Pacific Wind Lease Sale 2 for Commercial Leasing for Wind Power Development on the Outer Continental Shelf Offshore Oregon-Final Sale Notice, 71398-71410 [2024-19619]
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2. Any lineal descendant, Indian
Tribe, or Native Hawaiian organization
not identified in this notice who shows,
by a preponderance of the evidence, that
the requestor is a lineal descendant or
an Indian Tribe or Native Hawaiian
organization with cultural affiliation.
Repatriation of the human remains
and associated funerary objects
described in this notice to a requestor
may occur on or after October 3, 2024.
If competing requests for repatriation
are received, the Eastern Washington
University must determine the most
appropriate requestor prior to
repatriation. Requests for joint
repatriation of the human remains and
associated funerary objects are
considered a single request and not
competing requests. The Eastern
Washington University is responsible
for sending a copy of this notice to the
Indian Tribes and Native Hawaiian
organizations identified in this notice.
Authority: Native American Graves
Protection and Repatriation Act, 25
U.S.C. 3003, and the implementing
regulations, 43 CFR 10.10.
Dated: August 26, 2024.
Melanie O’Brien,
Manager, National NAGPRA Program.
[FR Doc. 2024–19679 Filed 8–30–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4312–52–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
[Docket No. BOEM–2024–0042]
Pacific Wind Lease Sale 2 for
Commercial Leasing for Wind Power
Development on the Outer Continental
Shelf Offshore Oregon—Final Sale
Notice
Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management, Interior.
ACTION: Final sale notice.
AGENCY:
This final sale notice (FSN)
contains information pertaining to the
areas available for commercial wind
power leasing during Pacific Wind
Lease Sale 2 (PACW–2) on the Outer
Continental Shelf (OCS) offshore
Oregon. Specifically, this FSN details
certain provisions and conditions of the
leases, auction details, the lease form,
criteria for evaluating competing bids,
and procedures for award, appeal, and
lease execution. The Bureau of Ocean
Energy Management (BOEM) will offer
two lease areas using an ascending clock
auction with multiple-factor bidding:
Lease OCS–P 0566 and Lease OCS–P
0567 (Lease Areas). Bidders will be
subject to a ‘one-per-customer’ rule, as
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SUMMARY:
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explained below. The Lease Areas are in
the previously identified wind energy
areas (WEAs) Brookings and Coos Bay.
The issuance of any lease resulting from
this sale will not constitute approval of
project-specific plans to develop
offshore wind energy. If submitted by
the lessee, such plans, will be subject to
environmental, technical, and public
reviews prior to a BOEM decision on
whether the proposed activity should be
authorized.
DATES: BOEM will hold an online mock
auction for potential bidders starting at
7:00 a.m. Pacific Time (PT)/10:00 a.m.
Eastern Time (ET) on October 10, 2024.
The monetary auction will be held
online and will begin at 7:00 a.m. PT/
10:00 a.m. ET on October 15, 2024.
Additional details are provided in the
section entitled ‘‘Deadlines and
Milestones for Bidders.’’
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jean
Thurston-Keller, Bureau of Ocean
Energy Management, Office of Strategic
Resources, 760 Paseo Camarillo, Suite
102 (CM102), Camarillo, California
93010–6002 or jean.thurston@boem.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
a. Call for Information and
Nominations: On April 29, 2022, BOEM
published the ‘‘Call for Information and
Nominations-Commercial Leasing for
Wind Power Development on the Outer
Continental Shelf offshore Oregon’’
(Call). The Call consisted of two areas
identified as the Brookings and Coos
Bay Call Areas. BOEM received 281
comments from Tribal nations, the
general public, Federal, State, and local
agencies, the fishing industry, industry
groups, developers, non-governmental
organizations, universities, and other
stakeholders. Comments can be viewed
at https://www.regulations.gov/
document/BOEM-2022-0009-0001/
comment. Four developers nominated
areas for a commercial wind energy
lease within the Call Areas.
b. Area Identification: After the close
of the Call comment period on June 28,
2022, BOEM initiated the process for
identifying possible leasing areas (Area
ID) by reviewing the input received on
the Call. BOEM used the modified Area
ID process described in a note to
stakeholders, available at: https://
www.boem.gov/newsroom/notesstakeholders/boem-enhances-itsprocesses-identify-future-offshore-windenergy-areas. BOEM and the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration’s (NOAA) National
Centers for Coastal Ocean Science
(NCCOS) team then used an ocean
planning modeling tool to assist in the
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identification of the two draft WEAs on
the OCS offshore Oregon. The modeling
tool, data inputs, and methodology used
to identify the WEAs are outlined in the
‘‘NCCOS Draft Report: A Wind Energy
Siting Analysis for the Oregon Call
Areas,’’ which can be found at https://
www.boem.gov/sites/default/files/
documents/renewable-energy/stateactivities/Oregon_WEA_Draft_Report_
NCCOS.pdf.
On August 15, 2023, BOEM
announced a 60-day public comment
period on the two draft WEAs offshore
Oregon, covering approximately 219,547
acres. BOEM later extended the
comment period for an additional 15
days for a total 75-day public comment
period.
BOEM considered the following
information sources, among others,
when identifying the draft WEAs:
comments and nominations received on
the Call; input from the BOEM Oregon
Intergovernmental Renewable Energy
Task Force; results of the ‘‘Data
Gathering and Engagement Summary
Report: Oregon Offshore Wind
Planning’’ input from Tribes, Oregon
State agencies, and Federal agencies;
comments from stakeholders and ocean
users, including the maritime
community, offshore wind developers,
and the commercial and recreational
fishing industry; State renewable energy
goals; information on domestic and
global offshore wind markets and
technological trends; and the data and
information found in OROWindMap at:
https://offshorewind.
westcoastoceans.org.
After the close of the draft WEA
comment period on October 31, 2023,
BOEM reviewed the input from all
parties mentioned above and finalized
the Area ID memorandum. BOEM
announced the designation of the two
final WEAs on February 13, 2024. The
first WEA (Brookings) is 133,792 acres
and located approximately 18 miles
from shore. The second WEA (Coos Bay)
is 61,203 acres and located
approximately 32 miles from shore. If
fully developed, both final WEAs
combined could support approximately
3.16 gigawatts of wind energy capacity.
The Oregon Area ID documentation can
be found at https://www.boem.gov/
renewable-energy/state-activities/
oregon.
c. Environmental Reviews: On
February 14, 2024, BOEM published a
notice of intent to prepare an
environmental assessment (EA) to
consider potential environmental
consequences of site characterization
activities (e.g., biological,
archaeological, geological, and
geophysical surveys and core samples)
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and site assessment activities (e.g.,
installation of meteorological buoys)
that are expected to take place after
issuance of wind energy leases in the
WEAs. When scoping the EA, BOEM
sought comments on the issues and
alternatives that should inform the EA.
BOEM received 242 comment
submissions, which can be found at
www.regulations.gov under Docket No.
BOEM–2023–0065. In addition to the
preparation of the EA, BOEM completed
consultations under the Endangered
Species Act, the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act, and the Coastal Zone Management
Act. The EA and associated
consultations informed BOEM’s
decision on whether to proceed with
this FSN. BOEM will conduct additional
environmental reviews upon receipt of
a lessee’s Construction and Operations
Plan (COP), which will include a
request for a project easement(s), if the
proposed leases reach that stage of
development. Lessees also need to
coordinate with state agencies during
BOEM’s COP review regarding potential
impacts from the development of any
cables or other infrastructure that would
be located within the state’s
jurisdiction.
II. List of Eligible Bidders
BOEM has determined that the
following 5 entities are legally,
technically, and financially qualified to
bid in the PACW–2 auction, pursuant to
30 CFR 585.107 and 585.108:
Company
No.
Company name
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Avangrid Renewables, LLC .....................
BlueFloat Energy Oregon, LLC ...............
OW North America Ventures, LLC ..........
US Mainstream Renewable Power Inc ...
South Coast Energy Waters I, LLC ........
15019
15160
15133
15089
15198
a. Affiliated Entities: On the Bidder’s
Financial Form (BFF), discussed in
Section III(a)(i) and Section IX below,
eligible bidders must list any other
eligible bidders with whom they are
affiliated. For the purpose of identifying
affiliated entities, a bidding entity is any
individual, firm, corporation,
association, partnership, consortium, or
joint venture (when established as a
separate entity) that is participating in
the same auction. BOEM considers
bidding entities to be affiliated when:
i. They own or have common
ownership of more than 50 percent of
the voting securities, or instruments of
ownership or other forms of ownership,
of another bidding entity. Ownership of
less than 10 percent of another bidding
entity constitutes a presumption of noncontrol that BOEM may rebut.
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ii. They own or have common
ownership of between 10 and 50 percent
of the voting securities or instruments of
ownership, or other forms of ownership,
of another bidding entity, and BOEM
determines that there is control upon
consideration of factors including the
following:
a. The extent to which there are
common officers or directors.
b. With respect to the voting
securities, or instruments of ownership
or other forms of ownership: The
percentage of ownership or common
ownership, the relative percentage of
ownership or common ownership
compared to the percentage(s) of
ownership by other bidding entities, if
a bidding entity is the greatest single
owner, or if there is an opposing voting
bloc of greater ownership.
c. Shared ownership, operation, or
day-to-day management of a lease, grant,
or facility, as those terms are defined in
BOEM’s regulations at 30 CFR 585.113.
iii. They are both direct or indirect
subsidiaries of the same parent
company.
iv. With respect to any lease(s) offered
in this auction, they have entered into
an agreement prior to the auction
regarding the shared ownership,
operation, or day-to-day management of
such lease. Such an agreement need not
be formalized to establish affiliated
entities.
v. Other evidence that indicates the
existence of power to exercise control,
such as evidence that one bidding entity
has power to exercise control over the
other, or that multiple bidders
collectively have the power to exercise
control over another bidding entity or
entities.
Affiliated entities are not permitted to
compete against each other in the
auction. Where two or more affiliated
entities have qualified to bid in the
auction, the affiliated entities must
decide prior to the auction which one (if
any) will participate in the auction. If
two or more affiliated entities attempt to
participate in the auction, BOEM will
disqualify those bidders from the
auction.
III. Deadlines and Milestones for
Bidders
This section describes the major
deadlines and milestones in the auction
process from publication of this FSN to
execution of a lease issued pursuant to
this sale.
a. FSN Waiting Period: During the
period between FSN publication and the
lease auction, qualified bidders must
take several steps to be able to
participate in the auction.
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i. Bidder’s Financial Form: Each
bidder must submit a BFF to BOEM to
participate in the auction. The BFF must
include each bidder’s Conceptual
Strategy for each bidding credit for
which that bidder wishes to be
considered. BOEM must receive each
bidder’s BFF on or before September 13,
2024, and it is each bidder’s
responsibility to ensure BOEM’s timely
receipt of the BFF. If a bidder does not
submit a BFF by this deadline, BOEM,
in its sole discretion, may grant an
extension to that bidder only if BOEM
determines the bidder’s failure to timely
submit a BFF was caused by events
beyond the bidder’s control. The BFF
can be downloaded at: https://
www.boem.gov/renewable-energy/stateactivities/oregon. Once BOEM has
processed a bidder’s BFF, the bidder is
allowed to log into www.pay.gov and
submit a bid deposit. For purposes of
this auction, BOEM will not consider
BFFs submitted for previous lease sales.
An original signed BFF may be mailed
to BOEM’s Pacific Regional Office. A
signed copy of the form may be
submitted in PDF format to
renewableenergypocs@boem.gov. A
faxed copy will not be accepted. BFF
submissions should be accompanied by
a transmittal letter on company
letterhead. The BFF must be executed
on paper with a wet signature or with
a digital signature affixed by an
authorized representative listed on the
bidder’s current legal qualification card
on file with BOEM, subject to 18 U.S.C.
1001 (False Statements, Concealment).
Further information about the BFF can
be found in the ‘‘Bidder’s Financial
Form’’ Section VII of this notice.
ii. Bid Deposit: Once BOEM has
processed a BFF and provided the
appropriate information to the Office of
Natural Resources Revenue (ONRR),
ONRR will populate the Bid Deposit
Forms and notify the bidders of access
to www.pay.gov for the bid deposits.
The bidder must log into www.pay.gov
to submit a bid deposit. To participate
in the mock auction and the monetary
auction, each qualified bidder must
provide a bid deposit of $2,000,000 no
later than September 27, 2024. BOEM
will grant extensions to this deadline
only if BOEM, in its sole discretion,
determines that the failure to timely
submit the bid deposit was caused by
events beyond the bidder’s control.
Further information about bid deposits
can be found in the ‘‘Bid Deposit’’
Section X of this notice.
b. Conducting the Auction:
i. Affirmative Action: Prior to bidding
in the monetary auction, each bidder
must file the Equal Opportunity
Affirmative Action Representation Form
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BOEM–2032 (February 2020, available
on BOEM’s website at www.boem.gov/
BOEM-2032/) and the Equal
Opportunity Compliance Report
Certification Form BOEM–2033
(February 2020, available on BOEM’s
website at www.boem.gov/BOEM-2033/)
with the BOEM Pacific Regional Office.
The forms can be submitted digitally to
renewableenergypocs@boem.gov or
mailed to the BOEM Pacific Regional
Office. This certification is required by
41 CFR part 60 and Executive Order
(E.O.) 11246, issued September 24,
1965, as amended by E.O. 11375, issued
October 13, 1967, and by E.O. 13672,
issued July 21, 2014. Both forms must
be on file with BOEM for the bidder(s)
prior to the execution of any lease
contract.
ii. Notification of Eligibility for
Bidding Credits: BOEM will notify each
bidder of its eligibility for bidding
credits and the value of those bidding
credits prior to the Mock Auction.
iii. Mock Auction: BOEM will hold a
Mock Auction on October 10, 2024,
beginning at 7:00 a.m. PT/10:00 a.m. ET,
which is open only to qualified bidders
who have met the requirements and
deadlines for auction participation,
including submission of the bid deposit.
The Mock Auction is intended to give
bidders an opportunity to clarify
auction rules, test the functionality of
the auction software, and identify any
potential issues that may arise during
the auction.
iv. The Auction: On October 15, 2024,
BOEM, through its contractor, will
commence the multiple-factor auction.
The first round of the auction will start
at 7:00 a.m. PT/10:00 a.m. ET. The
auction will proceed electronically
according to a schedule to be distributed
by the BOEM Auction Manager at the
beginning of the auction, subject to any
revisions (which will be communicated
to bidders during the auction). BOEM
anticipates that the auction will last one
or two business days, but the auction
may continue for additional business
days, as necessary, until the auction
ends in accordance with the procedures
described in the ‘‘Auction Procedures’’
section of this notice.
v. Announce Provisional Winners:
BOEM will announce the provisional
winners of the lease sale after the
auction ends.
c. From the Auction to Lease
Execution:
i. Refund Non-Winners: Once the
provisional winners have been
announced, BOEM will provide the
non-winners with a written explanation
of why they did not win and will
coordinate with ONRR to return their
bid deposits.
ii. Department of Justice (DOJ)
Review: DOJ will have 30 days in which
to conduct an antitrust review of the
auction, pursuant to 43 U.S.C. 1337(c).
iii. Delivery of the Lease: BOEM will
provide an unsigned copy of the lease
to each provisional winner, with
instructions on how to execute the
lease.
iv. Return the Lease: Within ten
business days of receiving the lease, the
auction winners must post financial
assurance, pay any outstanding balance
of their winning bids (i.e., winning cash
bid less applicable bid deposits), and
sign and return the executed lease. The
winners may request extensions and
BOEM, in its discretion, may grant such
a request.
v. Execution of Lease: BOEM will
execute the lease by signing the lease on
behalf of the United States only after the
provisional winner completes the
requirements in paragraph (b) of 30 CFR
585.225 and any appeals timely filed
under § 585.118(c)(1) have been
resolved. After BOEM executes the
lease, the provisional winner becomes
the winning bidder, and BOEM will
send the winning bidder an electronic
version of the fully executed copy of the
lease. The lease takes effect as set forth
in § 585.237. The first 12 months’ rent
under § 585.503(a) is due 45 calendar
days after receiving a copy of the
executed lease from BOEM.
IV. Areas Offered for Leasing
The two Lease Areas included in this
FSN are the same size and orientation
as were described in the Proposed Sale
Notice (PSN). BOEM’s designation of
the two Lease Areas offered in the FSN
is informed by coordination with
BOEM’s intergovernmental task force
members, consultation and engagement
with Tribes, stakeholder engagement, a
partnership with NOAA’s NCCOS to use
spatial modeling to inform the
identification of WEAs, and
consideration of the 281 comments that
BOEM received in response to the PSN.
The two areas BOEM is offering for lease
are: the Brookings Lease Area, OCS–P
0567, which consists of 133,792 acres
and is approximately 18 miles from
shore; and the Coos Bay Lease Area,
OCS–P 0566, which consists of 61,203
acres and is approximately 32 miles
from shore.
Descriptions of the proposed Lease
Areas can be found in Addendum A of
the proposed leases, which can be found
on BOEM’s website at: https://
www.boem.gov/renewable-energy/stateactivities/oregon. The areas available for
lease, as listed in Table 1, will be
auctioned in a single auction.
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TABLE 1—PACW–2 FINAL LEASE AREAS
Lease area name
Lease area ID
Brookings ...........................................................................................................................................................
Coos Bay ...........................................................................................................................................................
Total ............................................................................................................................................................
OCS–P 0567
OCS–P 0566
..............................
a. Map of the Area for Leasing: A map
of the Lease Areas, and GIS spatial files
X, Y (eastings, northings) UTM Zone 18,
NAD83 Datum, and geographic X, Y
(longitude, latitude), NAD83 Datum can
be found on BOEM’s website at:
www.boem.gov/renewable-energy/stateactivities/oregon.
V. Lease Stipulations
BOEM is including several lease
stipulations in Addendum C of each
lease related to reporting requirements,
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avoiding and minimizing potential
future user conflicts and environmental
impacts, project labor agreements,
national security, and project design.
BOEM is also including conditions of
the Oregon Department of Land,
Conservation and Development’s
conditional concurrence with the
federal consistency determination
pursuant to the Coastal Zone
Management Act for the Oregon
proposed Lease Areas. Requirements
pertaining to a single activity may arise
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Acres
133,792
61,203
194,995
from more than one consultation
process and may also, in some
instances, be slightly different; where
this has occurred, BOEM incorporated
the most protective measure in the
lease. BOEM has also refined some
stipulations identified in the PSN and
proposed leases in response to
comments on the PSN.
a. Reporting requirements: BOEM is
including stipulations similar to those
found in previous leases in other areas
of the OCS requiring a semi-annual
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progress report from lessees and regular
engagement with Tribes and parties that
may be affected by lessees’ activities on
the OCS. The lease stipulations require
working with BOEM to identify: Tribes
that have cultural and/or historical ties
to the Lease Areas, and potentially
affected parties; coastal communities;
commercial and recreational fishing
industries and stakeholders; educational
and research institutions; environmental
and public interest NGOs; Federal,
State, and local agencies; mariners and
the maritime industry; ocean users;
submarine cable operators; and
underserved communities, as defined in
Section 2 of E.O. 13985. The report must
identify Tribes and parties that may be
affected by lessees’ activities on the OCS
and with whom the lessees have
engaged; provide updates on
engagement activities; document
potential adverse effects to the interests
of Tribes and parties; document how, if
at all, project design or implementation
has been informed or altered to address
those potential effects; include feedback
from engagement regarding transmission
planning prior to proposing any export
cable route; provide information that
can be made available to the public; and
include strategies to reach potentially
affected individuals with limited
English proficiency.
