efficient method at high frequencies.
Table 6--Underwater Acoustic Modeling Scenarios--Pile Installation
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sound source
Duration of Total hammer Sound source level Sound source
pile blows (based Location (UTM level (peak (cumulative level (root
Platform Activity description installation on total piles coordinates) for sound sound exposure mean square
(minutes) per day) modeling locations pressure) over 24-hour sound
period) pressure)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
P4................... 4 piles per day (12 190 5,684 223,049 m, 3,219,466 m. 236 210 220
piles total).
P5................... 8 pile segments per day 238 7,144 222,890 m, 3,219,450 m. 236 210 220
(8 piles total).
P6................... 6 pile segments per day 122 5,358 223,176 m, 3,219,585 m. 236 210 220
(6 piles total).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: All piles are 108 in (2.743 m) diameter piles. Maximum hammer energy is 1,380 kJ.
To calculate distances to the Level A harassment and Level B
harassment thresholds for the methods and piles being used in this
project, a maximum received level-over-depth approach was used by NFE.
This approach uses the maximum received level that occurs within the
water column at each sampling point. Both the maximum range at which
the sound level was calculated in the model (Rmax) and the
maximum range at which a sound level was calculated excluding five
percent of the Rmax (R95) were calculated
for each of the regulatory thresholds. The R95
excludes major outliers or protruding areas associated with the
underwater acoustic modeling environment. Regardless of shape of the
calculated isopleths, the predicted range encompasses at least 95
percent of the area that would be exposed to sound at or above the
specified level. All distances to injury thresholds are presented in
terms of the R95 range. The calculated values for
all three platforms were comparable (Tables 7, 8, 9), which is expected
given the similar water depths, benthic conditions, bathymetry, and
sound speed profile influences resulting from the sites' close
proximity to one another.
For purposes of calculating and requesting take, NFE used the 6 dB
attenuated isopleths associated with the use of a single big bubble
curtain with a minimum airflow rate of 0.3 m\3\/min*m (see Proposed
Mitigation). A single bubble curtain with an airflow rate of 0.3 m\3\/
min*m can achieve 8-14 dB reduction when deployed on the seafloor at a
depth of 30 m (98 ft; Koschinski and Ludemann, 2020). Available single
big bubble curtains, operating with an airflow rate of 0.5 m\3\/min*m,
are documented to achieve a minimum of 10 dB reduction in sound
propagation (Bellmann et al., 2020). To be conservative in
determination of take estimations, a 6 dB mitigation level was chosen.
Table 7--Marine Mammal Injury and Behavioral Onset Criteria Threshold Distances (Meters) for Pile Driving at P4
Location
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Distance (m) Distance (m)
Hearing group Metric Threshold (dB) without with 6 dB
attenuation attenuation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
LF cetaceans.......................... Cumulative sound 183 3,929 2,010
exposure over 24-hour
period LE,24hr.
LF cetaceans.......................... Peak sound pressure 219 39 23
Lp,pk.
MF cetaceans.......................... Cumulative sound 185 116 46
exposure over 24-hour
period LE,24hr.
[[Page 17548]]
MF cetaceans.......................... Peak sound pressure 230 11 NA *
Lp,pk.
Marine mammal behavior................ Root mean square sound 160 3,208 1,560
pressure Lp.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* The threshold level is greater than the source level, therefore, distances are not generated.
Table 8--Marine Mammal Injury and Behavioral Onset Criteria Threshold Distances (Meters) for Pile Driving at P5
Location
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Distance (m) Distance (m)
Hearing group Metric Threshold (dB) without with 6 dB
attenuation attenuation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
LF cetaceans.......................... Cumulative sound 183 4,558 2,249
exposure over 24-hour
period LE,24hr.
LF cetaceans.......................... Peak sound pressure 219 39 24
Lp,pk.
MF cetaceans.......................... Cumulative sound 185 132 70
exposure over 24-hour
period LE,24hr.
MF cetaceans.......................... Peak sound pressure 230 12 NA *
Lp,pk.
Marine mammal behavior................ Root mean square sound 160 3,037 1,582
pressure Lp.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* The threshold level is greater than the source level, therefore, distances are not generated.
