Notice of Availability of the Proposed Resource Management Plan Amendment and Final Environmental Impact Statement for Big Game Habitat Conservation for Oil and Gas Management in Colorado, 58749-58751 [2024-15690]
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ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 139 / Friday, July 19, 2024 / Notices
declarations during the referral and
inspection. CBPOs will follow current
agency policy on declaration
amendment opportunities.
by 19 CFR 148.18, regarding failure to
declare, and 19 CFR 148.19, regarding
false or fraudulent statements, will still
apply.
Eligibility and Participation
Requirements
This test allowing a demonstrative
declaration to be an acceptable
declaration method will begin at one air
POE, Dallas-Fort Worth, Texas. CBP
may choose to expand this test to other
air POEs during the two-year test
period. Any such expansion will be
announced on the CBP website, https://
www.cbp.gov.
CBP will provide directional signage
for use in the implementation of the
declaration zones. Port management
will coordinate with the airport
authority and terminal managers for the
printing and posting of the directional
signage and for establishing the
corresponding queues. The signage is
ancillary to the statutory signage
currently posted within air terminal
facilities and the FIS area. These
directional signs will facilitate the
declaration zone process and help
travelers understand the expectation
when entering a specific queue.
CBP will also work with each airline
at eligible POEs to develop educational
materials to provide to travelers
regarding U.S. Customs declaration
responsibilities and how travelers
should navigate the declaration zones.
Duration of Test
Authorization for the Test
The test described in this notice is
authorized pursuant to 19 CFR 101.9(a),
which allows the Commissioner of CBP
to impose requirements different from
those specified in the CBP Regulations
for purposes of conducting a test
program or procedure designed to
evaluate the effectiveness of new
operational procedures regarding the
processing of passengers. This test is
authorized pursuant to this regulation as
it is designed to evaluate whether
allowing a demonstrative initial
declaration is a feasible way to fulfill
the declaration requirement and allow
for streamlined processing.
Paperwork Reduction Act
Waiver of Certain Regulatory
Requirements
CBP regulations require each traveler
to provide an oral or written declaration
of all articles brought into the United
States, to a CBP officer. See 19 CFR
148.12, 148.13. The test will provide
arriving travelers with an alternative
method to meet this requirement by
allowing a demonstrative initial
declaration. All other requirements of
19 CFR part 148, subpart B, regarding
declarations, including those provided
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18:53 Jul 18, 2024
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This test will run for approximately
two years, beginning no earlier than
August 19, 2024. While the test is
ongoing, CBP will evaluate the results
and determine whether the test will be
extended or otherwise modified. CBP
reserves the right to discontinue this test
at any time in CBP’s sole discretion.
CBP will announce any modifications to
the duration of the test by notice in the
Federal Register.
Evaluation of Declaration Zone Test
CBP will use the results of this test to
assess the operational feasibility of
allowing an initial demonstrative
declaration to be an acceptable method
of declaration at air POEs. CBP will
evaluate this test based on a number of
criteria, including:
• Evaluation of airline customer
satisfaction surveys gathering feedback
on the debarkation process; and
• Comparison of year-over-year
enforcement statistics for each test
period to ensure no impact to duty
collection or to the frequency of
enforcement activities.
The Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3507(d)) requires that
CBP consider the impact of paperwork
and other information collection
burdens imposed on the public. As
there is no new collection of
information required in this document,
the provisions of the PRA are
inapplicable.
Signing Authority
Troy A. Miller, the Senior Official
Performing the Duties of the
Commissioner, having reviewed and
approved this document, has delegated
the authority to electronically sign this
document to the Director (or Acting
Director, if applicable) of the
Regulations and Disclosure Law
Division for CBP, for purposes of
publication in the Federal Register.
Robert F. Altneu,
Director, Regulations & Disclosure Law
Division, Regulations & Rulings, Office of
Trade, U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
[FR Doc. 2024–15947 Filed 7–18–24; 8:45 am]
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58749
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[BLM_CO_FRN_MO4500179856]
Notice of Availability of the Proposed
Resource Management Plan
Amendment and Final Environmental
Impact Statement for Big Game Habitat
Conservation for Oil and Gas
Management in Colorado
Bureau of Land Management.
