National Environmental Policy Act; Proposed Implementing Procedures and Categorical Exclusions, 99834-99839 [2024-29088]
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calculated for the review period.9 As
noted above, there were no entries of
subject merchandise for the companies
subject to this review during the POR.
Accordingly, in the absence of
suspended entries of subject
merchandise during the POR, we are
hereby rescinding this administrative
review, in its entirety, in accordance
with 19 CFR 351.213(d)(3).
Assessment
Commerce will instruct CBP to assess
antidumping duties on all appropriate
entries of wire rod from Ukraine.
Antidumping duties shall be assessed at
rates equal to the cash deposit rate of
estimated antidumping duties required
at the time of entry, or withdrawal from
warehouse, for consumption, in
accordance with 19 CFR
351.212(c)(1)(i). Commerce intends to
issue appropriate assessment
instructions to CBP no earlier than 35
days after the date of publication of this
rescission notice in the Federal
Register.
Administrative Protective Order (APO)
This notice also serves as the only
reminder to parties subject to APO of
their responsibility concerning the
disposition of proprietary information
disclosed under APO, in accordance
with 19 CFR 351.305(a)(3). Timely
written notification of the return or
destruction of APO materials or
conversion to judicial protective order is
hereby requested. Failure to comply
with the regulations and terms of an
APO is a sanctionable violation.
Notification to Interested Parties
This notice is issued and published in
accordance with sections 751(a)(1) and
777(i)(1) of the Act and 19 CFR
351.213(d)(4).
Dated: December 5, 2024.
Scot Fullerton,
Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary for
Antidumping and Countervailing Duty
Operations.
[FR Doc. 2024–29124 Filed 12–10–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
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National Environmental Policy Act;
Proposed Implementing Procedures
and Categorical Exclusions
National Institute of Standards
and Technology, Department of
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; request for comments.
AGENCY:
9 See
19 CFR 351.213(d)(3).
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Federal agencies are required
to develop procedures to implement the
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) and the Council on
Environmental Quality (CEQ)
regulations implementing NEPA.
Consistent with these requirements, the
National Institute of Standards and
Technology (NIST) is proposing new
NEPA implementing procedures (NEPA
Procedures), including the
establishment of new categorical
exclusions (CEs) as part of its NEPA
Procedures. CEs are categories of actions
that an agency has determined normally
do not have a significant effect on the
human environment, individually or in
the aggregate. CEs are a form of review
that agencies use to comply with NEPA
for proposed actions that normally have
no or minimal environmental effects.
NIST requests the views of the public on
its draft NEPA Procedures as well as its
substantiation record for the proposed
CEs.
DATES: Submit written comments on or
before January 10, 2025.
ADDRESSES: The draft NEPA Procedures
and CE substantiation record are
available for review at https://
www.nist.gov/chips/nationalenvironmental-policy-act-nepa. Submit
all electronic public comments via
email to CHIPSNEPA@chips.gov citing
‘‘NEPA Procedures’’ in the subject line.
NIST will accept comments in attached
Word or PDF formats or within the body
of the email.
Comments sent by any other method,
to any other address or individual, or
received after the end of the comment
period, may not be considered by NIST.
All comments received are a part of the
public record; commenters should not
include personal identifying
information (e.g., name, address, etc.),
confidential business information, or
otherwise sensitive information. NIST
will accept anonymous comments. The
most helpful comments include a
specific recommendation, explain the
reason for any recommended change,
and provide supporting information.
NIST will consider all relevant
comments received on or before the
closing date.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
David Frenkel, NIST, telephone number
240–204–1960, email David.Frenkel@
chips.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
Legal Framework
The National Environmental Policy
Act (NEPA), 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.,
requires Federal agencies to consider
the environmental effects of their
proposed actions in their decision-
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making processes and inform and
engage the public in that process.
Section 101(a) of NEPA sets forth a
national policy to use all practicable
means and measures, including
financial and technical assistance, in a
manner calculated to foster and promote
the general welfare, to create and
maintain conditions under which
humans and nature can exist in
productive harmony, and fulfill the
social, economic, and other
requirements of present and future
generations of Americans. 42 U.S.C.
4331(a). Section 102 of NEPA directs
agencies to interpret and administer
Federal policies, regulations and laws
consistent with NEPA’s policies. 42
U.S.C. 4332.
NEPA also created the Council on
Environmental Quality (CEQ), which
has issued regulations implementing
NEPA, 40 CFR parts 1500 through 1508
(CEQ regulations). CEQ also has issued
numerous guidance documents to
facilitate agency implementation of
NEPA. See CEQ, CEQ Guidance
Documents, https://ceq.doe.gov/
guidance/guidance.html.
To comply with NEPA, agencies
determine the appropriate level of
review of any major Federal action—an
environmental impact statement (EIS),
environmental assessment (EA), or
categorical exclusion (CE). 40 CFR
1501.3. If a proposed action is likely to
have significant environmental effects,
the agency must prepare an EIS and
document its decision in a record of
decision. 40 CFR 1501.3(c)(3), part 1502,
1505.2. If the proposed action is not
likely to have significant environmental
effects or the effects are unknown, the
agency may instead prepare an EA,
which is a concise public document
used to support agency decision
making. 40 CFR 1501.3(c)(2), 1501.5,
1508.1(j). After completing the analysis
in the EA, the agency may conclude that
the action will have no significant
effects and document that conclusion in
a finding of no significant impact, or
conclude that the action is likely to have
significant effects and therefore requires
preparation of an EIS. 40 CFR 1501.6(a),
1508.1(j).
Under NEPA and the CEQ regulations,
a Federal agency may establish CEs—
categories of actions that the agency has
determined normally do not have a
significant effect on the human
environment, individually or in the
aggregate—in its agency NEPA
procedures. 42 U.S.C. 4336(e)(1); 40
CFR 1501.4(a), 1507.3(c)(8), 1508.1(e). If
an agency determines that a CE
established in its agency NEPA
procedures covers a proposed action, it
then evaluates the proposed action for
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extraordinary circumstances, which are
factors or circumstances that indicate a
normally categorically excluded action
may have a significant effect. 40 CFR
1501.4(b), 1508.1(o). If an extraordinary
circumstance exists, the agency
nevertheless may apply the CE if it
conducts an analysis and determines
that the proposed action does not in fact
have the potential to result in significant
effects notwithstanding the
extraordinary circumstance, or the
agency modifies the action to avoid the
potential to result in significant effects.
40 CFR 1501.4(b)(1). In these cases, the
agency must document such
determination. Id. If the agency cannot
categorically exclude the proposed
action, it will prepare an EA or EIS, as
appropriate. 40 CFR 1501.4(b)(2).
On May 1, 2024, CEQ finalized its
‘‘Bipartisan Permitting Reform
Implementation Rule’’ to revise its
regulations for implementing the
procedural provisions of NEPA,
including the amendments to NEPA in
the Fiscal Responsibility Act. Under the
revised regulations, each Federal agency
must, by July 1, 2025, develop
procedures to implement NEPA and the
CEQ regulations, facilitate efficient
decision making, and ensure that the
agencies make decisions in accordance
with the policies and requirements of
NEPA. 40 CFR 1507.3. As part of their
procedures, agencies must establish CEs
and identify extraordinary
circumstances. 40 CFR 1507.3(c)(8).
When establishing new or revising
existing CEs in agency NEPA
procedures, agencies must substantiate
the proposed new or revised CEs with
sufficient information to conclude that
each category of actions does not have
a significant effect, individually or in
the aggregate, on the human
environment, and provide this
substantiation in a written record that is
made publicly available as part of the
notice and comment process for
developing or revising proposed agency
procedures. See 40 CFR 1507.3(b), (c)(8).
In developing NEPA procedures,
agencies must consult with CEQ and
provide an opportunity for public
review. 40 CFR 1507.3(b)(1), (2). Before
publishing final procedures, agencies
must receive a determination from CEQ
that the procedures conform with NEPA
and the CEQ regulations. See 40 CFR
1507.3(b)(2).