The stipulations include requirements
for lessees to engage in ways that
minimize linguistic, technological,
cultural, capacity, or other obstacles.
The stipulations encourage lessees to
work collaboratively with governments,
community leadership and
organizations, and Tribes and to
develop specific frameworks for
capacity building.
In acknowledgment of the existing
and growing consultation burden placed
on many of the Tribes and parties, the
stipulation also requires, to the
maximum extent practicable, that
lessees coordinate with one another on
engagement activities. It is BOEM’s
intention that this requirement for
lessees to coordinate their engagement
apply not only to meetings proposed by
lessees, but also to reasonable requests
to coordinate engagement made by
Tribes and parties. Coordinated
engagement among Tribes and lessees is
strongly encouraged and is in addition
to BOEM’s responsibilities to federally
recognized Tribes under E.O. 13175.
Lastly, the progress report must
include an update on activities executed
under any survey plan and any
meteorological and/or oceanographic
buoy deployment planned or
undertaken within the leased area that
includes confirmation of the measures
the lessee took, or will take, to satisfy
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the conditions of any applicable lease
stipulations.
b. Communication Plans: BOEM is
including lease requirements for
development of a Native American
Tribes Communication Plan, an Agency
Communication Plan and a Fisheries
Communication Plan, as included in
previous leases. Experience in other
regions has shown that 120 days after
lease execution is not a sufficient time
period in which to draft comprehensive
communications plans for fisheries,
Tribes, and government agencies. For
this Lease Sale, BOEM is extending the
120-day requirement to a 180-day
requirement to allow sufficient time for
lessees to engage with entities to
develop communication plans.
c. Best Management Practices: The EA
for this lease sale lists a number of best
management practices which would
reduce potential impacts to resources,
including those with respect to Water
Quality, Marine Debris Awareness and
Prevention, Birds, Commercial Fishing,
Historic Properties, Sensitive Seafloor
Habitats, and Protected Species (in
addition to requirements arising under
Endangered Species Act (ESA)
Consultation and described below). The
full text of the EA, including Appendix
E, must be reviewed, and the
appropriate measures should be
incorporated into project activities by
lessees.
d. Protected Species: In August 2024,
BOEM published the Final EA, which
includes the most current measures to
minimize potential adverse impacts,
including Endangered Species Act
(ESA)-listed species of marine mammals
and sea turtles. BOEM has included in
the leases these measures from the EA
and the ESA Concurrence Letter and
Essential Fish Habitat (EFH) Response
issued on July 12, 2024.
e. Marine Mammal Protection Act
Authorization(s): If the lessee is
required to obtain an authorization
pursuant to section 101(a)(5) of the
Marine Mammal Protection Act prior to
conducting survey activities in support
of plan submittal, the lessee must
provide BOEM with a copy of the
authorization prior to commencing
these activities.
f. Project Labor Agreements (PLAs)
and Supply Chain: BOEM is committed
to workforce safety and the
establishment of a durable domestic
supply chain that can sustain the U.S.
offshore wind energy industry,
including for the leases offered in this
sale. To advance these goals, BOEM is
including three lease stipulations, one
for safety requirements, a second that
encourages construction efficiency for
projects, and a third that contributes
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71401
towards establishing a domestic supply
chain:
i. As part of its safety requirements,
lessees must maintain all places of
employment for activities in compliance
with occupational safety and health
standards, free from recognized hazards
to employees of the lessee or of any
contractor or subcontractor operating
under this lease, and free from
retaliation or discrimination against any
employee or contractor who raises a
health and safety concern on the job.
ii. A second stipulation requires
lessees to make every reasonable effort
to enter into a PLA covering the
construction stage of any project for the
Lease Areas.
iii. The third stipulation requires
lessees to establish a Statement of Goals
in which the lessee describes its plans
for contributing to the creation of a
robust and resilient U.S.-based floating
offshore wind industry supply chain
that would facilitate this or other
renewable energy projects permitted by
BOEM.
The lessee is also required to provide
regular progress updates on the
achievement of those goals to BOEM,
and BOEM will make those updates
publicly available.
g. Research Site Access: This
stipulation makes explicit that BOEM,
or its designated representative, retains
the right to access, for research
purposes, the site of any operation or
activity conducted under this lease.
h. Archaeological Survey
Requirements: This stipulation requires
that the lessee provide to BOEM, in the
associated plan submissions, a
description of the methods it will use to
conduct archaeological surveys in
support of meteorological and
oceanographic buoy siting and SAP and
COP development, in addition to the
survey results. The lessee is required to
coordinate a Tribal pre-survey meeting
with Tribes that have cultural and/or
historical ties to the Lease Area, and the
lessee must work with BOEM to identify
such Tribes. In the post-review
discovery clauses, the stipulation
requires that, in the event of an
unanticipated discovery of a potential
archaeological resource, the lessee will
immediately halt bottom-disturbing
activities occurring within 50 meters
(164 feet) or less of the discovery and
that the avoidance distance must be
calculated from the maximum
discernible extent of the archaeological
resource. The lessee must follow the
procedures in 30 CFR 585.702 to notify
BOEM of the discovery and provide
written notification using the State of
Oregon’s Inadvertent Discovery Plan
template, available at: https://
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archaeology.aspx.
i. Foreign Interest: To protect national
defense capabilities and military
operations, BOEM is requiring the lessee
to provide to the Department of Defense
(DoD) specific information about the
personnel allowed to access the wind
turbine structures and associated data
systems. That information includes the
names of entities or persons having a
direct ownership interest in an offshore
wind energy facility, as well as any
changes in ownership interests; and the
names of the material vendors, entities,
and persons with whom the lessee will
potentially execute contracts to perform
construction, supply turbines or other
components, or conduct construction
and operational activities at the facility.
In addition, the lessee must resolve
DoD’s security concerns before it allows
access to the site by foreign persons or
representatives of foreign entities for
which DoD has raised concerns and
before the lessee uses wind turbines or
other permanent on-site equipment
manufactured by such an entity.
j. Notice of Assignment to the
Committee on Foreign Investment in the
United States (CFIUS): Under BOEM’s
regulations at 30 CFR 585.107, a lessee
must be one of the following: (1) a
citizen or national of the United States;
(2) an alien lawfully admitted for
permanent residence in the United
States, as defined in 8 U.S.C.
1101(a)(20); (3) a private, public, or
municipal corporation organized under
the laws of any State of the United
States, the District of Columbia, or any
territory or insular possession subject to
U.S. jurisdiction; (4) an association of
such citizens, nationals, resident aliens,
or corporations; (5) an Executive Agency
of the United States, as defined in 5
U.S.C. 105; (6) a State of the United
States; or (7) a political subdivision of
a State of the United States. BOEM is
including a stipulation that requires any
proposed assignee of the lease that is a
foreign-controlled business entity under
the regulations at 31 CFR part 800 to
provide joint notice, with the lessee/
assignor, to CFIUS of the proposed
leasing transaction, in accordance with
applicable regulations at 31 CFR part
800, subpart D, and to provide a copy
of the notice to the DoD. BOEM’s
approval of any assignment of lease
interest to a foreign-controlled business
entity, as defined in 31 CFR part 800, is
subject to this CFIUS notice stipulation.
Such assignments would take place only
after CFIUS provides notice that it has
concluded all necessary reviews under
section 721 of the Defense Production
Act of 1950, as amended, with respect
to the leasing decision or assignment.
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j. Oregon Department of Land,
Conservation and Development (DLCD)
Consistency Determination Conditions:
On April 30, 2024, BOEM provided a
Consistency Determination to the
Oregon Coastal Management Program of
the Department of Land Conservation
and Development (OCMP). On July 17,
2024, OCMP concurred conditionally
with BOEM’s Consistency
Determination and BOEM has included
conditions in the leases to address
OCMP’s conditions.
VI. Potential Future Restrictions
a. Measures for Vessel Transit: The
information currently available does not
indicate that vessel routing mitigation
measures are warranted in the Lease
Areas at lease execution, and the U.S.
Coast Guard PAC–PARS study
recommends fairways that avoid the
Lease Areas entirely. However, at the
COP stage, BOEM may consider
designating portions of the Lease Areas
as areas of no surface occupancy to
facilitate vessel transit and continuance
of existing uses.
b. Archaeological Resources: Potential
bidders are advised that portions of the
Lease Areas may not be available for
future development (i.e., installation of
wind energy facilities) because of
archaeological and cultural resources.
Potential development may be restricted
consistent with requirements of the
National Historic Preservation Act.
BOEM will require further data
collection and evaluation of submerged
cultural resources, culturally significant
viewsheds, and restrictions on impacts
to these resources will be reviewed by
BOEM during the COP stage.
c. NOAA U.S. Integrated Ocean
Observing System (IOOS) HighFrequency (HF) Radar: Potential bidders
are advised that offshore wind energy
projects in the Lease Areas may cause
wind turbine interference to NOAA’s
IOOS HF oceanographic radars, which
provide measurement coverage of the
lease area region. Due to potential
implications to maritime safety,
navigation, U.S. Coast Guard searchand-rescue, weather forecasting, and
other applications of HF-radar systems’
data, BOEM may require future
mitigation as a condition of project
approval.
d. Benthic and Seafloor Habitat
Surveys: Potential bidders are advised
that portions of the Lease Areas may not
be available for future development due
to sensitive seafloor habitats, especially
portions of the Brookings Lease Area.
BOEM will require further data
gathering and comprehensive highresolutions mapping and sampling of
seafloor habitats from lessees and may
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place further restrictions on
disturbances of sensitive seafloor
habitats as a condition of a COP
approval, including potential
mitigations in facility design.
e. Scientific surveys: Potential bidders
are advised that NMFS conducts longterm scientific surveys along the U.S.
West Coast, including in the Lease
Areas, necessary for the management of
NOAA trust resources. Measures may be
needed to avoid and minimize impacts
to these federal surveys from site
assessment and characterization
activities and any future offshore wind
infrastructure. Where impacts cannot be
avoided, mitigation measures,
developed in concert with NMFS, may
need to be employed for the operational
life span of the lease.
VII. Lease Terms and Conditions
BOEM has made available the terms,
conditions, and stipulations for the
commercial wind leases that will be
offered through this sale. BOEM
reserves the right to require compliance
with additional terms and conditions
associated with the approval of a COP.
The lease forms are on BOEM’s website
at: https://www.boem.gov/renewableenergy/state-activities/oregon. Each
lease will include the following
attachments:
1. Addendum A (‘‘Description of
Leased Area and Lease Activities’’);
2. Addendum B (‘‘Lease Term and
Financial Schedule’’);
3. Addendum C (‘‘Lease-Specific
Terms, Conditions, and Stipulations’’);
4. Addendum D (‘‘Project Easement’’).
Addenda A, B, and C provide detailed
lease terms and conditions. Addendum
D will be completed at the time of COP
approval or approval with modifications
if a COP is approved.
a. Revised Lease Terms and
Conditions as a Result of the Renewable
Energy Modernization Rule: On May 15,
2024, BOEM published in the Federal
Register the Renewable Energy
Modernization Rule (Rule), which went
into effect on July 15, 2024. To ensure
consistency with the Rule, BOEM made
revisions to the lease published with the
PSN that are reflected in the lease
published with this FSN. Substantial
changes were made to the following
sections:
• Section 6: Associated Project
Easements
• Section 10: Financial Assurance
• Addendum A: V. Description of Lease
Activities
• Addendum B: I. Lease Periods; III.
Lease Payments; IV. Financial
Assurance (deleted in its entirety)
• Addendum C: 3.1.5 Survey and
Meteorological and/or Oceanographic
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Buoy Deployment Reporting; 5.5.5
Geotechnical Exploration and
Deployment of Meteorological and/or
Oceanographic Buoys
b. Required Plans for Potential
Development of Executed Leases: Each
commercial lease has a preliminary
period of up to five years. During the
preliminary period, the lessee must
submit a COP. The preliminary period
begins on the effective date of the lease
and ends either when a COP is received
by BOEM for review or at the expiration
of five years, whichever occurs first.
Lessees may request an extension of the
lease preliminary period for good cause,
such as the need for more time to obtain
an offtake agreement. In its discretion,
BOEM may approve the request.
VIII. Lease Payments
This section provides an overview of
the required annual payments under the
lease. Potential bidders should review
the lease for more detailed information,
including any changes from leases
issued in previous sales.1
a. Rent: Pursuant to 30 CFR 585.225(f)
and 585.503, the first year’s rent
payment of $3 per acre is due within 45calendar days after the lessee receives
the executed lease copies from BOEM.
Thereafter, annual rent payments are
due on the anniversary of the Effective
Date of the lease (the ‘‘Lease
Anniversary’’). Once commercial
operations under the lease begin, BOEM
will charge rent only for the portions of
the Lease Area remaining undeveloped
(i.e., non-generating acreage). For
example, for the 61,203 acres of Lease
Area OCS–P 0566 (Coos Bay), the rent
payment would be $183,609 per year
until commercial operations begin.
If the lessee submits an application
for relinquishment of a portion of its
leased area within the first 45-calendar
days after receiving the lease copies
from BOEM and BOEM approves that
application, no rent payment will be
due on the relinquished portion of the
Lease Area. Later relinquishments of
any portion of the Lease Area will
reduce the lessee’s rent payments
starting in the year following BOEM’s
approval of the relinquishment.
A lease issued under 30 CFR part 585
confers on the lessee the right to one or
more project easements, without further
competition, for the purpose of
installing, maintaining, repairing and
replacing: gathering, transmission, and
distribution, and inter-array cables;
power and pumping stations; facility
anchors; pipelines; and associated
facilities and other appurtenances on
the OCS as necessary for the full
enjoyment of the lease. A lessee must
apply for the project easement as part of
the COP, as provided under subpart G
of 30 CFR part 585.
The lessee also must pay rent for any
project easement associated with the
lease. Rent commences on the date that
BOEM approves the COP that describes
the project easement (or any
modification of such COP that affects
the easement acreage), as outlined in 30
CFR 585.507. Annual rent for a project
easement is the greater of $5 per acre
per year, or $450 per year. If a COP
revision results in increased easement
acreage, BOEM will require the
Annual Operating Fee= 976 MW
8,760
appropriate amount of additional rent
when it approves the revised COP.
b. Operating Fee: For purposes of
calculating the initial annual operating
fee payment under 30 CFR 585.506,
BOEM applies an operating fee rate to
a proxy for the wholesale market value
of the electricity expected to be
generated from the project during its
first 12 months of operations. This
initial payment will be prorated to
reflect the period between the
commencement of commercial
operations and the Lease Anniversary.
The initial annual operating fee
payment will be due within 90-calendar
days of the commencement of
commercial operations. Thereafter,
subsequent annual operating fee
payments will be due on or before the
Lease Anniversary.
The subsequent annual operating fee
payments will be calculated by
multiplying the operating fee rate by the
imputed wholesale market value of the
projected annual electric power
production. For the purposes of this
calculation, the imputed market value
will be the product of the project’s
annual nameplate capacity, the total
number of hours in a year (8,760), the
capacity factor, and the annual average
price of electricity derived from a
regional wholesale power price index.
For example, the annual operating fee
for a 976 megawatt (MW) wind facility
operating at a 40 percent capacity (i.e.,
capacity factor of 0.4) with a regional
wholesale power price of $40 per
megawatt hour (MWh) and an operating
fee rate of 0.02 will be calculated as
follows:
hrs X
year
0.4 x
Power Price x 0.02 = $2,735,923.20
i. Operating Fee Rate: The operating
fee rate is the share of the imputed
wholesale market value of the projected
annual electric power production due to
ONRR as an annual operating fee. For
the Lease Areas, BOEM will set the fee
rate at 0.02 (2 percent) for the entire life
of commercial operations.
ii. Nameplate Capacity: Nameplate
capacity is the maximum rated electric
output, expressed in MW, which the
turbines of the wind facility under
commercial operations can produce at
their rated wind speed as designated by
the turbine’s manufacturer.
iii. Capacity Factor: The capacity
factor relates to the amount of energy
delivered to the grid during a period of
time compared to the amount of energy
the wind facility would have produced
at full capacity during that same period
of time. BOEM will set the capacity
factor at 0.4 (i.e., 40 percent) for the year
in which the commercial operations
begin and for the first 6 full years of
commercial operations on the lease. At
the end of the sixth year, BOEM may
adjust the capacity factor to reflect the
performance over the previous 5 years
based upon the actual metered
electricity generation at the delivery
point to the electrical grid. BOEM may
make similar adjustments to the
capacity factor once every 5 years
thereafter.
iv. Wholesale Power Price Index:
Under 30 CFR 585.506(c)(2)(i), the
wholesale power price, expressed in
dollars per MWh, is determined at the
time each annual operating fee payment
is due. For the leases offered in this sale,
1 Note that BOEM’s Renewable Energy
Modernization Rule (89 FR 42602), published May
15, 2024, became effective on July 15, 2024. The
leases offered in this sale conform to the regulations
in Part 585 as modified.
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the following table provides the price
data. A similar price dataset may also be
used and may be posted by BOEM at
https://www.boem.gov for reference.
Lease area name
Brookings, OCS–P
0567.
Coos Bay, OCS–P
0566.
Wholesale power
price
Mid-Columbia.
Mid-Columbia.
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c. Financial Assurance: Within 10
business days after receiving the
unsigned lease copy for execution and
pursuant to 30 CFR 585.516(a)(1) the
provisional winners must provide an
initial lease-specific bond or other
BOEM-approved financial assurance
instrument in the amount of annual rent
due over the next 12 months. The
provisional winners may meet financial
assurance requirements by posting a
surety bond or other financial assurance
instrument as detailed in 30 CFR
585.526–585.529. BOEM encourages the
provisional winners to discuss the
financial assurance instrument
requirements with BOEM as soon as
possible after the auction has
concluded.
BOEM will base the amount of all
SAP, COP, and decommissioning
financial assurance on cost estimates for
meeting all accrued lease obligations at
the respective stages of development.
The required amount of supplemental
and decommissioning financial
assurance will be determined on a caseby-case basis.
The payment terms described above
can be found in Addendum ‘‘B’’ of the
lease, which is available at: https://
www.boem.gov/renewable-energy/stateactivities/oregon.
