Notice of Availability of a Gulf of Mexico Regional Outer Continental Shelf Oil and Gas Draft Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement, 101044-101047 [2024-29360]
Download as PDF
101044
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 240 / Friday, December 13, 2024 / Notices
https://www.blm.gov/get-involved/
resource-advisory-council/near-you/
montana-dakotas/western-montana-rac.
(Authority: 43 CFR 1784.4–2)
Kathryn Stevens,
Western Montana BLM District Manager.
[FR Doc. 2024–29453 Filed 12–12–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4331–20–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[BLM_MT_FRN_MO4540000308]
Call for Nominations to the Western
Montana Resource Advisory Council
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of call for nominations.
AGENCY:
The purpose of this notice is
to request public nominations for the
Bureau of Land Management’s (BLM)
Western Montana Resource Advisory
Council (RAC) to fill existing vacancies,
as well as for member terms that are
scheduled to expire. The RAC provides
advice and recommendations to the
BLM on land use planning and
management of the National System of
Public Lands within the Western
Montana District.
DATES: All nominations must be
received no later than January 13, 2025.
ADDRESSES: Nominations and completed
applications should be sent to the BLM
office listed in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section of this
notice.
SUMMARY:
Ann
Boucher, BLM Montana/Dakotas State
Office, 5001 Southgate Drive, Billings,
MT 59101; telephone: (406) 896–5255;
email: aboucher@blm.gov.
Individuals in the United States who
are deaf, blind, 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.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Federal Land Policy and Management
Act (FLPMA) directs the Secretary of the
Interior (Secretary) to involve the public
in planning and issues related to the
management of lands administered by
the BLM. Section 309 of FLPMA (43
U.S.C. 1739) directs the Secretary to
establish 10- to 15-member citizenbased advisory councils that are
consistent with the Federal Advisory
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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Committee Act (FACA). As required by
FACA, RAC membership must be
balanced and representative of the
various interests concerned with the
management of the public lands. The
rules governing RACs are found at 43
CFR part 1780 subpart 1784 and include
the following three membership
categories:
Category One—Holders of Federal
grazing permits or leases within the area
for which the RAC is organized;
represent interests associated with
transportation or rights-of-way;
represent developed outdoor recreation,
off-highway vehicle users, or
commercial recreation activities;
represent the commercial timber
industry; or represent energy and
mineral development.
Category Two—Representatives of
nationally or regionally recognized
environmental organizations; dispersed
recreational activities; archaeological
and historical interests; or nationally or
regionally recognized wild horse and
burro interest groups.
Category Three—Hold State, county,
or local elected office; are employed by
a State agency responsible for the
management of natural resources, land,
or water; represent Indian Tribes within
or adjacent to the area for which the
RAC is organized; are employed as
academicians in natural resource
management or the natural sciences; or
represent the affected public-at-large.
Individuals may nominate themselves
or others. Nominees must be residents
of the State of Montana. The BLM will
evaluate nominees based on their
education, training, experience, and
knowledge of the geographic area of the
RAC. Nominees should demonstrate a
commitment to collaborative resource
decision-making.
The following must accompany all
nominations:
• A completed RAC application,
which can either be obtained through
the nominee’s BLM office or online at:
https://www.blm.gov/sites/default/files/
docs/2022-05/BLM-Form-1120-19_RACApplication.pdf.
• Letters of reference from
represented interests or organizations;
and
• Any other information that
addresses the nominee’s qualifications.
Simultaneous with this notice, the
BLM Montana/Dakotas office will issue
an online announcement providing
additional information for submitting
nominations.
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(Authority: 43 CFR 1784.4–1)
Kathryn Stevens,
Western Montana BLM District Manager.
[FR Doc. 2024–29443 Filed 12–12–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4331–20–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
[Docket No. BOEM–2023–0046]
Notice of Availability of a Gulf of
Mexico Regional Outer Continental
Shelf Oil and Gas Draft Programmatic
Environmental Impact Statement
Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability; request
for comments.
AGENCY:
Consistent with the
regulations implementing the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA),
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
(BOEM) announces the availability of
the Gulf of Mexico (GOM) Regional
Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) Oil and
Gas Lease Sales: Draft Programmatic
Environmental Impact Statement (Draft
GOM Oil and Gas EIS). The Draft GOM
Oil and Gas EIS analyzes the potential
impacts of a representative oil and gas
lease sale in available OCS areas of the
Western, Central, and Eastern Planning
Areas and the associated potential siteand activity-specific approvals resulting
from an OCS oil and gas lease sale. This
notice of availability (NOA) announces
the release of the Draft GOM Oil and
Gas EIS, start of the public review and
comment period, and dates and times
for public meetings. After the public
comment period, BOEM will address
the comments received and publish the
Final GOM Oil and Gas EIS.
