[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 144 (Friday, July 30, 2021)]
[Notices]
[Pages 41083-41086]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-16282]


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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR

Bureau of Ocean Energy Management

[Docket No. BOEM-2021-0050]


Notice of Intent To Prepare an Environmental Impact Statement for 
the Proposed Kitty Hawk Offshore Wind Project Offshore North Carolina

AGENCY: Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM), Interior.

ACTION: Notice of intent (NOI) to prepare an environmental impact 
statement (EIS); request for comments.

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SUMMARY: Consistent with the regulations implementing the National 
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), BOEM announces its intent to prepare 
an EIS for the review of a construction and operations plan (COP) 
submitted by Kitty Hawk, LLC (Kitty Hawk) for its Kitty Hawk Offshore 
Wind Project. The COP proposes the development, construction, and 
operation of a wind energy facility offshore North Carolina with export 
cables connecting to the onshore electric grid in Virginia Beach, 
Virginia. This NOI announces the EIS scoping process for the Kitty Hawk 
COP. Additionally, this NOI seeks public comment and input under 
section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA) and its 
implementing regulations. Detailed information about the proposed wind 
energy facility, including the COP, can be found on BOEM's website at: 
https://www.boem.gov/Kitty-Hawk.

DATES: Comments are due to BOEM no later than August 30, 2021.
    BOEM will hold virtual public scoping meetings for the Kitty Hawk 
EIS at the following dates and times (eastern daylight time):
     Tuesday, August 10, 2021, 5:30 p.m.;
     Thursday, August 12, 2021, 1:00 p.m.; and
     Tuesday August 17, 2021, 5:30 p.m.

ADDRESSES: Comments can be submitted in any of the following ways:
     Delivered by mail or delivery service, enclosed in an 
envelope labeled ``KITTY HAWK COP EIS,'' and addressed to Program 
Manager, Office of Renewable Energy, Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, 
45600 Woodland Road, Sterling, Virginia 20166; or
     Through the regulations.gov web portal: Navigate to 
https://www.regulations.gov and search for Docket No. BOEM-2021-0050. 
Click on the ``Comment'' button. Enter your information and comment, 
then click ``Submit Comment.''

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Michelle Morin, BOEM Office of 
Renewable Energy Programs, 45600 Woodland Road, Sterling, Virginia 
20166, (703) 787-1722 or [email protected].

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Purpose of and Need for the Proposed Action

    In Executive Order 14008, President Biden stated that it is the 
policy of the United States:

    To organize and deploy the full capacity of its agencies to 
combat the climate crisis to implement a Government-wide approach 
that reduces climate pollution in every sector of the economy; 
increases resilience to the impacts of climate change; protects 
public health; conserves our lands, waters, and biodiversity; 
delivers environmental justice; and spurs well-paying union jobs and 
economic growth, especially through innovation, commercialization, 
and deployment of clean energy technologies and infrastructure.

    Through a competitive leasing process under 30 CFR 585.211, BOEM 
awarded Avangrid Renewables, LLC Commercial Lease OCS-A 0508 covering 
an area offshore North Carolina (the Lease Area) which was subsequently 
assigned to

[[Page 41084]]