Table 9--Marine Mammal Injury and Behavioral Onset Criteria Threshold Distances (Meters) for Pile Driving at P6
Location
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Distance (m) Distance (m)
Hearing group Metric Threshold (dB) without with 6 dB
attenuation attenuation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
LF cetaceans.......................... Cumulative sound 183 3,908 1,887
exposure over 24-hour
period LE,24hr.
LF cetaceans.......................... Peak sound pressure 219 39 24
Lp,pk.
MF cetaceans.......................... Cumulative sound 185 111 45
exposure over 24-hour
period LE,24hr.
MF cetaceans.......................... Peak sound pressure 230 11 NA *
Lp,pk.
Marine mammal behavior................ Root mean square sound 160 3,141 1,603
pressure Lp.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* The threshold level is greater than the source level, therefore, distances are not generated.
Marine Mammal Occurrence
In this section we provide information about the occurrence of
marine mammals, including density or other relevant information that
will inform the take calculations.
As discussed previously, given the project location in relatively
shallow shelf waters in the western GOM and brief project duration,
take is expected for only the bottlenose dolphin. However, NFE provided
quantitative analysis for additional species that rarely occur in shelf
waters and/or ESA-listed species (Rice's whales and sperm whales).
These analyses, shown in Table 10, confirmed that no take is reasonably
expected to occur for species other than bottlenose dolphin.
Marine mammal density estimates are based on the most recent marine
mammal species distribution data for the GOM (Litz et al., 2022). While
there are multiple sources of information in this region (e.g., Roberts
et al., 2016; Hayes et al., 2022; Maze-Foley and Mullin, 2006)), the
most recent information (Litz et al., 2022) was used in take estimation
calculations.
Take Estimation
Here we describe how the information provided above is synthesized
to produce a quantitative estimate of the take that is reasonably
likely to occur and proposed for authorization.
Potential take calculations were based on annual species density
within the project area, given the dates during which impact pile
driving would occur (May-August). Bottlenose dolphins are the only
marine mammal species with calculated take, and is the only marine
mammal species for which authorization of take is proposed. No take by
Level A harassment is anticipated during impact pile driving.
Table 10--Average Marine Mammal Densities Used in Exposure Estimates and Estimates of Calculated Takes by Level A and Level B Harassment Due to Impact
Pile Driving
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average
seasonal Take by Level Take by Level Take by Level Take by Level Take by Level Take by Level
Species Stock density (per A harassment B harassment A harassment B harassment A harassment B harassment
100 km \2\) at P4 at P4 at P5 at P5 at P6 at P6
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Atlantic spotted dolphin.... GOM....... 0.247 0 0 0 0 0 0
Bottlenose dolphin.......... GOM....... 149.159 0 15 0 15 0 16
Pantropical spotted dolphin. GOM....... 0.000 0 0 0 0 0 0
Rice's whale................ GOM....... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Risso's dolphin............. GOM....... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Sperm whale................. GOM....... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: Cetacean density values from the NOAA Southeast Fisheries Science Center (Litz et al., 2022). Bottlenose dolphin density values not identified to
stock.
[[Page 17549]]
Bottlenose dolphin density information is not differentiated by
individual stock (Litz et al., 2022). Given the difficulty of
bottlenose dolphin identification in the field, it has been assumed
that the total calculated take of bottlenose dolphins could accrue to
either the western coastal stock or the continental shelf stock. Take
calculations presented in Table 10 indicate that bottlenose dolphins
may be present during construction activities, but do not account for
average group sizes. Average pod size is assumed to be 20 individuals
(Maze-Foley and Mullin, 2006). Due to the likelihood that bottlenose
dolphins may be present during construction activities, one pod of
bottlenose dolphins was assumed to potentially be present per each day
of impact pile driving; therefore, the total number of days (9) was
multiplied by the average group size (20) to produce the proposed take
number for authorization (Table 11).
Table 11--Average Marine Mammal Densities Used in Exposure Estimates and Estimates of Requested Takes by Level B Harassment Due to Impact Pile Driving
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Take by Level Take by Level Take by Level
Species Stock B harassment B harassment B harassment Total Level B Percent
at P4 at P5 at P6 take \3\ population
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bottlenose dolphin \2\ \3\................ Western Coastal............. 60 60 60 180 0.3
Bottlenose dolphin\2\ \3\................. Continental Shelf...........
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: Given the difficulty of visual identification in the field for bottlenose dolphins, it has been assumed the calculated take could be accrued to
either the GOM Western Coastal stock or the northern GOM Continental Shelf stock.
