[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 43, Volume 1]
[Revised as of October 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 43CFR11.84]

[Page 291-293]
 
                    TITLE 43--PUBLIC LANDS: INTERIOR
 
PART 11--NATURAL RESOURCE DAMAGE ASSESSMENTS--Table of Contents
 
                      Subpart E--Type B Procedures
 
Sec. 11.84  Damage determination phase--implementation guidance.

    (a) Requirement. The authorized official should use the cost 
estimating and valuation methodologies in Sec. 11.83 of this part 
following the appropriate guidance in this section.
    (b) Determining uses. (1) Before estimating damages for compensable 
value under Sec. 11.83 of this part, the authorized official should 
determine the uses made of the resource services identified in the 
Quantification phase.
    (2) Only committed uses, as that phrase is used in this part, of the 
resource or services over the recovery period will be used to measure 
the change from the baseline resulting from injury to a resource. The 
baseline uses must be reasonably probable, not just in the realm of 
possibility. Purely speculative uses of the injured resource are 
precluded from consideration in the estimation of damages.
    (3)(i) When resources or resource services have mutually exclusive 
uses, the highest-and-best use of the injured resource or services, as 
determined by the authorized official, shall be used as the basis of the 
analyses required in this part. This determination of the highest-and-
best use must be consistent with the requirements of paragraph (b)(2) of 
this section.
    (ii) If the uses of the resource or service are not necessarily 
mutually exclusive, the sum of damages should be determined from 
individual services. However, the sum of the projected damages from 
individual services shall consider congestion or crowding out effects, 
if any, from the resulting projected total use of those services.
    (c) Double counting. (1) Double counting of damages should be 
avoided. Double counting means that a benefit or cost has been counted 
more than once in the damage assessment.
    (2) Natural resource damages are the residual to be determined by 
incorporating the effects, or anticipated effects, of any response 
actions. To avoid one aspect of double counting, the effects of response 
actions shall be factored into the analysis of damages. If response 
actions will not be completed until after the assessment has been 
initiated, the anticipated effects of such actions should be included in 
the assessment.
    (d) Uncertainty. (1) When there are significant uncertainties 
concerning the assumptions made in all phases of the assessment process, 
reasonable alternative assumptions should be examined. In such cases, 
uncertainty should be handled explicitly in the analysis and documented. 
The uncertainty should be incorporated in the estimates of benefits and 
costs.

[[Page 292]]

    (2) To incorporate this uncertainty, the authorized official should 
derive a range of probability estimates for the important assumptions 
used to determine damages. In these instances, the damage estimate will 
be the net expected present value of the costs of restoration, 
rehabilitation, replacement, and/or acquisition of equivalent resources 
and, if relevant, compensable value.
    (e) Discounting. (1) Where possible, damages should be estimated in 
the form of an expected present value dollar amount. In order to perform 
this calculation, a discount rate must be selected.
    (2) The discount rate to be used is that specified in ``Office of 
Management and Budget (OMB) Circular A-94 Revised'' (dated March 27, 
1972, available from the Executive Office of the President, 
Publications, 726 Jackson Place, NW., Washington, DC 20503; ph: (202) 
395-7372).
    (f) Substitutability. In calculating compensable value, the 
authorized official should incorporate estimates of the ability of the 
public to substitute resource services or uses for those of the injured 
resources. This substitutability should be estimated only if the 
potential benefits from an increase in accuracy are greater than the 
potential costs.
    (g) Compensable value during the restoration, rehabilitation, 
replacement, and/or acquisition of equivalent resources. (1) In 
determining the amount of damages, the authorized official has the 
discretion to compute compensable value for the period of time required 
to achieve the restoration, rehabilitation, replacement, and/or 
acquisition of equivalent resources.
    (2) When calculating compensable value during the period of time 
required to achieve restoration, rehabilitation, replacement, and/or 
acquisition of equivalent resources, the authorized official should 
follow the procedures described below. The procedures need not be 
followed in sequence.
    (i) The ability of the injured resources to recover over the 
recovery period should be estimated. This estimate includes estimates of 
natural recovery rates as well as recovery rates that reflect management 
actions or resource acquisitions to achieve restoration, rehabilitation, 
replacement, and/or acquisition of equivalent resources.
    (ii) A recovery rate should be selected for this analysis that is 
based upon cost-effective management actions or resource acquisitions, 
including a ``No Action-Natural Recovery'' alternative. After the 
recovery rate is estimated, compensable value should be estimated.
    (iii) The rate at which the uses of the injured resources and their 
services will be restored through the restoration or replacement of the 
services should be estimated. This rate may be discontinuous, that is, 
no uses are restored until all, or some threshold level, of the services 
are restored, or continuous, that is, restoration or replacement of uses 
will be a function of the level and rate of restoration or replacement 
of the services. Where practicable, the supply of and demand for the 
restored services should be analyzed, rather than assuming that the 
services will be utilized at their full capacity at each period of time 
in the analysis. Compensable value should be discounted using the rate 
described in paragraph (e)(2) of this section. This estimate is the 
expected present value of uses obtained through restoration, 
rehabilitation, replacement, and/or acquisition of equivalent resources.
    (iv) The uses of the resource that would have occurred in the 
absence of the discharge or release should be estimated. This estimate 
should be done in accordance with the procedures in Sec. 11.72 of this 
part. These uses should be estimated over the same time period using the 
same discount rate as that specified in paragraph (e)(2) of this 
section. This amount is the expected present value of uses forgone.
    (v) Subtraction of the present value of uses obtained through 
restoration or replacement from the expected present value of uses 
forgone gives the amount of compensation that may be included, if 
positive, in a measure of damages.
    (h) Scope of the analysis. (1) The authorized official must 
determine the scope of the analysis in order to estimate compensable 
value.

[[Page 293]]

    (2) In assessments where the scope of analysis is Federal, only the 
compensable value to the Nation as a whole should be counted.
    (3) In assessments where the scope of analysis is at the State 
level, only the compensable value to the State should be counted.
    (4) In assessments where the scope of analysis is at the tribal 
level, only the compensable value to the tribe should be counted.

[51 FR 27725, Aug. 1, 1986, as amended at 53 FR 5176, Feb. 22, 1988; 59 
FR 14286, Mar. 25, 1994]