IX. Bidder’s Financial Form
Each bidder must submit to BOEM the
information required in the BFF
referenced in this FSN. A copy of the
form is available at: https://
www.boem.gov/renewable-energy/stateactivities/oregon. BOEM recommends
that each bidder designate an email
address in its BFF that the bidder must
use to create an account in www.pay.gov
(if it has not already done so). BOEM
must receive BFFs, including
Conceptual Strategies, no later than
September 13, 2024. If a bidder does not
submit a BFF for this sale by the
deadline, BOEM, in its sole discretion,
may grant an extension to that bidder
only if BOEM determines the bidder’s
failure to timely submit a BFF was
caused by events beyond the bidder’s
control. The BFF is required to be
executed by an authorized
representative listed in the bidder’s
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qualification package on file with
BOEM. BFFs submitted by bidders for
previous lease sales will not satisfy the
requirements of this auction.
For the PACW–2, BOEM will accept
bidders’ BFFs and Conceptual Strategies
electronically or by mail. Instructions
for submission can be found in the BFF.
The BFF must be executed on paper
with a wet signature or with the
application of a digital signature by an
authorized representative listed on the
legal qualification card currently on file
with BOEM as authorized to bind the
company. Winning bidders who have
committed to bidding credit(s) must
meet the bidding credit requirements no
later than submission of their first
Facility Design Report (FDR) or the
tenth Lease Anniversary, whichever is
sooner.
X. Bid Deposit
A bid deposit is an advance cash
payment submitted to BOEM to
participate in the auction. ONRR will
notify the bidders that they have access
to the Bid Deposit Form in
www.pay.gov, and bidders must use the
Bid Deposit Form on the Weblink for
Federal Register is: https://onrr.gov/
paying/paymentoptions?tabs=renewable-energy,biddeposit-options website to submit a
deposit. Bidders may need to create an
account in www.pay.gov to access the
Bid Deposit Form and submit a deposit.
Each bidder must submit a bid deposit
of $2,000,000 no later than September
27, 2024, to be eligible to bid for one
lease area. Any bidder who fails to
submit the bid deposit by this deadline
may be disqualified from participating
in the auction. BOEM will consider
extensions to this deadline only if
BOEM, in its sole discretion, determines
that the failure to timely submit the bid
deposit was caused by events beyond
the bidder’s control.
Following the auction, provisional
winners’ bid deposits will be applied
against their winning cash bids. Once
BOEM has announced the provisional
winners, BOEM will coordinate with
ONRR to refund bid deposits to the
other bidders.
If BOEM offers a lease to a
provisionally winning bidder and that
bidder fails to timely return the signed
lease form, establish financial
assurance, or pay the balance of its bid,
BOEM may retain the bidder’s
$2,000,000 bid deposit. In such a
circumstance, BOEM may determine
which bid would have won in the
absence of the bid previously
determined to be the winning bid and
may offer a lease to this next highest
bidder if this next highest bidder is not
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a provisionally winning bidder of the
other Lease Area in the auction. This
process may be repeated if needed.
XI. Minimum Bid
The minimum bid is the lowest dollar
amount per acre that BOEM will accept
as a winning bid and is the amount at
which BOEM will start the bidding in
the auction. BOEM has established a
minimum bid of $50.00 per acre for this
lease sale.
XII. Auction Procedures
a. Multiple-Factor Bidding Auction:
BOEM will use a multiple factor auction
format for this lease sale. Under 30 CFR
585.113, a multiple factor auction
means an auction that involves the use
of factors other than cash, such as
bidding credits, to incentivize goals or
actions that support public policy
objectives or maximize public benefits
through the competitive leasing auction
process. For any multiple factor auction,
the monetary value of the bidding
credits, if any, is added to the value of
the cash bids to determine the highest
bidder. The bid made by a particular
bidder in each round of this lease sale
will represent the sum of the monetary
factor (cash bid) and the value of any
non-monetary factors in the form of
bidding credits. Bidders will be subject
to a ‘one-per-customer’ rule, meaning
that each bidder can acquire at most one
lease area. BOEM will start the auction
using the minimum bid price for each
lease area and will increase prices
incrementally until no more than one
bidder remains bidding on each Lease
Area in the auction.
BOEM is not revising the bidding
credit percentages from those proposed
in the PSN: a 15 percent workforce
training and/or supply chain bid credit,
a 5 percent Lease Area Use Community
Benefit Agreement (CBA) bid credit and
a 5 percent general CBA bid credit. The
total of all offered bidding credits
remains at 25 percent. For this sale,
BOEM is calculating bidding credits as
a percentage of the whole bid, which is
a change from the method used in prior
sales, where bidding credits were
calculated as a percentage of the cash
portion of the bid. The intended
purpose of this change is to simplify the
bidding credit calculation.
BOEM will grant bidding credits to
bidders that commit to one or more of
the following, subject to review of the
bidder’s BFF and Conceptual Strategy.
i. Supporting workforce training
programs for the floating offshore wind
industry or supporting the development
of a domestic supply chain for the
floating offshore wind industry, or a
combination of both; or
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ii. Establishing a Lease Area Use
Community Benefit Agreement (Lease
Area Use CBA) with one or more
communities, stakeholder groups, or
Tribal entities whose use of the
geographic space of the Lease Area, or
whose use of resources harvested from
that geographic space, is expected to be
impacted by the lessee’s potential
offshore wind development; or
iii. Establishing a General Community
Benefit Agreement (General CBA) with
one or more communities, Tribes, or
stakeholder groups that are expected to
be affected by the potential impacts on
the marine, coastal and/or human
environment (such as impacts to visual
or cultural resources) from activities
resulting from lease development that
are not otherwise addressed by the
Lease Area Use CBA.
These bidding credits are intended to:
i. Enhance, through training, the
floating offshore wind workforce and/or
enhance the establishment of a domestic
supply chain for floating offshore wind
manufacturing, assembly, or services,
both of which will contribute to the
expeditious and orderly development of
offshore wind resources on the OCS;
and
ii. Minimize potential impacts to a
community or stakeholder group from
renewable energy activity or structures
on the Lease Area, and particularly to
assist fishing and related industries to
manage transitions, gear changes, or
other similar impacts which may arise
from the development of the Lease Area;
and
iii. Minimize any potential impacts to
a Tribe, community or stakeholder
group from floating offshore wind
energy development, particularly to
assist them in managing transitions,
changes or other similar impacts which
may arise from the development of the
Lease Area.
b. Changes to Auction Rules: BOEM
will be employing new auction software
for lease sales held in 2024. The auction
format remains an ascending clock
auction with multiple-factor bidding.
There are four main changes to the
ascending clock auction rules in the
new software applicable to this lease
sale, as follows:
i. If a bidder decides to bid on a
different Lease Area in a given round of
the auction, it may submit a bid to
reduce demand for the Lease Area it bid
on in the previous round and,
simultaneously, submit a bid to increase
demand for another Lease Area. This
allows a bidder the option to switch to
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The auction will be conducted in a
series of rounds. Before each round, the
auction system will announce the prices
for each lease area offered in the
auction. In Round 1, there is a single
price for each lease area equal to the
minimum bid price (also known as the
‘opening price’ or ‘clock price of Round
1’). Each bidder can bid, at the opening
price, for one lease area. After Round 1,
the bidder’s ‘‘processed demand’’ is one
for the lease area (if any) for which the
bidder bid in Round 1.2 The bidder’s
eligibility for Round 2 equals the
number of Lease Areas for which the
bidder bid in Round 1.
Starting in Round 2, each Lease Area
is assigned a range of prices for the
round. The start-of-round price is the
lowest price in the range, and the clock
price is the highest price in the range.
A bidder still eligible to bid after the
previous round can either continue
2 Bidders specify their demand for a lease area
with either a 0 or 1 in the auction system. A
demand of 1 indicates the lease area that they are
bidding on. Processed demand is the demand,
either 0 or 1 of a bidder for a lease area following
the processing of the bids for the round.
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OCS–P 0567
OCS–P 0566
bidding at the new round’s clock price
for the same Lease Area for which the
bidder’s processed demand is one or
submit a bid at any price in the range
for that round to reduce demand for that
Lease Area. A bid to reduce demand at
some price indicates that the bidder is
not willing to acquire that Lease Area at
a price exceeding the specified bid
price. A bidder that bids to reduce
demand for a Lease Area can optionally
bid to increase demand for the other
Lease Area in the same round.
If an eligible bidder does not place a
bid during the round for the Lease Area
for which the bidder’s processed
demand is one, the auction system will
consider this a request to reduce
demand for that Lease Area at the
round’s start-of-round price. That bidder
can nonetheless win that Lease Area if
it is the last remaining bidder for that
Lease Area.
After each round, the auction system
processes the bids and determines each
bidder’s processed demand for each
Lease Area and the posted prices for the
Lease Areas. The bidder’s eligibility for
the next round equals the number of
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another Lease Area if the price of the
first Lease Area exceeds the bidder’s
specified bid price.
ii. Provisional winners will no longer
be determined using a two-step process.
The auction rules are implemented in a
way such that, when the auction
concludes, the bidder who remains on
a Lease Area after the final round
becomes its provisional winner. There
will be no additional processing step.
iii. The auction will use a ‘‘second
price’’ rule. A given Lease Area will be
won by the bidder that submitted the
highest bid amount for the Lease Area,
but the winning bidder will pay the
highest bid amount at which there was
competition (i.e., the ‘‘second price’’).
iv. Each bidder’s bidding credit will
be expressed directly as a percentage of
the final price of the lease.
All potential bidders should review
the Auction Procedures for Offshore
Wind Lease Sales (Version 1) located at:
https://www.boem.gov/renewableenergy/lease-and-grant-information.
c. The Auction: Using an online
bidding system to host the auction,
BOEM will start the bidding for Leases
OCS–P 0567 and OCS–P 0566 as
described below.
Lease area ID
Brookings .........................................................................................................................
Coos Bay .........................................................................................................................
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71405
Acres
133,792
61,203
Minimum bid
$6,689,600
3,060,150
Lease Areas for which the bidder had a
processed demand of one. If, after any
round, a bidder’s processed demand is
zero for both Lease Areas, the bidder’s
eligibility drops to zero and the bidder
can no longer bid in the auction. The
posted price is the price determined for
each Lease Area after processing of all
bids for a round. If only one bidder
remains on a Lease Area, the posted
price reflects the ‘‘second price’’ (i.e.,
the highest price at which there was
competition for the Lease Area).3
If, after the bids for the round have
been processed, there is no Lease Area
with excess demand, the auction will
end. When this occurs, each bidder with
a processed demand of one for a Lease
Area will become the provisional
winner for that Lease Area. Otherwise,
the auction will continue with a new
round in which the start-of-round price
for each Lease Area equals the posted
price of the previous round.
3 The Auction Procedures for Offshore Wind
Lease Sales provides details on how bids are
prioritized and processed.
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The increment by which the clock
price exceeds the start-of-round price
will be determined based on several
factors including, but not limited to, the
expected time needed to conduct the
auction and the number of rounds that
have already occurred. BOEM reserves
the right to increase or decrease the
increment as it deems appropriate.
The provisional winner of each Lease
Area will pay the final posted price (less
any applicable bidding credit) or risk
forfeiting its bid deposit. A provisional
winner will be disqualified if it is
subsequently found to have violated
auction rules or BOEM regulations, or
otherwise engaged in conduct
detrimental to the integrity of the
competitive auction. If a bidder submits
a bid that BOEM determines to be a
provisionally winning bid, the bidder
must sign the applicable lease
documents, post financial assurance,
and submit the outstanding balance (if
any) of its winning bid (i.e., winning bid
minus the applicable bid deposit and
any applicable bidding credits) within
ten business days of receiving the lease
for execution, pursuant to 30 CFR
585.225(b). BOEM reserves the right to
not issue the lease to the provisionally
winning bidder if that bidder fails to:
timely execute the lease and return it to
BOEM, timely post adequate financial
assurance, timely pay the balance of its
winning bid, or otherwise comply with
applicable regulations or the terms of
this FSN. In any of these cases, the
bidder may forfeit its bid deposit and
BOEM reserves the right to offer a lease
to the next highest eligible bidder as
determined by BOEM.
BOEM will publish the names of the
provisional winners of the Lease Areas
and the associated prices shortly after
the conclusion of the sale. Full bid
results, including round-by-round
results of the entire sale, will be
published on BOEM’s website after a
review of the results and announcement
of the provisional winners.
Additional Information Regarding the
Auction Format:
i. Authorized Individuals and Bidder
Authentication: An entity that is eligible
to participate in the auction will
identify on its BFF up to three
individuals who will be authorized to
bid on behalf of the company, including
their names, business telephone
numbers, and email addresses. All
individuals will log into the auction
system using Login.gov. Prior to the
auction, each individual listed on the
BFF form must obtain a Fast Identify
Online (FIDO) compliant security key 4
4 FIDO keys are produced by many
manufacturers, such as Yubico and Google. They
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and must register this security key on
Login.gov using the same email address
that was listed in the BFF. The
Login.gov registration, together with the
FIDO-compliant security key, will
enable the individual to log into the
auction system. Information on the
‘‘Auction Login and Authentication
Procedures’’ is available online at:
https://www.boem.gov/renewableenergy/lease-and-grant-information.
After BOEM has processed the bid
deposits, the auction contractor will
send an email to the authorized
individuals, inviting them to practice
logging into the auction system on a
specific day in advance of the mock
auction. The Login.gov login process,
along with the authentication process
for the auction helpdesk, will also be
tested during the mock auction.
ii. If an eligible bidder fails to submit
a bid deposit or does not participate in
the first round of the auction, BOEM
will deactivate that bidder’s login
information.
iii. Timing of Auction: The auction
will begin at 7:00 a.m. PT/10:00 a.m. ET
on October 15, 2024. Bidders will be
able to log into the auction system
beginning 30 minutes before the start of
the auction. BOEM recommends that
bidders log in earlier than 7:00 a.m. PT/
10:00 a.m. ET on that day to ensure that
any login issues are resolved prior to the
start of the auction.
iv. Messaging Service: BOEM and its
auction contractors will use the auction
system’s messaging service to keep
bidders informed on issues of interest
during the auction. For example, BOEM
could change the schedule at any time,
including during the auction. If BOEM
changes the schedule during the
auction, it will use the messaging
service to notify bidders that a revision
has been made and will direct bidders
to the relevant page. BOEM will also use
the messaging service for other updates
during the auction.
v. Bidding Rounds: Bidders are
allowed to place bids or to change their
bids at any time during the bidding
round. At the top of the bidding page,
a countdown clock shows how much
time remains in each round. Bidders
will have until the end of the round to
place bids. Bidders should do so
according to the procedures described
in this FSN and the Auction Procedures
are widely available and can easily be purchased
from Amazon, Best Buy, Walmart, or any other
seller of electronics. The latest generation of the
FIDO standard is FIDO2, and each authorized
individual should obtain a key compliant with the
FIDO2 authentication standard. FIDO keys are
typically inserted into a computer’s USB port, so
the authorized individual should obtain a FIDO key
compatible with their computer (USB–A or USB–
C) or a USB adapter, as necessary.
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for Offshore Wind Lease Sales.
Information about the round results will
be made available only after the round
has closed, so there is no strategic
advantage to placing bids early or late
in the round. The Auction Procedures
for Offshore Wind Lease Sales
elaborates on the auction procedures
described in this FSN. In the event of
any inconsistency between the Auction
Procedures for Offshore Wind Lease
Sales, the Bidder Manual, and the FSN,
the FSN is controlling.5
i. Alternate Bidding Procedures:
Redundancy is the most effective way to
mitigate technical and human issues
during an auction. BOEM strongly
recommends that bidders consider
authorizing more than one individual to
bid in the auction—and confirming
during the mock auction that each
individual is able to access the auction
system. A mobile hotspot or other form
of wireless access is helpful if a
company’s main internet connection
should fail. As a last resort, an
authorized individual facing technical
issues may request to submit its bid by
telephone. To be authorized to place a
telephone bid, an authorized individual
must contact the auction help desk, at
the phone number provided to bidders,
before the end of the round. The caller
must explain the reasons why a
telephone bid needs to be submitted.
BOEM may, in its sole discretion,
permit or refuse to accept a request for
the placement of a bid using this
alternate telephonic bidding procedure.
The auction help desk requires codes
from the Google Authenticator
application (app) as part of its
procedure for identifying individuals
who call for assistance. Prior to the
auction, all individuals listed on the
BFF should download the Google
AuthenticatorTM mobile app 6 onto their
smartphone or tablet.7 The first time the
individual logs into the auction system,
the system will provide a QR token to
be read into the Google Authenticator
app. This token is unique to the
individual and BOEM auctions. It
enables the Google Authenticator app to
generate time-sensitive codes that must
be provided to the help desk
representative as part of the user
authentication process.
b. 15 Percent Bidding Credit for
Workforce Training or Supply Chain
5 The Bidder Manual describes use of the auction
platform and is provided to the auction participants
in advance of the auction.
6 Google Authenticator must be installed from
either the Apple App Store or the Google Play
Store.
7 Installing the Google Authenticator app is only
required if the app has not already been installed
on the smartphone or tablet.
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Development or a Combination of Both:
This bidding credit allows a bidder to
receive a credit of 15 percent of its bid
in exchange for a commitment to make
a qualifying monetary contribution
(‘‘Contribution’’), in the same amount as
the bidding credit received, to programs
or initiatives that support workforce
training programs for the U.S. floating
offshore wind industry or development
of a U.S. domestic supply chain for the
floating offshore wind industry, or both,
as described in the BFF Addendum and
the lease. To qualify for this credit, the
bidder must commit to the bidding
credit requirements on the BFF and
submit a Conceptual Strategy as
described in the BFF Addendum.
i. The Contribution to workforce
training must result in a better trained
and/or larger domestic floating offshore
wind workforce that provides for more
efficient operations via increasing the
supply of fully trained personnel.
Training of existing lessee employees,
lessee contractors, or employees of
affiliated entities will not qualify.
ii. The Contribution to domestic
supply chain development must result
in overall benefits to the U.S. floating
offshore wind supply chain available to
all potential purchasers of floating
offshore wind services, components, or
subassemblies, not solely the lessee’s
project; and either: (i) the demonstrable
development of new domestic capacity
(including vessels) or the demonstrable
buildout of existing capacity; or (ii) an
improved floating offshore wind
domestic supply chain by reducing the
upfront capital or certification cost for
manufacturing floating offshore wind
components, including the building of
facilities, the purchasing of capital
equipment, and the certifying of existing
manufacturing facilities.
iii. Contributions cannot be used to
satisfy private cost shares for any federal
tax or other incentive programs where
cost sharing is a requirement. No
portion of the Contribution may be used
to meet the requirements of any other
bidding credits for which the lessee
qualifies.
iv. Bidders interested in obtaining a
bidding credit could choose to
contribute to workforce training
programs, domestic supply chain
initiatives, or a combination of both.