\1\ Cetacean density values from Litz et al. (2022).
\2\ Bottlenose dolphin density value from Litz et al. (2022) reported for the entire GOM are presented. Estimated take is listed as the total over 3
days of activity at each platform (9 days total).
\3\ Bottlenose dolphin estimated take was adjusted to account for one group size of 20 individuals per day for 9 days of construction (Maze-Foley and
Mullin, 2006).
Proposed Mitigation
In order to issue an IHA under section 101(a)(5)(D) of the MMPA,
NMFS must set forth the permissible methods of taking pursuant to the
activity, and other means of effecting the least practicable impact on
the species or stock and its habitat, paying particular attention to
rookeries, mating grounds, and areas of similar significance, and on
the availability of the species or stock for taking for certain
subsistence uses (latter not applicable for this action). NMFS
regulations require applicants for incidental take authorizations to
include information about the availability and feasibility (economic
and technological) of equipment, methods, and manner of conducting the
activity or other means of effecting the least practicable adverse
impact upon the affected species or stocks, and their habitat (50 CFR
216.104(a)(11)).
In evaluating how mitigation may or may not be appropriate to
ensure the least practicable adverse impact on species or stocks and
their habitat, as well as subsistence uses where applicable, NMFS
considers two primary factors:
(1) The manner in which, and the degree to which, the successful
implementation of the measure(s) is expected to reduce impacts to
marine mammals, marine mammal species or stocks, and their habitat.
This considers the nature of the potential adverse impact being
mitigated (likelihood, scope, range). It further considers the
likelihood that the measure will be effective if implemented
(probability of accomplishing the mitigating result if implemented as
planned), the likelihood of effective implementation (probability
implemented as planned); and,
(2) The practicability of the measures for applicant
implementation, which may consider such things as cost, and impact on
operations.
Single Big Bubble Curtain
NFE would employ a single big bubble curtain with a minimum airflow
rate of 0.3 m\3\/min*m. In a big bubble curtain system, the entire
construction site (installation vessel and foundation structure) is
enveloped by a nozzle hose deployed in a complete circle at a specified
distance from the site of pile driving on the sea floor. The hose is
perforated through which air is forced creating an air bubble curtain
that encloses the construction site (Bellmann et al., 2020).
Pile Driving Weather and Time Restrictions
Pile driving would commence only during daylight hours no earlier
than one hour after (civil) sunrise. Pile driving would not be
initiated later than 1.5 hr before (civil) sunset. Pile driving may
continue after dark when the installation of the same pile began during
daylight hours (1.5 hr before (civil) sunset) and must proceed for
human safety or installation feasibility reasons. Pile driving will not
be initiated in times of low visibility when the shutdown zone for MF
cetaceans (500 m) cannot be visually monitored, as determined by the
lead PSO on duty.
Protected Species Observers (PSOs)
The placement of four PSOs during all pile driving activities
(described in the Proposed Monitoring and Reporting section) would
ensure the shutdown zone is visible in good conditions. Visual
monitoring of the established zone would be performed by qualified and
NMFS-approved third-party PSOs.
Harassment and Shutdown Zones
The harassment and shutdown zones would be established and
continuously monitored by PSOs during impact pile driving to minimize
impacts to marine mammals. NMFS proposes to require the 500-m shutdown
zone. This zone is expanded from the largest estimated Level A
harassment zone (70 m) under the 6 dB reduction scenario in order to
provide a conservative monitoring area for purposes of potential
shutdown of activity (see below).
Ramp-Up Procedures
NFE would implement a ``ramp-up'' technique when impact pile
driving with the maximum hammer energy limited to 60 percent. The ramp
up technique requires an initial 30 min using a reduced hammer energy
and involves initially driving a pile using a low hammer energy and, as
the pile is driven further into the soil, the hammer energy is
increased as necessary to achieve desired soil penetration. A ramp up
would occur at the beginning of the impact pile driving of each pile
and at any time following the cessation of impact pile driving of 30
min or longer.
