[Federal Register: January 10, 2006 (Volume 71, Number 6)]
[Notices]
[Page 1560-1563]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr10ja06-57]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION
Notice of Intent To Prepare a Programmatic Environmental Impact
Statement for the National Science Foundation To Address Potential
Impacts on the Marine Environment Related to the United States
Implementing Organization's Participation in the Integrated Ocean
Drilling Program
AGENCY: National Science Foundation.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The National Science Foundation (NSF) announces its intent to
prepare a Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) to evaluate
the potential environmental impacts associated with the NSF funding of
the United States Implementing Organization's (USIO) participation in
the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP). This EIS is being
prepared and considered in accordance with requirements of the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) of 1969, regulations of the President's
Council on Environmental Quality (40 CFR parts 1500 through 1508), and
NSF's National Environmental Policy Act Implementing Procedures (45 CFR
640.1-640.5). The National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), a part of
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), is being
invited to be a cooperating agency in the preparation of the
Programmatic EIS.
Publication of this notice begins the official scoping process that
will help identify alternatives and determine the scope of
environmental issues to be addressed in the Programmatic EIS/OEIS. This
notice requests public participation in the scoping process and
provides information on how to participate.
Addresses and Dates
The public scoping period starts with the publication of this
Notice in the Federal Register and will continue until March 6, 2006.
NSF will consider all comments received or postmarked by that date in
defining the scope of this EIS. Comments received or postmarked after
that date will be considered to the extent practicable. Public scoping
meetings will provide the public with an opportunity to present
comments,
[[Page 1561]]
ask questions, and discuss concerns regarding the EIS with NSF
officials. The locations, dates, and times for the public scoping
meetings are as follows:
1. Wednesday, February 15, 5-9 p.m., 100 Vaughn Hall, Discovery
Way, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, La Jolla, CA;
2. Friday, February 17, 2006, 5-9 p.m., Room C126, 1000 Discovery
Drive, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX; and
3. Thursday, February 23, 2006, 2:30-6:30 p.m., Silver Spring Metro
Center Building 4, Science Center, 1301 East-West Highway, Silver
Spring, MD.
Written comments will be accepted at these meetings as well as
during the scoping period, and can be mailed to NSF by March 6, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Written statements and questions
regarding the scoping process should be mailed to Dr. James Allan,
Program Director, Ocean Drilling Program, Division of Ocean Sciences,
National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Suite 725,
Arlington, VA 22230; voice (703) 292-8581 or e-mail at jallan@nsf.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In 1975, the National Science Foundation
(NSF) prepared an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) on the
International Phase of Ocean Drilling (IPOD) of the Deep Sea Drilling
Project (DSDP). The 1975 EIS addressed scientific ocean drilling
carried out globally in major and minor ocean basins.
In 1985, the NSF prepared an EIS for the new Ocean Drilling Program
(ODP) to address the more complicated aspects of proposed drilling
techniques and of drilling in high latitudes and Antarctic seas that
were not previously addressed in the DSDP/IPOD EIS. Drilling modes that
were analyzed in the DSDP/IPOD EIS were reviewed in the 1985 EIS
including the use of the research vessel (RV) JOIDES Resolution.
Additionally, aspects of drilling in deep-ocean trenches, on active
spreading centers, and in or near environmentally sensitive regions
were considered in the 1985 environmental review. Drilling in both
DSDP/IPOD and ODP was riserless, where drill cuttings were typically
removed from the borehole by pumped seawater without return circulation
to the drillship via an external pipe or riser.
The ODP was formally completed September 30, 2003. In order to
facilitate the seamless continuation of research during the transition
from the ODP to the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP), the
JOIDES Resolution was selected as the platform to continue to conduct
riserless drilling activities during Phase 1 of the USIO participation
in the IODP. Environmental Assessments (EAs) were prepared in 2004 and
2005 to supplement the 1985 EIS and address the environmental and
operating conditions that were specific to the IODP-USIO Phase 1
expeditions that would be performed during 2004 and 2005.
The IODP is an international research program that explores the
history and structure of the earth as recorded in seafloor sediments,
fluids, and rocks. IODP builds upon the earlier successes of the DSDP
and the ODP, which revolutionized our view of Earth history and global
processes through ocean basin exploration. IODP represents the latest
generation of these highly successful scientific ocean-drilling
initiatives and seeks to greatly expand the reach of these previous
programs by forming a collaborative union between the United States,
Japan, and the European Union, each of whom will be responsible for
providing drilling platforms appropriate for achieving the scientific
objectives outlines in the IODP Initial Science Plan. China has joined
as an additional member. Based on international agreements, the United
States is responsible for providing and operating a riserless drilling
vessel, Japan will provide and operate a riser drilling vessel, and a
European-led consortium will provide and operate Mission Specific
Platforms capable of drilling in environments unsuitable for either the
riserless or riser vessels.