Notice of availability.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
In compliance with the
National Environmental Policy Act of
1969, as amended (NEPA), and the
Federal Land Policy and Management
Act of 1976, as amended (FLPMA), the
Bureau of Land Management (BLM) has
prepared a proposed Resource
Management Plan (RMP) Amendment
and Final Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS) for Big Game Habitat
Conservation for Oil and Gas
Management and by this notice is
announcing the start of a 30-day protest
period of the proposed RMP
amendment.
SUMMARY:
This notice announces a 30-day
protest period to the BLM on the
proposed RMP amendment. Protests
must be postmarked or electronically
submitted on the BLM’s ePlanning site
within 30 days of the date that the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
publishes its Notice of Availability
(NOA) in the Federal Register. The EPA
usually publishes its NOAs on Fridays.
ADDRESSES: The proposed RMP
amendment and final EIS is available on
the BLM ePlanning project website at
https://go.usa.gov/xzXxY. Documents
pertinent to this proposal may also be
examined at the BLM Colorado State
Office, Denver Federal Center, Building
1A, Lakewood, Colorado.
Instructions for filing a protest with
the BLM for the Big Game Habitat
Conservation for Oil and Gas
Management Proposed RMP
Amendment and Final EIS can be found
at: https://www.blm.gov/programs/
planning-and-nepa/publicparticipation/filing-a-plan-protest and
at 43 CFR 1610.5–2. All protests must be
submitted in writing by one of the
following methods—
Website: https://go.usa.gov/xzXxY; or
Regular mail and overnight mail: BLM
Director, Attention: Protest Coordinator
(HQ210), Denver Federal Center,
Building 40 (Door W–4), Lakewood, CO
80215.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Alan Bittner, Deputy State Director,
Resources, telephone 303–239–3768;
DATES:
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 139 / Friday, July 19, 2024 / Notices
address BLM Colorado State Office,
Attn: Big Game Corridor amendment/
EIS, Denver Federal Center Building 40,
P.O. Box 151029, Lakewood, CO 80215;
email BLM_CO_corridors_planning@
blm.gov. Individuals in the United
States who are deaf, deafblind, hard of
hearing, or have a speech disability may
dial 711 (TTY, TDD, or TeleBraille) to
access telecommunications relay
services for contacting Mr. Bittner.
Individuals outside the United States
should use the relay services offered
within their country to make
international calls to the point-ofcontact in the United States.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The RMP
amendment would change the following
existing plans:
• Eastern Colorado RMP for the Royal
Gorge Field Office (2024)
• San Luis Resource Area RMP (1991)
• Gunnison Resource Area RMP (1993)
• Uncompahgre Field Office RMP
(2020)
• Colorado River Valley Field Office
RMP (2015) and Roan Plateau
Amendment (2016)
• Grand Junction Field Office RMP
(2015)
• Kremmling RMP (2015)
• Little Snake RMP (2011)
• White River Field Office RMP (1997)
• Tres Rios Field Office RMP (2015)
• Canyons of the Ancients National
Monument RMP (2010)
• Gunnison Gorge National
Conservation Area RMP (2004)
The proposed RMP amendment
addresses alternative approaches for oil
and gas management to maintain,
conserve, and protect big game high
priority habitat (HPH). The planning
area includes all counties in Colorado
and encompasses approximately 8.3
million acres of public land and
approximately 27 million acres of
Federal mineral estate. The decision
area includes all 8.3 million acres of
BLM-administered surface land (except
where Federal minerals have been
withdrawn from mineral leasing) plus
approximately 4.7 million acres of
Federal mineral split estate where the
surface is owned by private owners,
local government, or the State.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
Public Involvement
Formal public scoping for the draft
RMP amendment/EIS started with the
publication of the notice of intent (NOI)
in the Federal Register on July 19, 2022
(87 FR 43050). The NOI contained
information about the purpose and
need, preliminary planning criteria,
preliminary alternatives, expected
impacts, and information about how to
comment. The BLM requested that the
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public submit scoping comments in
response to the NOI by September 2,
2022. Comments were used to inform
development of the draft management
plan.