[[Page 17550]]
Shutdown and Power-Down Procedures
The shutdown zone around the pile driving activities would be
maintained by four PSOs, as previously described, for the presence of
marine mammals before, during, and after pile driving activity. For
pile driving, from an engineering standpoint, any significant stoppage
of driving progress may allow time for displaced sediments along the
pile surface areas to consolidate and bind. Attempts to restart the
driving of a stopped pile may be unsuccessful and create a situation
where a pile is permanently bound in a partially driven position. If a
marine mammal is observed entering or within the shutdown zone after
pile driving has commenced, a shutdown of pile driving would occur when
practicable as determined by the lead engineer on duty, who must
evaluate the following:
Use of site-specific soil data and real-time hammer log
information to judge whether a stoppage would risk causing pile refusal
at restart of pile; and,
Confirmation that pile penetration is deep enough to
secure pile stability in the interim situation, taking into account
weather statistics for the relevant season and the current weather
forecast.
Determination by the lead engineer on duty would be made for each
pile as the installation progresses and not for the site as a whole. If
a shutdown is called for but the lead engineer determines shutdown is
not practicable due to an imminent risk of injury or loss of life to an
individual, or risk of damage to a vessel that creates risk of injury
or loss of life for individuals, reduced hammer energy (power-down)
would be implemented when the lead engineer determines it is
practicable.
Subsequent restart/increased power of the equipment can be
initiated if the animal has been observed exiting the shutdown zone
within 30 min of the shutdown, or, after an additional time period has
elapsed with no further sighting of the animal that triggered the
shutdown (i.e., 15 min for small odontocetes, 30 min for all other
species). If pile driving shuts down for reasons other than mitigation
(e.g., mechanical difficulty) for brief periods (i.e., less than 30
min), it may be activated again without a ramp up if PSOs have
maintained constant observation and no detections of any marine mammal
have occurred within the shutdown zone.
Based on our evaluation of the applicant's proposed measures, NMFS
has preliminarily determined that the proposed mitigation measures
provide the means of effecting the least practicable impact on the
affected species or stocks and their habitat, paying particular
attention to rookeries, mating grounds, and areas of similar
significance.
Proposed Monitoring and Reporting
In order to issue an IHA for an activity, section 101(a)(5)(D) of
the MMPA states that NMFS must set forth requirements pertaining to the
monitoring and reporting of such taking. The MMPA implementing
regulations at 50 CFR 216.104(a)(13) indicate that requests for
authorizations must include the suggested means of accomplishing the
necessary monitoring and reporting that will result in increased
knowledge of the species and of the level of taking or impacts on
populations of marine mammals that are expected to be present while
conducting the activities. Effective reporting is critical both to
compliance as well as ensuring that the most value is obtained from the
required monitoring.
Monitoring and reporting requirements prescribed by NMFS should
contribute to improved understanding of one or more of the following:
Occurrence of marine mammal species or stocks in the area
in which take is anticipated (e.g., presence, abundance, distribution,
density);
Nature, scope, or context of likely marine mammal exposure
to potential stressors/impacts (individual or cumulative, acute or
chronic), through better understanding of: (1) action or environment
(e.g., source characterization, propagation, ambient noise); (2)
affected species (e.g., life history, dive patterns); (3) co-occurrence
of marine mammal species with the activity; or (4) biological or
behavioral context of exposure (e.g., age, calving or feeding areas);
Individual marine mammal responses (behavioral or
physiological) to acoustic stressors (acute, chronic, or cumulative),
other stressors, or cumulative impacts from multiple stressors;
How anticipated responses to stressors impact either: (1)
long-term fitness and survival of individual marine mammals; or (2)
populations, species, or stocks;
Effects on marine mammal habitat (e.g., marine mammal prey
species, acoustic habitat, or other important physical components of
marine mammal habitat); and,
Mitigation and monitoring effectiveness.
Visual Monitoring
Monitoring and reporting requirements are provided herein. Visual
monitoring of the harassment zones, to the extent practicable, and
established shutdown zone would be performed by a minimum of four
qualified and NMFS-approved third-party PSOs. A visual observer team
comprising NMFS-approved PSOs, operating in shifts, would be stationed
aboard both the respective project vessel and a dedicated PSO vessel.
PSO qualifications would include a science degree and direct field
experience on a marine mammal observation vessel and/or aerial surveys
in the Atlantic Ocean/GOM. All PSOs would work in shifts such that no
one monitor would work more than 4 consecutive hr without a consecutive
2-hr break or longer than 12 hr during any 24-hr period.