The Conceptual Strategy must describe
verifiable actions that the lessee will
take that would allow BOEM to confirm
compliance when the documentation for
satisfying the bidding credit is
submitted. The Contribution must be
tendered in full, and the lessee must
provide documentation evidencing it
has made the Contribution and
complied with applicable requirements,
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no later than the date the lessee submits
its first FDR or before the tenth Lease
Anniversary, whichever is sooner.
v. Contributions to workforce training
must promote and support one or more
of the following purposes: (i) union
apprenticeships, labor management
training partnerships, stipends for
workforce training, or other technical
training programs or institutions
focused on providing skills necessary
for the planning, design, construction,
operation, maintenance, or
decommissioning of floating offshore
wind energy projects in the United
States; (ii) maritime training necessary
for the crewing of vessels to be used for
the construction, servicing, and/or
decommissioning of floating offshore
wind energy projects in the United
States; (iii) training workers in skills or
techniques necessary to manufacture or
assemble floating offshore wind
components, subcomponents, or
subassemblies. Examples of areas
involving these skills and techniques
include welding; wind energy
technology; hydraulic maintenance;
braking systems; mechanical systems,
including blade inspection and
maintenance; or computers and
programmable logic control systems; (iv)
Tribal floating offshore wind workforce
development programs or training for
employees of an Indian Economic
Enterprise 8 in skills necessary in the
floating offshore wind industry; or (v)
training in any other job skills that the
lessee can demonstrate are necessary for
the planning, design, construction,
operation, maintenance, or
decommissioning of floating offshore
wind energy projects in the United
States.
vi. Contributions to domestic supply
chain development must promote and
support one or more of the following: (i)
development of a domestic supply chain
for the floating offshore wind industry,
including manufacturing of components
and subassemblies and the expansion of
related services; (ii) domestic Tier 2 and
Tier 3 floating offshore wind component
suppliers and domestic Tier-1 supply
chain efforts, including quay-side
fabrication; 9 (iii) technical assistance
grants to help U.S. manufacturers re-tool
or certify (e.g., ISO–9001) for floating
offshore wind manufacturing; (iv)
8 https://www.bia.gov/sites/default/files/dup/
assets/as-ia/ieed/Primer%20on%20Buy%20Indian
%20Act%20508%20Compliant%202.6.18
(Reload).pdf.
9 Tier-1 denotes the primary offshore wind
components such as the blades, nacelles, towers,
foundations, and cables. Tier 2 subassemblies are
the systems that have a specific function for a Tier
1 component. Tier 3 subcomponents are commonly
available items that are combined into Tier 2
subassemblies, such as motors, bolts, and gears.
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development of Jones Act-compliant
vessels for the construction, servicing,
and/or decommissioning of floating
offshore wind energy projects in the
United States; (v) purchase and
installation of lift cranes or other
equipment capable of lifting or moving
floating offshore wind foundations,
towers, and nacelles quayside, or lift
cranes on vessels with these
capabilities; (vi) port infrastructure
directly related to floating offshore wind
component manufacturing or assembly
of major floating offshore wind facility
components; (vii) establishing a new or
existing bonding support reserve or
revolving fund available to all
businesses providing goods and services
to floating offshore wind energy
companies, including disadvantaged
businesses and/or Indian Economic
Enterprises; or (viii) other supply chain
development efforts that the lessee can
demonstrate advance the manufacturing
of floating offshore wind components or
subassemblies or the provision of
floating offshore wind services in the
United States.
vii. Documentation: If a lease is issued
pursuant to a winning bid that includes
a bidding credit for workforce training
or supply chain development, the lessee
is required to provide documentation
showing that the lessee has met the
financial commitment before the lessee
submits the first FDR for the lease or
before the tenth Lease Anniversary,
whichever is sooner. The
documentation must allow BOEM to
objectively verify the amount of the
Contribution and the beneficiary(ies) of
the Contribution.
At a minimum, the documentation
must include: all written agreements
between the lessee and beneficiary(ies)
of the Contribution, which must detail
the amount of the Contribution(s) and
how it will be used by the beneficiaries
of the Contribution(s) to satisfy the goals
of the bidding credit for which the
Contribution was made; all receipts
documenting the amount, date, financial
institution, and the account and owner
of the account to which the
Contribution was made; and sworn
statements by the entity that made the
Contribution and the beneficiary(ies) of
the Contribution attesting that all
information provided in the above
documentation is true and accurate. The
documentation will need to describe
how the funded initiative or program
has advanced, or is expected to advance,
U.S. floating offshore wind workforce
training or supply chain development.
The documentation must also provide
qualitative and/or quantitative
information that includes the estimated
number of trainees or jobs supported, or
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the estimated leveraged supply chain
investment resulting or expected to
result from the Contribution. The
documentation will need to contain any
information called for in the Conceptual
Strategy that the lessee submitted with
its BFF and to allow BOEM to
objectively verify (i) the amount of the
Contribution and the beneficiary(ies) of
the Contribution, and (ii) compliance
with the bidding credit criteria provided
in Addendum ‘‘C’’ of the lease. If the
lessee’s implementation of its
Conceptual Strategy changes due to
market needs or other factors, the lessee
must explain the changed approach.
BOEM reserves all rights to determine
that the bidding credit has not been
satisfied if changes from the lessee’s
Conceptual Strategy result in the lessee
not meeting the criteria for the bidding
credit described in Addendum ‘‘C’’ of
the lease.
viii. Enforcement: The commitment
for the bidding credit will be made in
the BFF and will be included in a lease
addendum that will bind the lessee and
all future assignees of the lease to the
fulfillment of the bidding credits. If
BOEM were to determine that a lessee
or assignee had failed to satisfy the
requirements of the bidding credit, or if
a lessee were to relinquish or otherwise
fail to develop the lease by the tenth
anniversary date of lease issuance, the
amount corresponding to the bidding
credit awarded would be immediately
due and payable to ONRR with interest
from the lease Effective Date. The
interest rate would be the
underpayment interest rate identified by
ONRR on its website. The lessee will
not be required to pay said amount if
the lessee satisfied its bidding credit
requirements but failed to develop the
lease by the tenth Lease Anniversary.
BOEM could, at its sole discretion,
extend the documentation deadline
beyond the first FDR submission or
extend the lease development deadline
beyond the 10-year timeframe.
5 Percent Bidding Credit for Lease
Area Use CBA: This bidding credit will
allow a bidder to receive a credit of 5
percent of its bid in exchange for a
commitment to contribute to an existing
Lease Area Use CBA or a commitment
to enter into a new Lease Area Use CBA
with a community or stakeholder group
whose use of the geographic space of the
Lease Area, or whose use of resources
harvested from that geographic space, is
expected to be impacted by the lessee’s
potential offshore wind development.
To qualify for the credit, the bidder
must commit to the bidding credit
requirements in the BFF and submit a
conceptual strategy, as described in the
BFF addendum. Lessees must use best
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efforts to provide benefits at least
commensurate to the value of the
bidding credit received. This may
include both monetary and nonmonetary benefits. To clarify, any
benefits provided to impacted
communities should not duplicate
benefits or mitigation measures imposed
on the lessee through, or pursuant to,
federal statutes other than OCSLA. To
count toward this bidding credit, any
compensatory mitigation required by a
CBA provision must occur before BOEM
requires the same compensatory
mitigation in the terms and conditions
of COP approval.
Bidders committing to use the Lease
Area Use CBA bidding credit must
submit their conceptual strategy, along
with their BFF, as further described
below and in the BFF addendum. The
conceptual strategy must describe the
actions that the lessee intends to take
that will allow BOEM to verify
compliance when the lessee seeks to
demonstrate satisfaction of the
requirements for the bidding credit. The
lessee must provide documentation
showing that the lessee has met the
commitment and complied with the
applicable bidding credit requirements
before the lessee submits the lease’s first
FDR or before the tenth Lease
Anniversary, whichever is sooner.
ix. Documentation: As proposed, if a
lease is awarded pursuant to a winning
bid that includes a Lease Area Use CBA
bidding credit, the lessee must provide
written documentation to BOEM
demonstrating execution of the Lease
Area Use CBA commitment no later
than submission of the lessee’s first FDR
or before the tenth Lease Anniversary,
whichever is sooner. The
documentation must enable BOEM to
objectively verify the Contribution has
met all applicable requirements
outlined in addendum ‘‘C’’ of the lease.
At a minimum, this documentation
must include:
• All written agreements between the
lessee and beneficiary(ies), including
the executed Lease Area Use CBA;
• A description of work done with
impacted communities, including the
monetary and non-monetary
commitments that reflect the value of
the bidding credit received; and
• Sworn statements by the Lease Area
Use CBA signatories or their assignees,
attesting to the truth and accuracy of all
the information provided in the above
documentation.
The documentation must contain any
information specified in the conceptual
strategy that was submitted with the
BFF. If the lessee’s implementation of
its conceptual strategy changes due to
market needs or other factors, the lessee
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must explain this change. BOEM
reserves the right to determine that the
bidding credit has not been satisfied if
changes from the lessee’s conceptual
strategy result in the lessee not meeting
the criteria for the bidding credit
described in addendum ‘‘C’’ of the lease.
x. Enforcement: The commitment for
the bidding credit will be made in the
BFF and will be included in a lease
addendum that will bind the lessee and
all future assignees of the lease to the
fulfillment of the bidding credit. If
BOEM were to determine that a lessee
or assignee had failed to satisfy the
requirements of the bidding credit, or if
a lessee were to relinquish or otherwise
fail to develop the lease by the
submission of the lessee’s first FDR or
by the tenth anniversary date of lease
issuance, the amount corresponding to
the bidding credit awarded would be
immediately due and payable to ONRR
with interest from the lease Effective
Date. The interest rate would be the
underpayment interest rate identified by
ONRR. The lessee will not be required
to pay said amount if the lessee satisfied
its bidding credit requirements but
failed to develop the lease by the tenth
Lease Anniversary. BOEM could, at its
sole discretion, extend the
documentation deadline beyond the
first FDR submission or extend the lease
development deadline beyond the 10year timeframe.
c. 5 percent Bidding Credit for
General CBA: The third bidding credit
offered would allow a bidder to receive
a credit of 5 percent of its bid in
exchange for a commitment to
contribute to an existing General CBA or
a commitment to enter into a new
General CBA with a community or
stakeholder group that is expected to be
impacted by the lessee’s potential
floating offshore wind development. To
qualify for the credit, the bidder must
commit to the bidding credit
requirements in the BFF and submit a
conceptual strategy as described in the
BFF addendum. Bidders committing to
use the General CBA bidding credit
must submit their conceptual strategy
along with their BFF, further described
below and in the BFF addendum. The
conceptual strategy must describe the
actions that the lessee intends to take
that will allow BOEM to verify
compliance when the lessee seeks to
demonstrate satisfaction of the
requirements for the bidding credit.
Lessees must use best efforts to provide
benefits at least commensurate to the
value of the bidding credit received.
This may include both monetary and
non-monetary benefits. To clarify, any
benefits provided to impacted
communities should not duplicate
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benefits or mitigation measures imposed
on the lessee through, or pursuant to,
federal statutes other than OCSLA. To
count toward this bidding credit, any
compensatory mitigation required by a
CBA provision must occur before BOEM
requires the same compensatory
mitigation in the terms and conditions
of COP approval.
(1) Documentation: As proposed, if a
lease is awarded pursuant to a winning
bid that includes a General CBA bidding
credit, the lessee must provide written
documentation to BOEM demonstrating
execution of the General CBA
commitment no later than submission of
the lessee’s first FDR or before the tenth
Lease Anniversary, whichever is sooner.
The documentation must enable BOEM
to objectively verify that the
Contribution has met all applicable
requirements outlined in addendum
‘‘C’’ of the lease. At a minimum, this
documentation must include:
a. All written agreements between the
lessee and beneficiary(ies), including
the executed General CBA;
b. A description of work with
impacted communities to reach
monetary and non-monetary
commitments that reflect the value of
the bidding credit received;
c. Sworn statements by the General
CBA signatories or their assignees,
attesting to the truth and accuracy of all
the information provided in the above
documentation.
The documentation must contain any
information specified in the conceptual
strategy that was submitted with the
BFF. If the lessee’s implementation of
its conceptual strategy changes due to
market needs or other factors, the lessee
will need to explain this change. BOEM
reserves the right to determine that the
bidding credit has not been satisfied if
changes from the lessee’s conceptual
strategy result in the lessee not meeting
the criteria for the bidding credit
described in addendum ‘‘C’’ of the lease.
d. Enforcement: The commitment for
the bidding credit must be made in the
BFF and will be included in a lease
addendum that will bind the lessee and
all future assignees of the lease to the
fulfillment of the bidding credit. If
BOEM were to determine that a lessee
or assignee had failed to satisfy the
requirements of the bidding credit, or if
a lessee were to relinquish or otherwise
fail to develop the lease by the tenth
anniversary date of lease issuance, the
amount corresponding to the bidding
credit awarded would be immediately
due and payable to ONRR with interest
from the lease Effective Date. The
interest rate would be the
underpayment interest rate identified by
ONRR. The lessee will not be required
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to pay said amount if the lessee satisfied
its bidding credit requirements but
failed to develop the lease by the tenth
Lease Anniversary. BOEM could, at its
sole discretion, extend the
documentation deadline beyond the
first FDR submission or extend the lease
development deadline beyond the 10year time.
XIII. Rejection or Non-Acceptance of
Bids
BOEM reserves the right to reject any
and all bids that do not satisfy the
requirements and rules of the auction,
this FSN, or applicable regulations and
statutes.
XIV. Anti-Competitive Review
Bidding behavior in this lease sale is
subject to federal antitrust laws.
Following the auction, but before the
acceptance of bids and the issuance of
the lease, BOEM will ‘‘allow the
Attorney General, in consultation with
the Federal Trade Commission, thirty
days to review the results of [the] lease
sale.’’ 43 U.S.C. 1337(c)(1). If a
provisionally winning bidder is found
to have engaged in anti-competitive
behavior in connection with this lease
sale, BOEM will reject its provisionally
winning bid. Compliance with BOEM’s
auction procedures and regulations is
not an absolute defense to violations of
antitrust laws.
Anti-competitive behavior
determinations are fact specific. Such
behavior may manifest itself in several
different ways, including, but not
limited to:
1. An express or tacit agreement
among bidders not to bid in an auction,
or to bid a particular price;
2. An agreement among bidders not to
bid;
3. An agreement among bidders not to
bid against each other; or
4. Other agreements among bidders
that have the potential to affect the final
auction price.
Pursuant to 43 U.S.C. 1337(c)(3),
BOEM will decline to award a lease if
the Attorney General, in consultation
with the Federal Trade Commission,
determines that awarding the lease
would be inconsistent with antitrust
laws.
For more information on whether
specific communications or agreements
could constitute a violation of federal
antitrust law, please see https://
www.justice.gov/atr or consult legal
counsel.
a. Process for Issuing the Lease
Once all post-auction reviews have
been completed to BOEM’s satisfaction,
BOEM will provide an unsigned copy of
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71409
the lease to each provisionally winning
bidder. Within 10 business days after
receiving the lease, the provisionally
winning bidders must:
1. Sign and return the lease on the
bidder’s behalf;
2. File financial assurance, as required
under 30 CFR 585.516–537; and
3. Pay by electronic funds transfer
(EFT) the balance owed (the winning
cash bid less the applicable bid deposit),
if any. BOEM requires bidders to use
EFT procedures (not www.pay.gov, the
website bidders used to submit bid
deposits) for payment of the balance,
following the detailed instructions
available on ONRR’s website at: https://
onrr.gov/paying/paymentoptions?tabs=renewable-energy,biddeposit-options.
BOEM will not execute the lease until
the three requirements above have been
satisfied, BOEM has accepted the
provisionally winning bidder’s financial
assurance, and BOEM has processed the
provisionally winning bidder’s
payment. Pursuant to 30 CFR
585.225(d), a provisional winner may
request in writing an extension of the
10-day time limit. BOEM, in its
discretion, may grant such a request. If
the provisionally winning bidder does
not meet these requirements or
otherwise fails to comply with
applicable regulations or the terms of
the FSN, BOEM reserves the right not to
issue the lease to that bidder. In such a
case, the provisional winner will forfeit
its bid deposit. Also, in such a case,
BOEM reserves the right to offer the
lease to the next highest eligible bidder
as determined by BOEM.
Within 45 calendar days of the date
that a provisional winner receives an
executed copy of the lease, each
provisional winner is required to pay
the first year’s rent using the ‘‘ONRR
Renewable Energy Initial Rental
Payments’’ form available at: https://
www.pay.gov/public/form/start/
27797604/.
Subsequent annual rent payments
must be made following the detailed
instructions available on ONRR’s
website at: https://onrr.gov/paying/
payment-options?tabs=rent-payments.
b. Non-Procurement Debarment and
Suspension Regulations
Pursuant to 43 CFR part 42, subpart
C, an OCS renewable energy lessee will
be required to comply with the
Department of the Interior’s nonprocurement debarment and suspension
regulations at 2 CFR parts 180 and 1400.
The lessee must also communicate this
requirement to persons with whom the
lessee does business relating to this
lease by including this requirement as a
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 170 / Tuesday, September 3, 2024 / Notices
condition in their contracts and in other
transactions.
c. Changes to Auction Details
BOEM has the discretion to change
any auction detail specified in the FSN,
including the date and time, if events
outside BOEM’s control may interfere
with a fair and proper lease sale. Such
events may include, but are not limited
to, natural disasters (e.g., earthquakes,
hurricanes, floods, and blizzards), wars,
riots, acts of terrorism, fire, strikes, civil
disorder, Federal Government
shutdowns, cyberattacks against
relevant information systems, or other
events of a similar nature. In case of
such events, BOEM will notify all
qualified bidders via email, phone, and
BOEM’s website at: https://
www.boem.gov/renewable-energy/stateactivities/oregon. Bidders should call
BOEM’s Auction Manager at (703) 787–
1121 if they have concerns.
d. Withdrawal of Blocks
BOEM reserves the right to withdraw
all or portions of the Lease Areas prior
to executing the leases with the winning
bidders. If BOEM exercises this right, it
will refund appropriate amounts of the
bid deposits to winning bidders,
without interest, as provided in 30 CFR
585.224(f).
tkelley on LAP7H3WLY3PROD with NOTICES2
e. Appeals
Procedures to request reconsideration
of rejected bids are provided in BOEM’s
regulations at 30 CFR 585.226(c) and
585.118(c). BOEM’s decision on a bid is
the final action of the Department of the
Interior and is not subject to appeal to
the Office of Hearings and Appeals.
Under 30 CFR 585.224, if BOEM rejects
your bid, BOEM will provide a written
statement of the reasons and will refund
any money deposited with your bid,
without interest. You may ask the
BOEM Director for reconsideration, in
writing, within 15 business days of bid
rejection, under 30 CFR 585.118(c)(1).
The Director will send you a written
response either affirming or reversing
the rejection.
f. Protection of Privileged or
Confidential Information
BOEM will protect privileged or
confidential information that the lessee
submits, as authorized by the Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA), 30 CFR
585.114, or other applicable statutes. If
the lessee wishes to protect the
confidentiality of information, the lessee
should clearly mark it ‘‘Contains
Privileged or Confidential Information’’
and consider submitting such
information as a separate attachment.
BOEM will not disclose such
VerDate Sep<11>2014
22:46 Aug 30, 2024
Jkt 262001
information, except as required by
FOIA. If your submission is requested
under the FOIA, your information will
only be withheld if a determination is
made that one of the FOIA’s exemptions
to disclosure applies. Such a
determination will be made in
accordance with the Department’s FOIA
regulations and applicable law. Labeling
information as privileged or confidential
will alert BOEM to more closely
scrutinize whether it warrants
withholding. Further, BOEM will not
treat as confidential aggregate
summaries of otherwise nonconfidential
information.