Background
Founded in 1901, NIST’s mission is to
promote U.S. innovation and industrial
competitiveness by advancing
measurement science, standards, and
technology in ways that enhance
economic security and improve our
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quality of life. Historically, NIST has
carried out this mission through
operation of the NIST Laboratories,
which conduct world-class research,
often in close collaboration with
industry, that advances the nation’s
technology infrastructure and helps U.S.
companies continually improve
products and services.
In August 2022, Congress passed the
CHIPS Act of 2022, which amended title
XCIX of the William M. (Mac)
Thornberry National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021,
15 U.S.C. 4651 et seq., also known as
the Creating Helpful Incentives to
Produce Semiconductors (CHIPS) for
America Act. The law provides the
Department of Commerce with $50
billion for a suite of programs to
strengthen and revitalize the U.S.
position in semiconductor research,
development, and manufacturing. The
CHIPS for America program
encompasses two offices within NIST
responsible for implementing the law:
the CHIPS Research and Development
Office is investing $11 billion into
developing a robust domestic
semiconductor R&D ecosystem, while
the CHIPS Program Office is dedicating
$39 billion to provide incentives for
investment in semiconductor facilities
and equipment in the United States.
NIST is uniquely positioned to
successfully administer the CHIPS for
America program because of the
bureau’s strong relationships with U.S.
industries, its deep understanding of the
semiconductor ecosystem, and its
reputation as fair and trustworthy.
NEPA may apply to activities
conducted by NIST, including on its
campuses in Gaithersburg, MD, and
Boulder, CO, as well as to activities for
which NIST provides financial
assistance. NIST’s NEPA Procedures are
intended to make the NEPA process
more useful to both NIST and the public
and will serve as a repository for
guidance and resources to aid NIST in
implementation of NEPA.
As part of its NEPA Procedures, NIST
is proposing 18 new CEs and has
prepared a substantiation record to
support establishment of each CE. The
proposed CEs are supported by longstanding CEs and substantiation records
that have been developed by other
Federal agencies through processes
consistent with NEPA regulatory
requirements and CEQ guidance on the
establishment of CEs. NIST identified
existing CEs established by other federal
agencies that are sufficiently described
in supporting substantiation records to
demonstrate that the actions covered by
these existing CEs are similar in nature,
scope, and impact on the human
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environment to actions performed by
NIST. NIST also reviewed and analyzed
other past actions by NIST and other
federal agencies, including supporting
NEPA documentation, to develop the
proposed CEs. The past actions were
evaluated to demonstrate that the
actions that would be covered by NIST’s
proposed CEs normally do not have a
substantial effect on the human
environment, individually or in the
aggregate. For a detailed discussion of
and substantiation for each proposed
CE, please refer to the substantiation
record available at https://www.nist.gov/
chips/national-environmental-policyact-nepa.
In this notice, NIST is requesting
public comment on its draft NEPA
Procedures, including on the 18 new
CEs proposed as part of those
Procedures, and on the substantiation
record supporting those new CEs. To
facilitate public comment, NIST is
reproducing those 18 proposed CEs in
this Notice. Additionally, the Building
CHIPS in America Act recently
established a number of CEs for use by
NIST, which are also reproduced below.
The Procedures include an Appendix A
that lists all CEs available for use by
NIST. NIST has consulted with CEQ on
its proposal and is seeking input from
the public.
A. Proposed New Categorical
Exclusions
I. Administrative Activities
I–1. Preparation, modification, and
issuance of policy directives, rules,
regulations, procedures, guidelines,
guidance documents, bulletins, and
informational publications that are of an
administrative, financial, legal,
technical, or procedural nature, for
which the environmental effects are too
broad, speculative, or conjectural to
lend themselves to meaningful analysis
and will be, in whole or part, subject
later to the NEPA process, either
collectively or on a case-by-case basis.
I–2. Planning, educational,
informational, or advisory activities
provided to other agencies, public and
private entities, visitors, individuals, or
the public, including training exercises
and simulations conducted under
appropriately controlled conditions and
in accordance with all applicable laws,
regulations, and requirements.
I–3. Preparation and dissemination of
scientific results, studies, surveys,
audits, reports, plans, papers,
recommendations, and technical advice.
I–4. Technical assistance to other
Federal, Tribal, State, and local agencies
or the public.
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I–5. Contracts, collaborative research
agreements, cooperative research and
development agreements, interagency
agreements, and other agreements that
do not concern environmental matters
or where the environmental effects are
negligible.
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II. Operations
II–1. Routine procurement, use,
storage, transportation, and disposal of
non-hazardous goods and services in
support of administrative, operational,
or maintenance activities in accordance
with Executive Orders and Federal
procurement guidelines. Examples
include office supplies and furniture;
equipment; mobile assets (i.e., vehicles,
vessels, aircraft); utility services; and
deployable emergency response
supplies and equipment.
II–2. Routine use of hazardous
materials (including procurement,
transportation, distribution, and storage
of such materials) and reuse, recycling,
and disposal of solid, medical,
radiological, or hazardous waste in a
manner that is consistent with all
applicable laws, regulations, and
requirements. Examples include use of
chemicals for laboratory applications;
refueling of storage tanks; temporary
storage and disposal of solid waste;
disposal of waste through manufacturer
return and recycling programs; and
hazardous waste minimization
activities, including source reduction
activities and recycling.
II–3. Maintenance of facilities,
equipment, and grounds. Examples
include interior utility work, road
maintenance, window washing, lawn
mowing, landscaping, weed
management/maintenance, trash
collecting, facility cleaning, and snow
removal.
III. Facility Modernization
III–1. Internal modifications,
renovations, or additions (e.g., computer
facilities, relocating interior walls) to
structures or buildings that do not result
in a change in the functional use of the
property.
* III–2. Exterior renovation, addition,
repair, alteration, safety and
environmental improvements, and
demolition projects affecting buildings,
roads, grounds, equipment, and other
facilities, including subsequent disposal
of debris, which may be contaminated
with hazardous materials, lead, or
asbestos. Hazardous materials must be
disposed of at approved sites in
accordance with all applicable laws,
regulations, and requirements. These
actions do not result in a significant
change in the expected useful life,
design capacity, or function of the
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facility and during which operations
may be suspended and then resumed,
and they do not include rebuilding or
modifying substantial portions of a
facility (such as replacing a reactor
vessel). Examples include the following:
(a) Painting, roofing, siding, or
alterations to an existing building;
(b) Adding a small storage shed to an
existing building;
(c) Retrofitting for energy and water
conservation and efficiency, including
weatherization, installation of timers on
hot water heaters, installation of energy
efficient lighting, and installation of low
flow plumbing fixtures.
(d) Closing and demolishing a
building not eligible for listing under
the National Register of Historic Places;
or
(e) Replacement/upgrade of control
valves, in-core monitoring devices,
facility air filtration systems, or
substation transformers or capacitors;
addition of structural bracing to meet
earthquake standards and/or sustain
high wind loading; and replacement of
aboveground or belowground tanks and
related piping, provided that there is no
evidence of leakage, based on testing in
accordance with applicable
requirements (such as 40 CFR 265,
‘‘Interim Status Standards for Owners
and Operators of Hazardous Waste
Treatment, Storage, and Disposal
Facilities’’ and 40 CFR 280, ‘‘Technical
Standards and Corrective Action
Requirements for Owners and Operators
of Underground Storage Tanks’’).
(f) Covered actions include, but are
not limited to weatherization (such as
insulation and replacing windows and
doors); programmed lowering of
thermostat settings; placement of timers
on hot water heaters; installation or
replacement of energy efficient lighting,
low-flow plumbing fixtures (such as
faucets, toilets, and showerheads),
heating, ventilation, and air
conditioning systems, and appliances;
installation of drip-irrigation systems;
improvements in generator efficiency
and appliance efficiency ratings;
efficiency improvements for vehicles
and transportation (such as fleet
changeout); power storage (such as
flywheels and batteries, generally less
than 10 megawatt equivalent);
transportation management systems
(such as traffic signal control systems,
car navigation, speed cameras, and
automatic plate number recognition);
development of energy-efficient
manufacturing, industrial, or building
practices; and small-scale energy
efficiency and conservation research
and development and small-scale pilot
projects.