Kitty Hawk in 2021. Kitty Hawk has the exclusive right to submit a COP 
for activities within the Lease Area, and it has submitted a COP to 
BOEM proposing the construction and installation, operations and 
maintenance, and conceptual decommissioning of an offshore wind energy 
facility in the western portion of the Lease Area (the Project).
    The goal of Kitty Hawk is to develop a commercial-scale, offshore 
wind energy facility in the Lease Area, with up to 69 total wind 
turbine generators, 1 offshore substation (also called ``electrical 
service platform''), inter-array cables, 1 onshore substation, and up 
to 2 transmission cables making landfall in Virginia Beach, Virginia, 
and connecting to the Pennsylvania-New Jersey-Maryland (PJM) 
Interconnection energy grid. Kitty Hawk is actively seeking one or more 
power purchase agreement awards for this project. The project is 
intended to substantially contribute to the region's electrical 
reliability and help Virginia achieve its renewable energy goals as 
stated in the Virginia Clean Economy Act.
    Based on the goals of the applicant and BOEM's authority, the 
purpose of BOEM's action is to respond to Kitty Hawk's COP proposal and 
determine whether to approve, approve with modifications, or disapprove 
Kitty Hawk's COP to construct and install, operate and maintain, and 
decommission a commercial-scale, offshore wind energy facility within 
the Lease Area (the Proposed Action). BOEM's action is needed to 
further the United States policy to make Outer Continental Shelf energy 
resources available for expeditious and orderly development, subject to 
environmental safeguards (43 U.S.C. 1332(3)), including consideration 
of natural resources, safety of navigation, and other ocean uses.
    In addition, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's 
(NOAA) National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) anticipates receipt of 
one or more requests for authorization to take marine mammals 
incidental to activities related to the Project under the Marine Mammal 
Protection Act (MMPA). NMFS's issuance of an MMPA incidental take 
authorization is a major Federal action, and, in relation to BOEM's 
action, is considered a connected action (40 CFR 1501.9(e)(1)). The 
purpose of the NMFS action--which is a direct outcome of Kitty Hawk's 
request for authorization to take marine mammals incidental to 
specified activities associated with the Project (e.g., pile driving)--
is to evaluate the applicant's request pursuant to specific 
requirements of the MMPA and its implementing regulations administered 
by NMFS, considering impacts of the applicant's activities on relevant 
resources, and if appropriate, issue the permit or authorization. NMFS 
needs to render a decision regarding the request for authorization due 
to NMFS's responsibilities under the MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1371(a)(5)(D)) and 
its implementing regulations. If NMFS makes the findings necessary to 
issue the requested authorization, NMFS intends to adopt BOEM's EIS to 
support that decision and fulfill its NEPA requirements.
    The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Wilmington and Norfolk Districts 
(USACE) anticipate a permit action to be undertaken through authority 
delegated to the District Engineer by 33 CFR 325.8, under section 10 of 
the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899 (RHA) (33 U.S.C. 403) and section 
404 of the Clean Water Act (CWA) (33 U.S.C. 1344). The USACE considers 
issuance of a permit under these two delegated authorities a major 
Federal action connected to BOEM's Proposed Action (40 CFR 
1501.9(e)(1)). The applicant's stated purpose and need for the project, 
as indicated above, is to provide a commercially viable, offshore wind 
energy project within the Lease Area to help States achieve their 
renewable energy goals.
    The basic project purpose, as determined by USACE for section 
404(b)(1) guidelines evaluation, is offshore wind energy generation. 
The overall project purpose for section 404(b)(1) guidelines 
evaluation, as determined by USACE, is the construction and operation 
of a commercial-scale, offshore wind energy project for renewable 
energy generation and distribution to the PJM Interconnection energy 
grid. USACE intends to adopt BOEM's EIS to support its decision on any 
permits requested under section 10 of the RHA or section 404 of the 
CWA.

Preliminary Proposed Action and Alternatives

    The Proposed Action is the construction and operation of a wind 
energy facility on the Lease Area as described in the COP submitted by 
Kitty Hawk. In its COP, Kitty Hawk is proposing the construction and 
operation of up to 69 wind turbine generators, 1 offshore substation, 
inter-array cables, 1 onshore substation, and up to 2 export cables 
making landfall on Sandbridge Beach in the City of Virginia Beach, 
Virginia, and connecting to the onshore electric grid. Kitty Hawk has 
proposed using foundations that are a combination of monopiles, piled 
jackets, and up to three suction caisson jackets. The wind turbine 
generators, offshore substations, array cables, and substation 
interconnector cables would be located on the OCS approximately 23.75 
nautical miles (27 statute miles) (44 kilometers) east of Corolla, 
North Carolina. The offshore export cables would be buried below the 
seabed of both the OCS and Virginia state waters.
    If any reasonable alternatives are identified during the scoping 
period, BOEM will evaluate those alternatives in the draft EIS, which 
will also include a no action alternative. Under the no action 
alternative, BOEM would disapprove the COP, and Kitty Hawk's wind 
energy facility described in the COP would not be built.
    Once BOEM completes the EIS and associated consultations, BOEM will 
decide whether to approve, approve with modification, or disapprove the 
Kitty Hawk COP. If BOEM approves the COP and the Project is 
constructed, the lessee must submit a plan to decommission the 
facilities before the end of the lease term.