The draft RMP amendment/EIS was
available for a 90-day public review and
comment period beginning with
publication of the Notice of Availability
(NOA) in the Federal Register on
November 9, 2023 (88 FR 77350). Issues
analyzed in detail in the draft EIS
included air quality, geology, fluid
minerals, climate, noise and the
acoustic environment, lands and realty,
soil resources, big game species and
habitat, special status species and other
wildlife, vegetation, Native American
religious concerns, cultural and
paleontological resources,
socioeconomics and environmental
justice, recreation, travel and
transportation, and visual resources.
Purpose and Need for the Planning
Effort
The purpose of this RMP amendment
is to evaluate alternative approaches for
oil and gas planning decisions to
maintain, conserve, and protect big
game corridors and other big game HPH
on BLM-administered lands and Federal
mineral estate in Colorado. Under the
authority of section 202 of FLPMA, the
BLM also seeks to evaluate consistency
with plans, policies, and programs of
other Federal agencies, State and local
governments, and Tribes, to the extent
consistent with Federal laws,
regulations, policies, and programs
applicable to BLM-administered lands.
This RMP amendment considers
current big game population and habitat
data and evaluates planning
alternatives’ consistency with the
policies and programs of State agencies
that manage big game populations and
regulate oil and gas operations in
Colorado: Colorado Parks and Wildlife
(CPW) and the Colorado Energy and
Carbon Management Commission
(ECMC).
This RMP amendment process also
complies with the terms of the
settlement agreement in State of
Colorado v. Bureau of Land
Management, No. 1:21–cv–00129 (U.S.
District Court for the District of
Colorado).
Alternatives Considered in the Draft
EIS
The BLM analyzed four alternatives in
detail in the draft RMP amendment,
including the no action alternative.
Alternative A was the No Action
alternative and reflected management
decisions in existing approved RMPs, as
amended, throughout Colorado. The
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analysis considered how the BLM is
currently managing big game habitat
protection and oil and gas development
across the State and provided a
characterization of the existing
environment for comparison with the
action alternatives.
Alternative B was based on
management alignment with the ECMC
rules for oil and gas development in elk,
mule deer, pronghorn, and bighorn
sheep HPH (Rule 1202.c, d; Rule 1203).
Where lands are open to oil and gas
leasing under existing RMPs,
Alternative B prescribed measures
consistent with the ECMC rules to
conserve HPH. Alternative B
incorporated various oil and gas lease
stipulations, including a controlled
surface use density limitation of one
well pad per square mile in big game
HPH and two no surface occupancy
stipulations to protect big horn sheep
production areas and pinch points (both
highway crossing and as mapped), all
subject to waivers, exceptions, and
modifications in some circumstances.
Alternative C, in addition to
incorporating lease stipulations similar
to alternative B, applied a 3 percent
surface disturbance cap on oil and gas
development within big game HPH on
BLM surface lands. This limit did not
apply to private, local government, or
State lands in the decision area. This
alternative provided for waivers,
exceptions, and modifications to the
stipulations in some circumstances.
Alternative D was similar to the other
action alternatives in that it also
incorporated lease stipulations that
aligned the BLM’s oil and gas
management with ECMC’s rules for big
game HPH in the decision area.
Alternative D included a 3 percent
surface disturbance cap on oil and gas
development on all lands, regardless of
land ownership, within big game HPH
in the decision area; the application of
this cap was not limited to BLM surface
lands as it is under Alternative C.
Additionally, unlike Alternatives B and
C, this alternative proposed to reduce
the area open to leasing of oil and gas.
Specifically, big game HPH identified
lands with low, moderate, or no known
oil and gas development potential that
would be closed to new Federal oil and
gas leasing.