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* III–3. Minor improvements to
existing steam plants and cooling water
systems (including, but not limited to,
modifications of existing cooling towers
and ponds), provided that the
improvements would not:
(a) Create new sources of water or
involve new receiving waters;
(b) Have the potential to significantly
alter water withdrawal rates;
(c) Exceed the permitted temperature
of discharged water; or
(d) Increase introductions of, or
involve new introductions of, hazardous
substances, pollutants, contaminants, or
Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation, and Liability
Act-excluded (CERCLA) petroleum and
natural gas products.
* III–4. Installation or relocation and
operation of machinery and equipment
(including, but not limited to, laboratory
equipment, electronic hardware,
manufacturing machinery, maintenance
equipment, and health and safety
equipment), provided that uses of the
installed or relocated items are
consistent with the general missions of
the receiving structure. Covered actions
include modifications to an existing
building, within or contiguous to a
previously disturbed or developed area,
that are necessary for equipment
installation and relocation. Such
modifications would not appreciably
increase the footprint or height of the
existing building or have the potential
to cause significant changes to the type
and magnitude of environmental
impacts.
IV. Real Property
* IV–1. Acquisition or use of existing
facilities or portions thereof by
purchase, lease, or use agreement where
use or operation will remain unchanged.
Examples include acquiring office space
through lease, purchase, or use
agreement, and acquisition of laboratory
space through lease, purchase, or use
agreement.
* IV–2. Decisions and actions to close
facilities, decommission equipment, or
temporarily discontinue use of facilities
or equipment, where the facility or
equipment, including office equipment,
telecommunications equipment, and
computer equipment, is not used to
prevent or control environmental
impacts.
V. Research
* V–1. Proposed new and recurring
activities and operations conducted in
laboratories and facilities where
research practices and safeguards
(including but not limited to
environmental permits for operation)
prevent environmental impacts, would
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be consistent with previously
established safety levels, and would not
result in a change in use of the facility.
Examples include types of research,
development, testing, and evaluation
activities, and laboratory operations
conducted within existing facilities
designed to support research and
development activities. Not included in
this category are demonstration actions,
meaning actions that are undertaken at
a scale to show whether a technology
would be viable on a larger scale and
suitable for commercial deployment.
* V–2. Outdoor research activities
conducted in compliance with all
applicable laws, regulations, and
requirements. Examples include types
of research, development, testing, and
evaluation activities conducted
outdoors where no new ground
disturbance occurs and no sensitive
resources (e.g., threatened or
endangered species, archaeological
sites, Tribal resources, wetlands, and
waterbodies) are present, such as radar
testing, radio noise measurements, and
public safety communications research.
VI. Facility Construction
* VI–1. New construction or
improvement of buildings or
experimental equipment (e.g., trailers,
prefabricated buildings, and test slabs)
on previously disturbed ground, with no
more than 1 acre (0.4 hectare) of ground
disturbance in previously disturbed
areas, where the proposed facility use is
generally compatible with the
surrounding land use and applicable
zoning standards and will not require
additional support infrastructure. Such
facilities could be used for indoor smallscale research and development projects
and small-scale pilot projects using
nanoscale materials in accordance with
applicable requirements (such as
engineering, worker safety, procedural,
and administrative regulations)
necessary to ensure the containment of
any hazardous materials.
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VII. Federal Assistance
VII–1. Actions related to financial
assistance administration performed at
any stage during the financial assistance
lifecycle, such as the development and
issuance of guidance; announcements of
availability of funds; project reviews for
program eligibility; provision of
technical assistance; conducting
inspections, financial audits, and
monitoring activities; development of
information technology systems for
financial assistance management; closeout activities; and actions taken in
situations where an awardee is in nonconformance with program
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requirements, such as disallowances,
recoupment of funds, and debarment.
CEs labeled with an asterisk (*)
require documentation in accordance
with NIST’s NEPA Procedures.
B. Categorical Exclusions Established
by 15 U.S.C. 4652(d)(1)
Each of the following categorical
exclusions was established for the
National Institute of Standards and
Technology with respect to a covered
activity, defined as any activity relating
to the construction, expansion, or
modernization of a facility, the
investment in which is eligible for
Federal financial assistance under 15
U.S.C. 4652 or 4656, and is available for
use by the Secretary:
A. Categorical exclusion 17.04.d
(relating to the acquisition of machinery
and equipment) in the document
entitled ‘EDA Program to Implement the
National Environmental Policy Act of
1969 and Other Federal Environmental
Mandates As Required’ (Directive No.
17.02–2; effective date October 14,
1992).
• EDA (d). Acquisition of machinery
and equipment (M&E) unless these
require applications for or amendments
to existing air, water or solid waste
permits.
B. Categorical exclusion A9 in
Appendix A to subpart D of part 1021
of title 10, Code of Federal Regulations,
or any successor regulation.
• DOE A9. Information gathering
(including, but not limited to, literature
surveys, inventories, site visits, and
audits), data analysis (including, but not
limited to, computer modeling),
document preparation (including, but
not limited to, conceptual design,
feasibility studies, and analytical energy
supply and demand studies), and
information dissemination (including,
but not limited to, document
publication and distribution, and
classroom training and informational
programs), but not including site
characterization or environmental
monitoring. (See also B3.1 of appendix
B to this subpart.)
C. Categorical exclusions B1.24,
B1.31, B2.5, and B5.1 in Appendix B to
subpart D of part 1021 of title 10, Code
of Federal Regulations, or any successor
regulation.
• DOE B1.24. Transfer, lease,
disposition, or acquisition of interests in
personal property (including, but not
limited to, equipment and materials) or
real property (including, but not limited
to, permanent structures and land),
provided that under reasonably
foreseeable uses (1) there would be no
potential for release of substances at a
level, or in a form, that could pose a
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threat to public health or the
environment and (2) the covered actions
would not have the potential to cause a
significant change in impacts from
before the transfer, lease, disposition, or
acquisition of interests.
• DOE B1.31. Installation or
relocation and operation of machinery
and equipment (including, but not
limited to, laboratory equipment,
electronic hardware, manufacturing
machinery, maintenance equipment,
and health and safety equipment),
provided that uses of the installed or
relocated items are consistent with the
general missions of the receiving
structure. Covered actions include
modifications to an existing building,
within or contiguous to a previously
disturbed or developed area, that are
necessary for equipment installation
and relocation. Such modifications
would not appreciably increase the
footprint or height of the existing
building or have the potential to cause
significant changes to the type and
magnitude of environmental impacts.
• DOE B2.5. Safety and
environmental improvements of a
facility (including, but not limited to,
replacement and upgrade of facility
components) that do not result in a
significant change in the expected
useful life, design capacity, or function
of the facility and during which
operations may be suspended and then
resumed. Improvements include, but are
not limited to, replacement/upgrade of
control valves, in-core monitoring
devices, facility air filtration systems, or
substation transformers or capacitors;
addition of structural bracing to meet
earthquake standards and/or sustain
high wind loading; and replacement of
aboveground or belowground tanks and
related piping, provided that there is no
evidence of leakage, based on testing in
accordance with applicable
requirements (such as 40 CFR part 265,
‘‘Interim Status Standards for Owners
and Operators of Hazardous Waste
Treatment, Storage, and Disposal
Facilities’’ and 40 CFR part 280,
‘‘Technical Standards and Corrective
Action Requirements for Owners and
Operators of Underground Storage
Tanks’’). These actions do not include
rebuilding or modifying substantial
portions of a facility (such as replacing
a reactor vessel).