Summary of Potential Impacts

    The draft EIS will identify and describe the potential effects of 
the Proposed Action on the human environment that are reasonably 
foreseeable and have a reasonably close causal relationship to the 
Proposed Action. This includes effects that occur at the same time and 
place as the Proposed Action or alternatives and effects that are later 
in time or occur in a different place. Potential impacts include, but 
are not limited to, impacts (whether beneficial or adverse) on air 
quality, water quality, bats, benthic habitat, essential fish habitat, 
invertebrates, finfish, birds, marine mammals, terrestrial and coastal 
habitats and fauna, sea turtles, wetlands and other waters of the 
United States, commercial fisheries and for-hire recreational fishing, 
cultural resources, demographics, employment, economics, environmental 
justice, land use and coastal infrastructure, navigation and vessel 
traffic, other marine uses, recreation and tourism, and visual 
resources. These potential impacts will be analyzed in the draft EIS 
and final EIS.
    Based on a preliminary evaluation of these resources, BOEM expects 
potential impacts on sea turtles and marine mammals from underwater 
noise caused by construction and from collision risks with Project-
related vessel traffic. Structures installed by the Project could 
permanently change benthic habitat and other fish habitat. Commercial 
fisheries

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and for-hire recreational fishing could be impacted. Project structures 
above the water could affect the visual character defining historic 
properties and recreational and tourism areas. Project structures also 
could pose an allision and height hazard to vessels passing close by, 
and vessels could in turn pose a hazard to the structures. 
Additionally, the Project could cause use conflicts with mineral 
extraction, military activities, air traffic, land-based radar 
services, cables and pipelines, and scientific surveys. Beneficial 
impacts are also expected by facilitating achievement of State 
renewable energy goals (e.g., Virginia's goal of developing 5.2 
gigawatts of offshore wind energy by 2034; North Carolina's goal of 
developing 2.8 gigawatts of offshore wind energy off its coast by 
2030), increasing job opportunities, improving air quality, and 
reducing carbon emissions. The EIS will analyze measures that would 
avoid, minimize, or mitigate adverse environmental effects.

Anticipated Permits and Authorizations

    In addition to the requested COP approval, various other Federal, 
State, and local authorizations will be required for the Kitty Hawk 
Project. Applicable Federal laws include, but are not limited to, the 
Endangered Species Act, Magnuson[hyphen]Stevens Fishery Conservation 
and Management Act, NEPA, MMPA, RHA, CWA, and the Coastal Zone 
Management Act. BOEM will also conduct government-to-government 
consultations with federally recognized tribes (Tribes). For a full 
listing of regulatory requirements applicable to the Kitty Hawk 
Project, please see the COP, volume I available at https://www.boem.gov/Kitty-Hawk.
    BOEM has chosen to use the NEPA substitution process to fulfill its 
obligations under NHPA. While BOEM's obligations under NHPA and NEPA 
are independent, regulations implementing section 106 of NHPA, at 36 
CFR 800.8(c), allow the NEPA process and documentation to substitute 
for various aspects of review otherwise required under NHPA. This 
substitution is intended to improve efficiency, promote transparency 
and accountability, and support a broadened discussion of potential 
effects that a project could have on the human environment. During 
preparation of the EIS, BOEM will ensure that the NEPA substitution 
process will fully meet all NHPA obligations.