The State Director identified
Alternative B as the preferred
alternative in the draft EIS.
Public Input Received
During the public comment period on
the draft EIS, the BLM received a total
of 746 comment submissions.
Submissions were focused on
suggestions for specific alternatives or
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 139 / Friday, July 19, 2024 / Notices
alternative elements, statements
pertaining to the cumulative effects
analysis, best available science and data,
and detailed input pertaining to various
resource topics analyzed in the draft EIS
such as big game species, air quality and
climate, social and economic
conditions, and fluid mineral
development.
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Changes Between the Draft EIS and the
Final EIS
Based on public feedback on the draft
EIS, the BLM has updated the final EIS.
The BLM has provided responses to
substantive comments in Appendix O.
The BLM developed a new alternative,
Modified Alternative B. The new
alternative includes updated big game
HPH from December 2023 CPW data.
The new alternative also includes
management guidance for assessing
route density in addition to the existing
Controlled Surface Use stipulation
applicable to active oil and gas facilities.
Minor language changes were made
throughout the plan to provide clarity.
Summary of the Proposed RMP
Amendment
The State Director’s proposed
alternative in the proposed RMP
amendment/final EIS is Modified
Alternative B. This alternative aligns
BLM management of oil and gas in high
priority wildlife habitats with the ECMC
rules for oil and gas development in elk,
mule deer, pronghorn, and bighorn
sheep HPH (Rule 1202.c, d; Rule 1203).
Modified Alternative B includes
additional management guidance for
enhanced coordination and use of best
available science and information
during implementation. Where lands are
open to oil and gas leasing under
existing RMPs, Modified Alternative B
prescribes measures consistent with the
ECMC rules to conserve seasonal
habitats and connectivity within big
game HPH in support of CPW’s big game
population objectives. Modified
Alternative B incorporates a Controlled
Surface Use stipulation that limits
facility density to no more than one
active oil and gas location per square
mile in big game HPH. A consideration
of CPW recommendations for route
density is included as an objective and
as a lease notice to further guide
implementation. Existing disturbance
may also be used to inform
implementation. The plan would
require operators to develop and
implement mitigation plans to minimize
and offset direct, indirect, and
cumulative adverse impacts.
The BLM considers potential
mitigation in compliance with Council
on Environmental Quality, Department
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18:53 Jul 18, 2024
Jkt 262001
of the Interior, and BLM guidance.
Mitigation would provide a
conservation benefit to big game species
when impacts from oil and gas
development activity are not avoidable.
Consistent with valid existing rights and
applicable law, when oil and gas
development results in habitat loss or
degradation within big game HPH, the
BLM will require and ensure mitigation
that provides a conservation benefit to
the species, including accounting for
any uncertainty associated with the
effectiveness of such mitigation.
Modified Alternative B calls for the
BLM to consider alternative locations
for oil and gas operations that either
avoid big game HPH altogether, or,
where avoidance is not feasible,
minimize adverse impacts to the
maximum extent possible. The action
alternatives include a surface density
limitation that would require the
operator to address direct and
unavoidable adverse indirect impacts
through compensatory mitigation. This
includes avoidance, minimization, and
mitigation strategies in subsequent
implementation-level NEPA analyses for
proposed actions that may result in big
game HPH loss and degradation.
Subsequent implementation-level
mitigation could limit the duration and
extent of development activities in big
game HPH through all phases of
development by avoiding activities in
HPH, applying surface density and
timing limitations, and mitigating
residual impacts. The BLM may also
require compensatory mitigation to
offset disturbance or density limitation
exceedances and direct and unavoidable
adverse indirect impacts that result in
the functional loss of habitat from oil
and gas development in big game HPH.
The BLM, after coordination with CPW,
will determine whether compensatory
mitigation proposed by the operator is
sufficient to protect big game HPH from
direct and unavoidable adverse indirect
impacts.