• DOE. B5.1. (a) Actions to conserve
energy or water, demonstrate potential
energy or water conservation, and
promote energy efficiency that would
not have the potential to cause
significant changes in the indoor or
outdoor concentrations of potentially
harmful substances. These actions may
involve financial and technical
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assistance to individuals (such as
builders, owners, consultants,
manufacturers, and designers),
organizations (such as utilities), and
governments (such as state, local, and
tribal). Covered actions include, but are
not limited to weatherization (such as
insulation and replacing windows and
doors); programmed lowering of
thermostat settings; placement of timers
on hot water heaters; installation or
replacement of energy efficient lighting,
low-flow plumbing fixtures (such as
faucets, toilets, and showerheads),
heating, ventilation, and air
conditioning systems, and appliances;
installation of drip-irrigation systems;
improvements in generator efficiency
and appliance efficiency ratings;
efficiency improvements for vehicles
and transportation (such as fleet
changeout); power storage (such as
flywheels and batteries, generally less
than 10 megawatt equivalent);
transportation management systems
(such as traffic signal control systems,
car navigation, speed cameras, and
automatic plate number recognition);
development of energy-efficient
manufacturing, industrial, or building
practices; and small-scale energy
efficiency and conservation research
and development and small-scale pilot
projects. Covered actions include
building renovations or new structures,
provided that they occur in a previously
disturbed or developed area. Covered
actions could involve commercial,
residential, agricultural, academic,
institutional, or industrial sectors.
D. The categorical exclusions
described in paragraphs (4) and (13) of
section 50.19(b) of title 24, Code of
Federal Regulations, or any successor
regulation.
• HUD a(4). Public services that will
not have a physical impact or result in
any physical changes, including but not
limited to services concerned with
employment, crime prevention, child
care, health, drug abuse, education,
counseling, energy conservation and
welfare or recreational needs.
• HUD a(13). Operating costs
including maintenance, security,
operation, utilities, furnishings,
equipment, supplies, staff training and
recruitment and other incidental costs;
however, in the case of equipment,
compliance with § 50.4(b)(1) is required.
E. Categorical exclusion (c)(1) in
Appendix B to part 651 of title 32, Code
of Federal Regulations, or any successor
regulation.
• Army (c)(1). Construction of an
addition to an existing structure or new
construction on a previously
undisturbed site if the area to be
disturbed has no more than 5.0
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18:17 Dec 10, 2024
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cumulative acres of new surface
disturbance. This does not include
construction of facilities for the
transportation, distribution, use,
storage, treatment, and disposal of solid
waste, medical waste, and hazardous
waste.
F. Categorical exclusions A2.3.8 and
A2.3.14 in Appendix B to part 989 of
title 32, Code of Federal Regulations, or
any successor regulation.
• USAF A2.3.8. Performing interior
and exterior construction within the 5foot line of a building without changing
the land use of the existing building.
• USAF A2.3.14. Installing on
previously developed land, equipment
that does not substantially alter land
use (i.e., land use of more than one
acre). This includes outgrants to private
lessees for similar construction.
Extraordinary Circumstances
NIST has identified a list of
extraordinary circumstances in its draft
NEPA Procedures. If NIST determines
that a CE is appropriate for a proposed
action, NIST must also evaluate the
proposed action for the presence of
extraordinary circumstances. 40 CFR
1501.4(b). Extraordinary circumstances
are situations for which NIST has
determined that further NEPA analysis
may be required because they are
circumstances in which a categorically
excluded action may have significant
effects. The mere presence of one or
more extraordinary circumstances does
not preclude the use of a CE. A
determination of whether an action that
is categorically excluded requires
additional evaluation because of
extraordinary circumstances focuses on
the action’s potential effects and
considers the significance of those
effects in terms of the context (the
potentially affected region, interests,
and resources) and the intensity (the
degree or severity of the effects) of the
action. Before applying a CE, NIST must
consider whether the proposed action
involves one or more of the following
extraordinary circumstances:
1. The action has potential to
adversely affect human health or safety;
2. The action is located in or may
affect an area with unique
environmental characteristics, such as
historic or cultural resources; park,
recreation or refuge lands; wilderness
areas; wild or scenic rivers; national
natural landmarks; sole or principal
drinking water aquifers; prime
farmlands; wetlands (E.O. 11990);
floodplains (E.O. 11988); national
monuments; and other ecologically
significant or critical areas;
3. The action may affect a species that
is listed, or proposed to be listed, as
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Sfmt 4703
threatened or endangered under the
Endangered Species Act (ESA), or is
located in the habitat of such a species;
4. The action has the potential to
affect properties that are listed or
eligible for listing on the National
Register of Historic Places;
5. The action has the potential to
affect lands owned by or held in trust
for a Federally recognized Tribe;
6. The action has the potential to
restrict access to and ceremonial use of
Indian sacred sites on Federal lands by
Indian religious practitioners or
significantly adversely affect the
physical integrity of such sacred sites
(E.O. 13007);
7. The action has the potential to have
a disproportionate and adverse effect on
communities with environmental justice
concerns (E.O. 14096);
8. The action has the potential to
violate a Federal, State, Tribal, or local
law or requirement imposed for
protection of the environment;
9. The action involves unresolved
conflicts concerning alternative uses of
available resources;
10. The action has highly uncertain
and potentially significant
environmental effects or involves
unique or unknown environmental
risks;
11. The action has the potential to
establish a precedent for future action or
represents a decision in principle about
future actions with potentially
significant environmental effects; or
12. The action has the potential for
significant cumulative impacts when
the proposed action is combined with
other past, present and reasonably
foreseeable future actions, even though
the impacts of the proposed action may
not be significant by themselves.
For CEs that NIST has adopted from
other Federal agencies under Section
109 of NEPA, NIST will consider
extraordinary circumstances in the
manner described in the Federal
Register notice announcing the
adoption. This process may require
considering extraordinary
circumstances identified by the agency
that developed the CE in that agency’s
NEPA implementing procedures.
If NIST determines that an
extraordinary circumstance exists, NIST
may nonetheless determine that a CE is
appropriate for the proposed action if
NIST conducts an analysis and
determines that the proposed action
does not in fact have the potential to
result in significant effects
notwithstanding the extraordinary
circumstance or modifies the action to
avoid the potential to result in
significant effects. In such cases, NIST
will document the determination and
E:\FR\FM\11DEN1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 238 / Wednesday, December 11, 2024 / Notices
make it publicly available on a NIST
website or through other means.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
Documenting the Use of a CE
Some activities, such as routine
personnel actions or purchases of small
amounts of supplies, may carry no risk
of significant environmental effects,
such that there is no benefit from
preparing additional documentation
when applying a CE to those activities.
NIST must, however, prepare a separate
document to evaluate the applicability
of a CE in each of the following cases:
1. For any application of a CE
designated by NIST as requiring
documentation, as indicated by an
asterisk in the list of proposed new CEs;
2. For any application of a CE adopted
from another Federal agency under
Section 109 of NEPA; and
3. For any case in which NIST
determines that a CE is appropriate
notwithstanding the existence of an
extraordinary circumstance.
Such documentation must include the
following:
(a) a description of the proposed
action;
(b) the CE category number, title, and
CE text that applies to the action;
(c) a brief summary of the agency’s
rationale for determining that the
proposed action is consistent with the
terms of the CE, including a description
of how the action complies with any
limitations in the CE (e.g., surface
disturbance limitations);
(d) a brief summary of the agency’s
review of the extraordinary
circumstances (or, where applicable, the
extraordinary circumstances identified
by the agency that developed a CE
adopted by NIST under Section 109 of
NEPA); and
(e) where the agency has determined
that one or more extraordinary
circumstance exists, the rationale for the
agency’s determination that the
proposed action does not in fact have
the potential to result in significant
effects notwithstanding the
extraordinary circumstance, or a
description of the modifications that
NIST has made to the action to avoid
the potential to result in significant
effects.
The document may take the form of
a memorandum, a completed form, or
other similar document, so long as the
above components are included. Before
the action is implemented, NIST must
sign and date the document to indicate
that use of the CE is appropriate. NIST
must keep the original, signed
document as part of the record for the
action.
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99839
Request for Comments
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
NIST requests comments from the
public on its draft NEPA Procedures and
its proposal to establish new CEs. The
agency will consider input from the
public and consult with CEQ for a
conformity determination before
finalizing its proposal.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
Alicia Chambers,
NIST Executive Secretariat.