Schedule for the Decision-Making Process

    After the draft EIS is completed, BOEM will publish a notice of 
availability (NOA) and request public comments on the draft EIS. BOEM 
expects to issue the NOA in September 2022. After the public comment 
period ends, BOEM will review and respond to comments received and will 
develop the final EIS. BOEM expects to make the final EIS available to 
the public in June 2023. In accordance with 40 CFR 1506.11, BOEM will 
not make a decision or issue a record of decision (ROD) sooner than 30 
days after the final EIS is released.
    This project is a ``covered project'' under section 41 of the 
Fixing America's Surface Transportation Act (FAST-41). FAST-41 provides 
increased transparency and predictability by requiring Federal agencies 
to publish comprehensive permitting timetables for all covered 
projects. FAST-41 also provides procedures for modifying permitting 
timetables to address the unpredictability inherent in the 
environmental review and permitting process for significant 
infrastructure projects. To view the FAST-41 Permitting Dashboard for 
Kitty Hawk, visit: https://www.permits.performance.gov/permitting-project/kitty-hawk-offshore-wind-project.
    Scoping Process: This NOI commences the public scoping process to 
identify issues and potential alternatives for consideration in the 
Kitty Hawk EIS. Throughout the scoping process, Federal agencies, 
Tribes, State and local governments, and the general public have the 
opportunity to help BOEM determine significant resources and issues, 
impact-producing factors, reasonable alternatives (e.g., size, 
geographic, seasonal, or other restrictions on construction and siting 
of facilities and activities), and potential mitigation measures to be 
analyzed in the EIS, as well as to provide additional information.
    In the interests of efficiency, completeness, and facilitating 
public involvement, BOEM will use the NEPA process to fulfill NHPA's 
public involvement requirements under 36 CFR 800.2(d). BOEM will 
involve the public, State and local governments, Tribes, and Kitty Hawk 
as consulting parties under NHPA. Also, BOEM may identify additional 
consulting parties, by considering written requests from individuals 
and organizations who would like to participate as consulting parties.
    BOEM will hold virtual public scoping meetings for the Kitty Hawk 
EIS at the following dates and times (eastern daylight time):
     Tuesday, August 10, 2021, 5:30 p.m.;
     Thursday, August 12, 2021, 1:00 p.m.; and
     Tuesday August 17, 2021, 5:30 p.m.
    Registration for the virtual public meetings may be completed here: 
https://www.boem.gov/Kitty-Hawk-Scoping-Virtual-Meetings.
    NEPA Cooperating Agencies: BOEM invites other Federal agencies, 
Tribes, and State and local governments to consider becoming 
cooperating agencies in the preparation of this EIS. The NEPA 
regulations specify that qualified agencies and governments are those 
with ``jurisdiction by law or special expertise.'' Potential 
cooperating agencies should consider their authority and capacity to 
assume the responsibilities of a cooperating agency and should be aware 
that an agency's role in the environmental analysis neither enlarges 
nor diminishes the final decision-making authority of any other agency 
involved in the NEPA process.
    Upon request, BOEM will provide potential cooperating agencies with 
a written summary of expectations for cooperating agencies, including 
schedules, milestones, responsibilities, scope and detail of 
cooperating agencies' expected contributions, and availability of pre-
decisional information. BOEM anticipates this summary will form the 
basis for a memorandum of agreement between BOEM and any non-Department 
of the Interior cooperating agency. Agencies also should consider the 
factors for determining cooperating agency status in the Council on 
Environmental Quality memorandum entitled ``Cooperating Agencies in 
Implementing the Procedural Requirements of the National Environmental 
Policy Act,'' dated January 30, 2002. This document is available on the 
internet at: http://energy.gov/sites/prod/files/nepapub/nepa_documents/RedDont/G-CEQ-CoopAgenciesImplem.pdf.
    BOEM, as the lead agency, will not provide financial assistance to 
cooperating agencies. Even if a governmental entity is not a 
cooperating agency, it will have opportunities to provide information 
and comments to BOEM during the public input stages of the NEPA 
process.
    NHPA Consulting Parties: Certain individuals and organizations with 
a demonstrated interest in the Project can request to participate as 
NHPA consulting parties under 36 CFR 800.2(c)(5) based on their legal 
or