DATES: BOEM will consider comments
received by January 27, 2025. BOEM
will hold three virtual public meetings
for the Draft GOM Oil and Gas EIS.
Dates, times, registration and
additional information for the public
meetings may be found at https://
www.boem.gov/environment/
environmental-assessment/gulf-mexicoregional-ocs-oil-and-gas-programmatic
or by calling 1–800–200–4853.
ADDRESSES: Detailed information can be
found on BOEM’s website at https://
www.boem.gov/environment/
environmental-assessment/gulf-mexicoregional-ocs-oil-and-gas-programmatic.
Written comments can be submitted
through the regulations.gov web portal:
Navigate to www.regulations.gov and
search for Docket No. BOEM–2023–
0046. Select the document in the search
SUMMARY:
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results on which you want to comment,
click on the ‘‘Comment’’ button, and
follow the online instructions for
submitting your comment. A
commenter’s checklist is available on
the comment web page. Enter your
information and comment, then click
‘‘Submit.’’
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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Helen Rucker, BOEM, Gulf of Mexico
Regional Office, Office of Environment,
1201 Elmwood Park Blvd., New
Orleans, Louisiana 70123, (504) 736–
2421, or helen.rucker@boem.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Proposed Action and Alternatives
This EIS is expected to be used to
inform the decision for the first GOM oil
and gas lease sale proposed in the 2024–
2029 National OCS Oil and Gas Leasing
Program. It also is expected to be used
and supplemented as appropriate for
decisions on additional future proposed
GOM lease sales. In addition, this EIS
will be used to support post-lease siteand activity-specific OCS oil- and gasrelated activity analyses and approvals.
In this Draft EIS, BOEM analyzes four
alternatives: a no action alternative and
three action alternatives. Because this
EIS analyzes a representative lease sale,
Alternative A (No Action) is the
cancellation of a single proposed GOM
lease sale.
The first action alternative
(Alternative B) is BOEM’s Proposed
Action and offers all available unleased
acreage in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico OCS,
including the Western and Central
Planning Areas and the portion of the
Eastern Planning Area not subject to
Presidential withdrawal. Alternative B
would allow BOEM to issue offshore
wind energy leases in the 12 months
following the sale by satisfying the
requirement in the Inflation Reduction
Act to offer an aggregate of at least 60
million acres for offshore oil and gas
leasing within a 12-month period prior
to issuing offshore wind energy leases.
Alternative B analyzes lease stipulations
and other mitigation measures for
environmental protection.
The second action alternative
(Alternative C) would allow for a
proposed lease sale excluding targeted
portions of the Central, Western, and
Eastern Planning Areas within the U.S.
Gulf of Mexico OCS. Alternative C
would allow BOEM to issue offshore
wind energy leases in the 12 months
following the sale by satisfying the
requirement in the Inflation Reduction
Act to offer an aggregate of at least 60
million acres for offshore oil and gas
leasing within a 12-month period prior
to issuing offshore wind energy leases.
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Alternative C would exclude several
areas for environmental protection
purposes and to avoid conflicts with
other ocean uses.
The final action alternative
(Alternative D) would allow for a
proposed OCS oil and gas lease sale
excluding more targeted portions than
Alternative C in the Central and
Western Planning Areas within the U.S.
Gulf of Mexico OCS. Alternative D
would exclude more of the OCS for
environmental considerations and to
avoid conflicts with other ocean uses.
However, this Alternative would not on
its own satisfy the aggregate lease
acreage requirements of the Inflation
Reduction Act to issue offshore wind
energy leases. Selection of this
alternative would require at least one
additional OCS oil and gas lease sale
within a 12-month period in order to
satisfy the requirements of the Inflation
Reduction Act.
Purpose of and Need for the Proposed
Action
The purpose of the Proposed Action
(Alternative B) is to facilitate the
potential development of those areas of
the OCS that may contain economically
recoverable oil and gas. Following lease
issuance, BOEM may authorize
development through plan and permit
approvals (subject to additional
environmental review and regulatory
oversight). This purpose is consistent
with BOEM’s mandate to further the
orderly development of OCS oil and gas
resources under the OCS Lands Act.
Each individual proposed oil and gas
lease sale would provide qualified
bidders the opportunity to bid upon and
lease available acreage in the Gulf of
Mexico OCS in order to explore,
develop, and produce oil and natural
gas.
The Proposed Action is needed to
meet the ongoing domestic demand for
oil and gas resources and, per current
law, to help facilitate the development
of offshore wind as a source of
renewable electricity. Oil and gas from
the Gulf of Mexico OCS contributes to
meeting domestic demand. Oil serves as
the feedstock for liquid hydrocarbon
products, including gasoline, aviation
and diesel fuel, and various
petrochemicals. Gas may be used to
support OCS oil and gas production on
site as well as to potentially heat homes,
generate electricity, and as feedstock
necessary for the production of
numerous other goods.