AGENCY:
[FR Doc. 2024–29088 Filed 12–10–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
[RTID 0648–XE524]
Endangered Species; File No. 28262
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
AGENCY:
Notice; withdrawal of
application.
ACTION:
Notice is hereby given that
Kori Johnsen, 1792 Harrison Avenue,
Melbourne, FL 32935, has withdrawn
their application for a permit to conduct
research on green (Chelonia mydas),
hawksbill (Eretmochelys imbricata), and
Kemp’s ridley (Lepidochelys kempii) sea
turtles.
SUMMARY:
The application and related
documents are available for review
upon written request via email to
NMFS.Pr1Comments@noaa.gov.
ADDRESSES:
Erin
Markin, Ph.D., or Amy Hapeman, (301)
427–8401.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
On
September 9, 2024, notice was
published in the Federal Register (89
FR 73069) that a request for a permit to
conduct research on green, hawksbill,
and Kemp’s ridley sea turtles had been
submitted by the above-named
applicant. The applicant has withdrawn
the application from further
consideration.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Dated: December 5, 2024.
Julia M. Harrison,
Chief, Permits and Conservation Division,
Office of Protected Resources, National
Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2024–29063 Filed 12–10–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
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[RTID 0648–XE508]
Fisheries of the Gulf of Mexico;
Southeast Data, Assessment, and
Review (SEDAR); Public Meeting
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of SEDAR 88 Red Tide
Topical Working Group Webinar IV for
Gulf of Mexico Red Grouper.
The SEDAR 88 assessment of
Gulf of Mexico red grouper will consist
of a series of webinars. See
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.
DATES: The SEDAR 88 Red Tide Topical
Working Group Webinar IV will be held
January 15, 2025, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.,
Eastern.
ADDRESSES: The meeting will be held
via webinar. The webinar is open to
members of the public. Those interested
in participating should contact Julie A.
Neer at SEDAR (see FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT) to request an
invitation providing webinar access
information. Please request webinar
invitations at least 24 hours in advance
of each webinar.
SEDAR address: 4055 Faber Place
Drive, Suite 201, North Charleston, SC
29405.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Julie
A. Neer, SEDAR Coordinator; phone:
(843) 571–4366; email: Julie.neer@
safmc.net.
SUMMARY:
The Gulf
of Mexico, South Atlantic, and
Caribbean Fishery Management
Councils, in conjunction with NOAA
Fisheries and the Atlantic and Gulf
States Marine Fisheries Commissions
have implemented the Southeast Data,
Assessment and Review (SEDAR)
process, a multi-step method for
determining the status of fish stocks in
the Southeast Region. SEDAR is a multistep process including: (1) Data
Workshop; (2) Assessment Process
utilizing webinars; and (3) Review
Workshop. The product of the Data
Workshop is a data report that compiles
and evaluates potential datasets and
recommends which datasets are
appropriate for assessment analyses.
The product of the Assessment Process
is a stock assessment report that
describes the fisheries, evaluates the
status of the stock, estimates biological
benchmarks, projects future population
conditions, and recommends research
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
E:\FR\FM\11DEN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 238 (Wednesday, December 11, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 99834-99839]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-29088]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Environmental Policy Act; Proposed Implementing
Procedures and Categorical Exclusions
AGENCY: National Institute of Standards and Technology, Department of
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Federal agencies are required to develop procedures to
implement the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and the Council
on Environmental Quality (CEQ) regulations implementing NEPA.
Consistent with these requirements, the National Institute of Standards
and Technology (NIST) is proposing new NEPA implementing procedures
(NEPA Procedures), including the establishment of new categorical
exclusions (CEs) as part of its NEPA Procedures. CEs are categories of
actions that an agency has determined normally do not have a
significant effect on the human environment, individually or in the
aggregate. CEs are a form of review that agencies use to comply with
NEPA for proposed actions that normally have no or minimal
environmental effects. NIST requests the views of the public on its
draft NEPA Procedures as well as its substantiation record for the
proposed CEs.
DATES: Submit written comments on or before January 10, 2025.
ADDRESSES: The draft NEPA Procedures and CE substantiation record are
available for review at https://www.nist.gov/chips/national-environmental-policy-act-nepa. Submit all electronic public comments
via email to [email protected] citing ``NEPA Procedures'' in the
subject line. NIST will accept comments in attached Word or PDF formats
or within the body of the email.
Comments sent by any other method, to any other address or
individual, or received after the end of the comment period, may not be
considered by NIST. All comments received are a part of the public
record; commenters should not include personal identifying information
(e.g., name, address, etc.), confidential business information, or
otherwise sensitive information. NIST will accept anonymous comments.
The most helpful comments include a specific recommendation, explain
the reason for any recommended change, and provide supporting
information. NIST will consider all relevant comments received on or
before the closing date.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: David Frenkel, NIST, telephone number
240-204-1960, email [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Legal Framework
The National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), 42 U.S.C. 4321 et
seq., requires Federal agencies to consider the environmental effects
of their proposed actions in their decision-making processes and inform
and engage the public in that process. Section 101(a) of NEPA sets
forth a national policy to use all practicable means and measures,
including financial and technical assistance, in a manner calculated to
foster and promote the general welfare, to create and maintain
conditions under which humans and nature can exist in productive
harmony, and fulfill the social, economic, and other requirements of
present and future generations of Americans. 42 U.S.C. 4331(a). Section
102 of NEPA directs agencies to interpret and administer Federal
policies, regulations and laws consistent with NEPA's policies. 42
U.S.C. 4332.
NEPA also created the Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ), which
has issued regulations implementing NEPA, 40 CFR parts 1500 through
1508 (CEQ regulations). CEQ also has issued numerous guidance documents
to facilitate agency implementation of NEPA. See CEQ, CEQ Guidance
Documents, https://ceq.doe.gov/guidance/guidance.html.
To comply with NEPA, agencies determine the appropriate level of
review of any major Federal action--an environmental impact statement
(EIS), environmental assessment (EA), or categorical exclusion (CE). 40
CFR 1501.3. If a proposed action is likely to have significant
environmental effects, the agency must prepare an EIS and document its
decision in a record of decision. 40 CFR 1501.3(c)(3), part 1502,
1505.2. If the proposed action is not likely to have significant
environmental effects or the effects are unknown, the agency may
instead prepare an EA, which is a concise public document used to
support agency decision making. 40 CFR 1501.3(c)(2), 1501.5, 1508.1(j).
After completing the analysis in the EA, the agency may conclude that
the action will have no significant effects and document that
conclusion in a finding of no significant impact, or conclude that the
action is likely to have significant effects and therefore requires
preparation of an EIS. 40 CFR 1501.6(a), 1508.1(j).
Under NEPA and the CEQ regulations, a Federal agency may establish
CEs-- categories of actions that the agency has determined normally do
not have a significant effect on the human environment, individually or
in the aggregate--in its agency NEPA procedures. 42 U.S.C. 4336(e)(1);
40 CFR 1501.4(a), 1507.3(c)(8), 1508.1(e). If an agency determines that
a CE established in its agency NEPA procedures covers a proposed
action, it then evaluates the proposed action for
[[Page 99835]]
extraordinary circumstances, which are factors or circumstances that
indicate a normally categorically excluded action may have a
significant effect. 40 CFR 1501.4(b), 1508.1(o). If an extraordinary
circumstance exists, the agency nevertheless may apply the CE if it
conducts an analysis and determines that the proposed action does not
in fact have the potential to result in significant effects
notwithstanding the extraordinary circumstance, or the agency modifies
the action to avoid the potential to result in significant effects. 40
CFR 1501.4(b)(1). In these cases, the agency must document such
determination. Id. If the agency cannot categorically exclude the
proposed action, it will prepare an EA or EIS, as appropriate. 40 CFR
1501.4(b)(2).
