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Approved resource management plan amendments/record of decision (ROD) for oil shale and tar sands resources to address land use allocations in Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming and final programmatic environmental impact statement PDF

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88067791 Approved Resource Management Plan Amendments/Record of Decision (ROD) for Oil Shale and Tar Sands Resources to Address Land Use Allocations in Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming and Final Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement November 2008 195 04 L352 &mjy¥h%%°\ MISSION STATEMENT It is the mission ofthe Bureau of Land Management (BLM), an agency ofthe Department ofthe Interior, to manage BLM-administered lands and resources in a manner that best serves the needs ofthe American people. Management is based upon the principles ofmultiple use and sustained yield taking into account the long-term needs offuture generations for renewable and nonrenewable resources. BLM-WO-GI-09-001-3900 Thispage intentionally left blank CONTENTS RECORD OF DECISION 1 INTRODUCTION 1 — OVERVIEW OF THE ALTERNATIVES OIL SHALE 2 — Alternative A No Action Alternative, Continuation ofCurrent Management....5 Commercial Oil Shale Program Alternatives 8 — Alternative B Oil Shale Proposed Amendments 13 Alternative C 17 OVERVIEW OF THE ALTERNATIVES TAR SANDS 23 — Alternative A No Action Alternative, Continuation ofCurrent Management..27 Commercial Tar Sands Program Alternatives 27 — Alternative B Commercial Tar Sands Program, Proposed Plan Amendments.29 Alternative C 31 COMMENTS ON THE PRMP AND FEIS 36 THE DECISION 36 What the Decision and RMP Provides 38 Oil Shale Decisions 38 Tar Sands Decisions 39 What the Decision and RMP Do Not Provide 39 NOTICE OF MODIFICATIONS AND CLARIFICATIONS MADE TO THE APPROVED PLAN 40 Modifications 40 Clarifications 40 MANAGEMENT CONSIDERATIONS IN SELECTING THE APPROVED PLAN Amendments 42 Energy Policy Act of2005 42 Comments and Recommendations 42 Balanced Use and Environmental Protection 43 i CONSISTENCY AND CONSULTATION REVIEW 44 Governor’s Consistency Review 44 Cooperating Agencies 45 Tribal Governments 46 — NHPA Section 106 Consultation 49 — ESA Section 7 Compliance 50 MITIGATION MEASURES 53 PUBLIC INVOLVEMENT 54 Scoping 54 Public Comments on the Draft EIS 54 RELEASE ofthe RMPA and FPEIS 55 AVAILABILITY OF THE PLAN 55 BLM DIRECTOR RECOMMENDATION 56 ASSISTANT SECRETARY APPROVAL 56 APPROVED RESOURCE MANAGEMENT PLAN AMENDMENTS 57 INTRODUCTION 57 CONSIDERATION OF OTHER BLM PLANS AND POLICIES 58 PLAN IMPLEMENTATION 59 General Implementation Schedule 59 Maintaining the Plan 59 Changing the Plan 60 LIST OF PREPARERS 60 REFERENCES CITED 61 LIST OF ACRONYMS 63 LIST OF TABLES 64 LIST OF FIGURES 64 APPENDIX A: A-l APPENDIX B: B-l ii RECORD OF DECISION 1 INTRODUCTION This Record of Decision (ROD) describes the Bureau of Land Management’s (BLM’s) proposal to amend 10 Resource Management Plans (RMP) to identify the most geologically prospective public lands in Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming for oil shale and tar sands resources, and to -y designate certain ofthese lands as available for application for commercial leasing" and future exploration and development ofthese resources. These 10 RMPs still provide decisions for the management ofthe public lands for other resource uses and values. RMP The amendments were described as the Proposed Plan in the September 2008 Proposed Oil Shale and Tar Sands Resource Management Plan (PRMP) Amendments to Address Land Use Allocations in Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming and Final Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement (FPEIS)(USDI-BLM-2008), and received preliminary approval by the Assistant Secretary, Land and Minerals Management. The RMP amendments, approved in this ROD, serve as the first step in the process to establish a commercial oil shale and tar sands program that meets the intent ofCongress while taking advantage ofthe best available information and practices to minimize impacts and ensure that states, local communities, and the public have the opportunity to be involved. ROD This provides the background on development ofthe plan and rationale for approving the proposed decisions contained in the Proposed Plan. The attached Resource Management Plan (RMP) Amendments to Address Land Use Allocations in Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming 1 The ROD for the Price Field Office RMP/EIS, the Richfield Field Office RMP/EIS, and the Vernal Field Office RMP/EIS were signed in October 2008 and the Monticello RMP/EIS was signed in November 2008. These decision documents supersede the decision contained in the prior RMPs [Book Cliffs RMP (BLM 1985); Diamond Mountain RMP (BLM 1994); Price River Resource Area MFP, as amended (BLM 1989); Henry Mountain MFP (BLM 1982); San Rafael Resource Area RMP (BLM 1991); and San Juan Resource Area RMP (BLM 1991 for the planning )] areas but did not make decisions for oil shale and tar sands resources. Those decisions for oil shale and tar sands resources are contained in this ROD. Ten land use plans are being amended, six land use plans cover areas containing only oil shale resources, 2 land use plans cover areas containing only tar sands resources and 2 land use plans cover areas containing both oil shale and tar sands resources. 