Under the Inflation Reduction Act of
2022 (Pub. L. 117–169, enacted August
16, 2022), Congress directed that the
Secretary of the Interior must hold an
offshore oil and gas lease sale(s) totaling
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at least 60 million acres in the year prior
to issuing any offshore wind energy
leases. The long-term goal of the Biden
Administration is to reduce greenhouse
gas (GHG) emissions to 50 percent of
2005 emissions by 2030, reach net-zero
GHG emissions by 2050, and to limit
global warming to less than 1.5 °Celsius
(https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefingroom/statements-releases/2021/04/22/
fact-sheet-president-biden-sets-2030greenhouse-gas-pollution-reductiontarget-aimed-at-creating-good-payingunion-jobs-and-securing-u-s-leadershipon-clean-energy-technologies/). Offshore
wind energy is a key component of the
Administration’s plans to reduce future
GHG emissions. Therefore, continued
OCS oil and gas lease sale sales are
required to pursue the climate-related
goals of the Biden Administration.
Summary of Potential Impacts
BOEM analyzed potential impacts
from routine OCS oil- and gas-related
activities through impact-producing
factors (IPFs) such as air emissions,
discharges and wastes, bottom
disturbance, noise, coastal land use/
modification, lighting and visual
impacts, offshore habitat modification/
space use, and socioeconomic changes.
Additional IPFs analyzed in this Draft
EIS may occur from accidental events
such as unintentional releases into the
environment, response activities, or
strikes and collisions. BOEM also
included an analysis of cumulative
impacts from past, present, and
reasonably foreseeable future OCS oiland gas-related activities and non-OCS
oil- and gas-related activities as part of
the Draft EIS. Resources analyzed
included air quality; water quality;
coastal communities and habitats;
benthic communities and habitats
(including protected corals); pelagic
communities and habitats; fishes and
invertebrates; birds; marine mammals;
sea turtles; commercial fisheries;
recreational fishing; recreational
resources; land use and coastal
infrastructure; social factors (including
environmental justice); economic
factors; and cultural, historical, and
archaeological resources. This EIS
determined potential impacts to
resources ranging from negligible to
moderate adverse (with most being
negligible or minor) and some
beneficial. Two issues of programmatic
concern were identified and analyzed
separately in this Draft EIS: GHG
emissions and their social costs and
space-use conflicts between BOEM
Program Areas. These issues of
programmatic concern are included in
the environmental consequences
analysis through the air emissions and
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offshore habitat modification/space use
impact-producing factors.
including any required mitigation (e.g.,
through lease stipulations).
Post-Lease Plan/Permit Approvals and
Tiering
If the Department of the Interior
ultimately decides to move forward
with an individual OCS oil and gas
lease sale, neither this EIS nor a
resulting individual lease sale record of
decision (ROD) will authorize any
immediate activities (beyond ancillary
activities under a lease) or approve any
individual applications for plans or
permits. The GOM Oil and Gas EIS will
provide a programmatic environmental
analysis and framework to support
future decision-making on individual
plan and permit submittals.
When plans or permit applications are
submitted to BOEM or the Bureau of
Safety and Environmental Enforcement
(BSEE), the site-specific characteristics
of the project will be evaluated by
preparing additional environmental
analyses that may tier from this EIS or
incorporate it by reference. Based on the
site-specific applications and
evaluations, BOEM or BSEE may then
reach a site-specific determination and
approve, approve with modifications, or
disapprove individual plans or permits.
This EIS may inform future BOEM
decision-making on plan submittals but
does not approve or authorize any
applications or plans. Therefore, neither
this EIS nor a resulting oil and gas lease
sale ROD constitutes a final agency
action authorizing or approving any
individual plan(s) or permit(s).
NEPA Cooperating Agencies
One Tribal government and three
Federal agencies responded to BOEM’s
request for cooperating agencies. The
National Park Service, National Marine
Fisheries Service, and BSEE are
cooperating agencies on the GOM Oil
and Gas EIS.
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Anticipated Authorizations and
Consultations
In conjunction with this EIS, BOEM is
undertaking various consultations and
coordination in accordance with
applicable Federal laws, such as the
Endangered Species Act,
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act,
National Historic Preservation Act
(NHPA), and Coastal Zone Management
Act, as appropriate. BOEM also
conducted government-to-government
Tribal consultations.
Decision-Making Schedule
After the public comment period
ends, BOEM will review and respond to
comments received and will develop the
Final EIS. BOEM will make the Final
EIS available to the public at least 30
days prior to issuance of any ROD. The
ROD will document the final decision
on which alternative (or alternative with
modifications) has been selected. If the
decision is to hold an OCS oil and gas
lease sale, the ROD will identify the area
and terms to be offered in the lease sale,
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Information on Comment Submissions
Federal agencies, Tribal, State, and
local governments, and other interested
parties are requested to comment on the
Draft EIS. For information on how to
submit comments, see the ‘‘Addresses’’
section above.