On May 1, 2024, CEQ finalized its ``Bipartisan Permitting Reform
Implementation Rule'' to revise its regulations for implementing the
procedural provisions of NEPA, including the amendments to NEPA in the
Fiscal Responsibility Act. Under the revised regulations, each Federal
agency must, by July 1, 2025, develop procedures to implement NEPA and
the CEQ regulations, facilitate efficient decision making, and ensure
that the agencies make decisions in accordance with the policies and
requirements of NEPA. 40 CFR 1507.3. As part of their procedures,
agencies must establish CEs and identify extraordinary circumstances.
40 CFR 1507.3(c)(8). When establishing new or revising existing CEs in
agency NEPA procedures, agencies must substantiate the proposed new or
revised CEs with sufficient information to conclude that each category
of actions does not have a significant effect, individually or in the
aggregate, on the human environment, and provide this substantiation in
a written record that is made publicly available as part of the notice
and comment process for developing or revising proposed agency
procedures. See 40 CFR 1507.3(b), (c)(8). In developing NEPA
procedures, agencies must consult with CEQ and provide an opportunity
for public review. 40 CFR 1507.3(b)(1), (2). Before publishing final
procedures, agencies must receive a determination from CEQ that the
procedures conform with NEPA and the CEQ regulations. See 40 CFR
1507.3(b)(2).
Background
Founded in 1901, NIST's mission is to promote U.S. innovation and
industrial competitiveness by advancing measurement science, standards,
and technology in ways that enhance economic security and improve our
quality of life. Historically, NIST has carried out this mission
through operation of the NIST Laboratories, which conduct world-class
research, often in close collaboration with industry, that advances the
nation's technology infrastructure and helps U.S. companies continually
improve products and services.
In August 2022, Congress passed the CHIPS Act of 2022, which
amended title XCIX of the William M. (Mac) Thornberry National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021, 15 U.S.C. 4651 et seq., also
known as the Creating Helpful Incentives to Produce Semiconductors
(CHIPS) for America Act. The law provides the Department of Commerce
with $50 billion for a suite of programs to strengthen and revitalize
the U.S. position in semiconductor research, development, and
manufacturing. The CHIPS for America program encompasses two offices
within NIST responsible for implementing the law: the CHIPS Research
and Development Office is investing $11 billion into developing a
robust domestic semiconductor R&D ecosystem, while the CHIPS Program
Office is dedicating $39 billion to provide incentives for investment
in semiconductor facilities and equipment in the United States. NIST is
uniquely positioned to successfully administer the CHIPS for America
program because of the bureau's strong relationships with U.S.
industries, its deep understanding of the semiconductor ecosystem, and
its reputation as fair and trustworthy.
NEPA may apply to activities conducted by NIST, including on its
campuses in Gaithersburg, MD, and Boulder, CO, as well as to activities
for which NIST provides financial assistance. NIST's NEPA Procedures
are intended to make the NEPA process more useful to both NIST and the
public and will serve as a repository for guidance and resources to aid
NIST in implementation of NEPA.
As part of its NEPA Procedures, NIST is proposing 18 new CEs and
has prepared a substantiation record to support establishment of each
CE. The proposed CEs are supported by long-standing CEs and
substantiation records that have been developed by other Federal
agencies through processes consistent with NEPA regulatory requirements
and CEQ guidance on the establishment of CEs. NIST identified existing
CEs established by other federal agencies that are sufficiently
described in supporting substantiation records to demonstrate that the
actions covered by these existing CEs are similar in nature, scope, and
impact on the human environment to actions performed by NIST. NIST also
reviewed and analyzed other past actions by NIST and other federal
agencies, including supporting NEPA documentation, to develop the
proposed CEs. The past actions were evaluated to demonstrate that the
actions that would be covered by NIST's proposed CEs normally do not
have a substantial effect on the human environment, individually or in
the aggregate. For a detailed discussion of and substantiation for each
proposed CE, please refer to the substantiation record available at
https://www.nist.gov/chips/national-environmental-policy-act-nepa.
In this notice, NIST is requesting public comment on its draft NEPA
Procedures, including on the 18 new CEs proposed as part of those
Procedures, and on the substantiation record supporting those new CEs.
To facilitate public comment, NIST is reproducing those 18 proposed CEs
in this Notice. Additionally, the Building CHIPS in America Act
recently established a number of CEs for use by NIST, which are also
reproduced below. The Procedures include an Appendix A that lists all
CEs available for use by NIST. NIST has consulted with CEQ on its
proposal and is seeking input from the public.
A. Proposed New Categorical Exclusions
I. Administrative Activities
I-1. Preparation, modification, and issuance of policy directives,
rules, regulations, procedures, guidelines, guidance documents,
bulletins, and informational publications that are of an
administrative, financial, legal, technical, or procedural nature, for
which the environmental effects are too broad, speculative, or
conjectural to lend themselves to meaningful analysis and will be, in
whole or part, subject later to the NEPA process, either collectively
or on a case-by-case basis.
I-2. Planning, educational, informational, or advisory activities
provided to other agencies, public and private entities, visitors,
individuals, or the public, including training exercises and
simulations conducted under appropriately controlled conditions and in
accordance with all applicable laws, regulations, and requirements.
I-3. Preparation and dissemination of scientific results, studies,
surveys, audits, reports, plans, papers, recommendations, and technical
advice.
I-4. Technical assistance to other Federal, Tribal, State, and
local agencies or the public.
[[Page 99836]]
I-5. Contracts, collaborative research agreements, cooperative
research and development agreements, interagency agreements, and other
agreements that do not concern environmental matters or where the
environmental effects are negligible.
II. Operations
II-1. Routine procurement, use, storage, transportation, and
disposal of non-hazardous goods and services in support of
administrative, operational, or maintenance activities in accordance
with Executive Orders and Federal procurement guidelines. Examples
include office supplies and furniture; equipment; mobile assets (i.e.,
vehicles, vessels, aircraft); utility services; and deployable
emergency response supplies and equipment.
II-2. Routine use of hazardous materials (including procurement,
transportation, distribution, and storage of such materials) and reuse,
recycling, and disposal of solid, medical, radiological, or hazardous
waste in a manner that is consistent with all applicable laws,
regulations, and requirements. Examples include use of chemicals for
laboratory applications; refueling of storage tanks; temporary storage
and disposal of solid waste; disposal of waste through manufacturer
return and recycling programs; and hazardous waste minimization
activities, including source reduction activities and recycling.
II-3. Maintenance of facilities, equipment, and grounds. Examples
include interior utility work, road maintenance, window washing, lawn
mowing, landscaping, weed management/maintenance, trash collecting,
facility cleaning, and snow removal.
III. Facility Modernization
III-1. Internal modifications, renovations, or additions (e.g.,
computer facilities, relocating interior walls) to structures or
buildings that do not result in a change in the functional use of the
property.
* III-2. Exterior renovation, addition, repair, alteration, safety
and environmental improvements, and demolition projects affecting
buildings, roads, grounds, equipment, and other facilities, including
subsequent disposal of debris, which may be contaminated with hazardous
materials, lead, or asbestos. Hazardous materials must be disposed of
at approved sites in accordance with all applicable laws, regulations,
and requirements. These actions do not result in a significant change
in the expected useful life, design capacity, or function of the
facility and during which operations may be suspended and then resumed,
and they do not include rebuilding or modifying substantial portions of
a facility (such as replacing a reactor vessel). Examples include the
following:
(a) Painting, roofing, siding, or alterations to an existing
building;
(b) Adding a small storage shed to an existing building;
(c) Retrofitting for energy and water conservation and efficiency,
including weatherization, installation of timers on hot water heaters,
installation of energy efficient lighting, and installation of low flow
plumbing fixtures.
(d) Closing and demolishing a building not eligible for listing
under the National Register of Historic Places; or
(e) Replacement/upgrade of control valves, in-core monitoring
devices, facility air filtration systems, or substation transformers or
capacitors; addition of structural bracing to meet earthquake standards
and/or sustain high wind loading; and replacement of aboveground or
belowground tanks and related piping, provided that there is no
evidence of leakage, based on testing in accordance with applicable
requirements (such as 40 CFR 265, ``Interim Status Standards for Owners
and Operators of Hazardous Waste Treatment, Storage, and Disposal
Facilities'' and 40 CFR 280, ``Technical Standards and Corrective
Action Requirements for Owners and Operators of Underground Storage
Tanks'').