XV. Compliance With the Inflation
Reduction Act (Pub. L. 117–169 (Aug.
16, 2022)) (Hereinafter, the ‘‘IRA’’):
Section 50265(b)(2) of the IRA
provides that ‘‘[d]uring the 10-year
period beginning on the date of
enactment of this Act . . . the Secretary
may not issue a lease for offshore wind
development under section 8(p)(1)(C) of
the OCS Lands Act (43 U.S.C.
1337(p)(1)(C)) unless—(A) an offshore
[oil and gas] lease sale has been held
during the 1-year period ending on the
date of the issuance of the lease for
offshore wind development; and (B) the
sum total of acres offered for lease in
offshore [oil and gas] lease sales during
the 1-year period ending on the date of
the issuance of the lease for offshore
wind development is not less than
60,000,000 acres.’’ Oil and Gas Lease
Sale 261 was held on December 20,
2023, offering approximately 72 million
acres, satisfying the requirements in
section 50265(b)(2) of the IRA for any
offshore wind lease issued by December
20, 2024. BOEM expects to issue any
leases resulting from PACW–2 no later
than the one-year anniversary of Lease
Sale 261.
Authority: 43 U.S.C. 1337(p); 30 CFR
585.214 and 585.220 et seq.
Elizabeth Klein,
Director, Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management.
[FR Doc. 2024–19619 Filed 8–30–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4340–98–P
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Office of Surface Mining Reclamation
and Enforcement
[S1D1S SS08011000 SX064A000
245S180110; S2D2S SS08011000
SX064A000 24XS501520; OMB Control
Number 1029–0025]
Submission to the Office of
Management and Budget for Review
and Approval; Maintenance of State
Programs and Procedures for
Substituting Federal Enforcement of
State Programs and Withdrawing
Approval of State Programs
Office of Surface Mining
Reclamation and Enforcement, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of information collection;
request for comment.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, we,
the Office of Surface Mining
Reclamation and Enforcement (OSMRE),
are proposing to renew an information
collection.
DATES: Interested persons are invited to
submit comments on or before
November 4, 2024.
ADDRESSES: Send your comments on
this information collection request (ICR)
by mail to Mark Gehlhar, Office of
Surface Mining Reclamation and
Enforcement, 1849 C Street NW, Room
1544–MIB, Washington, DC 20240, or by
email to mgehlhar@osmre.gov. Please
reference OMB Control Number 1029–
0025 in the subject line of your
comments.
SUMMARY:
To
request additional information about
this ICR, contact Mark Gehlhar by email
at mgehlhar@osmre.gov, or by telephone
at 202–208–2716. 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.
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. You may
also view the ICR at https://
www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In
accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501
et seq.) and 5 CFR 1320.8(d)(1), we
provide the general public and other
Federal agencies with an opportunity to
comment on new, proposed, revised,
and continuing collections of
information. This helps us assess the
impact of our information collection
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 170 (Tuesday, September 3, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 71398-71410]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-19619]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
[Docket No. BOEM-2024-0042]
Pacific Wind Lease Sale 2 for Commercial Leasing for Wind Power
Development on the Outer Continental Shelf Offshore Oregon--Final Sale
Notice
AGENCY: Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Interior.
ACTION: Final sale notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This final sale notice (FSN) contains information pertaining
to the areas available for commercial wind power leasing during Pacific
Wind Lease Sale 2 (PACW-2) on the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS)
offshore Oregon. Specifically, this FSN details certain provisions and
conditions of the leases, auction details, the lease form, criteria for
evaluating competing bids, and procedures for award, appeal, and lease
execution. The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) will offer two
lease areas using an ascending clock auction with multiple-factor
bidding: Lease OCS-P 0566 and Lease OCS-P 0567 (Lease Areas). Bidders
will be subject to a `one-per-customer' rule, as explained below. The
Lease Areas are in the previously identified wind energy areas (WEAs)
Brookings and Coos Bay. The issuance of any lease resulting from this
sale will not constitute approval of project-specific plans to develop
offshore wind energy. If submitted by the lessee, such plans, will be
subject to environmental, technical, and public reviews prior to a BOEM
decision on whether the proposed activity should be authorized.
DATES: BOEM will hold an online mock auction for potential bidders
starting at 7:00 a.m. Pacific Time (PT)/10:00 a.m. Eastern Time (ET) on
October 10, 2024. The monetary auction will be held online and will
begin at 7:00 a.m. PT/10:00 a.m. ET on October 15, 2024. Additional
details are provided in the section entitled ``Deadlines and Milestones
for Bidders.''
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jean Thurston-Keller, Bureau of Ocean
Energy Management, Office of Strategic Resources, 760 Paseo Camarillo,
Suite 102 (CM102), Camarillo, California 93010-6002 or
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
a. Call for Information and Nominations: On April 29, 2022, BOEM
published the ``Call for Information and Nominations-Commercial Leasing
for Wind Power Development on the Outer Continental Shelf offshore
Oregon'' (Call). The Call consisted of two areas identified as the
Brookings and Coos Bay Call Areas. BOEM received 281 comments from
Tribal nations, the general public, Federal, State, and local agencies,
the fishing industry, industry groups, developers, non-governmental
organizations, universities, and other stakeholders. Comments can be
viewed at https://www.regulations.gov/document/BOEM-2022-0009-0001/comment. Four developers nominated areas for a commercial wind energy
lease within the Call Areas.
b. Area Identification: After the close of the Call comment period
on June 28, 2022, BOEM initiated the process for identifying possible
leasing areas (Area ID) by reviewing the input received on the Call.
BOEM used the modified Area ID process described in a note to
stakeholders, available at: https://www.boem.gov/newsroom/notes-stakeholders/boem-enhances-its-processes-identify-future-offshore-wind-energy-areas. BOEM and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration's (NOAA) National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science
(NCCOS) team then used an ocean planning modeling tool to assist in the
identification of the two draft WEAs on the OCS offshore Oregon. The
modeling tool, data inputs, and methodology used to identify the WEAs
are outlined in the ``NCCOS Draft Report: A Wind Energy Siting Analysis
for the Oregon Call Areas,'' which can be found at https://www.boem.gov/sites/default/files/documents/renewable-energy/state-activities/Oregon_WEA_Draft_Report_NCCOS.pdf.
On August 15, 2023, BOEM announced a 60-day public comment period
on the two draft WEAs offshore Oregon, covering approximately 219,547
acres. BOEM later extended the comment period for an additional 15 days
for a total 75-day public comment period.
BOEM considered the following information sources, among others,
when identifying the draft WEAs: comments and nominations received on
the Call; input from the BOEM Oregon Intergovernmental Renewable Energy
Task Force; results of the ``Data Gathering and Engagement Summary
Report: Oregon Offshore Wind Planning'' input from Tribes, Oregon State
agencies, and Federal agencies; comments from stakeholders and ocean
users, including the maritime community, offshore wind developers, and
the commercial and recreational fishing industry; State renewable
energy goals; information on domestic and global offshore wind markets
and technological trends; and the data and information found in
OROWindMap at: https://offshorewind.westcoastoceans.org.
After the close of the draft WEA comment period on October 31,
2023, BOEM reviewed the input from all parties mentioned above and
finalized the Area ID memorandum. BOEM announced the designation of the
two final WEAs on February 13, 2024. The first WEA (Brookings) is
133,792 acres and located approximately 18 miles from shore. The second
WEA (Coos Bay) is 61,203 acres and located approximately 32 miles from
shore. If fully developed, both final WEAs combined could support
approximately 3.16 gigawatts of wind energy capacity. The Oregon Area
ID documentation can be found at https://www.boem.gov/renewable-energy/state-activities/oregon.
c. Environmental Reviews: On February 14, 2024, BOEM published a
notice of intent to prepare an environmental assessment (EA) to
consider potential environmental consequences of site characterization
activities (e.g., biological, archaeological, geological, and
geophysical surveys and core samples)
[[Page 71399]]
and site assessment activities (e.g., installation of meteorological
buoys) that are expected to take place after issuance of wind energy
leases in the WEAs. When scoping the EA, BOEM sought comments on the
issues and alternatives that should inform the EA. BOEM received 242
comment submissions, which can be found at www.regulations.gov under
Docket No. BOEM-2023-0065. In addition to the preparation of the EA,
BOEM completed consultations under the Endangered Species Act, the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act, and the
Coastal Zone Management Act. The EA and associated consultations
informed BOEM's decision on whether to proceed with this FSN. BOEM will
conduct additional environmental reviews upon receipt of a lessee's
Construction and Operations Plan (COP), which will include a request
for a project easement(s), if the proposed leases reach that stage of
development. Lessees also need to coordinate with state agencies during
BOEM's COP review regarding potential impacts from the development of
any cables or other infrastructure that would be located within the
state's jurisdiction.
II. List of Eligible Bidders
BOEM has determined that the following 5 entities are legally,
technically, and financially qualified to bid in the PACW-2 auction,
pursuant to 30 CFR 585.107 and 585.108:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Company
Company name No.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Avangrid Renewables, LLC..................................... 15019
BlueFloat Energy Oregon, LLC................................. 15160
OW North America Ventures, LLC............................... 15133
US Mainstream Renewable Power Inc............................ 15089
South Coast Energy Waters I, LLC............................. 15198
------------------------------------------------------------------------
a. Affiliated Entities: On the Bidder's Financial Form (BFF),
discussed in Section III(a)(i) and Section IX below, eligible bidders
must list any other eligible bidders with whom they are affiliated. For
the purpose of identifying affiliated entities, a bidding entity is any
individual, firm, corporation, association, partnership, consortium, or
joint venture (when established as a separate entity) that is
participating in the same auction. BOEM considers bidding entities to
be affiliated when:
i. They own or have common ownership of more than 50 percent of the
voting securities, or instruments of ownership or other forms of
ownership, of another bidding entity. Ownership of less than 10 percent
of another bidding entity constitutes a presumption of non-control that
BOEM may rebut.
ii. They own or have common ownership of between 10 and 50 percent
of the voting securities or instruments of ownership, or other forms of
ownership, of another bidding entity, and BOEM determines that there is
control upon consideration of factors including the following:
a. The extent to which there are common officers or directors.
b. With respect to the voting securities, or instruments of
ownership or other forms of ownership: The percentage of ownership or
common ownership, the relative percentage of ownership or common
ownership compared to the percentage(s) of ownership by other bidding
entities, if a bidding entity is the greatest single owner, or if there
is an opposing voting bloc of greater ownership.
c. Shared ownership, operation, or day-to-day management of a
lease, grant, or facility, as those terms are defined in BOEM's
regulations at 30 CFR 585.113.
iii. They are both direct or indirect subsidiaries of the same
parent company.
iv. With respect to any lease(s) offered in this auction, they have
entered into an agreement prior to the auction regarding the shared
ownership, operation, or day-to-day management of such lease. Such an
agreement need not be formalized to establish affiliated entities.
v. Other evidence that indicates the existence of power to exercise
control, such as evidence that one bidding entity has power to exercise
control over the other, or that multiple bidders collectively have the
power to exercise control over another bidding entity or entities.
Affiliated entities are not permitted to compete against each other
in the auction. Where two or more affiliated entities have qualified to
bid in the auction, the affiliated entities must decide prior to the
auction which one (if any) will participate in the auction. If two or
more affiliated entities attempt to participate in the auction, BOEM
will disqualify those bidders from the auction.
III. Deadlines and Milestones for Bidders
This section describes the major deadlines and milestones in the
auction process from publication of this FSN to execution of a lease
issued pursuant to this sale.
a. FSN Waiting Period: During the period between FSN publication
and the lease auction, qualified bidders must take several steps to be
able to participate in the auction.
i. Bidder's Financial Form: Each bidder must submit a BFF to BOEM
to participate in the auction. The BFF must include each bidder's
Conceptual Strategy for each bidding credit for which that bidder
wishes to be considered. BOEM must receive each bidder's BFF on or
before September 13, 2024, and it is each bidder's responsibility to
ensure BOEM's timely receipt of the BFF. If a bidder does not submit a
BFF by this deadline, BOEM, in its sole discretion, may grant an
extension to that bidder only if BOEM determines the bidder's failure
to timely submit a BFF was caused by events beyond the bidder's
control. The BFF can be downloaded at: https://www.boem.gov/renewable-energy/state-activities/oregon. Once BOEM has processed a bidder's BFF,
the bidder is allowed to log into www.pay.gov and submit a bid deposit.
For purposes of this auction, BOEM will not consider BFFs submitted for
previous lease sales. An original signed BFF may be mailed to BOEM's
Pacific Regional Office. A signed copy of the form may be submitted in
PDF format to [email protected]. A faxed copy will not be
accepted. BFF submissions should be accompanied by a transmittal letter
on company letterhead. The BFF must be executed on paper with a wet
signature or with a digital signature affixed by an authorized
representative listed on the bidder's current legal qualification card
on file with BOEM, subject to 18 U.S.C. 1001 (False Statements,
Concealment). Further information about the BFF can be found in the
``Bidder's Financial Form'' Section VII of this notice.
ii. Bid Deposit: Once BOEM has processed a BFF and provided the
appropriate information to the Office of Natural Resources Revenue
(ONRR), ONRR will populate the Bid Deposit Forms and notify the bidders
of access to www.pay.gov for the bid deposits. The bidder must log into
www.pay.gov to submit a bid deposit. To participate in the mock auction
and the monetary auction, each qualified bidder must provide a bid
deposit of $2,000,000 no later than September 27, 2024. BOEM will grant
extensions to this deadline only if BOEM, in its sole discretion,
determines that the failure to timely submit the bid deposit was caused
by events beyond the bidder's control. Further information about bid
deposits can be found in the ``Bid Deposit'' Section X of this notice.
b. Conducting the Auction:
i. Affirmative Action: Prior to bidding in the monetary auction,
each bidder must file the Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action
Representation Form
[[Page 71400]]
BOEM-2032 (February 2020, available on BOEM's website at www.boem.gov/BOEM-2032/) and the Equal Opportunity Compliance Report Certification
Form BOEM-2033 (February 2020, available on BOEM's website at
www.boem.gov/BOEM-2033/) with the BOEM Pacific Regional Office. The
forms can be submitted digitally to [email protected] or
mailed to the BOEM Pacific Regional Office. This certification is
required by 41 CFR part 60 and Executive Order (E.O.) 11246, issued
September 24, 1965, as amended by E.O. 11375, issued October 13, 1967,
and by E.O. 13672, issued July 21, 2014. Both forms must be on file
with BOEM for the bidder(s) prior to the execution of any lease
contract.
ii. Notification of Eligibility for Bidding Credits: BOEM will
notify each bidder of its eligibility for bidding credits and the value
of those bidding credits prior to the Mock Auction.
iii. Mock Auction: BOEM will hold a Mock Auction on October 10,
2024, beginning at 7:00 a.m. PT/10:00 a.m. ET, which is open only to
qualified bidders who have met the requirements and deadlines for
auction participation, including submission of the bid deposit. The
Mock Auction is intended to give bidders an opportunity to clarify
auction rules, test the functionality of the auction software, and
identify any potential issues that may arise during the auction.
iv. The Auction: On October 15, 2024, BOEM, through its contractor,
will commence the multiple-factor auction. The first round of the
auction will start at 7:00 a.m. PT/10:00 a.m. ET. The auction will
proceed electronically according to a schedule to be distributed by the
BOEM Auction Manager at the beginning of the auction, subject to any
revisions (which will be communicated to bidders during the auction).
BOEM anticipates that the auction will last one or two business days,
but the auction may continue for additional business days, as
necessary, until the auction ends in accordance with the procedures
described in the ``Auction Procedures'' section of this notice.
v. Announce Provisional Winners: BOEM will announce the provisional
winners of the lease sale after the auction ends.
c. From the Auction to Lease Execution:
i. Refund Non-Winners: Once the provisional winners have been
announced, BOEM will provide the non-winners with a written explanation
of why they did not win and will coordinate with ONRR to return their
bid deposits.
ii. Department of Justice (DOJ) Review: DOJ will have 30 days in
which to conduct an antitrust review of the auction, pursuant to 43
U.S.C. 1337(c).
iii. Delivery of the Lease: BOEM will provide an unsigned copy of
the lease to each provisional winner, with instructions on how to
execute the lease.
iv. Return the Lease: Within ten business days of receiving the
lease, the auction winners must post financial assurance, pay any
outstanding balance of their winning bids (i.e., winning cash bid less
applicable bid deposits), and sign and return the executed lease. The
winners may request extensions and BOEM, in its discretion, may grant
such a request.
v. Execution of Lease: BOEM will execute the lease by signing the
lease on behalf of the United States only after the provisional winner
completes the requirements in paragraph (b) of 30 CFR 585.225 and any
appeals timely filed under Sec. 585.118(c)(1) have been resolved.
After BOEM executes the lease, the provisional winner becomes the
winning bidder, and BOEM will send the winning bidder an electronic
version of the fully executed copy of the lease. The lease takes effect
as set forth in Sec. 585.237. The first 12 months' rent under Sec.
585.503(a) is due 45 calendar days after receiving a copy of the
executed lease from BOEM.
IV. Areas Offered for Leasing
The two Lease Areas included in this FSN are the same size and
orientation as were described in the Proposed Sale Notice (PSN). BOEM's
designation of the two Lease Areas offered in the FSN is informed by
coordination with BOEM's intergovernmental task force members,
consultation and engagement with Tribes, stakeholder engagement, a
partnership with NOAA's NCCOS to use spatial modeling to inform the
identification of WEAs, and consideration of the 281 comments that BOEM
received in response to the PSN. The two areas BOEM is offering for
lease are: the Brookings Lease Area, OCS-P 0567, which consists of
133,792 acres and is approximately 18 miles from shore; and the Coos
Bay Lease Area, OCS-P 0566, which consists of 61,203 acres and is
approximately 32 miles from shore.
Descriptions of the proposed Lease Areas can be found in Addendum A
of the proposed leases, which can be found on BOEM's website at:
https://www.boem.gov/renewable-energy/state-activities/oregon. The
areas available for lease, as listed in Table 1, will be auctioned in a
single auction.
Table 1--PACW-2 Final Lease Areas
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lease area name Lease area ID Acres
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Brookings............................ OCS-P 0567 133,792
Coos Bay............................. OCS-P 0566 61,203
Total............................ ................. 194,995
------------------------------------------------------------------------
a. Map of the Area for Leasing: A map of the Lease Areas, and GIS
spatial files X, Y (eastings, northings) UTM Zone 18, NAD83 Datum, and
geographic X, Y (longitude, latitude), NAD83 Datum can be found on
BOEM's website at: www.boem.gov/renewable-energy/state-activities/oregon.