BOEM does not consider anonymous
comments. Please include your name
and address as part of your comment.
Comments submitted in response to this
notice are a matter of public record. You
should be aware that your entire
comment—including your address,
phone number, email address, and other
personally identifiable information
included in your comment—may be
made publicly available.
You may request that BOEM withhold
your personally identifiable information
from public disclosure. For BOEM to
consider withholding from disclosure
your personally identifying information,
you must identify, in a cover letter, any
information contained in the submittal
of your comments that, if released,
would constitute a clearly unwarranted
invasion of your personal privacy. You
must also briefly describe any possible
harmful consequences from disclosing
your information, such as
embarrassment, injury, or other harm.
Even if BOEM withholds your
information in the context of this NOA,
your submission is subject to the
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). If
your submission is requested under
FOIA, BOEM can only withhold your
information if it determines that one of
the FOIA’s exemptions to disclosure
applies. Such a determination will be
made in accordance with the
Department of the Interior’s FOIA
regulations and applicable law.
Additionally, under Section 304 of
the NHPA, BOEM is required, after
consultation with the Secretary of the
Interior, to withhold the location,
character, or ownership of historic
property if it determines that disclosure
may, among other things, cause a
significant invasion of privacy, risk
harm to the historic property, or impede
the use of a traditional religious site by
practitioners. Tribal entities and other
parties providing information on
historic resources should designate
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information that they wish to be held as
confidential and provide the reasons
why BOEM should do so. Please label
privileged or confidential information as
‘‘Contains Confidential Information,’’
and consider submitting such
information as a separate attachment.
BOEM may consider information that is
not labeled as privileged or confidential
as suitable for public release.
All submissions from organizations or
businesses and from individuals
identifying themselves as
representatives or officials of
organizations or businesses will be
made available for public inspection in
their entirety.
Request for Comment
BOEM requests data, traditional and
Indigenous knowledge, comments,
views, information, analysis, or
suggestions relevant to the analysis of
the Proposed Action from the public;
affected Federal, Tribal, State, and local
governments, agencies, and offices; the
scientific community; industry; or any
other interested party. Specifically,
BOEM requests information on the
following topics:
1. Potential mitigating measures and
the effects these could have on—
a. biological resources, including
birds, coastal communities, benthic
communities, pelagic communities, fish,
invertebrates, essential fish habitat,
marine mammals, and sea turtles;
b. physical resources and conditions,
including air quality, water quality,
coastal habitats, benthic habitats, and
pelagic habitats; and
c. socioeconomic and cultural
resources, including commercial
fishing, recreational fishing,
demographics, employment, economics,
environmental justice, land use and
coastal infrastructure, navigation and
vessel traffic, other uses (such as marine
minerals, military use, and aviation),
and recreation and tourism.
2. The identification of historic
properties within the GOM, the
potential effects on those historic
properties from GOM oil and gas
development, and any information that
supports identification of historic
properties under the NHPA. BOEM also
solicits proposed measures to avoid,
minimize, or mitigate any adverse
effects on historic properties. If any
historic properties are identified, a
potential effects analysis will be
available for public and NHPA
consulting party comment in the Final
EIS.
3. Information on other current or
planned activities in the GOM,
including any mitigating measures, their
possible impacts on the alternatives,
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and the alternatives’ possible impacts
on those activities.
4. Other information relevant to
impacts on the human environment
from potential GOM oil and gas
development alternatives, including any
mitigating measures.
To promote informed decisionmaking, comments should be as specific
as possible and should provide as much
detail as necessary to meaningfully and
fully inform BOEM of the commenter’s
position. Comments should explain why
the issues raised are important for
consideration of the Proposed Action, as
well as economic, employment, and
other impacts affecting the quality of the
human environment.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq. and
40 CFR 1503.1.
James J. Kendall,
Regional Director, New Orleans, Louisiana
Office, Bureau of Ocean Energy Management.
[FR Doc. 2024–29360 Filed 12–12–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4350–98–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
[Docket No. BOEM–2024–0039]
Notice of Availability of Determination
of Competitive Interest in Wind Energy
Area Options C and D in the Gulf of
Mexico
Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
AGENCY:
The Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management (BOEM) announces the
availability of its determination of
competitive interest in the areas
identified in the prior notice, ‘‘Potential
Commercial Leasing for Wind Power
Development on the Gulf of Mexico
Outer Continental Shelf-Request for
Competitive Interest,’’ which was
published in the Federal Register on
July 29, 2024. BOEM published the
request for competitive interest (RFCI)
after receiving an unsolicited request
from Hecate Energy Gulf Wind LLC
expressing interest in acquiring a
commercial wind energy lease for wind
energy area (WEA) options C and D in
the Gulf of Mexico. In response to the
RFCI, BOEM received one expression of
interest from Invenergy GOM Offshore
Wind LLC. Upon review of the
proposals, BOEM has determined that
competitive interest exists in the RFCI
Areas and will move forward with the
next competitive lease sale process in
the Gulf of Mexico.
