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Four Federal agencies today released a Final Programmatic
Environmental Impact Statement (Final PEIS) proposing to designate
more than 6,000 miles of energy transport corridors on Federal lands
in 11 Western States. The Department of the Interior’s Bureau of
Land Management and the U.S.
Departments of Energy, Agriculture, and Defense (the Agencies)
prepared the Final PEIS as part of their work to implement Section
368 of the Energy Policy Act of 2005. The proposed energy corridors
would facilitate future siting of oil, gas, and hydrogen pipelines,
as well as electricity transmission and distribution facilities on
Federal lands in the West to meet the region’s increasing energy
demands while mitigating potential harmful effects to the
environment. “Up to now, Federal land management agencies have
often designated energy corridors and rights-of-way when local
projects were proposed,” said Assistant Secretary of the Interior C.
Stephen Allred.
“Designating energy corridors using a PEIS allows
the participating Agencies to mitigate environmental effects and
reduce conflicts with other uses of Federal land. The results of
this work will speed the process of siting energy infrastructure on
Federal lands in the West.” The Energy Policy Act of 2005 directs
the Secretaries of Agriculture, Defense, Energy, and the Interior to
designate energy transport corridors for oil, gas, and hydrogen
pipelines and electricity transmission and distribution facilities
on Federal lands in Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana,
Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming. The Act
further directs that environmental reviews be completed for the
designation of such corridors, and that the designated corridors are
incorporated into the relevant agency land-use and resource
management plans or equivalent plans. Energy transport corridors are
agency-preferred locations where pipelines and transmission lines
may be sited and built in the future.
Having a network of corridors
that could accommodate transportation systems for multiple energy
types potentially minimizes the proliferation of energy utility
rights-of-way on the Federal landscape. Eighty-two percent of the
corridors analyzed in the Final PEIS are located on BLM-managed
lands, while 16 percent are on USDA Forest Service lands. The
remaining proposed corridor segments are on lands managed by
Interior’s Bureau of Reclamation and National Park Service, or by
the Department of Defense. Individual projects proposed for these
corridors would undergo further, project-specific environmental
analysis before being granted permits or rights-of-way.
Corridors
were sited using a four-step process that identified a number of
important lands and resources to be avoided to the fullest extent
possible. The Agencies examined factors that constrain where a
network of energy transport corridors could be located – including
topographical, environmental, and regulatory constraints – as well
as the overall suitability of particular lands to support
development and operation of energy transport infrastructure. In
some cases, corridors intersect or approach sensitive lands or
resources. Most often these intersections follow existing
infrastructure such as highways, transmission lines, or pipelines to
avoid placing corridors in “greenfield” (undeveloped) locations.
The PEIS identifies a number of requirements that will help ensure that
energy transport projects within Section 368 energy corridors are
planned, implemented, and operated in a manner that protects and
enhances environmental resources. Prepared under provisions of the
National Environmental Policy Act, the Final PEIS outlines the
potential environmental effects of two alternatives developed, in
part, by using comments received during a scoping period in Fall
2005, public responses to preliminary maps published in June 2006,
and public comments on the draft PEIS during a 90-day comment period
earlier this year. The Agencies worked closely with local Federal
land managers as well aslocal government agencies to ensure that the
proposed corridors were consistent with local land management
responsibilities and resource constraints.
In preparing the Final PEIS, the Agencies reviewed and considered all of the comments
received on the draft during the 90-day comment period, and made
revisions to the PEIS and adjustments to the corridors as
appropriate and applicable. Aspects of the alternatives were
clarified or expanded to provide additional information on the
purpose and need for corridor designation, potential impacts to
resources, locations of sensitive resources or areas, or other
concerns.
To review the Final PEIS and related documents, including
detailed maps, visit the project Website at
http://corridoreis.anl.gov.
Review copies are also available at libraries and agency regional
and field offices. Notice of the availability of the Final PEIS
will be published in the Federal Register on Friday, November 28,
2008.
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