The BLM has the discretion to require
an operator to modify surface operations
to change or add specific mitigation
measures when supported by scientific
analysis and consistent with existing
rights. Potential mitigation or
conservation measures not already
required as stipulations would be
analyzed in a site-specific NEPA
document and incorporated, as
appropriate, as conditions of approval of
the permit, plan of development, or
other use authorization. In discussing
surface use rights, 43 CFR 3101.1–2
states that the lessee has the right ‘‘to
use so much of the leased lands as is
necessary to explore for, drill for, mine,
extract, remove and dispose of all the
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58751
leased resource.’’ However, lessees are
subject to lease stipulations,
nondiscretionary statutes, and, as
identified in 43 CFR 3101.1–2, ‘‘such
reasonable measures as may be required
by the authorized officer to minimize
adverse impacts to other resource
values, land uses or users not addressed
in the lease stipulations at the time
operations are proposed.’’
Protest of the Proposed RMP
Amendment
The BLM planning regulations state
that any person who participated in the
preparation of the RMP amendment and
has an interest that will or might be
adversely affected by approval of the
proposed RMP amendment may protest
its approval to the BLM. Protest on the
proposed RMP amendment constitutes
the final opportunity for administrative
review of the proposed land use
planning decisions prior to the BLM
adopting an approved RMP amendment.
Instructions for filing a protest regarding
the proposed RMP amendment with the
BLM Director may be found online (see
ADDRESSES). All protests must be in
writing and mailed to the appropriate
address or submitted electronically
through the BLM ePlanning project
website (see ADDRESSES). Protests
submitted by any other means will be
invalid. The BLM will render a written
decision on each protest. The protest
decision of the BLM shall be the final
decision of the Department of the
Interior. Responses to valid protest
issues will be compiled and
documented in a Protest Resolution
Report made available following the
protest resolution online at: https://
www.blm.gov/programs/planning-andnepa/public-participation/protestresolution-reports. Upon resolution of
protests, the BLM will issue a Record of
Decision and Approved RMP.
Before including your phone number,
email address, or other personal
identifying information in your protest,
you should be aware that your entire
protest—including your personal
identifying information—may be made
publicly available at any time. While
you can ask us in your protest to
withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able to
do so.
(Authority: 40 CFR 1506.6, 40 CFR 1506.10,
43 CFR 1610.2, 43 CFR 1610.5)
Douglas J. Vilsack,
State Director.
[FR Doc. 2024–15690 Filed 7–18–24; 8:45 am]
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 139 (Friday, July 19, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 58749-58751]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-15690]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[BLM_CO_FRN_MO4500179856]
Notice of Availability of the Proposed Resource Management Plan
Amendment and Final Environmental Impact Statement for Big Game Habitat
Conservation for Oil and Gas Management in Colorado
AGENCY: Bureau of Land Management.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In compliance with the National Environmental Policy Act of
1969, as amended (NEPA), and the Federal Land Policy and Management Act
of 1976, as amended (FLPMA), the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) has
prepared a proposed Resource Management Plan (RMP) Amendment and Final
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for Big Game Habitat Conservation
for Oil and Gas Management and by this notice is announcing the start
of a 30-day protest period of the proposed RMP amendment.
DATES: This notice announces a 30-day protest period to the BLM on the
proposed RMP amendment. Protests must be postmarked or electronically
submitted on the BLM's ePlanning site within 30 days of the date that
the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) publishes its Notice of
Availability (NOA) in the Federal Register. The EPA usually publishes
its NOAs on Fridays.
ADDRESSES: The proposed RMP amendment and final EIS is available on the
BLM ePlanning project website at https://go.usa.gov/xzXxY. Documents
pertinent to this proposal may also be examined at the BLM Colorado
State Office, Denver Federal Center, Building 1A, Lakewood, Colorado.