ADDRESSES: The determination of
competitive interest memorandum is
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Purpose
This public notice documents the
review and analysis of materials
submitted by Invenergy GOM Offshore
Wind LLC (hereinafter, Invenergy)
(Company #15177) expressing interest
in acquiring a commercial wind energy
lease in response to the RFCI published
in the Federal Register on July 29, 2024
at 89 FR 60913. BOEM published the
RFCI in response to an unsolicited
request from Hecate Energy Gulf Wind
LLC (hereafter, Hecate Energy)
(Company #15166) to acquire a
commercial wind energy lease in Gulf of
Mexico WEA options C and D.
Background
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
SUMMARY:
available on BOEM’s website at https://
www.boem.gov/renewable-energy/stateactivities/gulf-mexico-activities.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Karoline DiPerna, BOEM Office of
Leasing and Plans, 1201 Elmwood Park
Boulevard, New Orleans, Louisiana
70123, (504) 736–5722, or
karoline.diperna@boem.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
On February 16, 2024, BOEM received
an unsolicited request from Hecate
Energy expressing interest in acquiring
a wind energy lease for WEA options C
and D. After determining that Hecate
Energy is qualified to hold a wind
energy lease in these areas, BOEM
published an RFCI pursuant to
subsection 8(p)(3) of the Outer
Continental Shelf (OCS) Lands Act (43
U.S.C. 1337(p)(3)) and BOEM’s
implementing regulations at 30 CFR
585.231. Subsection 8(p)(3) of the OCS
Lands Act requires OCS renewable
energy leases, easements, and rights-ofway to be issued ‘‘on a competitive basis
unless the Secretary determines after
public notice of a lease, easement, or
right-of-way that there is no competitive
interest.’’ The RFCI provided public
notice of Hecate Energy’s unsolicited
lease request and invited the submission
of indications of competitive interest in
commercial wind energy leases within
the RFCI areas as well as stakeholder
feedback. The RFCI provided that if
BOEM received one or more indications
of competitive interest from qualified
entities that wish to develop a
commercial wind energy project in the
RFCI areas, BOEM may decide to move
forward with a competitive lease
issuance process following the
procedures set forth in 30 CFR 585.210
through 585.226. Based on those
procedures, if BOEM receives no
competing expressions of interest from
qualified companies, BOEM can decide
to move forward with the lease issuance
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101047
process using the noncompetitive
procedures contained in 30 CFR
585.231.
RFCI Response
BOEM received 18 comments during
the RFCI comment period, including
one expression of interest from
Invenergy. Invenergy is qualified
legally, financially, and technically for
this specific submission pursuant to 30
CFR 585.107 and 585.108. Many of the
comments addressed concerns about the
suitability of the RFCI areas for leasing.
To the extent they are relevant, BOEM
will take all the comments it received
during the RFCI comment period into
consideration as it moves forward with
the competitive leasing process.
Findings
BOEM has deemed both Hecate
Energy and Invenergy to be legally,
technically, and financially qualified to
hold an OCS renewable energy lease in
the Gulf of Mexico. Their submittals
included all the required information
outlined in the RFCI and 30 CFR
585.231.
Hecate Energy’s proposed project
would consist of up to 133 fixed-bottom
wind turbine generators (WTGs), each
with a capacity of 15–23 megawatts
(MW), with an overall maximum
capacity of approximately 2,000 MW.
Each turbine would be deployed on
fixed monopile or jacket foundation
types. Hecate Energy narrowed its
selections to three points of
interconnection within Texas and
Louisiana and continues to examine 12
potential landfall locations with paths
to three designated substations. Export
cables would run separately from each
of the two lease areas, or the lease areas
would be joined offshore with one
substation and one central export cable.
Hecate Energy’s full application can be
found online at https://www.boem.gov/
renewable-energy/state-activities/gulfmexico-activities.
Invenergy’s proposed project would
consist of up to 140 competitively
selected and commercially available
turbines, with expected capacities of
more than 15 MW, for a total project
capacity of up to 2,500 MW. WTG units
would be connected via inter-array
cables to 1–4 offshore substations,
which would connect to an offshore
export cable that would carry the power
to shore. Structures would be designed
to international standards, such as those
from the International Electrotechnical
Commission, to ensure they can
maintain structural reliability in high
load cases. Invenergy’s full expression
of interest can be found online at
https://www.boem.gov/renewable-
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 240 (Friday, December 13, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 101044-101047]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-29360]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
[Docket No. BOEM-2023-0046]
Notice of Availability of a Gulf of Mexico Regional Outer
Continental Shelf Oil and Gas Draft Programmatic Environmental Impact
Statement
AGENCY: Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability; request for comments.