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economic stake in historic properties affected by the Project.
    Before issuing this NOI, BOEM compiled a list of potential 
consulting parties and invited them in writing to become consulting 
parties. To become a consulting party, those invited must respond in 
writing, preferably by the requested response date.
    Interested individuals or organizations that did not receive an 
invitation can request to be consulting parties by writing to the 
appropriate staff at ICF, which is the third party EIS contractor 
supporting BOEM in its administration of this review. ICF's contact for 
this review is Christine Cruiess (800-203-2807, 
[email protected]). BOEM will determine which interested 
parties should be consulting parties.
    Comments: Federal agencies, Tribes, State and local governments, 
and other interested parties are requested to comment on the scope of 
this EIS, significant issues that should be addressed, and alternatives 
that should be considered. 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. BOEM makes all comments, including 
the names, addresses, and other personally identifiable information 
included in the comment, available for public review online. 
Individuals can request that BOEM withhold their names, addresses, or 
other personally identifiable information included in their comment 
from the public record; however, BOEM cannot guarantee that it will be 
able to do so. In order for BOEM to withhold from disclosure your 
personally identifiable information, you must identify any information 
contained in your comment that, if released, would constitute a clearly 
unwarranted invasion of your privacy. You also must briefly describe 
any possible harmful consequences of the disclosure of that 
information, such as embarrassment, injury, or other harm.
    Additionally, under section 304 of NHPA, BOEM is required, after 
consultation with the Secretary of the Interior, to withhold the 
location, character, or ownership of historic resources if it 
determines that disclosure may, among other things, cause a significant 
invasion of privacy, risk harm to the historic resources, 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.
    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 Identification of Potential Alternatives, Information, and 
Analyses Relevant to the Proposed Action

    BOEM requests information, data, analyses, alternatives, comments, 
views, or any suggestions concerning the Proposed Action from Federal 
agencies, Tribes, State and local governments, academic institutions, 
industry, non-profit organizations, and any other individuals or 
organizations. Specifically, BOEM requests information on the following 
topics:
    1. Potential effects that the Proposed Action could have on 
biological resources, including bats, birds, coastal fauna, finfish, 
invertebrates, essential fish habitat, marine mammals, and sea turtles.
    2. Potential effects that the Proposed Action could have on 
physical resources and conditions including air quality, water quality, 
and wetlands and other waters of the United States.
    3. Potential effects that the Proposed Action could have on 
socioeconomic and cultural resources, including commercial fisheries 
and for-hire recreational fishing, demographics, employment, economics, 
environmental justice, land use and coastal infrastructure, navigation 
and vessel traffic, other uses (marine minerals, military use, 
aviation), recreation and tourism, and scenic and visual resources.
    4. Other possible reasonable alternatives to the Proposed Action 
that BOEM should consider, including additional or alternative 
avoidance, minimization, and mitigation measures.
    5. As part of its compliance with NHPA section 106 and its 
implementing regulations (36 CFR part 800), BOEM seeks comment and 
input from the public and consulting parties regarding the 
identification of historic properties within the Proposed Action's area 
of potential effects, the potential effects on those historic 
properties from the activities proposed in the COP, and any information 
that supports identification of historic properties under NHPA. BOEM 
also solicits proposed measures to avoid, minimize, or mitigate any 
adverse effects on historic properties. BOEM will present available 
information regarding known historic properties during the public 
scoping period at https://www.boem.gov/Kitty-Hawk. BOEM's effects 
analysis for historic properties will be available for public and 
consulting party comment in the draft EIS.
    6. Information on other current or planned activities within the 
Lease Area or in the vicinity of the Proposed Action and their possible 
impacts on the Project or the Project's impacts on those activities.
    7. Other information relevant to the Proposed Action and its 
impacts on the human environment.
    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 to the 
consideration of potential environmental impacts and alternatives to 
the Proposed Action as well as economic, employment, and other impacts 
affecting the quality of the human environment.
    The draft EIS will include a summary of all alternatives, 
information, and analyses submitted during the scoping process for 
consideration by BOEM and the cooperating agencies.
    Authority: This NOI is published in accordance with NEPA, 42 U.S.C. 
4321 et seq., and 40 CFR 1501.9.

William Yancey Brown,
Chief Environmental Officer, Bureau of Ocean Energy Management.
[FR Doc. 2021-16282 Filed 7-29-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-MR-P