Instructions for filing a protest with the BLM for the Big Game
Habitat Conservation for Oil and Gas Management Proposed RMP Amendment
and Final EIS can be found at: https://www.blm.gov/programs/planning-and-nepa/public-participation/filing-a-plan-protest and at 43 CFR
1610.5-2. All protests must be submitted in writing by one of the
following methods--
Website: https://go.usa.gov/xzXxY; or
Regular mail and overnight mail: BLM Director, Attention: Protest
Coordinator (HQ210), Denver Federal Center, Building 40 (Door W-4),
Lakewood, CO 80215.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Alan Bittner, Deputy State Director,
Resources, telephone 303-239-3768;
[[Page 58750]]
address BLM Colorado State Office, Attn: Big Game Corridor amendment/
EIS, Denver Federal Center Building 40, P.O. Box 151029, Lakewood, CO
80215; email [email protected]. Individuals in the
United States who are deaf, deafblind, hard of hearing, or have a
speech disability may dial 711 (TTY, TDD, or TeleBraille) to access
telecommunications relay services for contacting Mr. Bittner.
Individuals outside the United States should use the relay services
offered within their country to make international calls to the point-
of-contact in the United States.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The RMP amendment would change the following
existing plans:
Eastern Colorado RMP for the Royal Gorge Field Office (2024)
San Luis Resource Area RMP (1991)
Gunnison Resource Area RMP (1993)
Uncompahgre Field Office RMP (2020)
Colorado River Valley Field Office RMP (2015) and Roan Plateau
Amendment (2016)
Grand Junction Field Office RMP (2015)
Kremmling RMP (2015)
Little Snake RMP (2011)
White River Field Office RMP (1997)
Tres Rios Field Office RMP (2015)
Canyons of the Ancients National Monument RMP (2010)
Gunnison Gorge National Conservation Area RMP (2004)
The proposed RMP amendment addresses alternative approaches for oil
and gas management to maintain, conserve, and protect big game high
priority habitat (HPH). The planning area includes all counties in
Colorado and encompasses approximately 8.3 million acres of public land
and approximately 27 million acres of Federal mineral estate. The
decision area includes all 8.3 million acres of BLM-administered
surface land (except where Federal minerals have been withdrawn from
mineral leasing) plus approximately 4.7 million acres of Federal
mineral split estate where the surface is owned by private owners,
local government, or the State.
Public Involvement
Formal public scoping for the draft RMP amendment/EIS started with
the publication of the notice of intent (NOI) in the Federal Register
on July 19, 2022 (87 FR 43050). The NOI contained information about the
purpose and need, preliminary planning criteria, preliminary
alternatives, expected impacts, and information about how to comment.
The BLM requested that the public submit scoping comments in response
to the NOI by September 2, 2022. Comments were used to inform
development of the draft management plan.
The draft RMP amendment/EIS was available for a 90-day public
review and comment period beginning with publication of the Notice of
Availability (NOA) in the Federal Register on November 9, 2023 (88 FR
77350). Issues analyzed in detail in the draft EIS included air
quality, geology, fluid minerals, climate, noise and the acoustic
environment, lands and realty, soil resources, big game species and
habitat, special status species and other wildlife, vegetation, Native
American religious concerns, cultural and paleontological resources,
socioeconomics and environmental justice, recreation, travel and
transportation, and visual resources.
Purpose and Need for the Planning Effort
The purpose of this RMP amendment is to evaluate alternative
approaches for oil and gas planning decisions to maintain, conserve,
and protect big game corridors and other big game HPH on BLM-
administered lands and Federal mineral estate in Colorado. Under the
authority of section 202 of FLPMA, the BLM also seeks to evaluate
consistency with plans, policies, and programs of other Federal
agencies, State and local governments, and Tribes, to the extent
consistent with Federal laws, regulations, policies, and programs
applicable to BLM-administered lands.
This RMP amendment considers current big game population and
habitat data and evaluates planning alternatives' consistency with the
policies and programs of State agencies that manage big game
populations and regulate oil and gas operations in Colorado: Colorado
Parks and Wildlife (CPW) and the Colorado Energy and Carbon Management
Commission (ECMC).
This RMP amendment process also complies with the terms of the
settlement agreement in State of Colorado v. Bureau of Land Management,
No. 1:21-cv-00129 (U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado).