Joint Oceanographic Institutions, Incorporated (JOI) and its
partners, the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University
(LDEO) and Texas A&M University (TAMU) through the Texas A&M Research
Foundation (TAMRF), have been selected by NSF to be the IODP USIO for
the riserless vessel and related activities. These three partners
comprise the JOI Alliance. JOI is responsible to NSF for the overall
program leadership, technical, operational, and financial management,
and delivery of services. TAMU is responsible for providing a full
array of science services, ranging from vessel and drilling operations
to ship- and shore-based science laboratories, core repositories, and
publication. LDEO is responsible for logging-related shipboard and
shore-based science services and for leading an international logging
consortium to participate in scientific ocean drilling operations. The
objectives of the USIO are to provide leadership regarding the U.S.
interests in IODP as the challenges and demands of a multiplatform
drilling program present themselves. The USIO also seeks to ensure that
services for the riserless vessel and other program aspects are
provided in a cost-effective, holistic, and responsive manner to
facilitate comprehensive, integrated, and flexible management that
involves a broad array of stakeholders.
Currently, the JOI Alliance is completing IODP Phase 1 operations
using the RV JOIDES Resolution, which is the same vessel used for two
decades during ODP (1985-2003). Concurrent with Phase 1 activities
(2003-2006), the JOI Alliance is planning for Phase 2 operations, which
require procuring and converting an appropriate ship into a Scientific
Ocean Drilling Vessel (SODV). This Programmatic EIS will address the
use of the SODV and the USIO's participation in IODP Phase 2 riserless
drilling operations for at least the next 20 years.
Depending upon the specific research objectives of each IODP USIO
Phase 2 expedition, typical aspects of the proposed action that have
the potential to affect the surrounding environment and will be subject
to review in the proposed Programmatic EIS include:
Site Selection and Expedition Planning
Review and evaluate research proposals (multi-phase,
international process).
Logistically prepare for expedition and schedule.
Vessel Deployment and Maximum Days at Sea per Expedition
Transit from port call to expedition site; may require
days or weeks of travel at a nominal speed of 10 knots (depending on
sea conditions).
Remain at sea for 60 days.
Number of Drill Sites and Boreholes
One or more drill sites may be selected in a specific area
for each expedition as needed to meet research objectives.
One or more boreholes may be advanced at each drill site
as needed to meet specific objectives.
Typical Extent of Operations
Water Depth (m) 75-7,000.
Seafloor Penetration (m) 1-2,500.
Drilling and Casing Deployment
Depending upon the specific application, drill bits will
be advanced into the seafloor to produce nominally-sized boreholdes
37.5, 44.5, 50.8, or 61 cm (14\5/8\, 17\3/8\, 20, 24 in) in diameter
(alternate sized boreholes may be drilled as needed).
Depending on the specific application, boreholes may be
lined
[[Page 1562]]
with 27.3, 34, 40, and 50.8 cm (10\5/8\, 13\3/8\, 16, 20 in) casings
(alternate size casting may be installed as needed).
Core Sampling
Advanced Piston Corer (APC): used in soft ooze and
sediments.
Rotary Core Barrel (RCB): used in medium to hard
crystalline sediments.
Sonic Core Monitor (SCM).
Extended Core Barrel (XCB): used in firm sediments.
Advanced Diamond Core Barrel (ADCB): used in hard
sedimentary or igneous formations.
Motor Driven Core Barrel (MDCB): Used in interbedded
materials and hard fractured rock.
Pressure Core Sample (PCS): used in sediments while
maintaining in situ pressure.
Botton-Hole Assembly (BHA).
Tricone Retractable Bit (TRB).
Other coring and sampling capability as developed.
Deployment of Reentry Hardware and Observatories
Drill-In-Casing (DIC) System: used to drill in a short
casing string simultaneously with the bit to support an unstable
sediment zone.
Free Fall Funnel (FFF): used to reenter a hole.
Hard Rock Base (HRB): Used to focus the direction of the
drill bit into hard irregular seafloor surfaces.
Hard Rock Reentry System (HRRS): used to install casing
with reentry capability on a sloping or rough hard rock seafloor.
Reentry Cone and Casing (RECC): used as a permanent
seafloor installation (or legacy hole) able to support nested casing
strings.
Database query of sites with reentry cones.
Underreamers, Bi-Center Reamers, and Mud Motors.
Vibration Isolated Television Frame (VIT).
Circulation Obviation Retrofit Kit (CORK) Borehole
Observatory.
Advanced CORK (ACORK) Borehole Observatory.
In Situ Sampling and Testing
Temperature, pore pressure, gas and fluid compositions,
permeability, microbial with instruments such as:
Advanced Piston Corer Temperature (APCT), used to obtain
formation temperatures to determine the heat flow gradient.
Davis-Villinger Temperature Probe (DVTP), used to take
heat-flow measurements in semi consolidated sediments that are too
stiff for the APCT.
Water Sampling Temperature Probe (WSTP).
Downhole Logging
Natural gamma ray measurement.
Compressional- and shear-wave sonic velocity (Vp and Vs).
Caliper to measure borehole rugosity.
Formation density, porosity, temperature, resistivity and
resistivity images, magnetic susceptibility/reversals.