PSOs would be responsible for visually monitoring and identifying
marine mammals approaching or entering the established harassment and
shutdown zones during survey activities. It would be the responsibility
of a designated lead PSO on duty to communicate the presence of marine
mammals as well as to communicate and enforce the action(s) that are
necessary to ensure mitigation and monitoring requirements are
implemented as appropriate. Observations from other PSOs would be
communicated to the lead PSO on duty, who would then be responsible for
implementing the necessary mitigation procedures.
PSOs would be equipped with binoculars and have the ability to
estimate distances to marine mammals located in proximity to their
established zones using range finders. Reticulated binoculars would
also be available to PSOs for use as appropriate based on conditions
and visibility to support the sighting and monitoring of marine
species.
Data on all PSO observations would be recorded based on standard
PSO collection requirements. This would include dates and locations of
survey operations; time of observation, location and weather; details
of the sightings (e.g., species, age classification (if known),
numbers, behavior), and details of any observed ``taking'' (behavioral
disturbances or injury/mortality). The data sheet would be provided to
NMFS for review and approval prior to the start of survey activities.
In addition, prior to initiation of project activities, all crew
members would undergo environmental training, a component of which
would focus on the procedures for sighting and protection of marine
[[Page 17551]]
mammals. A briefing would also be conducted between the survey
supervisors and crews, the PSOs, and NFE. The purpose of the briefing
would be to establish responsibilities of each party, define the chains
of command, discuss communication procedures, provide an overview of
monitoring purposes, and review operational procedures.
During impact pile driving, visual monitoring would occur as
follows using a minimum of four PSOs assigned to two different
locations:
A minimum of two PSOs must be on active duty at the pile
driving vessel/platform from 60 min before, during, and for 30 min
after all pile installation activity; and,
A minimum of two PSOs must be on active duty on a
dedicated PSO vessel from 60 min before, during, and for 30 min after
all pile installation activity. The dedicated PSO vessel must be
located at the best vantage point in order to observe and document
marine mammal sightings in proximity to the shutdown zone.
Reporting
NFE will provide the following reporting as necessary during active
pile driving activities:
The applicant will report any observed injury or mortality
as soon as feasible and in accordance with NMFS' standard reporting
guidelines. Reports will be made by phone (305-361-4586) and by email
([email protected] and [email protected]) and will
include the following:
[cir] Time, date, and location (latitude/longitude) of the first
discovery (and updated location information if known and applicable);
[cir] Species identification (if known) or description of the
animal(s) involved;
[cir] Condition of the animal(s) (including carcass condition if
the animal is dead);
[cir] Observed behaviors of the animal(s), if alive;
[cir] If available, photographs or video footage of the animal(s);
and,
[cir] General circumstances under which the animal was discovered.
An annual report summarizing the prior year's activities
will be provided that fully documents the methods and monitoring
protocols, summarizes the data recorded during monitoring, estimates
the number of listed marine mammals that may have been incidentally
taken during project pile driving, and provides an interpretation of
the results and effectiveness of all monitoring tasks. The annual draft
report will be provided no later than 90 days following completion of
construction activities. Any recommendations made by NMFS will be
addressed in the final report, due after the IHA expires and including
a summary of all monitoring activities, prior to acceptance by NMFS.
Final reports will follow a standardized format for PSO reporting from
activities requiring marine mammal mitigation and monitoring.
All PSOs will use a standardized data entry format (see
Appendix B PSO Standardized Data Entry of application).
Negligible Impact Analysis and Determination
NMFS has defined negligible impact as an impact resulting from the
specified activity that cannot be reasonably expected to, and is not
reasonably likely to, adversely affect the species or stock through
effects on annual rates of recruitment or survival (50 CFR 216.103). A
negligible impact finding is based on the lack of likely adverse
effects on annual rates of recruitment or survival (i.e., population-
level effects). An estimate of the number of takes alone is not enough
information on which to base an impact determination. In addition to
considering estimates of the number of marine mammals that might be
``taken'' through harassment, NMFS considers other factors, such as the
likely nature of any impacts or responses (e.g., intensity, duration),
the context of any impacts or responses (e.g., critical reproductive
time or location, foraging impacts affecting energetics), as well as
effects on habitat, and the likely effectiveness of the mitigation. We
also assess the number, intensity, and context of estimated takes by
evaluating this information relative to population status. Consistent
with the 1989 preamble for NMFS' implementing regulations (54 FR 40338;
September 29, 1989), the impacts from other past and ongoing
anthropogenic activities are incorporated into this analysis via their
impacts on the baseline (e.g., as reflected in the regulatory status of
the species, population size and growth rate where known, ongoing
sources of human-caused mortality, or ambient noise levels).
