[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 103 (Friday, May 28, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 29996-29997]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-13111]


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COUNCIL ON ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY


Review of MMS NEPA Policies, Practices, and Procedures for OCS 
Oil and Gas Exploration and Development

AGENCY: Council on Environmental Quality.

ACTION: Notice of Review and Request for Public Comment.

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SUMMARY: On May 17, 2010, the Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) 
informed the Department of the Interior (DOI) that CEQ was conducting a 
30 day review National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) policies, 
practices, and procedures for the Minerals Management Service (MMS) 
decisions for Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) oil and gas exploration and 
development.
    This review of MMS NEPA policies, practices and procedures is being 
conducted as a result of the oil spill from the Deepwater Horizon well 
and drilling rig in the Gulf of Mexico. The purpose of this review is 
to ascertain how MMS applies NEPA in its management of Outer 
Continental Shelf oil and gas exploration and development and make 
recommendations for revisions. The scope of the review is intended to 
be holistic, i.e. from leasing decisions to drilling and production.
    In line with CEQ's effort to engage the public in the NEPA process 
and the President's Open Government Initiative, this notice is also a 
solicitation for public comment on the review process undertaken by CEQ 
as well as on current MMS NEPA policies, practices, and procedures 
regarding Outer Continental Shelf oil and gas exploration and 
development. Public participation in this review effort will benefit 
this specific review process, the MMS NEPA implementation, CEQ's 
overall effectiveness in overseeing NEPA, and the environmental and 
social consequences of government activity.

DATES: Comments should be submitted as soon as possible on the CEQ 
review, recognizing that the review is to be completed June 17, 2010.

ADDRESSES: All relevant information related to MMS NEPA procedures and 
the review process is available at http://www.whitehouse.gov/ceq/initiatives/nepa. Comments on the procedures and review should be 
submitted electronically at the above URL or to [email protected] 
or in writing to Associate Director for NEPA Oversight, Council on 
Environmental Quality, 722 Jackson Place NW., Washington, DC 20503.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Horst Greczmiel, Associate Director 
for NEPA Oversight, Council on Environmental Quality, at (202) 395-
5750.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

NEPA and Offshore Drilling

    Enacted in 1970, NEPA mandates that Federal agencies consider the 
environmental impacts of their proposed actions during all stages of 
decision making, from planning to implementation. NEPA is a fundamental 
decision-making tool used to harmonize our economic, environmental, and 
social aspirations and is a cornerstone of our Nation's efforts to 
protect the environment. NEPA applies to every stage of Federal 
decision making related to offshore oil and gas exploration and 
development. When an agency proposes an action, it must determine if 
the action has the potential to affect the quality of the human 
environment. Agencies then apply one of three levels of NEPA analysis. 
They may: Prepare an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) when the 
agency projects the proposed action has the potential for significant 
environmental impacts; apply a Categorical Exclusion (CE) when the 
agency has previously established a CE based on its determination that 
proposed action falls within the categories of actions described in the 
CE which the agency has found do not typically result in individually 
or cumulatively significant environmental effects or impacts; or the 
agency prepares an Environmental Assessment (EA) to determine whether 
it can make a Finding of No Significant Impact or proceed to prepare an 
EIS.
    Under the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act, MMS has implemented a 
process for oil and gas development consisting of the following stages: 
(1) Preparing a nationwide 5-year oil and gas development program, (2) 
planning for and holding a specific lease sale, (3) approving a 
company's exploration plan, and (4) approving a company's development 
and production plan. MMS is required to apply NEPA during each of these 
stages, beginning with the initial planning of outer continental shelf 
leasing and ending with a decision on a specific well. The sequence of 
NEPA analyses is informed by the CEQ Regulations Implementing the 
Procedural Requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act, 40 
CFR parts 1500-1508 available at http://ceq.hss.doe.gov/ceq_regulations/regulations.html. Specifically, 40 CFR 1502.20, discusses 
``tiering,'' a strategy used to avoid repetitive discussions of

[[Page 29997]]

the same issues, and to prevent unnecessary duplication of work by 
reviewers, as the NEPA reviews progress from a broad program to a site 
specific action. In the case of the Gulf of Mexico leases, MMS prepared 
several tiered NEPA analyses (see NEPA environmental review documents 
available at http://www.mms.gov/5-year/2007-2012BackgroundDocs.htm and 
http://www.gomr.mms.gov/homepg/regulate/environ/nepa/nepaprocess.html).
    Environmental Impact Statements (EIS), the most intensive level of 
analysis, were prepared at two decision points. First, in April 2007, 
MMS prepared a broad ``programmatic'' EIS on the Outer Continental 
Shelf Oil and Gas Leasing Program for 2007-2012. Also, in April 2007, 
MMS prepared an EIS for the Gulf of Mexico OCS Oil and Gas Lease Sales 
in the Western and Central Planning Areas, the ``multi-sale'' EIS.
    In October 2007, MMS completed another NEPA analysis, an 
Environmental Assessment (EA), under the multi-sale EIS, for Central 
Gulf of Mexico Lease Sale 206. This is the sale in which the lease was 
issued for the location that includes the Deepwater Horizon well. MMS 
previously approved BP's development operations based on a programmatic 
EA that MMS prepared in December 2002.
    Finally, for the Deepwater Horizon well, MMS applied its existing 
Categorical Exclusion Review (CER) process prior to the decision to 
approve the Exploration Plan that included the drilling of the 
Deepwater Horizon well. The Categorical Exclusion used by MMS for 
Deepwater Horizon was established more than 20 years ago. Under section 
11 of the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act, 43 U.S.C. section 1340, 
MMS had 30 days to complete its environmental review and act on the 
application to permit drilling. The Administration, in its supplemental 
budget request sent to Congress on May 12, 2010, seeks to extend that 
30-day timeline; however, this review will consider the existing 
statutory requirements applicable to MMS decisions for OCS oil and gas 
exploration and development.