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SUMMARY: Consistent with the regulations implementing the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
(BOEM) announces the availability of the Gulf of Mexico (GOM) Regional
Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) Oil and Gas Lease Sales: Draft
Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement (Draft GOM Oil and Gas
EIS). The Draft GOM Oil and Gas EIS analyzes the potential impacts of a
representative oil and gas lease sale in available OCS areas of the
Western, Central, and Eastern Planning Areas and the associated
potential site- and activity-specific approvals resulting from an OCS
oil and gas lease sale. This notice of availability (NOA) announces the
release of the Draft GOM Oil and Gas EIS, start of the public review
and comment period, and dates and times for public meetings. After the
public comment period, BOEM will address the comments received and
publish the Final GOM Oil and Gas EIS.
DATES: BOEM will consider comments received by January 27, 2025. BOEM
will hold three virtual public meetings for the Draft GOM Oil and Gas
EIS.
Dates, times, registration and additional information for the
public meetings may be found at https://www.boem.gov/environment/environmental-assessment/gulf-mexico-regional-ocs-oil-and-gas-programmatic or by calling 1-800-200-4853.
ADDRESSES: Detailed information can be found on BOEM's website at
https://www.boem.gov/environment/environmental-assessment/gulf-mexico-regional-ocs-oil-and-gas-programmatic.
Written comments can be submitted through the regulations.gov web
portal: Navigate to www.regulations.gov and search for Docket No. BOEM-
2023-0046. Select the document in the search
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results on which you want to comment, click on the ``Comment'' button,
and follow the online instructions for submitting your comment. A
commenter's checklist is available on the comment web page. Enter your
information and comment, then click ``Submit.''
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Helen Rucker, BOEM, Gulf of Mexico
Regional Office, Office of Environment, 1201 Elmwood Park Blvd., New
Orleans, Louisiana 70123, (504) 736-2421, or [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Proposed Action and Alternatives
This EIS is expected to be used to inform the decision for the
first GOM oil and gas lease sale proposed in the 2024-2029 National OCS
Oil and Gas Leasing Program. It also is expected to be used and
supplemented as appropriate for decisions on additional future proposed
GOM lease sales. In addition, this EIS will be used to support post-
lease site- and activity-specific OCS oil- and gas-related activity
analyses and approvals.
In this Draft EIS, BOEM analyzes four alternatives: a no action
alternative and three action alternatives. Because this EIS analyzes a
representative lease sale, Alternative A (No Action) is the
cancellation of a single proposed GOM lease sale.
The first action alternative (Alternative B) is BOEM's Proposed
Action and offers all available unleased acreage in the U.S. Gulf of
Mexico OCS, including the Western and Central Planning Areas and the
portion of the Eastern Planning Area not subject to Presidential
withdrawal. Alternative B would allow BOEM to issue offshore wind
energy leases in the 12 months following the sale by satisfying the
requirement in the Inflation Reduction Act to offer an aggregate of at
least 60 million acres for offshore oil and gas leasing within a 12-
month period prior to issuing offshore wind energy leases. Alternative
B analyzes lease stipulations and other mitigation measures for
environmental protection.
The second action alternative (Alternative C) would allow for a
proposed lease sale excluding targeted portions of the Central,
Western, and Eastern Planning Areas within the U.S. Gulf of Mexico OCS.
Alternative C would allow BOEM to issue offshore wind energy leases in
the 12 months following the sale by satisfying the requirement in the
Inflation Reduction Act to offer an aggregate of at least 60 million
acres for offshore oil and gas leasing within a 12-month period prior
to issuing offshore wind energy leases. Alternative C would exclude
several areas for environmental protection purposes and to avoid
conflicts with other ocean uses.
The final action alternative (Alternative D) would allow for a
proposed OCS oil and gas lease sale excluding more targeted portions
than Alternative C in the Central and Western Planning Areas within the
U.S. Gulf of Mexico OCS. Alternative D would exclude more of the OCS
for environmental considerations and to avoid conflicts with other
ocean uses. However, this Alternative would not on its own satisfy the
aggregate lease acreage requirements of the Inflation Reduction Act to
issue offshore wind energy leases. Selection of this alternative would
require at least one additional OCS oil and gas lease sale within a 12-
month period in order to satisfy the requirements of the Inflation
Reduction Act.