Alternatives Considered in the Draft EIS
The BLM analyzed four alternatives in detail in the draft RMP
amendment, including the no action alternative. Alternative A was the
No Action alternative and reflected management decisions in existing
approved RMPs, as amended, throughout Colorado. The analysis considered
how the BLM is currently managing big game habitat protection and oil
and gas development across the State and provided a characterization of
the existing environment for comparison with the action alternatives.
Alternative B was based on management alignment with the ECMC rules
for oil and gas development in elk, mule deer, pronghorn, and bighorn
sheep HPH (Rule 1202.c, d; Rule 1203). Where lands are open to oil and
gas leasing under existing RMPs, Alternative B prescribed measures
consistent with the ECMC rules to conserve HPH. Alternative B
incorporated various oil and gas lease stipulations, including a
controlled surface use density limitation of one well pad per square
mile in big game HPH and two no surface occupancy stipulations to
protect big horn sheep production areas and pinch points (both highway
crossing and as mapped), all subject to waivers, exceptions, and
modifications in some circumstances.
Alternative C, in addition to incorporating lease stipulations
similar to alternative B, applied a 3 percent surface disturbance cap
on oil and gas development within big game HPH on BLM surface lands.
This limit did not apply to private, local government, or State lands
in the decision area. This alternative provided for waivers,
exceptions, and modifications to the stipulations in some
circumstances.
Alternative D was similar to the other action alternatives in that
it also incorporated lease stipulations that aligned the BLM's oil and
gas management with ECMC's rules for big game HPH in the decision area.
Alternative D included a 3 percent surface disturbance cap on oil and
gas development on all lands, regardless of land ownership, within big
game HPH in the decision area; the application of this cap was not
limited to BLM surface lands as it is under Alternative C.
Additionally, unlike Alternatives B and C, this alternative proposed to
reduce the area open to leasing of oil and gas. Specifically, big game
HPH identified lands with low, moderate, or no known oil and gas
development potential that would be closed to new Federal oil and gas
leasing.
The State Director identified Alternative B as the preferred
alternative in the draft EIS.
Public Input Received
During the public comment period on the draft EIS, the BLM received
a total of 746 comment submissions. Submissions were focused on
suggestions for specific alternatives or
[[Page 58751]]
alternative elements, statements pertaining to the cumulative effects
analysis, best available science and data, and detailed input
pertaining to various resource topics analyzed in the draft EIS such as
big game species, air quality and climate, social and economic
conditions, and fluid mineral development.
Changes Between the Draft EIS and the Final EIS
Based on public feedback on the draft EIS, the BLM has updated the
final EIS. The BLM has provided responses to substantive comments in
Appendix O. The BLM developed a new alternative, Modified Alternative
B. The new alternative includes updated big game HPH from December 2023
CPW data. The new alternative also includes management guidance for
assessing route density in addition to the existing Controlled Surface
Use stipulation applicable to active oil and gas facilities. Minor
language changes were made throughout the plan to provide clarity.
Summary of the Proposed RMP Amendment
The State Director's proposed alternative in the proposed RMP
amendment/final EIS is Modified Alternative B. This alternative aligns
BLM management of oil and gas in high priority wildlife habitats with
the ECMC rules for oil and gas development in elk, mule deer,
pronghorn, and bighorn sheep HPH (Rule 1202.c, d; Rule 1203). Modified
Alternative B includes additional management guidance for enhanced
coordination and use of best available science and information during
implementation. Where lands are open to oil and gas leasing under
existing RMPs, Modified Alternative B prescribes measures consistent
with the ECMC rules to conserve seasonal habitats and connectivity
within big game HPH in support of CPW's big game population objectives.
Modified Alternative B incorporates a Controlled Surface Use
stipulation that limits facility density to no more than one active oil
and gas location per square mile in big game HPH. A consideration of
CPW recommendations for route density is included as an objective and
as a lease notice to further guide implementation. Existing disturbance
may also be used to inform implementation. The plan would require
operators to develop and implement mitigation plans to minimize and
offset direct, indirect, and cumulative adverse impacts.