Level A harassment is extremely unlikely given the required
mitigation measures designed to minimize the possibility of injury to
marine mammals. No mortality is anticipated given the nature of the
activity.
Pile installation activities have the potential to disturb or
displace marine mammals. Specifically, the project activities may
result in take, in the form of Level B harassment only, from underwater
sounds generated from impact pile installation activities. Potential
takes could occur if individuals move into the ensonified zones when
these activities are underway. The takes from Level B harassment would
be due to potential behavioral disturbance. The potential for
harassment is minimized through the implementation of planned
mitigation strategies.
Take would occur within a limited, confined area of each stock's
range. Level B harassment would be reduced to the level of least
practicable adverse impact through use of mitigation measures described
herein. Further, the amount of take authorized is extremely small when
compared to stock abundance (less than one percent for each stock).
No marine mammal stocks for which incidental take authorization is
proposed are listed as threatened or endangered under the ESA or
determined to be strategic or depleted under the MMPA. The employment
of a single big bubble curtain for sound attenuation, large shutdown
zone, and proposed monitoring make injury takes of marine mammals
unlikely. The shutdown zone would be thoroughly monitored before the
proposed pile installation begins and activities would be postponed or
hammer energy would be reduced (power down) if a marine mammal is
sighted within the shutdown zone. There is a high likelihood that
marine mammals would be detected by trained observers under
environmental conditions described for the proposed project. NFE's plan
to limit construction activities to daylight hours would also increase
detectability of marine mammals in the area. Therefore, the proposed
mitigation and monitoring measures are expected to eliminate the
potential for Level A harassment as well as reduce the amount and
intensity for Level B behavioral harassment.
Anticipated and authorized takes are expected to be limited to
short-term Level B harassment (behavioral disturbance) as construction
activities would occur over the course of 9 days. Individual animals,
even if taken multiple times, would likely move away from the sound
source and be temporarily displaced from the area due to elevated noise
level during pile removal. Marine mammals could also experience TTS if
they move into the Level B harassment zone. TTS is a temporary loss of
hearing sensitivity when exposed to loud sound, and the hearing
threshold is expected to recover completely within minutes to hours;
thus, it is not considered an injury. While TTS could occur, it is not
considered a likely outcome of this
[[Page 17552]]
activity. In all, there would be no adverse impacts to the stocks as a
whole.
The proposed project is not expected to have significant adverse
effects on marine mammal habitat. There are no Biologically Important
Areas or ESA-designated critical habitat within the project area. The
activities may cause fish to leave the area temporarily, which could
impact marine mammals' foraging opportunities in a limited portion of
the foraging range. However, due to the short duration of activities
and the relatively small area of affected habitat, the impacts to
marine mammal habitat are not expected to cause significant or long-
term negative consequences.
In combination, we believe that these factors, as well as the
available body of evidence from other similar activities, demonstrate
that the potential effects of the specified activities would have only
minor, short-term behavioral effects on individuals. The specified
activities are not expected to impact reproduction or survival of any
individual marine mammals, much less affect rates of recruitment or
survival, and would therefore not result in population-level impacts.
In summary and as described above, the following factors primarily
support our preliminary determination that the impacts resulting from
this activity are not expected to adversely affect either of the stocks
through effects on annual rates of recruitment or survival:
No serious injury or mortality is anticipated or
authorized;
The specified activity and associated ensonified areas are
small relative to the overall habitat ranges of the stocks;
The applicant is required to implement mitigation measures
to minimize impacts, such as a single big bubble curtain, ramp-up
procedures, and implementation of shutdown zone, when practicable;
Biologically important areas or critical habitat have not
been identified within the project area; and,
The lack of anticipated significant or long-term effects
to marine mammal habitat.
Based on the analysis contained herein of the likely effects of the
specified activity on marine mammals and their habitat, and taking into
consideration the implementation of the proposed monitoring and
mitigation measures, NMFS preliminarily finds that the total marine
mammal take from the proposed activity would have a negligible impact
on all affected marine mammal species or stocks.