Borehole camera.
Borehole seismic tool for check shots or vertical seismic
profiles (VSP).
Fluid sampling.
Measurement while Drilling (MWD), including Logging While
Drilling (LWD, formation resistivity images and density/porosity).
Geochemical logging (inference of formation chemical
composition).
Geophysical Surveying
Occasional use of geophysical techniques to characterize
seafloor.
The Programmatic EIS will address U.S. laws and regulations, as
appropriate, including but not necessarily limited to NEPA; the Marine
Mammal Protection Act of 1972 (MMPA); the Endangered Species Act of
1973 (ESA); and Executive Order (EO) 12114 (1979), Environmental
Effects Abroad of Major Federal Actions. In addition, the assessment
will address foreign regulations especially where research will be
carried out entirely or partially within territorial waters or
Exclusive Economic Zone waters surrounding a foreign nation or in
international waters subject to the United Nations Law of the Sea or
other international agreements.
The Programmatic EIS will take a view of the planned USIO drilling
program as a whole and thereby assemble and analyze the broadest range
of direct, indirect, and cumulative impacts associated with the entire
program rather than assessing individual cruises separately. This
approach will also address possible concerns that NSF is analyzing
regarding each expedition's contribution to the cumulative impacts of
the entire program. Further, the Programmatic EIS will provide a broad
analytical baseline within which NSF, using tiered documents, will be
able to analyze and decide upon various cruise-specific issues. This
process will enable the NSF to streamline the preparation of subsequent
environmental documents for the individual cruises, if needed, and
enable NSF to identify any prudent conservation practices and
mitigation measures that may be applied across the entire program. The
application of the Programmatic EIS to future cruises will be
determined during the development of the EIS and will be specified
within the EIS.
Major environmental issues that will be addressed in the
Programmatic EIS include marine biological resources including
Essential Fish Habitat (EFH), acoustic impacts to marine mammals, fish,
sea turtles, invertebrates, and threatened and endangered species;
releases of any substances from the ship during vessel transit,
drilling, and research operations; cultural resources; human health and
safety; socioeconomic and land use (i.e., commercial, private, and
recreational uses of the marine environment); and water quality.
At present, NSF has identified two alternatives for evaluation in
the EIS: (1) The proposed action as described above; and (2) the no
action alternative. NSF welcomes discussion on these and other possible
alternatives that may be identified during the scoping process. NSF
also welcomes discussion on mitigation measures to be considered,
separate from features of the proposed action that could avoid or
substantially reduce the environmental consequences of the proposed
action.
NSF is initiating this scoping process for the purpose of
determining the extent of issues to be addressed, identifying the
significant issues related to this action, and identifying possible
alternatives to the proposed action. NSF will hold public scoping
meetings as identified in the Dates and Addresses section of this
notice. These meetings will also be advertised in area newspapers. NSF
and NMFS representatives will be available at these meetings to receive
comments from the public regarding issues of concern to the public.
Federal, state, and local agencies and interested individuals are
encouraged to take this opportunity to identify environmental concerns
that should be addressed during the preparation of the Programmatic
EIS. Agencies and the public are also invited and encouraged to provide
written comments on scoping issues in addition to, or in lieu of, oral
comments at the public meeting. To be most helpful, scoping comments
should clearly describe issues or topics that the commenter believes
the Programmatic EIS should address.
We invite you to learn about NSF's funding of the USIO's role in
the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program at an informational open house,
and to assist NSF in defining the alternatives and the scoping
environmental issues related to the drilling research program. All our
[[Page 1563]]
public meeting locations are wheelchair-accessible. If you plan to
attend a scoping meeting/open house, and need special assistance such
as sign language interpretation or other reasonable accommodation,
please notify NSF (see FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT) at least 3
business days in advance. Include your contact information as well as
information about your specific needs.
We request public comments or other relevant information on
environmental issues related to the NSF drilling program. The public
meetings are not the only opportunity you have to comment. In addition
to or in place of attending a meeting, you can submit comments to Dr.
James Allan by March 6, 2006 (see FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT). We
will consider all comments received during the comment period. We
request that you include in your comments:
Your name and address (especially if you would like to
receive a copy of the Draft Programmatic EIS/OEIS upon completion);
An explanation for each comment; and
Include any background materials to support your comments,
as you feel necessary.
You may mail, e-mail, or hand deliver your comments to NSF (see FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT). All comment submissions must be unbound,
no larger than 8\1/2\ by 11 inches, and suitable for copying and
elctronic scanning. Please note that regardless of the method used for
submitting comments or material, all submissions will be publicly
available and, therefore, any personal information you provide in your
comments will be open for public review. In addition, if you wish to
receive a copy of the Draft Programmatic EIS/OEIS, please indicate this
in your comment. No decision will be made to implement any alternative
until the NEPA prcoess is completed.
Dated: January 5, 2006.
James Allan,
Program Director, Ocean Drilling Program, Division of Ocean Sciences,
National Science Foundation.
[FR Doc. 06-198 Filed 1-9-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7555-01-M