The Role of CEQ in the NEPA Process

    NEPA charges the Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) with the 
authority and responsibility to guide Federal agencies on their 
implementation of the Act. In 1978, CEQ issued regulations implementing 
the procedural provisions of NEPA. These regulations apply to all 
Federal agencies and establish the basic framework for all NEPA 
analyses (available at http://ceq.hss.doe.gov/ceq_regulations/regulations.html). The regulations require Federal agencies to 
establish their own NEPA implementing procedures (see 40 CFR 1507.3), 
and to ensure that they have the capacity, in terms of personnel and 
other resources, to comply with NEPA (see 40 CFR 1507.2).
    CEQ periodically issues guidance and other documents, such as 
guides and handbooks for NEPA. CEQ also convenes meetings with Federal 
NEPA contacts to present CEQ's interpretation of NEPA requirements and 
focus on how agencies can improve their NEPA analyses and documents. 
Through case law, the Federal courts and the Supreme Court have 
established that the agencies can rely on CEQ's interpretation of, and 
guidance on, NEPA.
    Agencies establish their own NEPA implementing procedures which 
tailor the CEQ requirements to a specific agency's authorities and 
decisionmaking processes. MMS must comply with the Department of the 
Interior NEPA regulations (available at http://www.doi.gov/oepc/nepafr.html) and the MMS NEPA implementing procedures found in the 
Department of the Interior's Director's Manual 516 at Chapter 15 
(available at http://elips.doi.gov/app_DM/act_getfiles.cfm?relnum=3625). CEQ provides assistance when agency-specific 
procedures, such as these DOI and MMS NEPA implementing procedures, are 
developed. An agency's NEPA procedures are not official until CEQ 
reviews the proposed procedures and determines that they are in 
conformity with NEPA and the CEQ regulations. Any subsequent revisions 
or changes to the agency procedures are subject to the same oversight 
process with CEQ. Periodically, CEQ also reviews the agency's NEPA 
implementing regulations and procedures. CEQ does not review every 
application of a Categorical Exclusion, every agency project, or the 
NEPA review for every agency project. The CEQ review will review the 
NEPA analyses conducted for the Deepwater Horizon well as well as the 
overall NEPA process MMS uses for OCS oil and gas exploration and 
development.

Discussion of the Request for Public Comment

    NEPA itself emphasizes public involvement in government actions 
affecting the environment by requiring that the environmental impacts 
or effects associated with proposed actions be assessed and publicly 
disclosed. NEPA is steeped in the principle that public accountability 
and oversight makes government more effective. Public access to and 
participation in specific agency NEPA actions illuminates areas where 
agency reviewers may have overlooked or misinterpreted portions of a 
submitted EIS or EA.
    Public participation in this review process allows CEQ to similarly 
tap into the collective wisdom of industry, academia, state, local, and 
tribal governments, and the rest of the private sector. CEQ is 
soliciting comments, questions, and other input about a number of 
specific issues focused on the NEPA review of OCS oil and gas 
exploration and development:
    1. What are substantive issues and at what level should they be 
analyzed in each of the tiered NEPA submissions, from National 5-Year 
Oil and Gas Program to an individual well permit?
    2. Does this sequence of permitting stages (and associate NEPA 
submissions) allow for comprehensive evaluation of all relevant issues?
    3. What have been past industry and agency experiences with the use 
of categorical exclusions for OCS oil and gas activities?
    4. Has the use of the CER process been an effective tool for 
reducing unnecessary paperwork without compromising the robustness of 
the NEPA analysis for OCS oil and gas activities?
    5. To what degree has public engagement been a part of MMS NEPA 
practice, particularly as it deals with categorical exclusions?
    6. What resources are available in Federal, tribal, state, and 
local government agencies with a stake in OCS oil and gas exploration 
and development to participate in NEPA reviews?
    In addition to input on the above issues, general comments and 
questions are also welcome. Information relevant to this MMS NEPA 
policy review can be found on the CEQ Web site at http://www.whitehouse.gov/ceq/initiatives/nepa.
    Public comments are requested as soon as possible in light of the 
June 17, 2010, deadline for the CEQ review.

    Dated: May 25, 2010.
Nancy Sutley,
Chair, Council on Environmental Quality.
[FR Doc. 2010-13111 Filed 5-27-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3125-W0-P