2 While the term “commercial lease” was used throughout the PRMP/FPEIS, the use ofthe term there, as here, represents that BLM may consider issuing commercial leases or research, development, and demonstration leases, or both in the areas designated as available for application. The phrase “available for application for leasing” is used above, and throughout the document, rather than “available for leasing” to highlight that, unlike BLM’s practice with respect to oil and gas leasing, additional National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) analysis will be required prior to the issuance ofany lease ofoil shale or tar sands resources. (Attachment -Appendix A) (also referred to as the Approved Plan Amendments) describes the decisions. The purpose and need for the Approved Plan Amendments is to meet the requirements established by Congress in Section 369 ofthe Energy Policy Act of2005. In August 2005, the U.S. Congress enacted the Energy Policy Act of2005, Public Law (P.L.) 109-58. In Section 369 ofthis Act, also known as the “Oil Shale, Tar Sands, and Other Strategic Unconventional Fuels Act of2005,” Congress declared that oil shale and tar sands (and other unconventional fuels) are strategically important domestic energy resources that should be developed to reduce the Nation’s growing dependence on oil from politically and economically unstable foreign sources. To support this declaration ofpolicy, Congress directed the Secretary ofthe Interior (the Secretary) to undertake a series ofsteps, several ofwhich are directly related to the development ofa commercial leasing program for oil shale and tar sands. A principle provision required the Secretary to “...complete a programmatic environmental impact statement for a commercial leasing program for oil shale and tar sands resources on public lands, with an emphasis on the most geologically prospective lands in Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming.” The decisions analyzed in the Oil Shale and Tar Sands Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement (PEIS) satisfy this statutory requirement. — OVERVIEW OF THE ALTERNATIVES OIL SHALE The PRMP/PEIS study area for the oil shale resources includes the most geologically prospective resources ofthe Green River Formation located in the Green River, Piceance, Uinta, and Washakie Basins and encompasses approximately 3,540,000 acres. BLM The identified the most geologically prospective areas for oil shale development based on the grade and thickness ofthe oil shale deposits. The most geologically prospective oil shale resources in Colorado and Utah are those deposits that yield 25 gallons ofshale oil per ton of rock (gal/ton) or more and are 25 feet thick or greater. In Wyoming, where the oil shale resource is not as high ofa quality resource as it is in Colorado and Utah, the most geologically prospective oil shale resources are those deposits that yield 15 gal/ton or more ofshale oil and are 5 feet thick or greater. 1 Figure 1 shows the four oil shale basins that were mapped based on the extent ofthe Green River Formation and the most geologically prospective oil shale resources within those basins. I ^hosbone NationalForest BfKlger-Ttton LiXDER NationalForest KEM\tERER Logan Greer r ^BrighamCache River City National Basin Green'River Forest | Evanston Washakie Basin Layton Farmingtol Cotewado Medicine Coalville Bow- Routt VaWlelsety' 1stJordart AshleyNationalForest DNiantoisonaaulr NF City Monument frUinta ,Vernal National,, OremaProvo Forestj Duchesna. WHITERIVER Meeker Uinta Basin Piceance River iBasin **f | andUOiunrtaa^9 N /<£EXWOOD mrUFtELl) 'Reservation JlgXj(uTxIdOX dS smixiv*s ,>Manti I J6'-vj I G_randMesa.» 89" Manti-Lajsal Basing T" NationalFprest GreenRiver Cokjiado '^ranclJuncJtor1”" GiandMi- MoNantuimoneanlt J^—-q-c) £Jdh/msoUnnNcaolmipcaniavltjFroreesatnsd. '‘Richfie.ld FNiasthitoankael^*» fA\NAamrtcihoneasl ,\oBlNlatathciekoGnCaualnnnPyitsowoknn fores! • i J FieldOfficeBoundary NPS-administeredLand I \ MostGeologicallyProspectiveOHShaleResource USFS-admtmsteredLand ExtentofGreenRiverFormation TribalLands j_ Figure 1: Most Geologically Prospective Oil Shale Resources within the Green River formation Basins in Colorado, Utah and Wyoming The oil shale resources within the defined study areas are located within thejurisdiction ofeight BLM separate administrative units. These units include the Glenwood Springs, Grand Junction, and White River Field Offices in Colorado; the Price, and Vernal Field Offices in Utah; and the Kemmerer, Rawlins, and Rock Springs Field Offices in Wyoming. Table presents the total 1 acreage ofthe most geologically prospective oil shale areas. 3 Table 1: Total Size in Acres ofthe Green River Formation Basins, Most geologically prospective Oil Shale Areas, and Acres of BLM-Administered and Split Estate Lands within the Most Prospective Areas in each State a, b Most Geologically Prospective Area State Total Size of Most Total BLM- Total Split Basin Geologically Administered Estate Lands Prospective Lands (Federal Area Minerals) Colorado 1,185,700 503,342 319,710 41,940 Piceance Basin Utah 2,977,900 840,213 560,972 77,220 Uinta Basin c Wyoming 4,506,200 2,194,483 1,257,680 39,406 Green River and Washakie Basins Total 8,669,800 3,538,038 2,138,361 158,566 aTotals may notbe exactbecause ofrounding. These estimates were derived from geographic information system (GIS) data compiled forthe PEIS analyses. The GIS data may contain errors; therefore, these estimates should be considered to be only representative ofthe size ofthe oil shale resources and the distribution of BLM-administered and split estate lands. b Split estate lands include areaswhere the Federal government owns, and the BLM administers, the subsurface mineral rights, but the surface estate is ownedby tribes, states, orprivate parties. Three alternatives, including a no action alternative, were analyzed. All management under any ofthe alternatives would comply with Federal laws, rules, regulations, and policies. Alternative A (the no action alternative) would not amend the plans. Management prescriptions in existing plans are not modified under this alternative. Alternatives B and C described different management approaches to amending RMPs to designate certain lands as being available for application for future commercial leasing and development. The approach taken in both Alternatives B and C is designed to ensure that future oil shale leasing and development is possible when economic and environmentally acceptable. 4

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