Small Numbers
As noted previously, only take of small numbers of marine mammals
may be authorized under sections 101(a)(5)(A) and (D) of the MMPA for
specified activities other than military readiness activities. The MMPA
does not define small numbers and so, in practice, where estimated
numbers are available, NMFS compares the number of individuals taken to
the most appropriate estimation of abundance of the relevant species or
stock in our determination of whether an authorization is limited to
small numbers of marine mammals. When the predicted number of
individuals to be taken is fewer than one-third of the species or stock
abundance, the take is considered to be of small numbers. Additionally,
other qualitative factors may be considered in the analysis, such as
the temporal or spatial scale of the activities.
NMFS proposes to authorize incidental take by Level B harassment
only of one marine mammal species with two managed stocks. The total
amount of takes proposed for authorization relative to the best
available population abundance is below one third of the estimated
stock abundances and less than one percent for both stocks.
Based on the analysis contained herein of the proposed activity
(including the proposed mitigation and monitoring measures) and the
anticipated take of marine mammals, NMFS preliminarily finds that small
numbers of marine mammals would be taken relative to the population
size of the affected species or stocks.
Unmitigable Adverse Impact Analysis and Determination
There are no relevant subsistence uses of the affected marine
mammal stocks or species implicated by this action. Therefore, NMFS has
determined that the total taking of affected species or stocks would
not have an unmitigable adverse impact on the availability of such
species or stocks for taking for subsistence purposes.
Endangered Species Act
Section 7(a)(2) of the Endangered Species Act of 1973 (ESA: 16
U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) requires that each Federal agency insure that any
action it authorizes, funds, or carries out is not likely to jeopardize
the continued existence of any endangered or threatened species or
result in the destruction or adverse modification of designated
critical habitat. To ensure ESA compliance for the issuance of IHAs,
NMFS consults internally whenever we propose to authorize take for
endangered or threatened species.
No incidental take of ESA-listed species is proposed for
authorization or expected to result from this activity. Therefore, NMFS
has determined that formal consultation under section 7 of the ESA is
not required for this action.
Proposed Authorization
As a result of these preliminary determinations, NMFS proposes to
issue an IHA to NFE for conducting impact pile driving to support
construction of liquefied natural gas platforms in waters off Grand
Isle, Louisiana, from May 1, 2023, through April 30, 2024, provided the
previously mentioned mitigation, monitoring, and reporting requirements
are incorporated. A draft of the proposed IHA can be found at: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/incidental-take-authorizations-construction-activities.
Request for Public Comments
We request comment on our analyses, the proposed authorization, and
any other aspect of this notice of proposed IHA. We also request
comment on the potential renewal of this proposed IHA as described in
the paragraph below. Please include with your comments any supporting
data or literature citations to help inform decisions on the request
for this IHA or a subsequent renewal IHA.
On a case-by-case basis, NMFS may issue a one-time, one-year
renewal IHA following notice to the public providing an additional 15
days for public comments when (1) up to another year of identical or
nearly identical activities as described in the Description of Proposed
Activities section of this notice is planned or (2) the activities as
described in the Description of Proposed Activities section of this
notice would not be completed by the time the IHA expires and a renewal
would allow for completion of the activities beyond that described in
the Dates and Duration section of this notice, provided all of the
following conditions are met:
A request for renewal is received no later than 60 days
prior to the needed renewal IHA effective date (recognizing that the
renewal IHA expiration date cannot extend beyond one year from
expiration of the initial IHA).
The request for renewal must include the following:
(1) An explanation that the activities to be conducted under the
requested renewal IHA are identical to the activities analyzed under
the initial IHA, are a subset of the activities, or
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include changes so minor (e.g., reduction in pile size) that the
changes do not affect the previous analyses, mitigation and monitoring
requirements, or take estimates (with the exception of reducing the
type or amount of take).
(2) A preliminary monitoring report showing the results of the
required monitoring to date and an explanation showing that the
monitoring results do not indicate impacts of a scale or nature not
previously analyzed or authorized.
Upon review of the request for renewal, the status of the affected
species or stocks, and any other pertinent information, NMFS determines
that there are no more than minor changes in the activities, the
mitigation and monitoring measures will remain the same and
appropriate, and the findings in the initial IHA remain valid.
Dated: March 20, 2023.
Kimberly Damon-Randall,
Director, Office of Protected Resources, National Marine Fisheries
Service.
[FR Doc. 2023-06006 Filed 3-22-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P