Purpose of and Need for the Proposed Action
The purpose of the Proposed Action (Alternative B) is to facilitate
the potential development of those areas of the OCS that may contain
economically recoverable oil and gas. Following lease issuance, BOEM
may authorize development through plan and permit approvals (subject to
additional environmental review and regulatory oversight). This purpose
is consistent with BOEM's mandate to further the orderly development of
OCS oil and gas resources under the OCS Lands Act. Each individual
proposed oil and gas lease sale would provide qualified bidders the
opportunity to bid upon and lease available acreage in the Gulf of
Mexico OCS in order to explore, develop, and produce oil and natural
gas.
The Proposed Action is needed to meet the ongoing domestic demand
for oil and gas resources and, per current law, to help facilitate the
development of offshore wind as a source of renewable electricity. Oil
and gas from the Gulf of Mexico OCS contributes to meeting domestic
demand. Oil serves as the feedstock for liquid hydrocarbon products,
including gasoline, aviation and diesel fuel, and various
petrochemicals. Gas may be used to support OCS oil and gas production
on site as well as to potentially heat homes, generate electricity, and
as feedstock necessary for the production of numerous other goods.
Under the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 (Pub. L. 117-169, enacted
August 16, 2022), Congress directed that the Secretary of the Interior
must hold an offshore oil and gas lease sale(s) totaling at least 60
million acres in the year prior to issuing any offshore wind energy
leases. The long-term goal of the Biden Administration is to reduce
greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions to 50 percent of 2005 emissions by 2030,
reach net-zero GHG emissions by 2050, and to limit global warming to
less than 1.5 [deg]Celsius (https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2021/04/22/fact-sheet-president-biden-sets-2030-greenhouse-gas-pollution-reduction-target-aimed-at-creating-good-paying-union-jobs-and-securing-u-s-leadership-on-clean-energy-technologies/). Offshore wind energy is a key component of the
Administration's plans to reduce future GHG emissions. Therefore,
continued OCS oil and gas lease sale sales are required to pursue the
climate-related goals of the Biden Administration.
Summary of Potential Impacts
BOEM analyzed potential impacts from routine OCS oil- and gas-
related activities through impact-producing factors (IPFs) such as air
emissions, discharges and wastes, bottom disturbance, noise, coastal
land use/modification, lighting and visual impacts, offshore habitat
modification/space use, and socioeconomic changes. Additional IPFs
analyzed in this Draft EIS may occur from accidental events such as
unintentional releases into the environment, response activities, or
strikes and collisions. BOEM also included an analysis of cumulative
impacts from past, present, and reasonably foreseeable future OCS oil-
and gas-related activities and non-OCS oil- and gas-related activities
as part of the Draft EIS. Resources analyzed included air quality;
water quality; coastal communities and habitats; benthic communities
and habitats (including protected corals); pelagic communities and
habitats; fishes and invertebrates; birds; marine mammals; sea turtles;
commercial fisheries; recreational fishing; recreational resources;
land use and coastal infrastructure; social factors (including
environmental justice); economic factors; and cultural, historical, and
archaeological resources. This EIS determined potential impacts to
resources ranging from negligible to moderate adverse (with most being
negligible or minor) and some beneficial. Two issues of programmatic
concern were identified and analyzed separately in this Draft EIS: GHG
emissions and their social costs and space-use conflicts between BOEM
Program Areas. These issues of programmatic concern are included in the
environmental consequences analysis through the air emissions and
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offshore habitat modification/space use impact-producing factors.
Post-Lease Plan/Permit Approvals and Tiering
If the Department of the Interior ultimately decides to move
forward with an individual OCS oil and gas lease sale, neither this EIS
nor a resulting individual lease sale record of decision (ROD) will
authorize any immediate activities (beyond ancillary activities under a
lease) or approve any individual applications for plans or permits. The
GOM Oil and Gas EIS will provide a programmatic environmental analysis
and framework to support future decision-making on individual plan and
permit submittals.
When plans or permit applications are submitted to BOEM or the
Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE), the site-
specific characteristics of the project will be evaluated by preparing
additional environmental analyses that may tier from this EIS or
incorporate it by reference. Based on the site-specific applications
and evaluations, BOEM or BSEE may then reach a site-specific
determination and approve, approve with modifications, or disapprove
individual plans or permits. This EIS may inform future BOEM decision-
making on plan submittals but does not approve or authorize any
applications or plans. Therefore, neither this EIS nor a resulting oil
and gas lease sale ROD constitutes a final agency action authorizing or
approving any individual plan(s) or permit(s).
Anticipated Authorizations and Consultations
In conjunction with this EIS, BOEM is undertaking various
consultations and coordination in accordance with applicable Federal
laws, such as the Endangered Species Act, Magnuson[hyphen]Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management Act, National Historic Preservation
Act (NHPA), and Coastal Zone Management Act, as appropriate. BOEM also
conducted government-to-government Tribal consultations.