V. Lease Stipulations
BOEM is including several lease stipulations in Addendum C of each
lease related to reporting requirements, avoiding and minimizing
potential future user conflicts and environmental impacts, project
labor agreements, national security, and project design. BOEM is also
including conditions of the Oregon Department of Land, Conservation and
Development's conditional concurrence with the federal consistency
determination pursuant to the Coastal Zone Management Act for the
Oregon proposed Lease Areas. Requirements pertaining to a single
activity may arise from more than one consultation process and may
also, in some instances, be slightly different; where this has
occurred, BOEM incorporated the most protective measure in the lease.
BOEM has also refined some stipulations identified in the PSN and
proposed leases in response to comments on the PSN.
a. Reporting requirements: BOEM is including stipulations similar
to those found in previous leases in other areas of the OCS requiring a
semi-annual
[[Page 71401]]
progress report from lessees and regular engagement with Tribes and
parties that may be affected by lessees' activities on the OCS. The
lease stipulations require working with BOEM to identify: Tribes that
have cultural and/or historical ties to the Lease Areas, and
potentially affected parties; coastal communities; commercial and
recreational fishing industries and stakeholders; educational and
research institutions; environmental and public interest NGOs; Federal,
State, and local agencies; mariners and the maritime industry; ocean
users; submarine cable operators; and underserved communities, as
defined in Section 2 of E.O. 13985. The report must identify Tribes and
parties that may be affected by lessees' activities on the OCS and with
whom the lessees have engaged; provide updates on engagement
activities; document potential adverse effects to the interests of
Tribes and parties; document how, if at all, project design or
implementation has been informed or altered to address those potential
effects; include feedback from engagement regarding transmission
planning prior to proposing any export cable route; provide information
that can be made available to the public; and include strategies to
reach potentially affected individuals with limited English
proficiency.
The stipulations include requirements for lessees to engage in ways
that minimize linguistic, technological, cultural, capacity, or other
obstacles. The stipulations encourage lessees to work collaboratively
with governments, community leadership and organizations, and Tribes
and to develop specific frameworks for capacity building.
In acknowledgment of the existing and growing consultation burden
placed on many of the Tribes and parties, the stipulation also
requires, to the maximum extent practicable, that lessees coordinate
with one another on engagement activities. It is BOEM's intention that
this requirement for lessees to coordinate their engagement apply not
only to meetings proposed by lessees, but also to reasonable requests
to coordinate engagement made by Tribes and parties. Coordinated
engagement among Tribes and lessees is strongly encouraged and is in
addition to BOEM's responsibilities to federally recognized Tribes
under E.O. 13175.
Lastly, the progress report must include an update on activities
executed under any survey plan and any meteorological and/or
oceanographic buoy deployment planned or undertaken within the leased
area that includes confirmation of the measures the lessee took, or
will take, to satisfy the conditions of any applicable lease
stipulations.
b. Communication Plans: BOEM is including lease requirements for
development of a Native American Tribes Communication Plan, an Agency
Communication Plan and a Fisheries Communication Plan, as included in
previous leases. Experience in other regions has shown that 120 days
after lease execution is not a sufficient time period in which to draft
comprehensive communications plans for fisheries, Tribes, and
government agencies. For this Lease Sale, BOEM is extending the 120-day
requirement to a 180-day requirement to allow sufficient time for
lessees to engage with entities to develop communication plans.
c. Best Management Practices: The EA for this lease sale lists a
number of best management practices which would reduce potential
impacts to resources, including those with respect to Water Quality,
Marine Debris Awareness and Prevention, Birds, Commercial Fishing,
Historic Properties, Sensitive Seafloor Habitats, and Protected Species
(in addition to requirements arising under Endangered Species Act (ESA)
Consultation and described below). The full text of the EA, including
Appendix E, must be reviewed, and the appropriate measures should be
incorporated into project activities by lessees.
d. Protected Species: In August 2024, BOEM published the Final EA,
which includes the most current measures to minimize potential adverse
impacts, including Endangered Species Act (ESA)-listed species of
marine mammals and sea turtles. BOEM has included in the leases these
measures from the EA and the ESA Concurrence Letter and Essential Fish
Habitat (EFH) Response issued on July 12, 2024.
e. Marine Mammal Protection Act Authorization(s): If the lessee is
required to obtain an authorization pursuant to section 101(a)(5) of
the Marine Mammal Protection Act prior to conducting survey activities
in support of plan submittal, the lessee must provide BOEM with a copy
of the authorization prior to commencing these activities.
f. Project Labor Agreements (PLAs) and Supply Chain: BOEM is
committed to workforce safety and the establishment of a durable
domestic supply chain that can sustain the U.S. offshore wind energy
industry, including for the leases offered in this sale. To advance
these goals, BOEM is including three lease stipulations, one for safety
requirements, a second that encourages construction efficiency for
projects, and a third that contributes towards establishing a domestic
supply chain:
i. As part of its safety requirements, lessees must maintain all
places of employment for activities in compliance with occupational
safety and health standards, free from recognized hazards to employees
of the lessee or of any contractor or subcontractor operating under
this lease, and free from retaliation or discrimination against any
employee or contractor who raises a health and safety concern on the
job.
ii. A second stipulation requires lessees to make every reasonable
effort to enter into a PLA covering the construction stage of any
project for the Lease Areas.
iii. The third stipulation requires lessees to establish a
Statement of Goals in which the lessee describes its plans for
contributing to the creation of a robust and resilient U.S.-based
floating offshore wind industry supply chain that would facilitate this
or other renewable energy projects permitted by BOEM.
The lessee is also required to provide regular progress updates on
the achievement of those goals to BOEM, and BOEM will make those
updates publicly available.
g. Research Site Access: This stipulation makes explicit that BOEM,
or its designated representative, retains the right to access, for
research purposes, the site of any operation or activity conducted
under this lease.
h. Archaeological Survey Requirements: This stipulation requires
that the lessee provide to BOEM, in the associated plan submissions, a
description of the methods it will use to conduct archaeological
surveys in support of meteorological and oceanographic buoy siting and
SAP and COP development, in addition to the survey results. The lessee
is required to coordinate a Tribal pre-survey meeting with Tribes that
have cultural and/or historical ties to the Lease Area, and the lessee
must work with BOEM to identify such Tribes. In the post-review
discovery clauses, the stipulation requires that, in the event of an
unanticipated discovery of a potential archaeological resource, the
lessee will immediately halt bottom-disturbing activities occurring
within 50 meters (164 feet) or less of the discovery and that the
avoidance distance must be calculated from the maximum discernible
extent of the archaeological resource. The lessee must follow the
procedures in 30 CFR 585.702 to notify BOEM of the discovery and
provide written notification using the State of Oregon's Inadvertent
Discovery Plan template, available at: https://
[[Page 71402]]
www.oregonlegislature.gov/cis/Pages/archaeology.aspx.
i. Foreign Interest: To protect national defense capabilities and
military operations, BOEM is requiring the lessee to provide to the
Department of Defense (DoD) specific information about the personnel
allowed to access the wind turbine structures and associated data
systems. That information includes the names of entities or persons
having a direct ownership interest in an offshore wind energy facility,
as well as any changes in ownership interests; and the names of the
material vendors, entities, and persons with whom the lessee will
potentially execute contracts to perform construction, supply turbines
or other components, or conduct construction and operational activities
at the facility. In addition, the lessee must resolve DoD's security
concerns before it allows access to the site by foreign persons or
representatives of foreign entities for which DoD has raised concerns
and before the lessee uses wind turbines or other permanent on-site
equipment manufactured by such an entity.
j. Notice of Assignment to the Committee on Foreign Investment in
the United States (CFIUS): Under BOEM's regulations at 30 CFR 585.107,
a lessee must be one of the following: (1) a citizen or national of the
United States; (2) an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence
in the United States, as defined in 8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(20); (3) a
private, public, or municipal corporation organized under the laws of
any State of the United States, the District of Columbia, or any
territory or insular possession subject to U.S. jurisdiction; (4) an
association of such citizens, nationals, resident aliens, or
corporations; (5) an Executive Agency of the United States, as defined
in 5 U.S.C. 105; (6) a State of the United States; or (7) a political
subdivision of a State of the United States. BOEM is including a
stipulation that requires any proposed assignee of the lease that is a
foreign-controlled business entity under the regulations at 31 CFR part
800 to provide joint notice, with the lessee/assignor, to CFIUS of the
proposed leasing transaction, in accordance with applicable regulations
at 31 CFR part 800, subpart D, and to provide a copy of the notice to
the DoD. BOEM's approval of any assignment of lease interest to a
foreign-controlled business entity, as defined in 31 CFR part 800, is
subject to this CFIUS notice stipulation. Such assignments would take
place only after CFIUS provides notice that it has concluded all
necessary reviews under section 721 of the Defense Production Act of
1950, as amended, with respect to the leasing decision or assignment.
j. Oregon Department of Land, Conservation and Development (DLCD)
Consistency Determination Conditions: On April 30, 2024, BOEM provided
a Consistency Determination to the Oregon Coastal Management Program of
the Department of Land Conservation and Development (OCMP). On July 17,
2024, OCMP concurred conditionally with BOEM's Consistency
Determination and BOEM has included conditions in the leases to address
OCMP's conditions.
VI. Potential Future Restrictions
a. Measures for Vessel Transit: The information currently available
does not indicate that vessel routing mitigation measures are warranted
in the Lease Areas at lease execution, and the U.S. Coast Guard PAC-
PARS study recommends fairways that avoid the Lease Areas entirely.
However, at the COP stage, BOEM may consider designating portions of
the Lease Areas as areas of no surface occupancy to facilitate vessel
transit and continuance of existing uses.
b. Archaeological Resources: Potential bidders are advised that
portions of the Lease Areas may not be available for future development
(i.e., installation of wind energy facilities) because of
archaeological and cultural resources. Potential development may be
restricted consistent with requirements of the National Historic
Preservation Act. BOEM will require further data collection and
evaluation of submerged cultural resources, culturally significant
viewsheds, and restrictions on impacts to these resources will be
reviewed by BOEM during the COP stage.
c. NOAA U.S. Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS) High-
Frequency (HF) Radar: Potential bidders are advised that offshore wind
energy projects in the Lease Areas may cause wind turbine interference
to NOAA's IOOS HF oceanographic radars, which provide measurement
coverage of the lease area region. Due to potential implications to
maritime safety, navigation, U.S. Coast Guard search-and-rescue,
weather forecasting, and other applications of HF-radar systems' data,
BOEM may require future mitigation as a condition of project approval.
d. Benthic and Seafloor Habitat Surveys: Potential bidders are
advised that portions of the Lease Areas may not be available for
future development due to sensitive seafloor habitats, especially
portions of the Brookings Lease Area. BOEM will require further data
gathering and comprehensive high-resolutions mapping and sampling of
seafloor habitats from lessees and may place further restrictions on
disturbances of sensitive seafloor habitats as a condition of a COP
approval, including potential mitigations in facility design.
e. Scientific surveys: Potential bidders are advised that NMFS
conducts long-term scientific surveys along the U.S. West Coast,
including in the Lease Areas, necessary for the management of NOAA
trust resources. Measures may be needed to avoid and minimize impacts
to these federal surveys from site assessment and characterization
activities and any future offshore wind infrastructure. Where impacts
cannot be avoided, mitigation measures, developed in concert with NMFS,
may need to be employed for the operational life span of the lease.
VII. Lease Terms and Conditions
BOEM has made available the terms, conditions, and stipulations for
the commercial wind leases that will be offered through this sale. BOEM
reserves the right to require compliance with additional terms and
conditions associated with the approval of a COP. The lease forms are
on BOEM's website at: https://www.boem.gov/renewable-energy/state-activities/oregon. Each lease will include the following attachments:
1. Addendum A (``Description of Leased Area and Lease
Activities'');
2. Addendum B (``Lease Term and Financial Schedule'');
3. Addendum C (``Lease-Specific Terms, Conditions, and
Stipulations'');
4. Addendum D (``Project Easement'').
Addenda A, B, and C provide detailed lease terms and conditions.
Addendum D will be completed at the time of COP approval or approval
with modifications if a COP is approved.
a. Revised Lease Terms and Conditions as a Result of the Renewable
Energy Modernization Rule: On May 15, 2024, BOEM published in the
Federal Register the Renewable Energy Modernization Rule (Rule), which
went into effect on July 15, 2024. To ensure consistency with the Rule,
BOEM made revisions to the lease published with the PSN that are
reflected in the lease published with this FSN. Substantial changes
were made to the following sections:
Section 6: Associated Project Easements
Section 10: Financial Assurance
Addendum A: V. Description of Lease Activities
Addendum B: I. Lease Periods; III. Lease Payments; IV.
Financial Assurance (deleted in its entirety)
Addendum C: 3.1.5 Survey and Meteorological and/or
Oceanographic
[[Page 71403]]
Buoy Deployment Reporting; 5.5.5 Geotechnical Exploration and
Deployment of Meteorological and/or Oceanographic Buoys
b. Required Plans for Potential Development of Executed Leases:
Each commercial lease has a preliminary period of up to five years.
During the preliminary period, the lessee must submit a COP. The
preliminary period begins on the effective date of the lease and ends
either when a COP is received by BOEM for review or at the expiration
of five years, whichever occurs first. Lessees may request an extension
of the lease preliminary period for good cause, such as the need for
more time to obtain an offtake agreement. In its discretion, BOEM may
approve the request.
VIII. Lease Payments
This section provides an overview of the required annual payments
under the lease. Potential bidders should review the lease for more
detailed information, including any changes from leases issued in
previous sales.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Note that BOEM's Renewable Energy Modernization Rule (89 FR
42602), published May 15, 2024, became effective on July 15, 2024.
The leases offered in this sale conform to the regulations in Part
585 as modified.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
a. Rent: Pursuant to 30 CFR 585.225(f) and 585.503, the first
year's rent payment of $3 per acre is due within 45-calendar days after
the lessee receives the executed lease copies from BOEM. Thereafter,
annual rent payments are due on the anniversary of the Effective Date
of the lease (the ``Lease Anniversary''). Once commercial operations
under the lease begin, BOEM will charge rent only for the portions of
the Lease Area remaining undeveloped (i.e., non-generating acreage).
For example, for the 61,203 acres of Lease Area OCS-P 0566 (Coos Bay),
the rent payment would be $183,609 per year until commercial operations
begin.
If the lessee submits an application for relinquishment of a
portion of its leased area within the first 45-calendar days after
receiving the lease copies from BOEM and BOEM approves that
application, no rent payment will be due on the relinquished portion of
the Lease Area. Later relinquishments of any portion of the Lease Area
will reduce the lessee's rent payments starting in the year following
BOEM's approval of the relinquishment.
A lease issued under 30 CFR part 585 confers on the lessee the
right to one or more project easements, without further competition,
for the purpose of installing, maintaining, repairing and replacing:
gathering, transmission, and distribution, and inter-array cables;
power and pumping stations; facility anchors; pipelines; and associated
facilities and other appurtenances on the OCS as necessary for the full
enjoyment of the lease. A lessee must apply for the project easement as
part of the COP, as provided under subpart G of 30 CFR part 585.
The lessee also must pay rent for any project easement associated
with the lease. Rent commences on the date that BOEM approves the COP
that describes the project easement (or any modification of such COP
that affects the easement acreage), as outlined in 30 CFR 585.507.
Annual rent for a project easement is the greater of $5 per acre per
year, or $450 per year. If a COP revision results in increased easement
acreage, BOEM will require the appropriate amount of additional rent
when it approves the revised COP.
b. Operating Fee: For purposes of calculating the initial annual
operating fee payment under 30 CFR 585.506, BOEM applies an operating
fee rate to a proxy for the wholesale market value of the electricity
expected to be generated from the project during its first 12 months of
operations. This initial payment will be prorated to reflect the period
between the commencement of commercial operations and the Lease
Anniversary. The initial annual operating fee payment will be due
within 90-calendar days of the commencement of commercial operations.
Thereafter, subsequent annual operating fee payments will be due on or
before the Lease Anniversary.
The subsequent annual operating fee payments will be calculated by
multiplying the operating fee rate by the imputed wholesale market
value of the projected annual electric power production. For the
purposes of this calculation, the imputed market value will be the
product of the project's annual nameplate capacity, the total number of
hours in a year (8,760), the capacity factor, and the annual average
price of electricity derived from a regional wholesale power price
index. For example, the annual operating fee for a 976 megawatt (MW)
wind facility operating at a 40 percent capacity (i.e., capacity factor
of 0.4) with a regional wholesale power price of $40 per megawatt hour
(MWh) and an operating fee rate of 0.02 will be calculated as follows:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TN03SE24.084
i. Operating Fee Rate: The operating fee rate is the share of the
imputed wholesale market value of the projected annual electric power
production due to ONRR as an annual operating fee. For the Lease Areas,
BOEM will set the fee rate at 0.02 (2 percent) for the entire life of
commercial operations.
ii. Nameplate Capacity: Nameplate capacity is the maximum rated
electric output, expressed in MW, which the turbines of the wind
facility under commercial operations can produce at their rated wind
speed as designated by the turbine's manufacturer.
iii. Capacity Factor: The capacity factor relates to the amount of
energy delivered to the grid during a period of time compared to the
amount of energy the wind facility would have produced at full capacity
during that same period of time. BOEM will set the capacity factor at
0.4 (i.e., 40 percent) for the year in which the commercial operations
begin and for the first 6 full years of commercial operations on the
lease. At the end of the sixth year, BOEM may adjust the capacity
factor to reflect the performance over the previous 5 years based upon
the actual metered electricity generation at the delivery point to the
electrical grid. BOEM may make similar adjustments to the capacity
factor once every 5 years thereafter.
iv. Wholesale Power Price Index: Under 30 CFR 585.506(c)(2)(i), the
wholesale power price, expressed in dollars per MWh, is determined at
the time each annual operating fee payment is due. For the leases
offered in this sale,
[[Page 71404]]
the following table provides the price data. A similar price dataset
may also be used and may be posted by BOEM at https://www.boem.gov for
reference.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lease area name Wholesale power price
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Brookings, OCS-P 0567..................... Mid-Columbia.
Coos Bay, OCS-P 0566...................... Mid-Columbia.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
c. Financial Assurance: Within 10 business days after receiving the
unsigned lease copy for execution and pursuant to 30 CFR 585.516(a)(1)
the provisional winners must provide an initial lease-specific bond or
other BOEM-approved financial assurance instrument in the amount of
annual rent due over the next 12 months. The provisional winners may
meet financial assurance requirements by posting a surety bond or other
financial assurance instrument as detailed in 30 CFR 585.526-585.529.
BOEM encourages the provisional winners to discuss the financial
assurance instrument requirements with BOEM as soon as possible after
the auction has concluded.
BOEM will base the amount of all SAP, COP, and decommissioning
financial assurance on cost estimates for meeting all accrued lease
obligations at the respective stages of development. The required
amount of supplemental and decommissioning financial assurance will be
determined on a case-by-case basis.
The payment terms described above can be found in Addendum ``B'' of
the lease, which is available at: https://www.boem.gov/renewable-energy/state-activities/oregon.