(f) Covered actions include, but are not limited to weatherization
(such as insulation and replacing windows and doors); programmed
lowering of thermostat settings; placement of timers on hot water
heaters; installation or replacement of energy efficient lighting, low-
flow plumbing fixtures (such as faucets, toilets, and showerheads),
heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems, and appliances;
installation of drip-irrigation systems; improvements in generator
efficiency and appliance efficiency ratings; efficiency improvements
for vehicles and transportation (such as fleet changeout); power
storage (such as flywheels and batteries, generally less than 10
megawatt equivalent); transportation management systems (such as
traffic signal control systems, car navigation, speed cameras, and
automatic plate number recognition); development of energy-efficient
manufacturing, industrial, or building practices; and small-scale
energy efficiency and conservation research and development and small-
scale pilot projects.
* III-3. Minor improvements to existing steam plants and cooling
water systems (including, but not limited to, modifications of existing
cooling towers and ponds), provided that the improvements would not:
(a) Create new sources of water or involve new receiving waters;
(b) Have the potential to significantly alter water withdrawal
rates;
(c) Exceed the permitted temperature of discharged water; or
(d) Increase introductions of, or involve new introductions of,
hazardous substances, pollutants, contaminants, or Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act-excluded
(CERCLA) petroleum and natural gas products.
* III-4. Installation or relocation and operation of machinery and
equipment (including, but not limited to, laboratory equipment,
electronic hardware, manufacturing machinery, maintenance equipment,
and health and safety equipment), provided that uses of the installed
or relocated items are consistent with the general missions of the
receiving structure. Covered actions include modifications to an
existing building, within or contiguous to a previously disturbed or
developed area, that are necessary for equipment installation and
relocation. Such modifications would not appreciably increase the
footprint or height of the existing building or have the potential to
cause significant changes to the type and magnitude of environmental
impacts.
IV. Real Property
* IV-1. Acquisition or use of existing facilities or portions
thereof by purchase, lease, or use agreement where use or operation
will remain unchanged. Examples include acquiring office space through
lease, purchase, or use agreement, and acquisition of laboratory space
through lease, purchase, or use agreement.
* IV-2. Decisions and actions to close facilities, decommission
equipment, or temporarily discontinue use of facilities or equipment,
where the facility or equipment, including office equipment,
telecommunications equipment, and computer equipment, is not used to
prevent or control environmental impacts.
V. Research
* V-1. Proposed new and recurring activities and operations
conducted in laboratories and facilities where research practices and
safeguards (including but not limited to environmental permits for
operation) prevent environmental impacts, would
[[Page 99837]]
be consistent with previously established safety levels, and would not
result in a change in use of the facility. Examples include types of
research, development, testing, and evaluation activities, and
laboratory operations conducted within existing facilities designed to
support research and development activities. Not included in this
category are demonstration actions, meaning actions that are undertaken
at a scale to show whether a technology would be viable on a larger
scale and suitable for commercial deployment.
* V-2. Outdoor research activities conducted in compliance with all
applicable laws, regulations, and requirements. Examples include types
of research, development, testing, and evaluation activities conducted
outdoors where no new ground disturbance occurs and no sensitive
resources (e.g., threatened or endangered species, archaeological
sites, Tribal resources, wetlands, and waterbodies) are present, such
as radar testing, radio noise measurements, and public safety
communications research.
VI. Facility Construction
* VI-1. New construction or improvement of buildings or
experimental equipment (e.g., trailers, prefabricated buildings, and
test slabs) on previously disturbed ground, with no more than 1 acre
(0.4 hectare) of ground disturbance in previously disturbed areas,
where the proposed facility use is generally compatible with the
surrounding land use and applicable zoning standards and will not
require additional support infrastructure. Such facilities could be
used for indoor small-scale research and development projects and
small-scale pilot projects using nanoscale materials in accordance with
applicable requirements (such as engineering, worker safety,
procedural, and administrative regulations) necessary to ensure the
containment of any hazardous materials.
VII. Federal Assistance
VII-1. Actions related to financial assistance administration
performed at any stage during the financial assistance lifecycle, such
as the development and issuance of guidance; announcements of
availability of funds; project reviews for program eligibility;
provision of technical assistance; conducting inspections, financial
audits, and monitoring activities; development of information
technology systems for financial assistance management; close-out
activities; and actions taken in situations where an awardee is in non-
conformance with program requirements, such as disallowances,
recoupment of funds, and debarment.
CEs labeled with an asterisk (*) require documentation in
accordance with NIST's NEPA Procedures.
B. Categorical Exclusions Established by 15 U.S.C. 4652(d)(1)
Each of the following categorical exclusions was established for
the National Institute of Standards and Technology with respect to a
covered activity, defined as any activity relating to the construction,
expansion, or modernization of a facility, the investment in which is
eligible for Federal financial assistance under 15 U.S.C. 4652 or 4656,
and is available for use by the Secretary:
A. Categorical exclusion 17.04.d (relating to the acquisition of
machinery and equipment) in the document entitled `EDA Program to
Implement the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 and Other
Federal Environmental Mandates As Required' (Directive No. 17.02-2;
effective date October 14, 1992).
EDA (d). Acquisition of machinery and equipment (M&E)
unless these require applications for or amendments to existing air,
water or solid waste permits.
B. Categorical exclusion A9 in Appendix A to subpart D of part 1021
of title 10, Code of Federal Regulations, or any successor regulation.
DOE A9. Information gathering (including, but not limited
to, literature surveys, inventories, site visits, and audits), data
analysis (including, but not limited to, computer modeling), document
preparation (including, but not limited to, conceptual design,
feasibility studies, and analytical energy supply and demand studies),
and information dissemination (including, but not limited to, document
publication and distribution, and classroom training and informational
programs), but not including site characterization or environmental
monitoring. (See also B3.1 of appendix B to this subpart.)
C. Categorical exclusions B1.24, B1.31, B2.5, and B5.1 in Appendix
B to subpart D of part 1021 of title 10, Code of Federal Regulations,
or any successor regulation.
DOE B1.24. Transfer, lease, disposition, or acquisition of
interests in personal property (including, but not limited to,
equipment and materials) or real property (including, but not limited
to, permanent structures and land), provided that under reasonably
foreseeable uses (1) there would be no potential for release of
substances at a level, or in a form, that could pose a threat to public
health or the environment and (2) the covered actions would not have
the potential to cause a significant change in impacts from before the
transfer, lease, disposition, or acquisition of interests.
DOE B1.31. Installation or relocation and operation of
machinery and equipment (including, but not limited to, laboratory
equipment, electronic hardware, manufacturing machinery, maintenance
equipment, and health and safety equipment), provided that uses of the
installed or relocated items are consistent with the general missions
of the receiving structure. Covered actions include modifications to an
existing building, within or contiguous to a previously disturbed or
developed area, that are necessary for equipment installation and
relocation. Such modifications would not appreciably increase the
footprint or height of the existing building or have the potential to
cause significant changes to the type and magnitude of environmental
impacts.
DOE B2.5. Safety and environmental improvements of a
facility (including, but not limited to, replacement and upgrade of
facility components) that do not result in a significant change in the
expected useful life, design capacity, or function of the facility and
during which operations may be suspended and then resumed. Improvements
include, but are not limited to, replacement/upgrade of control valves,
in-core monitoring devices, facility air filtration systems, or
substation transformers or capacitors; addition of structural bracing
to meet earthquake standards and/or sustain high wind loading; and
replacement of aboveground or belowground tanks and related piping,
provided that there is no evidence of leakage, based on testing in
accordance with applicable requirements (such as 40 CFR part 265,
``Interim Status Standards for Owners and Operators of Hazardous Waste
Treatment, Storage, and Disposal Facilities'' and 40 CFR part 280,
``Technical Standards and Corrective Action Requirements for Owners and
Operators of Underground Storage Tanks''). These actions do not include
rebuilding or modifying substantial portions of a facility (such as
replacing a reactor vessel).