Decision-Making Schedule
After the public comment period ends, BOEM will review and respond
to comments received and will develop the Final EIS. BOEM will make the
Final EIS available to the public at least 30 days prior to issuance of
any ROD. The ROD will document the final decision on which alternative
(or alternative with modifications) has been selected. If the decision
is to hold an OCS oil and gas lease sale, the ROD will identify the
area and terms to be offered in the lease sale, including any required
mitigation (e.g., through lease stipulations).
NEPA Cooperating Agencies
One Tribal government and three Federal agencies responded to
BOEM's request for cooperating agencies. The National Park Service,
National Marine Fisheries Service, and BSEE are cooperating agencies on
the GOM Oil and Gas EIS.
Information on Comment Submissions
Federal agencies, Tribal, State, and local governments, and other
interested parties are requested to comment on the Draft EIS. For
information on how to submit comments, see the ``Addresses'' section
above.
BOEM does not consider anonymous comments. Please include your name
and address as part of your comment. Comments submitted in response to
this notice are a matter of public record. You should be aware that
your entire comment--including your address, phone number, email
address, and other personally identifiable information included in your
comment--may be made publicly available.
You may request that BOEM withhold your personally identifiable
information from public disclosure. For BOEM to consider withholding
from disclosure your personally identifying information, you must
identify, in a cover letter, any information contained in the submittal
of your comments that, if released, would constitute a clearly
unwarranted invasion of your personal privacy. You must also briefly
describe any possible harmful consequences from disclosing your
information, such as embarrassment, injury, or other harm.
Even if BOEM withholds your information in the context of this NOA,
your submission is subject to the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). If
your submission is requested under FOIA, BOEM can only withhold your
information if it determines that one of the FOIA's exemptions to
disclosure applies. Such a determination will be made in accordance
with the Department of the Interior's FOIA regulations and applicable
law.
Additionally, under Section 304 of the NHPA, BOEM is required,
after consultation with the Secretary of the Interior, to withhold the
location, character, or ownership of historic property if it determines
that disclosure may, among other things, cause a significant invasion
of privacy, risk harm to the historic property, or impede the use of a
traditional religious site by practitioners. Tribal entities and other
parties providing information on historic resources should designate
information that they wish to be held as confidential and provide the
reasons why BOEM should do so. Please label privileged or confidential
information as ``Contains Confidential Information,'' and consider
submitting such information as a separate attachment. BOEM may consider
information that is not labeled as privileged or confidential as
suitable for public release.
All submissions from organizations or businesses and from
individuals identifying themselves as representatives or officials of
organizations or businesses will be made available for public
inspection in their entirety.
Request for Comment
BOEM requests data, traditional and Indigenous knowledge, comments,
views, information, analysis, or suggestions relevant to the analysis
of the Proposed Action from the public; affected Federal, Tribal,
State, and local governments, agencies, and offices; the scientific
community; industry; or any other interested party. Specifically, BOEM
requests information on the following topics:
1. Potential mitigating measures and the effects these could have
on--
a. biological resources, including birds, coastal communities,
benthic communities, pelagic communities, fish, invertebrates,
essential fish habitat, marine mammals, and sea turtles;
b. physical resources and conditions, including air quality, water
quality, coastal habitats, benthic habitats, and pelagic habitats; and
c. socioeconomic and cultural resources, including commercial
fishing, recreational fishing, demographics, employment, economics,
environmental justice, land use and coastal infrastructure, navigation
and vessel traffic, other uses (such as marine minerals, military use,
and aviation), and recreation and tourism.
2. The identification of historic properties within the GOM, the
potential effects on those historic properties from GOM oil and gas
development, and any information that supports identification of
historic properties under the NHPA. BOEM also solicits proposed
measures to avoid, minimize, or mitigate any adverse effects on
historic properties. If any historic properties are identified, a
potential effects analysis will be available for public and NHPA
consulting party comment in the Final EIS.
3. Information on other current or planned activities in the GOM,
including any mitigating measures, their possible impacts on the
alternatives,
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and the alternatives' possible impacts on those activities.
4. Other information relevant to impacts on the human environment
from potential GOM oil and gas development alternatives, including any
mitigating measures.
To promote informed decision-making, comments should be as specific
as possible and should provide as much detail as necessary to
meaningfully and fully inform BOEM of the commenter's position.
Comments should explain why the issues raised are important for
consideration of the Proposed Action, as well as economic, employment,
and other impacts affecting the quality of the human environment.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq. and 40 CFR 1503.1.
James J. Kendall,
Regional Director, New Orleans, Louisiana Office, Bureau of Ocean
Energy Management.
[FR Doc. 2024-29360 Filed 12-12-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4350-98-P