IX. Bidder's Financial Form
Each bidder must submit to BOEM the information required in the BFF
referenced in this FSN. A copy of the form is available at: https://www.boem.gov/renewable-energy/state-activities/oregon. BOEM recommends
that each bidder designate an email address in its BFF that the bidder
must use to create an account in www.pay.gov (if it has not already
done so). BOEM must receive BFFs, including Conceptual Strategies, no
later than September 13, 2024. If a bidder does not submit a BFF for
this sale by the deadline, BOEM, in its sole discretion, may grant an
extension to that bidder only if BOEM determines the bidder's failure
to timely submit a BFF was caused by events beyond the bidder's
control. The BFF is required to be executed by an authorized
representative listed in the bidder's qualification package on file
with BOEM. BFFs submitted by bidders for previous lease sales will not
satisfy the requirements of this auction.
For the PACW-2, BOEM will accept bidders' BFFs and Conceptual
Strategies electronically or by mail. Instructions for submission can
be found in the BFF. The BFF must be executed on paper with a wet
signature or with the application of a digital signature by an
authorized representative listed on the legal qualification card
currently on file with BOEM as authorized to bind the company. Winning
bidders who have committed to bidding credit(s) must meet the bidding
credit requirements no later than submission of their first Facility
Design Report (FDR) or the tenth Lease Anniversary, whichever is
sooner.
X. Bid Deposit
A bid deposit is an advance cash payment submitted to BOEM to
participate in the auction. ONRR will notify the bidders that they have
access to the Bid Deposit Form in www.pay.gov, and bidders must use the
Bid Deposit Form on the Weblink for Federal Register is: https://onrr.gov/paying/payment-options?tabs=renewable-energy,bid-deposit-options website to submit a deposit. Bidders may need to create an
account in www.pay.gov to access the Bid Deposit Form and submit a
deposit. Each bidder must submit a bid deposit of $2,000,000 no later
than September 27, 2024, to be eligible to bid for one lease area. Any
bidder who fails to submit the bid deposit by this deadline may be
disqualified from participating in the auction. BOEM will consider
extensions to this deadline only if BOEM, in its sole discretion,
determines that the failure to timely submit the bid deposit was caused
by events beyond the bidder's control.
Following the auction, provisional winners' bid deposits will be
applied against their winning cash bids. Once BOEM has announced the
provisional winners, BOEM will coordinate with ONRR to refund bid
deposits to the other bidders.
If BOEM offers a lease to a provisionally winning bidder and that
bidder fails to timely return the signed lease form, establish
financial assurance, or pay the balance of its bid, BOEM may retain the
bidder's $2,000,000 bid deposit. In such a circumstance, BOEM may
determine which bid would have won in the absence of the bid previously
determined to be the winning bid and may offer a lease to this next
highest bidder if this next highest bidder is not a provisionally
winning bidder of the other Lease Area in the auction. This process may
be repeated if needed.
XI. Minimum Bid
The minimum bid is the lowest dollar amount per acre that BOEM will
accept as a winning bid and is the amount at which BOEM will start the
bidding in the auction. BOEM has established a minimum bid of $50.00
per acre for this lease sale.
XII. Auction Procedures
a. Multiple-Factor Bidding Auction: BOEM will use a multiple factor
auction format for this lease sale. Under 30 CFR 585.113, a multiple
factor auction means an auction that involves the use of factors other
than cash, such as bidding credits, to incentivize goals or actions
that support public policy objectives or maximize public benefits
through the competitive leasing auction process. For any multiple
factor auction, the monetary value of the bidding credits, if any, is
added to the value of the cash bids to determine the highest bidder.
The bid made by a particular bidder in each round of this lease sale
will represent the sum of the monetary factor (cash bid) and the value
of any non-monetary factors in the form of bidding credits. Bidders
will be subject to a `one-per-customer' rule, meaning that each bidder
can acquire at most one lease area. BOEM will start the auction using
the minimum bid price for each lease area and will increase prices
incrementally until no more than one bidder remains bidding on each
Lease Area in the auction.
BOEM is not revising the bidding credit percentages from those
proposed in the PSN: a 15 percent workforce training and/or supply
chain bid credit, a 5 percent Lease Area Use Community Benefit
Agreement (CBA) bid credit and a 5 percent general CBA bid credit. The
total of all offered bidding credits remains at 25 percent. For this
sale, BOEM is calculating bidding credits as a percentage of the whole
bid, which is a change from the method used in prior sales, where
bidding credits were calculated as a percentage of the cash portion of
the bid. The intended purpose of this change is to simplify the bidding
credit calculation.
BOEM will grant bidding credits to bidders that commit to one or
more of the following, subject to review of the bidder's BFF and
Conceptual Strategy.
i. Supporting workforce training programs for the floating offshore
wind industry or supporting the development of a domestic supply chain
for the floating offshore wind industry, or a combination of both; or
[[Page 71405]]
ii. Establishing a Lease Area Use Community Benefit Agreement
(Lease Area Use CBA) with one or more communities, stakeholder groups,
or Tribal entities whose use of the geographic space of the Lease Area,
or whose use of resources harvested from that geographic space, is
expected to be impacted by the lessee's potential offshore wind
development; or
iii. Establishing a General Community Benefit Agreement (General
CBA) with one or more communities, Tribes, or stakeholder groups that
are expected to be affected by the potential impacts on the marine,
coastal and/or human environment (such as impacts to visual or cultural
resources) from activities resulting from lease development that are
not otherwise addressed by the Lease Area Use CBA.
These bidding credits are intended to:
i. Enhance, through training, the floating offshore wind workforce
and/or enhance the establishment of a domestic supply chain for
floating offshore wind manufacturing, assembly, or services, both of
which will contribute to the expeditious and orderly development of
offshore wind resources on the OCS; and
ii. Minimize potential impacts to a community or stakeholder group
from renewable energy activity or structures on the Lease Area, and
particularly to assist fishing and related industries to manage
transitions, gear changes, or other similar impacts which may arise
from the development of the Lease Area; and
iii. Minimize any potential impacts to a Tribe, community or
stakeholder group from floating offshore wind energy development,
particularly to assist them in managing transitions, changes or other
similar impacts which may arise from the development of the Lease Area.
b. Changes to Auction Rules: BOEM will be employing new auction
software for lease sales held in 2024. The auction format remains an
ascending clock auction with multiple-factor bidding. There are four
main changes to the ascending clock auction rules in the new software
applicable to this lease sale, as follows:
i. If a bidder decides to bid on a different Lease Area in a given
round of the auction, it may submit a bid to reduce demand for the
Lease Area it bid on in the previous round and, simultaneously, submit
a bid to increase demand for another Lease Area. This allows a bidder
the option to switch to another Lease Area if the price of the first
Lease Area exceeds the bidder's specified bid price.
ii. Provisional winners will no longer be determined using a two-
step process. The auction rules are implemented in a way such that,
when the auction concludes, the bidder who remains on a Lease Area
after the final round becomes its provisional winner. There will be no
additional processing step.
iii. The auction will use a ``second price'' rule. A given Lease
Area will be won by the bidder that submitted the highest bid amount
for the Lease Area, but the winning bidder will pay the highest bid
amount at which there was competition (i.e., the ``second price'').
iv. Each bidder's bidding credit will be expressed directly as a
percentage of the final price of the lease.
All potential bidders should review the Auction Procedures for
Offshore Wind Lease Sales (Version 1) located at: https://www.boem.gov/renewable-energy/lease-and-grant-information.
c. The Auction: Using an online bidding system to host the auction,
BOEM will start the bidding for Leases OCS-P 0567 and OCS-P 0566 as
described below.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lease area name Lease area ID Acres Minimum bid
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Brookings................................................. OCS-P 0567 133,792 $6,689,600
Coos Bay.................................................. OCS-P 0566 61,203 3,060,150
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The auction will be conducted in a series of rounds. Before each
round, the auction system will announce the prices for each lease area
offered in the auction. In Round 1, there is a single price for each
lease area equal to the minimum bid price (also known as the `opening
price' or `clock price of Round 1'). Each bidder can bid, at the
opening price, for one lease area. After Round 1, the bidder's
``processed demand'' is one for the lease area (if any) for which the
bidder bid in Round 1.\2\ The bidder's eligibility for Round 2 equals
the number of Lease Areas for which the bidder bid in Round 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Bidders specify their demand for a lease area with either a
0 or 1 in the auction system. A demand of 1 indicates the lease area
that they are bidding on. Processed demand is the demand, either 0
or 1 of a bidder for a lease area following the processing of the
bids for the round.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Starting in Round 2, each Lease Area is assigned a range of prices
for the round. The start-of-round price is the lowest price in the
range, and the clock price is the highest price in the range. A bidder
still eligible to bid after the previous round can either continue
bidding at the new round's clock price for the same Lease Area for
which the bidder's processed demand is one or submit a bid at any price
in the range for that round to reduce demand for that Lease Area. A bid
to reduce demand at some price indicates that the bidder is not willing
to acquire that Lease Area at a price exceeding the specified bid
price. A bidder that bids to reduce demand for a Lease Area can
optionally bid to increase demand for the other Lease Area in the same
round.
If an eligible bidder does not place a bid during the round for the
Lease Area for which the bidder's processed demand is one, the auction
system will consider this a request to reduce demand for that Lease
Area at the round's start-of-round price. That bidder can nonetheless
win that Lease Area if it is the last remaining bidder for that Lease
Area.
After each round, the auction system processes the bids and
determines each bidder's processed demand for each Lease Area and the
posted prices for the Lease Areas. The bidder's eligibility for the
next round equals the number of Lease Areas for which the bidder had a
processed demand of one. If, after any round, a bidder's processed
demand is zero for both Lease Areas, the bidder's eligibility drops to
zero and the bidder can no longer bid in the auction. The posted price
is the price determined for each Lease Area after processing of all
bids for a round. If only one bidder remains on a Lease Area, the
posted price reflects the ``second price'' (i.e., the highest price at
which there was competition for the Lease Area).\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The Auction Procedures for Offshore Wind Lease Sales
provides details on how bids are prioritized and processed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
If, after the bids for the round have been processed, there is no
Lease Area with excess demand, the auction will end. When this occurs,
each bidder with a processed demand of one for a Lease Area will become
the provisional winner for that Lease Area. Otherwise, the auction will
continue with a new round in which the start-of-round price for each
Lease Area equals the posted price of the previous round.
[[Page 71406]]
The increment by which the clock price exceeds the start-of-round
price will be determined based on several factors including, but not
limited to, the expected time needed to conduct the auction and the
number of rounds that have already occurred. BOEM reserves the right to
increase or decrease the increment as it deems appropriate.
The provisional winner of each Lease Area will pay the final posted
price (less any applicable bidding credit) or risk forfeiting its bid
deposit. A provisional winner will be disqualified if it is
subsequently found to have violated auction rules or BOEM regulations,
or otherwise engaged in conduct detrimental to the integrity of the
competitive auction. If a bidder submits a bid that BOEM determines to
be a provisionally winning bid, the bidder must sign the applicable
lease documents, post financial assurance, and submit the outstanding
balance (if any) of its winning bid (i.e., winning bid minus the
applicable bid deposit and any applicable bidding credits) within ten
business days of receiving the lease for execution, pursuant to 30 CFR
585.225(b). BOEM reserves the right to not issue the lease to the
provisionally winning bidder if that bidder fails to: timely execute
the lease and return it to BOEM, timely post adequate financial
assurance, timely pay the balance of its winning bid, or otherwise
comply with applicable regulations or the terms of this FSN. In any of
these cases, the bidder may forfeit its bid deposit and BOEM reserves
the right to offer a lease to the next highest eligible bidder as
determined by BOEM.
BOEM will publish the names of the provisional winners of the Lease
Areas and the associated prices shortly after the conclusion of the
sale. Full bid results, including round-by-round results of the entire
sale, will be published on BOEM's website after a review of the results
and announcement of the provisional winners.
Additional Information Regarding the Auction Format:
i. Authorized Individuals and Bidder Authentication: An entity that
is eligible to participate in the auction will identify on its BFF up
to three individuals who will be authorized to bid on behalf of the
company, including their names, business telephone numbers, and email
addresses. All individuals will log into the auction system using
Login.gov. Prior to the auction, each individual listed on the BFF form
must obtain a Fast Identify Online (FIDO) compliant security key \4\
and must register this security key on Login.gov using the same email
address that was listed in the BFF. The Login.gov registration,
together with the FIDO-compliant security key, will enable the
individual to log into the auction system. Information on the ``Auction
Login and Authentication Procedures'' is available online at: https://www.boem.gov/renewable-energy/lease-and-grant-information. After BOEM
has processed the bid deposits, the auction contractor will send an
email to the authorized individuals, inviting them to practice logging
into the auction system on a specific day in advance of the mock
auction. The Login.gov login process, along with the authentication
process for the auction helpdesk, will also be tested during the mock
auction.
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\4\ FIDO keys are produced by many manufacturers, such as Yubico
and Google. They are widely available and can easily be purchased
from Amazon, Best Buy, Walmart, or any other seller of electronics.
The latest generation of the FIDO standard is FIDO2, and each
authorized individual should obtain a key compliant with the FIDO2
authentication standard. FIDO keys are typically inserted into a
computer's USB port, so the authorized individual should obtain a
FIDO key compatible with their computer (USB-A or USB-C) or a USB
adapter, as necessary.
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ii. If an eligible bidder fails to submit a bid deposit or does not
participate in the first round of the auction, BOEM will deactivate
that bidder's login information.
iii. Timing of Auction: The auction will begin at 7:00 a.m. PT/
10:00 a.m. ET on October 15, 2024. Bidders will be able to log into the
auction system beginning 30 minutes before the start of the auction.
BOEM recommends that bidders log in earlier than 7:00 a.m. PT/10:00
a.m. ET on that day to ensure that any login issues are resolved prior
to the start of the auction.
iv. Messaging Service: BOEM and its auction contractors will use
the auction system's messaging service to keep bidders informed on
issues of interest during the auction. For example, BOEM could change
the schedule at any time, including during the auction. If BOEM changes
the schedule during the auction, it will use the messaging service to
notify bidders that a revision has been made and will direct bidders to
the relevant page. BOEM will also use the messaging service for other
updates during the auction.
v. Bidding Rounds: Bidders are allowed to place bids or to change
their bids at any time during the bidding round. At the top of the
bidding page, a countdown clock shows how much time remains in each
round. Bidders will have until the end of the round to place bids.
Bidders should do so according to the procedures described in this FSN
and the Auction Procedures for Offshore Wind Lease Sales. Information
about the round results will be made available only after the round has
closed, so there is no strategic advantage to placing bids early or
late in the round. The Auction Procedures for Offshore Wind Lease Sales
elaborates on the auction procedures described in this FSN. In the
event of any inconsistency between the Auction Procedures for Offshore
Wind Lease Sales, the Bidder Manual, and the FSN, the FSN is
controlling.\5\
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\5\ The Bidder Manual describes use of the auction platform and
is provided to the auction participants in advance of the auction.
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i. Alternate Bidding Procedures: Redundancy is the most effective
way to mitigate technical and human issues during an auction. BOEM
strongly recommends that bidders consider authorizing more than one
individual to bid in the auction--and confirming during the mock
auction that each individual is able to access the auction system. A
mobile hotspot or other form of wireless access is helpful if a
company's main internet connection should fail. As a last resort, an
authorized individual facing technical issues may request to submit its
bid by telephone. To be authorized to place a telephone bid, an
authorized individual must contact the auction help desk, at the phone
number provided to bidders, before the end of the round. The caller
must explain the reasons why a telephone bid needs to be submitted.
BOEM may, in its sole discretion, permit or refuse to accept a request
for the placement of a bid using this alternate telephonic bidding
procedure. The auction help desk requires codes from the Google
Authenticator application (app) as part of its procedure for
identifying individuals who call for assistance. Prior to the auction,
all individuals listed on the BFF should download the Google
Authenticator\TM\ mobile app \6\ onto their smartphone or tablet.\7\
The first time the individual logs into the auction system, the system
will provide a QR token to be read into the Google Authenticator app.
This token is unique to the individual and BOEM auctions. It enables
the Google Authenticator app to generate time-sensitive codes that must
be provided to the help desk representative as part of the user
authentication process.
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\6\ Google Authenticator must be installed from either the Apple
App Store or the Google Play Store.
\7\ Installing the Google Authenticator app is only required if
the app has not already been installed on the smartphone or tablet.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. 15 Percent Bidding Credit for Workforce Training or Supply Chain
[[Page 71407]]
Development or a Combination of Both: This bidding credit allows a
bidder to receive a credit of 15 percent of its bid in exchange for a
commitment to make a qualifying monetary contribution
(``Contribution''), in the same amount as the bidding credit received,
to programs or initiatives that support workforce training programs for
the U.S. floating offshore wind industry or development of a U.S.
domestic supply chain for the floating offshore wind industry, or both,
as described in the BFF Addendum and the lease. To qualify for this
credit, the bidder must commit to the bidding credit requirements on
the BFF and submit a Conceptual Strategy as described in the BFF
Addendum.
i. The Contribution to workforce training must result in a better
trained and/or larger domestic floating offshore wind workforce that
provides for more efficient operations via increasing the supply of
fully trained personnel. Training of existing lessee employees, lessee
contractors, or employees of affiliated entities will not qualify.
ii. The Contribution to domestic supply chain development must
result in overall benefits to the U.S. floating offshore wind supply
chain available to all potential purchasers of floating offshore wind
services, components, or subassemblies, not solely the lessee's
project; and either: (i) the demonstrable development of new domestic
capacity (including vessels) or the demonstrable buildout of existing
capacity; or (ii) an improved floating offshore wind domestic supply
chain by reducing the upfront capital or certification cost for
manufacturing floating offshore wind components, including the building
of facilities, the purchasing of capital equipment, and the certifying
of existing manufacturing facilities.
iii. Contributions cannot be used to satisfy private cost shares
for any federal tax or other incentive programs where cost sharing is a
requirement. No portion of the Contribution may be used to meet the
requirements of any other bidding credits for which the lessee
qualifies.
iv. Bidders interested in obtaining a bidding credit could choose
to contribute to workforce training programs, domestic supply chain
initiatives, or a combination of both. The Conceptual Strategy must
describe verifiable actions that the lessee will take that would allow
BOEM to confirm compliance when the documentation for satisfying the
bidding credit is submitted. The Contribution must be tendered in full,
and the lessee must provide documentation evidencing it has made the
Contribution and complied with applicable requirements, no later than
the date the lessee submits its first FDR or before the tenth Lease
Anniversary, whichever is sooner.
v. Contributions to workforce training must promote and support one
or more of the following purposes: (i) union apprenticeships, labor
management training partnerships, stipends for workforce training, or
other technical training programs or institutions focused on providing
skills necessary for the planning, design, construction, operation,
maintenance, or decommissioning of floating offshore wind energy
projects in the United States; (ii) maritime training necessary for the
crewing of vessels to be used for the construction, servicing, and/or
decommissioning of floating offshore wind energy projects in the United
States; (iii) training workers in skills or techniques necessary to
manufacture or assemble floating offshore wind components,
subcomponents, or subassemblies. Examples of areas involving these
skills and techniques include welding; wind energy technology;
hydraulic maintenance; braking systems; mechanical systems, including
blade inspection and maintenance; or computers and programmable logic
control systems; (iv) Tribal floating offshore wind workforce
development programs or training for employees of an Indian Economic
Enterprise \8\ in skills necessary in the floating offshore wind
industry; or (v) training in any other job skills that the lessee can
demonstrate are necessary for the planning, design, construction,
operation, maintenance, or decommissioning of floating offshore wind
energy projects in the United States.