The BLM considers potential mitigation in compliance with Council
on Environmental Quality, Department of the Interior, and BLM guidance.
Mitigation would provide a conservation benefit to big game species
when impacts from oil and gas development activity are not avoidable.
Consistent with valid existing rights and applicable law, when oil and
gas development results in habitat loss or degradation within big game
HPH, the BLM will require and ensure mitigation that provides a
conservation benefit to the species, including accounting for any
uncertainty associated with the effectiveness of such mitigation.
Modified Alternative B calls for the BLM to consider alternative
locations for oil and gas operations that either avoid big game HPH
altogether, or, where avoidance is not feasible, minimize adverse
impacts to the maximum extent possible. The action alternatives include
a surface density limitation that would require the operator to address
direct and unavoidable adverse indirect impacts through compensatory
mitigation. This includes avoidance, minimization, and mitigation
strategies in subsequent implementation-level NEPA analyses for
proposed actions that may result in big game HPH loss and degradation.
Subsequent implementation-level mitigation could limit the duration and
extent of development activities in big game HPH through all phases of
development by avoiding activities in HPH, applying surface density and
timing limitations, and mitigating residual impacts. The BLM may also
require compensatory mitigation to offset disturbance or density
limitation exceedances and direct and unavoidable adverse indirect
impacts that result in the functional loss of habitat from oil and gas
development in big game HPH. The BLM, after coordination with CPW, will
determine whether compensatory mitigation proposed by the operator is
sufficient to protect big game HPH from direct and unavoidable adverse
indirect impacts.
The BLM has the discretion to require an operator to modify surface
operations to change or add specific mitigation measures when supported
by scientific analysis and consistent with existing rights. Potential
mitigation or conservation measures not already required as
stipulations would be analyzed in a site-specific NEPA document and
incorporated, as appropriate, as conditions of approval of the permit,
plan of development, or other use authorization. In discussing surface
use rights, 43 CFR 3101.1-2 states that the lessee has the right ``to
use so much of the leased lands as is necessary to explore for, drill
for, mine, extract, remove and dispose of all the leased resource.''
However, lessees are subject to lease stipulations, nondiscretionary
statutes, and, as identified in 43 CFR 3101.1-2, ``such reasonable
measures as may be required by the authorized officer to minimize
adverse impacts to other resource values, land uses or users not
addressed in the lease stipulations at the time operations are
proposed.''
Protest of the Proposed RMP Amendment
The BLM planning regulations state that any person who participated
in the preparation of the RMP amendment and has an interest that will
or might be adversely affected by approval of the proposed RMP
amendment may protest its approval to the BLM. Protest on the proposed
RMP amendment constitutes the final opportunity for administrative
review of the proposed land use planning decisions prior to the BLM
adopting an approved RMP amendment. Instructions for filing a protest
regarding the proposed RMP amendment with the BLM Director may be found
online (see ADDRESSES). All protests must be in writing and mailed to
the appropriate address or submitted electronically through the BLM
ePlanning project website (see ADDRESSES). Protests submitted by any
other means will be invalid. The BLM will render a written decision on
each protest. The protest decision of the BLM shall be the final
decision of the Department of the Interior. Responses to valid protest
issues will be compiled and documented in a Protest Resolution Report
made available following the protest resolution online at: https://www.blm.gov/programs/planning-and-nepa/public-participation/protest-resolution-reports. Upon resolution of protests, the BLM will issue a
Record of Decision and Approved RMP.
Before including your phone number, email address, or other
personal identifying information in your protest, you should be aware
that your entire protest--including your personal identifying
information--may be made publicly available at any time. While you can
ask us in your protest to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we cannot guarantee that we will be
able to do so.
(Authority: 40 CFR 1506.6, 40 CFR 1506.10, 43 CFR 1610.2, 43 CFR
1610.5)
Douglas J. Vilsack,
State Director.
[FR Doc. 2024-15690 Filed 7-18-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4331-16-P