DOE. B5.1. (a) Actions to conserve energy or water,
demonstrate potential energy or water conservation, and promote energy
efficiency that would not have the potential to cause significant
changes in the indoor or outdoor concentrations of potentially harmful
substances. These actions may involve financial and technical
[[Page 99838]]
assistance to individuals (such as builders, owners, consultants,
manufacturers, and designers), organizations (such as utilities), and
governments (such as state, local, and tribal). Covered actions
include, but are not limited to weatherization (such as insulation and
replacing windows and doors); programmed lowering of thermostat
settings; placement of timers on hot water heaters; installation or
replacement of energy efficient lighting, low-flow plumbing fixtures
(such as faucets, toilets, and showerheads), heating, ventilation, and
air conditioning systems, and appliances; installation of drip-
irrigation systems; improvements in generator efficiency and appliance
efficiency ratings; efficiency improvements for vehicles and
transportation (such as fleet changeout); power storage (such as
flywheels and batteries, generally less than 10 megawatt equivalent);
transportation management systems (such as traffic signal control
systems, car navigation, speed cameras, and automatic plate number
recognition); development of energy-efficient manufacturing,
industrial, or building practices; and small-scale energy efficiency
and conservation research and development and small-scale pilot
projects. Covered actions include building renovations or new
structures, provided that they occur in a previously disturbed or
developed area. Covered actions could involve commercial, residential,
agricultural, academic, institutional, or industrial sectors.
D. The categorical exclusions described in paragraphs (4) and (13)
of section 50.19(b) of title 24, Code of Federal Regulations, or any
successor regulation.
HUD a(4). Public services that will not have a physical
impact or result in any physical changes, including but not limited to
services concerned with employment, crime prevention, child care,
health, drug abuse, education, counseling, energy conservation and
welfare or recreational needs.
HUD a(13). Operating costs including maintenance,
security, operation, utilities, furnishings, equipment, supplies, staff
training and recruitment and other incidental costs; however, in the
case of equipment, compliance with Sec. 50.4(b)(1) is required.
E. Categorical exclusion (c)(1) in Appendix B to part 651 of title
32, Code of Federal Regulations, or any successor regulation.
Army (c)(1). Construction of an addition to an existing
structure or new construction on a previously undisturbed site if the
area to be disturbed has no more than 5.0 cumulative acres of new
surface disturbance. This does not include construction of facilities
for the transportation, distribution, use, storage, treatment, and
disposal of solid waste, medical waste, and hazardous waste.
F. Categorical exclusions A2.3.8 and A2.3.14 in Appendix B to part
989 of title 32, Code of Federal Regulations, or any successor
regulation.
USAF A2.3.8. Performing interior and exterior construction
within the 5-foot line of a building without changing the land use of
the existing building.
USAF A2.3.14. Installing on previously developed land,
equipment that does not substantially alter land use (i.e., land use of
more than one acre). This includes outgrants to private lessees for
similar construction.
Extraordinary Circumstances
NIST has identified a list of extraordinary circumstances in its
draft NEPA Procedures. If NIST determines that a CE is appropriate for
a proposed action, NIST must also evaluate the proposed action for the
presence of extraordinary circumstances. 40 CFR 1501.4(b).
Extraordinary circumstances are situations for which NIST has
determined that further NEPA analysis may be required because they are
circumstances in which a categorically excluded action may have
significant effects. The mere presence of one or more extraordinary
circumstances does not preclude the use of a CE. A determination of
whether an action that is categorically excluded requires additional
evaluation because of extraordinary circumstances focuses on the
action's potential effects and considers the significance of those
effects in terms of the context (the potentially affected region,
interests, and resources) and the intensity (the degree or severity of
the effects) of the action. Before applying a CE, NIST must consider
whether the proposed action involves one or more of the following
extraordinary circumstances:
1. The action has potential to adversely affect human health or
safety;
2. The action is located in or may affect an area with unique
environmental characteristics, such as historic or cultural resources;
park, recreation or refuge lands; wilderness areas; wild or scenic
rivers; national natural landmarks; sole or principal drinking water
aquifers; prime farmlands; wetlands (E.O. 11990); floodplains (E.O.
11988); national monuments; and other ecologically significant or
critical areas;
3. The action may affect a species that is listed, or proposed to
be listed, as threatened or endangered under the Endangered Species Act
(ESA), or is located in the habitat of such a species;
4. The action has the potential to affect properties that are
listed or eligible for listing on the National Register of Historic
Places;
5. The action has the potential to affect lands owned by or held in
trust for a Federally recognized Tribe;
6. The action has the potential to restrict access to and
ceremonial use of Indian sacred sites on Federal lands by Indian
religious practitioners or significantly adversely affect the physical
integrity of such sacred sites (E.O. 13007);
7. The action has the potential to have a disproportionate and
adverse effect on communities with environmental justice concerns (E.O.
14096);
8. The action has the potential to violate a Federal, State,
Tribal, or local law or requirement imposed for protection of the
environment;
9. The action involves unresolved conflicts concerning alternative
uses of available resources;
10. The action has highly uncertain and potentially significant
environmental effects or involves unique or unknown environmental
risks;
11. The action has the potential to establish a precedent for
future action or represents a decision in principle about future
actions with potentially significant environmental effects; or
12. The action has the potential for significant cumulative impacts
when the proposed action is combined with other past, present and
reasonably foreseeable future actions, even though the impacts of the
proposed action may not be significant by themselves.
For CEs that NIST has adopted from other Federal agencies under
Section 109 of NEPA, NIST will consider extraordinary circumstances in
the manner described in the Federal Register notice announcing the
adoption. This process may require considering extraordinary
circumstances identified by the agency that developed the CE in that
agency's NEPA implementing procedures.
If NIST determines that an extraordinary circumstance exists, NIST
may nonetheless determine that a CE is appropriate for the proposed
action if NIST conducts an analysis and determines that the proposed
action does not in fact have the potential to result in significant
effects notwithstanding the extraordinary circumstance or modifies the
action to avoid the potential to result in significant effects. In such
cases, NIST will document the determination and
[[Page 99839]]
make it publicly available on a NIST website or through other means.
Documenting the Use of a CE
Some activities, such as routine personnel actions or purchases of
small amounts of supplies, may carry no risk of significant
environmental effects, such that there is no benefit from preparing
additional documentation when applying a CE to those activities. NIST
must, however, prepare a separate document to evaluate the
applicability of a CE in each of the following cases:
1. For any application of a CE designated by NIST as requiring
documentation, as indicated by an asterisk in the list of proposed new
CEs;
2. For any application of a CE adopted from another Federal agency
under Section 109 of NEPA; and
3. For any case in which NIST determines that a CE is appropriate
notwithstanding the existence of an extraordinary circumstance.
Such documentation must include the following:
(a) a description of the proposed action;
(b) the CE category number, title, and CE text that applies to the
action;
(c) a brief summary of the agency's rationale for determining that
the proposed action is consistent with the terms of the CE, including a
description of how the action complies with any limitations in the CE
(e.g., surface disturbance limitations);
(d) a brief summary of the agency's review of the extraordinary
circumstances (or, where applicable, the extraordinary circumstances
identified by the agency that developed a CE adopted by NIST under
Section 109 of NEPA); and
(e) where the agency has determined that one or more extraordinary
circumstance exists, the rationale for the agency's determination that
the proposed action does not in fact have the potential to result in
significant effects notwithstanding the extraordinary circumstance, or
a description of the modifications that NIST has made to the action to
avoid the potential to result in significant effects.
The document may take the form of a memorandum, a completed form,
or other similar document, so long as the above components are
included. Before the action is implemented, NIST must sign and date the
document to indicate that use of the CE is appropriate. NIST must keep
the original, signed document as part of the record for the action.
Request for Comments
NIST requests comments from the public on its draft NEPA Procedures
and its proposal to establish new CEs. The agency will consider input
from the public and consult with CEQ for a conformity determination
before finalizing its proposal.
Alicia Chambers,
NIST Executive Secretariat.
[FR Doc. 2024-29088 Filed 12-10-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-13-P