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\8\ https://www.bia.gov/sites/default/files/dup/assets/as-ia/ieed/Primer%20on%20Buy%20Indian%20Act%20508%20Compliant%202.6.18(Reload).p
df.
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vi. Contributions to domestic supply chain development must promote
and support one or more of the following: (i) development of a domestic
supply chain for the floating offshore wind industry, including
manufacturing of components and subassemblies and the expansion of
related services; (ii) domestic Tier 2 and Tier 3 floating offshore
wind component suppliers and domestic Tier-1 supply chain efforts,
including quay-side fabrication; \9\ (iii) technical assistance grants
to help U.S. manufacturers re-tool or certify (e.g., ISO-9001) for
floating offshore wind manufacturing; (iv) development of Jones Act-
compliant vessels for the construction, servicing, and/or
decommissioning of floating offshore wind energy projects in the United
States; (v) purchase and installation of lift cranes or other equipment
capable of lifting or moving floating offshore wind foundations,
towers, and nacelles quayside, or lift cranes on vessels with these
capabilities; (vi) port infrastructure directly related to floating
offshore wind component manufacturing or assembly of major floating
offshore wind facility components; (vii) establishing a new or existing
bonding support reserve or revolving fund available to all businesses
providing goods and services to floating offshore wind energy
companies, including disadvantaged businesses and/or Indian Economic
Enterprises; or (viii) other supply chain development efforts that the
lessee can demonstrate advance the manufacturing of floating offshore
wind components or subassemblies or the provision of floating offshore
wind services in the United States.
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\9\ Tier-1 denotes the primary offshore wind components such as
the blades, nacelles, towers, foundations, and cables. Tier 2
subassemblies are the systems that have a specific function for a
Tier 1 component. Tier 3 subcomponents are commonly available items
that are combined into Tier 2 subassemblies, such as motors, bolts,
and gears.
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vii. Documentation: If a lease is issued pursuant to a winning bid
that includes a bidding credit for workforce training or supply chain
development, the lessee is required to provide documentation showing
that the lessee has met the financial commitment before the lessee
submits the first FDR for the lease or before the tenth Lease
Anniversary, whichever is sooner. The documentation must allow BOEM to
objectively verify the amount of the Contribution and the
beneficiary(ies) of the Contribution.
At a minimum, the documentation must include: all written
agreements between the lessee and beneficiary(ies) of the Contribution,
which must detail the amount of the Contribution(s) and how it will be
used by the beneficiaries of the Contribution(s) to satisfy the goals
of the bidding credit for which the Contribution was made; all receipts
documenting the amount, date, financial institution, and the account
and owner of the account to which the Contribution was made; and sworn
statements by the entity that made the Contribution and the
beneficiary(ies) of the Contribution attesting that all information
provided in the above documentation is true and accurate. The
documentation will need to describe how the funded initiative or
program has advanced, or is expected to advance, U.S. floating offshore
wind workforce training or supply chain development. The documentation
must also provide qualitative and/or quantitative information that
includes the estimated number of trainees or jobs supported, or
[[Page 71408]]
the estimated leveraged supply chain investment resulting or expected
to result from the Contribution. The documentation will need to contain
any information called for in the Conceptual Strategy that the lessee
submitted with its BFF and to allow BOEM to objectively verify (i) the
amount of the Contribution and the beneficiary(ies) of the
Contribution, and (ii) compliance with the bidding credit criteria
provided in Addendum ``C'' of the lease. If the lessee's implementation
of its Conceptual Strategy changes due to market needs or other
factors, the lessee must explain the changed approach. BOEM reserves
all rights to determine that the bidding credit has not been satisfied
if changes from the lessee's Conceptual Strategy result in the lessee
not meeting the criteria for the bidding credit described in Addendum
``C'' of the lease.
viii. Enforcement: The commitment for the bidding credit will be
made in the BFF and will be included in a lease addendum that will bind
the lessee and all future assignees of the lease to the fulfillment of
the bidding credits. If BOEM were to determine that a lessee or
assignee had failed to satisfy the requirements of the bidding credit,
or if a lessee were to relinquish or otherwise fail to develop the
lease by the tenth anniversary date of lease issuance, the amount
corresponding to the bidding credit awarded would be immediately due
and payable to ONRR with interest from the lease Effective Date. The
interest rate would be the underpayment interest rate identified by
ONRR on its website. The lessee will not be required to pay said amount
if the lessee satisfied its bidding credit requirements but failed to
develop the lease by the tenth Lease Anniversary. BOEM could, at its
sole discretion, extend the documentation deadline beyond the first FDR
submission or extend the lease development deadline beyond the 10-year
timeframe.
5 Percent Bidding Credit for Lease Area Use CBA: This bidding
credit will allow a bidder to receive a credit of 5 percent of its bid
in exchange for a commitment to contribute to an existing Lease Area
Use CBA or a commitment to enter into a new Lease Area Use CBA with a
community or stakeholder group whose use of the geographic space of the
Lease Area, or whose use of resources harvested from that geographic
space, is expected to be impacted by the lessee's potential offshore
wind development. To qualify for the credit, the bidder must commit to
the bidding credit requirements in the BFF and submit a conceptual
strategy, as described in the BFF addendum. Lessees must use best
efforts to provide benefits at least commensurate to the value of the
bidding credit received. This may include both monetary and non-
monetary benefits. To clarify, any benefits provided to impacted
communities should not duplicate benefits or mitigation measures
imposed on the lessee through, or pursuant to, federal statutes other
than OCSLA. To count toward this bidding credit, any compensatory
mitigation required by a CBA provision must occur before BOEM requires
the same compensatory mitigation in the terms and conditions of COP
approval.
Bidders committing to use the Lease Area Use CBA bidding credit
must submit their conceptual strategy, along with their BFF, as further
described below and in the BFF addendum. The conceptual strategy must
describe the actions that the lessee intends to take that will allow
BOEM to verify compliance when the lessee seeks to demonstrate
satisfaction of the requirements for the bidding credit. The lessee
must provide documentation showing that the lessee has met the
commitment and complied with the applicable bidding credit requirements
before the lessee submits the lease's first FDR or before the tenth
Lease Anniversary, whichever is sooner.
ix. Documentation: As proposed, if a lease is awarded pursuant to a
winning bid that includes a Lease Area Use CBA bidding credit, the
lessee must provide written documentation to BOEM demonstrating
execution of the Lease Area Use CBA commitment no later than submission
of the lessee's first FDR or before the tenth Lease Anniversary,
whichever is sooner. The documentation must enable BOEM to objectively
verify the Contribution has met all applicable requirements outlined in
addendum ``C'' of the lease. At a minimum, this documentation must
include:
All written agreements between the lessee and
beneficiary(ies), including the executed Lease Area Use CBA;
A description of work done with impacted communities,
including the monetary and non-monetary commitments that reflect the
value of the bidding credit received; and
Sworn statements by the Lease Area Use CBA signatories or
their assignees, attesting to the truth and accuracy of all the
information provided in the above documentation.
The documentation must contain any information specified in the
conceptual strategy that was submitted with the BFF. If the lessee's
implementation of its conceptual strategy changes due to market needs
or other factors, the lessee must explain this change. BOEM reserves
the right to determine that the bidding credit has not been satisfied
if changes from the lessee's conceptual strategy result in the lessee
not meeting the criteria for the bidding credit described in addendum
``C'' of the lease.
x. Enforcement: The commitment for the bidding credit will be made
in the BFF and will be included in a lease addendum that will bind the
lessee and all future assignees of the lease to the fulfillment of the
bidding credit. If BOEM were to determine that a lessee or assignee had
failed to satisfy the requirements of the bidding credit, or if a
lessee were to relinquish or otherwise fail to develop the lease by the
submission of the lessee's first FDR or by the tenth anniversary date
of lease issuance, the amount corresponding to the bidding credit
awarded would be immediately due and payable to ONRR with interest from
the lease Effective Date. The interest rate would be the underpayment
interest rate identified by ONRR. The lessee will not be required to
pay said amount if the lessee satisfied its bidding credit requirements
but failed to develop the lease by the tenth Lease Anniversary. BOEM
could, at its sole discretion, extend the documentation deadline beyond
the first FDR submission or extend the lease development deadline
beyond the 10-year timeframe.
c. 5 percent Bidding Credit for General CBA: The third bidding
credit offered would allow a bidder to receive a credit of 5 percent of
its bid in exchange for a commitment to contribute to an existing
General CBA or a commitment to enter into a new General CBA with a
community or stakeholder group that is expected to be impacted by the
lessee's potential floating offshore wind development. To qualify for
the credit, the bidder must commit to the bidding credit requirements
in the BFF and submit a conceptual strategy as described in the BFF
addendum. Bidders committing to use the General CBA bidding credit must
submit their conceptual strategy along with their BFF, further
described below and in the BFF addendum. The conceptual strategy must
describe the actions that the lessee intends to take that will allow
BOEM to verify compliance when the lessee seeks to demonstrate
satisfaction of the requirements for the bidding credit. Lessees must
use best efforts to provide benefits at least commensurate to the value
of the bidding credit received. This may include both monetary and non-
monetary benefits. To clarify, any benefits provided to impacted
communities should not duplicate
[[Page 71409]]
benefits or mitigation measures imposed on the lessee through, or
pursuant to, federal statutes other than OCSLA. To count toward this
bidding credit, any compensatory mitigation required by a CBA provision
must occur before BOEM requires the same compensatory mitigation in the
terms and conditions of COP approval.
(1) Documentation: As proposed, if a lease is awarded pursuant to a
winning bid that includes a General CBA bidding credit, the lessee must
provide written documentation to BOEM demonstrating execution of the
General CBA commitment no later than submission of the lessee's first
FDR or before the tenth Lease Anniversary, whichever is sooner. The
documentation must enable BOEM to objectively verify that the
Contribution has met all applicable requirements outlined in addendum
``C'' of the lease. At a minimum, this documentation must include:
a. All written agreements between the lessee and beneficiary(ies),
including the executed General CBA;
b. A description of work with impacted communities to reach
monetary and non-monetary commitments that reflect the value of the
bidding credit received;
c. Sworn statements by the General CBA signatories or their
assignees, attesting to the truth and accuracy of all the information
provided in the above documentation.
The documentation must contain any information specified in the
conceptual strategy that was submitted with the BFF. If the lessee's
implementation of its conceptual strategy changes due to market needs
or other factors, the lessee will need to explain this change. BOEM
reserves the right to determine that the bidding credit has not been
satisfied if changes from the lessee's conceptual strategy result in
the lessee not meeting the criteria for the bidding credit described in
addendum ``C'' of the lease.
d. Enforcement: The commitment for the bidding credit must be made
in the BFF and will be included in a lease addendum that will bind the
lessee and all future assignees of the lease to the fulfillment of the
bidding credit. If BOEM were to determine that a lessee or assignee had
failed to satisfy the requirements of the bidding credit, or if a
lessee were to relinquish or otherwise fail to develop the lease by the
tenth anniversary date of lease issuance, the amount corresponding to
the bidding credit awarded would be immediately due and payable to ONRR
with interest from the lease Effective Date. The interest rate would be
the underpayment interest rate identified by ONRR. The lessee will not
be required to pay said amount if the lessee satisfied its bidding
credit requirements but failed to develop the lease by the tenth Lease
Anniversary. BOEM could, at its sole discretion, extend the
documentation deadline beyond the first FDR submission or extend the
lease development deadline beyond the 10-year time.
XIII. Rejection or Non-Acceptance of Bids
BOEM reserves the right to reject any and all bids that do not
satisfy the requirements and rules of the auction, this FSN, or
applicable regulations and statutes.
XIV. Anti-Competitive Review
Bidding behavior in this lease sale is subject to federal antitrust
laws. Following the auction, but before the acceptance of bids and the
issuance of the lease, BOEM will ``allow the Attorney General, in
consultation with the Federal Trade Commission, thirty days to review
the results of [the] lease sale.'' 43 U.S.C. 1337(c)(1). If a
provisionally winning bidder is found to have engaged in anti-
competitive behavior in connection with this lease sale, BOEM will
reject its provisionally winning bid. Compliance with BOEM's auction
procedures and regulations is not an absolute defense to violations of
antitrust laws.
Anti-competitive behavior determinations are fact specific. Such
behavior may manifest itself in several different ways, including, but
not limited to:
1. An express or tacit agreement among bidders not to bid in an
auction, or to bid a particular price;
2. An agreement among bidders not to bid;
3. An agreement among bidders not to bid against each other; or
4. Other agreements among bidders that have the potential to affect
the final auction price.
Pursuant to 43 U.S.C. 1337(c)(3), BOEM will decline to award a
lease if the Attorney General, in consultation with the Federal Trade
Commission, determines that awarding the lease would be inconsistent
with antitrust laws.
For more information on whether specific communications or
agreements could constitute a violation of federal antitrust law,
please see https://www.justice.gov/atr or consult legal counsel.
a. Process for Issuing the Lease
Once all post-auction reviews have been completed to BOEM's
satisfaction, BOEM will provide an unsigned copy of the lease to each
provisionally winning bidder. Within 10 business days after receiving
the lease, the provisionally winning bidders must:
1. Sign and return the lease on the bidder's behalf;
2. File financial assurance, as required under 30 CFR 585.516-537;
and
3. Pay by electronic funds transfer (EFT) the balance owed (the
winning cash bid less the applicable bid deposit), if any. BOEM
requires bidders to use EFT procedures (not www.pay.gov, the website
bidders used to submit bid deposits) for payment of the balance,
following the detailed instructions available on ONRR's website at:
https://onrr.gov/paying/payment-options?tabs=renewable-energy,bid-deposit-options.
BOEM will not execute the lease until the three requirements above
have been satisfied, BOEM has accepted the provisionally winning
bidder's financial assurance, and BOEM has processed the provisionally
winning bidder's payment. Pursuant to 30 CFR 585.225(d), a provisional
winner may request in writing an extension of the 10-day time limit.
BOEM, in its discretion, may grant such a request. If the provisionally
winning bidder does not meet these requirements or otherwise fails to
comply with applicable regulations or the terms of the FSN, BOEM
reserves the right not to issue the lease to that bidder. In such a
case, the provisional winner will forfeit its bid deposit. Also, in
such a case, BOEM reserves the right to offer the lease to the next
highest eligible bidder as determined by BOEM.
Within 45 calendar days of the date that a provisional winner
receives an executed copy of the lease, each provisional winner is
required to pay the first year's rent using the ``ONRR Renewable Energy
Initial Rental Payments'' form available at: https://www.pay.gov/public/form/start/27797604/.
Subsequent annual rent payments must be made following the detailed
instructions available on ONRR's website at: https://onrr.gov/paying/payment-options?tabs=rent-payments.
b. Non-Procurement Debarment and Suspension Regulations
Pursuant to 43 CFR part 42, subpart C, an OCS renewable energy
lessee will be required to comply with the Department of the Interior's
non-procurement debarment and suspension regulations at 2 CFR parts 180
and 1400. The lessee must also communicate this requirement to persons
with whom the lessee does business relating to this lease by including
this requirement as a
[[Page 71410]]
condition in their contracts and in other transactions.
c. Changes to Auction Details
BOEM has the discretion to change any auction detail specified in
the FSN, including the date and time, if events outside BOEM's control
may interfere with a fair and proper lease sale. Such events may
include, but are not limited to, natural disasters (e.g., earthquakes,
hurricanes, floods, and blizzards), wars, riots, acts of terrorism,
fire, strikes, civil disorder, Federal Government shutdowns,
cyberattacks against relevant information systems, or other events of a
similar nature. In case of such events, BOEM will notify all qualified
bidders via email, phone, and BOEM's website at: https://www.boem.gov/renewable-energy/state-activities/oregon. Bidders should call BOEM's
Auction Manager at (703) 787-1121 if they have concerns.
d. Withdrawal of Blocks
BOEM reserves the right to withdraw all or portions of the Lease
Areas prior to executing the leases with the winning bidders. If BOEM
exercises this right, it will refund appropriate amounts of the bid
deposits to winning bidders, without interest, as provided in 30 CFR
585.224(f).
e. Appeals
Procedures to request reconsideration of rejected bids are provided
in BOEM's regulations at 30 CFR 585.226(c) and 585.118(c). BOEM's
decision on a bid is the final action of the Department of the Interior
and is not subject to appeal to the Office of Hearings and Appeals.
Under 30 CFR 585.224, if BOEM rejects your bid, BOEM will provide a
written statement of the reasons and will refund any money deposited
with your bid, without interest. You may ask the BOEM Director for
reconsideration, in writing, within 15 business days of bid rejection,
under 30 CFR 585.118(c)(1). The Director will send you a written
response either affirming or reversing the rejection.
f. Protection of Privileged or Confidential Information
BOEM will protect privileged or confidential information that the
lessee submits, as authorized by the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA),
30 CFR 585.114, or other applicable statutes. If the lessee wishes to
protect the confidentiality of information, the lessee should clearly
mark it ``Contains Privileged or Confidential Information'' and
consider submitting such information as a separate attachment. BOEM
will not disclose such information, except as required by FOIA. If your
submission is requested under the FOIA, your information will only be
withheld if a determination is made that one of the FOIA's exemptions
to disclosure applies. Such a determination will be made in accordance
with the Department's FOIA regulations and applicable law. Labeling
information as privileged or confidential will alert BOEM to more
closely scrutinize whether it warrants withholding. Further, BOEM will
not treat as confidential aggregate summaries of otherwise
nonconfidential information.
XV. Compliance With the Inflation Reduction Act (Pub. L. 117-169 (Aug.
16, 2022)) (Hereinafter, the ``IRA''):
Section 50265(b)(2) of the IRA provides that ``[d]uring the 10-year
period beginning on the date of enactment of this Act . . . the
Secretary may not issue a lease for offshore wind development under
section 8(p)(1)(C) of the OCS Lands Act (43 U.S.C. 1337(p)(1)(C))
unless--(A) an offshore [oil and gas] lease sale has been held during
the 1-year period ending on the date of the issuance of the lease for
offshore wind development; and (B) the sum total of acres offered for
lease in offshore [oil and gas] lease sales during the 1-year period
ending on the date of the issuance of the lease for offshore wind
development is not less than 60,000,000 acres.'' Oil and Gas Lease Sale
261 was held on December 20, 2023, offering approximately 72 million
acres, satisfying the requirements in section 50265(b)(2) of the IRA
for any offshore wind lease issued by December 20, 2024. BOEM expects
to issue any leases resulting from PACW-2 no later than the one-year
anniversary of Lease Sale 261.
Authority: 43 U.S.C. 1337(p); 30 CFR 585.214 and 585.220 et seq.
Elizabeth Klein,
Director, Bureau of Ocean Energy Management.
[FR Doc. 2024-19619 Filed 8-30-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4340-98-P